The Pope vs. The Church on Family Values?
The synod underway in Rome will discuss divorce, birth control and same-sex marriage - and nobodys really sure what Pope Francis will do.
10.05.14
Barbie Latza Nadeau
VATICAN CITY When Pope Francis opened the Extraordinary General Assembly Synod of Bishops to discuss the role of the family in the Catholic context on Sunday, he opened the biggest can of worms in his still-young papacy.
It is expected to pit hard-core Catholic conservatives who prefer to hang on to the Churchs traditional doctrine on family matters against liberal Catholic clergy who would prefer to see a loosening of some of the rules, especially those that keep lapsed Catholics away in droves. The skirmishing here is expected to help define the battles in the even more important Ordinary Synod of Bishops scheduled for October 2015.
Of the 252 participants now gathered in Rome, 191 so-called Synod Fathers are eligible to vote on issues ranging from whether divorced and remarried Catholics should be allowed to take communion to whether annulments should be easier to obtain.
Yes, birth control will be up for debate. Yes, even same-sex marriage will be discussed. In that sense there are no taboos, although virtually no one in the know expects any really dramatic breakthroughs.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/10/05/the-pope-vs-the-church-on-family-values.html
okasha
(11,573 posts)It seems to mr that the Church-;the people in the pews, the Body of Christ--are likely to be solidly behind him.
rug
(82,333 posts)The laity is way out front of the conservatives even in S. Texas. Only one priest in my city that I know of withholds the Eucharist from anyone, and there are a couple of old-fashioned Berrigan-style radicals in the poorest parishes.