logo
These Contentious Issues Could Determine Who Becomes the Next Pope

These Contentious Issues Could Determine Who Becomes the Next Pope

New York Times03-05-2025
The cardinals who have traveled to Rome to elect the next pope at a conclave next week sometimes look as ideologically polarized as many secular voters around the globe.
At first glance, they appear to split along the kinds of left-right lines that characterize political contests elsewhere. Many conservative Roman Catholic Church leaders disagreed with Pope Francis, who was often a darling of liberals around the world.
But the typical divisions between progressives and conservatives don't correspond so neatly with the ideological battles within the Vatican and the broader church. Although there are some exceptions among the cardinals, the issue that most consistently marked Francis as a liberal — his fierce advocacy on behalf of migrants and the poor — does not necessarily set him apart, because the Catholic Church has made the gospel's call to shelter and feed strangers a fundamental tenet.
Ultimately, the cardinals' choice will amount to a referendum on whether to extend Francis' legacy of inclusivity and openness to change. That was 'how he made sense of living in a highly polarized age,' said Anna Rowlands, a political theologian at Durham University in England.
Francis understood 'what's at stake in the polarization,' said Professor Rowlands, and was willing to accept disagreement as a precursor to dialogue. 'The danger is the church moves into a moment when it might be tempted to choose a pole,' she said, which could close off discussion altogether.
More than any single issue, the choice of the next pontiff will be dominated by a philosophical question: Who deserves a say in determining the Catholic Church's future?
Decision-Making
Francis often argued that regular practicing Catholics — including women and L.G.B.T.Q. people — should be consulted about the direction of the church. He invited lay people to sit with bishops to discuss controversial issues in Vatican meetings called synods.
He was opposed by more conservative leaders, who may be keen to return to centralized decision making. 'I think the conversation will have to go along the lines of, 'Can we get away with doing away with it?'' said Miriam Duignan, the executive director of the Wijngaards Institute for Catholic Research in Cambridge, England.
Another key split is between those who believe the church should welcome everyone — including those whose lives don't match traditional church teachings — and those who think that only those committed to unwavering Catholic doctrine should be admitted into the church's fold.
'It's that big-tent vision of the church that is sometimes the source of tension and apprehension,' said Rev. Agbonkhianmeghe E. Orobator, dean of the Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University. 'It's very different when you think of church as a perfect society or closed society where membership is defined by doctrinal allegiance or orthodoxy.'
Women in the Church
Two years ago, Francis for the first time allowed women to vote at a significant meeting of bishops. Last later, he punted on a decision about whether women could be ordained as deacons who can preach and preside over weddings, funerals and baptisms.
Francis was clear that he wanted women to be permitted more options than 'altar girls or the president of a charity,' but resisted the notion that they needed to participate in the church hierarchy. In many places with priest shortages, women increasingly do the work of ministering to congregants.
Conservatives say that allowing women to be deacons would create a pathway for them eventually to become priests. They argue that doing so would violate 2,000 years of church doctrine, despite what some experts say is historical evidence that women acted as deacons in the early church.
Even if the ordination of women remains contentious among the cardinals, it would be difficult to stifle the debate altogether because of pressure from female Catholic activists.
Cardinal Tarcisio Isao Kikuchi, the archbishop of Tokyo, said in an interview last month that he saw 'nothing wrong with ordaining women as deacons.' But he said, 'there are still many problems that need to be overcome.'
Married Priests
The church has a dearth of priests in many countries. In 2019, a summit of Roman Catholic bishops recommended that Francis allow married men to serve as priests in the remote Amazon region, where the shortage is particularly acute.
A year later, Francis said he needed more time to consider the landmark proposal, deciding that the church wasn't yet ready to lift its roughly 1,000-year-old restriction requiring priests to be single, celibate men. Many of his supporters who expected him to be a pope of radical change felt let down.
Divorce
On the question of divorced and remarried Catholics, Francis urged priests not to treat them like pariahs, and to welcome them with 'doors wide open.'
Francis opened up the debate over whether to allow divorced and remarried Catholics to receive communion even if they had not had their previous marriages annulled by a church tribunal. But in the end, he backed off from any change in church law and simply encouraged priests to be welcoming to divorced and remarried Catholics.
'People who started a new union after the defeat of their sacramental marriage are not at all excommunicated, and they absolutely must not be treated that way,' Francis said. 'Though their unions are contrary to the sacrament of marriage, the church, as a mother, seeks the good and salvation of all her children.'
Sexual Orientation
Pope Francis ushered in a new era for L.G.B.T.Q. Catholics when in 2023 he permitted priests to bless same-sex couples. He made clear that marriage was reserved for relationships between a woman and a man, but his changes still stoked the ire of conservatives, especially in Africa and North America.
In countries in Africa and other regions where homosexuality is a crime, Francis explicitly condemned the criminalization but allowed bishops in Africa to forbid priests to bless same-sex couples because of the danger to them if they were outed. In cultures that stigmatized gay relationships, clergy would be given an 'extended period of pastoral reflection' to accept the new path that Francis always argued did not contradict church teachings.
Sexual Abuse
Some among the church hierarchy might like to declare the crisis of sexual abuse by Catholic priests over. But abuse survivors and activists warn that practices and the mentality in local parishes have not changed enough to prevent future cases or address the pain of existing ones.
A statement from the Vatican press office on Friday said the cardinals were discussing sexual abuse in the church as a ''wound' to be kept 'open', so that awareness of the problem remains alive and concrete paths for its healing can be identified.'
The biggest revelations have been concentrated in the United States, Australia and Europe. But in most of Asia, Africa and Latin America, 'a lot has yet to come out, so this will continue to rumble on,' said Miles Pattenden, a historian who studies the Catholic Church at Oxford University.
The Global South
The biggest growth areas for the Catholic Church are in Africa and Asia. The cardinals selecting the next pope are surely discussing whether to choose someone from one of those regions. Whoever they elect will need to reckon with the proliferation of cultures and traditions, as well as spiritual heritages, among new followers. Some may come with different expectations of what role the faith plays in their lives and how they should accommodate its rules.
Whether or not the new pope comes from those regions, he 'must be one who is ready to speak to the injustices that exist in relationship between the global north and the global south in international politics,' said Nora Kofognotera Nonterah, a theological ethicist at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana. 'A pope cannot run away from that in the 21st century.'
As the church recruits new followers, it will also need to find a way to speak to its youngest members. 'Young people are no longer interested in taking directives and working with directives,' Dr. Nonterah said. 'They want to ask questions and they want to be asked questions.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Letters to the Editor: CAIR's national deputy director defends the group against L.A. Times op-ed
Letters to the Editor: CAIR's national deputy director defends the group against L.A. Times op-ed

Los Angeles Times

time3 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Letters to the Editor: CAIR's national deputy director defends the group against L.A. Times op-ed

To the editor: Contributing writer Josh Hammer's recent column repeats bigoted, discredited conspiracy theories about American Muslims ('Label the Muslim Brotherhood's branches as terrorist organizations,' Aug. 15). Just as extremists once smeared Catholic and Jewish Americans as disloyal and accused Black civil rights leaders and Vietnam War protesters of being communist agents, Islamophobes today falsely claim that American Muslim institutions are part of a global terrorist conspiracy. The main target of Hammer's article was my civil rights group, the Council on American-Islamic Relations. For more than 30 years, CAIR has defended free speech, racial equality and religious liberty while consistently condemning all forms of bigotry — including antisemitism and Islamophobia — and unjust violence. We have spoken out against terrorism so often that ISIS once put a target on our executive director. Like other American Muslim institutions, CAIR is an independent nonprofit, not an agent of any foreign group. If Hammer's real grievance with CAIR is our advocacy for Palestinian human rights, polls show that most Americans oppose U.S. support for Israel's devastating war in Gaza. Does Hammer smear American Muslim groups because he fears our growing civic engagement will continue to reorient U.S. policy on Israel and Gaza in a more just, humane direction? Anti-Muslim and anti-Palestinian activists are entitled to lash out, but the rest of us should not take their bigoted conspiracy theories seriously. Edward Ahmed Mitchell, Washington, writer is a civil rights attorney and the national deputy director of CAIR.

Pope Leo to visit Lebanon, cardinal says, in likely first trip abroad
Pope Leo to visit Lebanon, cardinal says, in likely first trip abroad

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pope Leo to visit Lebanon, cardinal says, in likely first trip abroad

By Joshua McElwee VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -Pope Leo plans to visit Lebanon, the country's senior Catholic official announced on Wednesday, in what could be the first visit outside Italy by the new leader of the global Church. The pope will travel to Lebanon "by December", Cardinal Bechara Rai told the al-Arabiya television channel. Rai, leader of the 3.5-million-member Maronite Catholic Church, did not give a specific date for the visit but said "preparations are already underway". A Lebanese official familiar with the matter confirmed that discussions were being held about a visit towards the end of the year, though a date had not yet been finalised. Leo, the first U.S. pope, was elected by the world's Catholic cardinals on May 8 to replace the late Pope Francis, who had planned to visit Lebanon but was unable to go because of health issues. Lebanon is home to more than two million Catholics, according to Vatican statistics. A Vatican spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Rai's remarks. A Vatican official, who asked not to be named, confirmed that a trip was being planned and said it could be part of a tour that would also include Turkey. Travelling abroad has become a major part of the modern papacy, with popes seeking to meet local Catholics, spread the faith, and conduct international diplomacy. They often draw crowds in the millions. Francis made 47 visits abroad during his 12-year papacy, travelling to 68 countries. He made a policy of visiting countries that often did not draw international attention as a way of highlighting problems in what he called the "peripheries" of the world. Leo has been expected to visit Turkey in late November as part of celebrations for the 1,700th anniversary of a major early Church council, which took place in Nicaea, now called Iznik. In a message to Lebanon earlier this month, Leo commemorated the fifth anniversary of a huge chemical explosion at the Beirut port that killed 200 people and caused billions of dollars worth of damage. "Beloved and suffering Lebanon remains at the centre of our prayers," said the pope.

Pope calls for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican

time4 hours ago

Pope calls for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican

VATICAN CITY -- VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV asked people to fast on Friday to pray for peace and justice in the Middle East and Ukraine, issuing a special appeal as he returned to the Vatican from summer vacation. At the end of his weekly general audience Wednesday, Leo recalled that Friday is a special feast day dedicated to the Virgin Mary. He urged Catholic faithful to spend the day fasting and 'praying that the Lord grants peace and justice, and dries the tears of all those who are suffering as a result of the armed conflicts underway.' Leo has called for ceasefires in Gaza and Ukraine and for dialogue to achieve peace. Wednesday marked Leo's first day back at the Vatican after a period of vacation at the papal summer retreat in Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome. Going forward, the pope has some important appointments including special audiences for the Vatican's 2025 Holy Year and the Sept. 7 canonization of the Catholic Church's first millennial saint Carlo Acutis. At the end of Wednesday's audience, Leo received a special gift: A Ping-Pong table decorated with his papal coat of arms. Leo, an avid tennis player, gamely picked up a paddle and bounced a ball on it, but the ball rolled into the net.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store