Catholic Pontiff, Pope Francis reached out to gays on Monday,
saying he wouldn’t judge priests for their sexual orientation in a remarkably
open and wide-ranging news conference as he returned from his first foreign
trip.
“If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good
will, who am I to judge?” Francis asked. His predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI,
signed a document in 2005 that said men with deep-rooted homosexual tendencies
should not be priests. Francis was much more conciliatory, saying gay clergymen
should be forgiven and their sins forgotten.
Francis’ remarks came yesterday during a plane journey back
to the Vatican from his first foreign trip in Brazil. He was funny and candid
during his first news conference that lasted almost an hour and a half. He
didn’t dodge a single question, even thanking the journalist who raised
allegations reported by an Italian newsmagazine that one of his trusted
monsignors was involved in a scandalous gay tryst.
Francis said he investigated and found nothing to back up
the allegations.
Francis was asked about Italian media reports suggesting
that a group within the church tried to blackmail fellow church officials with
evidence of their homosexual activities. Italian media reported this year that
the allegations contributed to Benedict’s decision to resign.
Stressing that Catholic social teaching that calls for
homosexuals to be treated with dignity and not marginalized, Francis said it
was something else entirely to conspire to use private information for
blackmail or to exert pressure.
Francis was responding to reports that a trusted aide was
involved in an alleged gay tryst a decade ago.
He said he investigated the allegations according to canon
law and found nothing to back them up. But he took journalists to task for
reporting on the matter, saying the allegations concerned matters of sin, not
crimes like sexually abusing children.
And when someone sins and confesses, he said, God not only
forgives but forgets.
“We don’t have the right to not forget,” he said. The
directness of his comments suggested that he wanted to put the matter of the
monsignor behind him as he sets about overhauling the Vatican bank and
reforming the Holy See bureaucracy.
“The keys to the atomic bomb weren’t in it,” Francis
quipped. Rather, he said, the bag merely contained a razor, his breviary prayer
book, his agenda and a book on St. Terese of Lisieux, to whom he is
particularly devoted.
“It’s normal” to carry a bag when traveling, he said. “We
have to get use to this being normal, this normalcy of life,” for a pope, he
added. Francis certainly showed a human, normal touch during his trip to Rio,
charming the masses at World Youth Day with his decision to forgo typical
Vatican security so he could to get close to his flock. Francis traveled
without the bulletproof popemobile, using instead a simple Fiat or open-sided
car.
“There wasn’t a single incident in all of Rio de Janeiro in
all of these days and all of this spontaneity,” Francis said, responding to
concerns raised after his car was swarmed by an adoring mob when it took a
wrong turn and got stuck in traffic.
“I could be with the people, embrace them and greet them
without an armored car and instead with the security of trusting the people,”
he said. He acknowledged that there is always the chance that a “crazy” person
could get to him. But he said he preferred taking that risk than submitting to
the “craziness” of putting an armored wall between a shepherd and his flock.
Francis’ news conference was remarkable and unprecedented:
Pope John Paul II used to have on-board press conferences, but he would move
about the cabin, chatting with individual reporters so it was sometimes
hit-or-miss to hear what he said and there were often time limits. After
Benedict’s maiden foreign voyage, the Vatican insisted that reporters submit
questions in advance so the theologian pope could choose the three or four he
wanted to answer and prepare his answers.
For Francis, however, no question was off the table, no
small thing given that he is known to distrust the mainstream media and had
told journalists en route to Rio that he greatly disliked giving news
conferences because he found them “tiresome.”
Francis spoke lovingly of his predecessor, Benedict XVI,
saying that having him living in the Vatican “is like having a grandfather, a
wise grandfather, living at home.” He said he regularly asks Benedict for
advice, but dismissed suggestions that the German pontiff was exerting any
influence on his papacy.
On the contrary, Francis said he had tried to encourage
Benedict to participate more in public functions at the Vatican and receive
guests, but that he was “a man of prudence.”
In one of his most important speeches delivered in Rio,
Francis described the church in feminine terms, saying it would be “sterile” without
women. Asked what role he foresaw, he said the church must develop a more
profound role for women in the church, though he said “the door is closed” to
ordaining women to the priesthood.
He was less charitable with the Vatican accountant,
Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, who has been jailed on accusations he plotted to
smuggle €20 million ($26 million) from Switzerland to Italy and is also accused
by Italian prosecutors of using his Vatican bank account to launder money.
Francis said while “there are saints” in the Vatican
bureaucracy, Scarano wasn’t among them. The Vatican bank, known as the
Institute for Religious Works, has been a focus of Francis’ reform efforts, and
he has named a commission of inquiry to look into its activities amid
accusations from Italian prosecutors that it has been used as an offshore tax
haven to launder money.
Asked if closing the bank was a possibility, Francis said:
“I don’t know how this story will end.” “But the characteristics of the IOR
whether it’s a bank, an aid fund or whatever it is are Value of stolen Cannes
jewels soars to $136m
transparency
and honesty.”
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