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Inter Press Service, April 8,
2005
Paying Last Respects,
but Hoping for Change
Author : Katherine Stapp
DATELINE: NEW YORK, April 7 2005
Reform-minded Catholics in the United States
are praying the successor to John Paul II will
prove more receptive to softening church doctrine
on contraception, abortion, homosexuality and
women's equality, although they acknowledge
that these issues are probably not high on
the Vatican agenda.
"Being a Catholic, I'm always open to miracles,"
said Jon O'Brien, vice president of the Washington-based
Catholics for a Free Choice. "But as a
realist, I also think the decks have been stacked
on these issues."
Noting that all but three of the 117 cardinals
voting for the next pope were appointed by
John Paul II, whose tenure saw the replacement
of liberal bishops from the school of Liberation
Theology with younger men without much pastoral
experience, O'Brien said it was unlikely that
radical change would be forthcoming anytime
soon.
"However, if a conservative of similar ilk
gets in, that might be the push too far,"
he added. "In the wake of the sex abuse
scandal, the tolerance level for a dominant
hierarchy telling people what to do is very
thin. It might be just what reformers in the
church need."
The Vatican estimates that about two million
pilgrims have paid their respects at St. Peter's
Basilica, where the pope's body now lies in
state. John Paul II has been widely praised
as a champion of human freedom and dignity
who worked tirelessly to make the church truly
global in character and ethnicity.
But many Catholics also say they felt alienated
by his unwavering stance on birth control -
forbidden, even for married couples - and condom
use to prevent pregnancy and disease transmission,
and his intolerance of any discussion of women
entering the priesthood.
On Mar. 11, shortly before his death, the pope
told a group of Tanzanian bishops that "fidelity
within marriage and abstinence outside are
the only sure ways to limit the further spread
of AIDS infection."
He had previously declared the use of birth control
to be "intrinsically illicit".
"In the global North, most Catholics already
use contraception, so to a large extent Rome's
stance is irrelevant," O'Brien said. "But
in developing countries, people are actually
dying, and the reality is they have to speak
out on the issue."
Today, two in three Catholics are from Asia,
Africa and Latin America, regions that suffer
tragically high rates of infant and maternal
mortality. The United Nations estimates that
more than 200 million women have an unmet need
for safe and effective contraception, and that
family planning alone could reduce maternal
deaths by 25 percent.
"The pope wrote quite a lot about women's
dignity and women's equality," said Aisha
Taylor of the Women's Ordination Conference
in Virginia, which lobbies for women to be
allowed into the priesthood. "Which is
ironic because then he turned around and barred
them from governing structures in the church."
Under John Paul II's leadership, the Code of
Canon Law was revised in 1983 to encourage
women to take a wider role, especially at the
diocesan level, where they were allowed to
serve as eucharistic ministers and on parish
committees.
However, he was rigid on the subject of women's
ordination, issuing an apostolic letter in
1994 declaring that "the church has no
authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination
on women, and that this judgment is to be definitively
held for all the church's faithful."
Still, in opening doors to women to assume new
roles and responsibilities, Taylor believes
that the pope may have unwittingly advanced
the cause of women's ordination -- a position
now supported by 70 percent of U.S. Catholics.
"These writings are now in the church canons
and can't be taken back," she said. "It's
like Thomas Jefferson writing that 'all men
are created equal'. Of course, he meant 'all
white, landowning men', but his words ultimately
helped inspire the abolitionist movement."
While the field of front-runners for the next
pope is largely conservative, not all share
John Paul's positions, and some say the College
of Cardinals, which elects the successor, could
make a surprising choice.
'National Catholic Reporter' Vatican correspondent
John Allen, Jr. points out that, "Colleges
of cardinals appointed entirely by one pope
do not elect a reproduction of that pope as
his successor."
He cited the example of Pope Pius XII, who appointed
all but two of the 51 cardinals who elected
his successor -- the "strikingly"
liberal Pope John XXIII.
"There is some surprising diversity among
the cardinals," agreed Taylor. "Of
the four main groups, two are involved with
church reform and social justice."
Vatican watchers say the social justice contingent,
which focuses on such worldly problems as globalisation,
racial relations and the fight against AIDS,
is the largest current, and represents many
cardinals from developing nations, including
Cardinal Juan Sandoval from Mexico, Cardinal
Claudio Hummes from Brazil, and Cardinal Oscar
Rodriguez Maradiaga from Honduras.
At the other end of the ideological spectrum
is a grouping dubbed the "cultural warriors",
who want to see the church's conservative teachings
on issues like abortion, gay marriage and stem
cell research incorporated into civil law.
"From the beginning of his papacy right
up to his deathbed, John Paul had appointed
cardinals in his own image, which is the right-wing
current of the church," said O'Brien.
Of all the potential successors, O'Brien singled
out Cardinal Godfried Danneels of Belgium as
the most moderate.
"He did say that using condoms to prevent
HIV/AIDS is about stopping the transmission
of death, not stopping the transmission of
life," O'Brien noted. "And in this
airless environment, saying something like
that is a fresh breeze."
<< Inter Press Service -- 4/7/05 >>
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