Vatican says Pope's 'blessing' for gay couples part of larger 'pastoral' view, critics see wokeness
Vatican officials acknowledge announcement was significant but said didn't “transform traditional church doctrine”
Pope Francis’ announcement Monday that now permits Roman Catholic priests to formally bless same-sex couples is being hailed as a landmark decision in equality for all. But it has also further rankled traditionalist Catholics who think the church is taking too many progressive stances.
Vatican officials acknowledged to Just the News that the announcement was significant but said it did not “transform traditional church doctrine” that teaches that marriage is between a man and a woman, since it allowed “blessings of couples in irregular situations” without endorsing their status or permitting any new liturgical rites.
“A blessing is much different than a sacrament,” referring to the church’s seven formal sacraments, which include baptism, marriage, and ordination.
“When people ask for a blessing, an exhaustive moral analysis should not be placed as a precondition for conferring it,” Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernandez wrote in the Vatican’s declaration Monday.
The declaration, which Vatican officials says was endorsed by the pope, leaves the decision over whether to bless same-sex couples to individual priests. It also came days after Fernandez – one of the pontiff’s strongest allies and a fellow Argentinian – encouraged single mothers to receive communion if they first go to confession.
The apparent trend, then the backlash, at least within the church, emerged publicly last month when the pope “relieved” Texas Bishop Joseph Strickland of his responsibilities after Strickland’s repeated criticisms of Francis’ reforms.
That move was in line with the pontiff’s comments about the “backwardness” of some Catholic officials in the U.S.
In October, Francis responded to criticisms from five conservative cardinals that he was “open to” blessing same-sex couples.
Previous to that, Francis – who became pope in 2013 – earned both plaudits and reproaches for weighing in on prickly issues like the role of women in the church, what has been seen by some as tone-deaf takes on the Russia-Ukraine war, pushing forward with talks on normalizing relations with China and Iran despite well documented human rights abuses in those countries, and taking a lead role on the untraditional (for the Vatican) topic of climate change.
The most common response to the declaration appears to be along the line of what officials described as following Francis' "pastoral vision" of the church. But even before the latest move, some prominent commentators have asked whether the pope has “gone woke.” On social media, at least some are saying the answer is clear.
The Facts Inside Our Reporter's Notebook
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- formally bless same-sex couples
- seven formal sacraments
- encouraged single mothers to receive communion
- ârelievedâ Texas Bishop Joseph Strickland of his responsibilities
- backwardness
- criticisms from five conservative cardinals
- women in the church
- tone-deaf takes on the Russia-Ukraine war
- normalizing relations with China
- Iran
- climate change
- "pastoral vision"
- the pope has âgone woke
- some are saying the answer is clear