By MARY WARD
Australians just love talking about Catholicism, don’t they?
The fascination became pretty clear when the installation of Pope Francis occurred within the same fortnight of the installation of the current Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Justin Welby, earlier this year.
Two near-identical positions – each within a different branch of Christianity. With not exceptionally disparate numbers of faithful in Australia (17% of Australian identified as Anglican on the 2011 census, compared with 25% identifying as Catholic.)
And yet all we wanted to talk about was the Pope.
What would he be like? Would he support gay marriage? How about his stance on abortion? Would he be black? Would he be Cardinal Pell?
I am at a loss as to why anyone would care about these things if they weren’t Catholic themselves. But secular media really does love the spectacle of the Papacy. The pomp and ceremony are arresting for our media.
And ever since Pope Francis was voted into the top job, they just haven’t been able to get enough. Because, this new bloke is different to Pope Benedict XVI. So different, in fact, that the UK Guardian’s Marina Hyde has gone so far as to ask: “Is the Pope Catholic?”
It all started with this:
Top Comments
Good article! But . . .
People assign mega-labels such as "conservative" to a swag of completely different issues. Is Abbott more conservative than the Pope? On one side you picked some pertinent issues to say that he is. On the other, Francis unequivocally opposes abortion and IVF, while Abbott has renounced those positions loudly. The Pope's opposition to same-sex marriage, and homosexual sex, is quite clear, despite (quite consistently) advocating compassion and love for all.
In these things Francis is no different to Benedict, though clearly in style and emphasis they differ. We style Francis as progressive, but Benedict and JP2 as conservative. Yet you could analyse these same issues for those popes and come to the same conclusions you did above. You could add their opposition to our role in the Iraq war and their denunciations of the excesses of capitalism.
Economic theories, border protection/refugee intake, marriage laws and abortion laws have absolutely nothing to do with each other, and people need to stop lumping them together.
(A side note: It is a massive stretch to argue that a position is "so far away from the Catholic faith" on the basis that some Catholic school-kids (Jesuit educated) wrote a letter opposing it. For any Catholic who knows modern Jesuits and Catholic schools, this probably undermines your otherwise sound argument more than it supports it.)
The Pope is not "conservative" he is orthodox, just as all other Popes have been before him. Nothing the Pope has said in regarding abortion and same sex relationships in any way compromises the non-negotiable teachings of the Church on these matters, and comments similar to his were actually made by Pope Benedict in the past (although for some reason they don't seem to have been given the same media coverage).
While the Catholic Church may be a "broad church" in terms of political affiliations of its members, its teachings on major issues could not be more clear. Support for abortion, for example, is as incompatible with Catholicism as meat eating is with vegetarianism. The reason that you find Catholics on different sides of the political spectrum is that neither the left or right of politics fits perfectly with the Catholic faith. On moral and life issues, the Church could be considered "conservative" and therefore to the right of politics. Yet on social justice issues Church teaching is probably closer to the left of politics. So for individual Catholics it comes down to which aspect of Church teaching they value most. It also follows that, any orthodox Catholic who enters politics in either of the major political parties will generally have to compromise their beliefs in certain areas.