Biden to meet pope amid pressure from anti-abortion U.S. bishops
Send a link to a friend
[October 27, 2021]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -Devout Roman
Catholic Joe Biden meets Pope Francis in the Vatican on Friday at a time
when the U.S. president is under pressure from conservatives in the
Church for his conflicted position in the dispute over abortion rights.
Biden goes to weekly Mass regularly and keeps a picture of the pope
behind his desk in the Oval Office. He has said he is personally opposed
to abortion but cannot impose his views as an elected leader.
But conservative Catholic media and U.S. conservative bishops have
criticised him for that stand, with some saying the Democratic president
should be banned from receiving communion, the central sacrament of the
faith.
At the same time, supporters of abortion rights have been horrified by a
new Texas law that imposes a near-total ban on abortion. Biden's
administration has challenged the law and the U.S. Supreme Court will
hear the case next Monday.
It is not known if Biden and Pope Francis will discuss the abortion and
communion disputes at their private meeting on Friday, their first since
Biden took office in January.
U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters https://www.reuters.com/world/biden-heads-g20-talk-energy-prices-supply-chain-woes-2021-10-26
on Tuesday that the two men would discuss climate change, migration and
income inequality.
"It's clear that the pope does not agree with the president about
abortion. He's made that exceptionally clear," Archbishop William Lori
of Baltimore told Catholic News Service.
Asked about the U.S. communion debate last month, the pope told
reporters that abortion is "murder". But he also appeared to criticise
U.S. Catholic bishops for dealing with the issue in a political rather
than a pastoral way.
"Communion is not a prize for the perfect. ... Communion is a gift, the
presence of Jesus and his Church," the pope said.
Bishops should use "compassion and tenderness" with Catholic politicians
who support abortion rights, he said.
Since his election in 2013 as the first Latin American pope, Francis has
said that while the Church should oppose abortion, the issue should not
become an all-consuming battle in culture wars that detract attention
from matters such as immigration and poverty.
Jo Renee Formicola, a political science professor at Seton Hall
University in New Jersey, said the meeting should help Biden in his
standoff with the U.S. bishops on abortion and shift the spotlight to
social justice concerns the two men share.
"The optics of the pope meeting with Biden basically says to the
American (Catholic) hierarchy: 'Listen, this man and I have the same
agenda. ... Don't expect that I am going to compromise my teachings on
things like the environment and immigration,'" she told Reuters in a
telephone interview.
[to top of second column]
|
President Joe Biden delivers remarks on his Build Back Better
infrastructure agenda at the NJ TRANSIT Meadowlands Maintenance
Complex in Kearny, New Jersey, U.S., October 25, 2021.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
CONSERVATIVES ON THE ATTACK
In June, a divided conference of U.S. Roman Catholic bishops
voted to draft a statement on communion that some bishops say should
specifically admonish Catholic politicians, including Biden.
The bishops, who went ahead despite a Vatican warning that it would
sow discord rather than unity, will take up the issue again next
month.
Catholics hold two of the three top offices in the United States -
the other is Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. But
instead of uniting co-religionists, as the election of John F.
Kennedy as the first Catholic U.S. president did in 1960, both Biden
and Pelosi have come under attack by Church conservatives.
They increased their criticism of Biden this month when his
administration challenged the Texas law.
While Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington, has not
tried to stop Biden from receiving communion, the archbishop in
Pelosi's home city of San Francisco, Salvatore Cordileone, has told
his priests not to give it to her.
White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said in a statement last week
that the meeting would cover "working together on efforts grounded
in respect for fundamental human dignity." That would include ending
the COVID-19 pandemic and caring for the poor, she said.
Like Biden, the pope has urged everyone to get vaccinated and has
issued numerous appeals to defend the environment by reducing the
use of fossil fuels. Biden will attend the U.N. Climate Change
summit in Glasgow and the pope is expected to send a message.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Additional reporting by Jeff Mason in
Washington; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Peter Cooney)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|