ROME, October 10, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com)
 – Pope Francis has the heart of a liberal, and I’m not speaking here of
 "liberal" in the pejorative sense, but in the positive sense - a 
generous and child-like heart.  With this heart and his mandate to care 
for souls, Pope Francis can perform miracles, even the miracle of 
halting the downward spiral of the Catholic Church in the West.  It will
 take radical action to achieve that miracle, and it is just such a 
heart that is needed to take such radical action. 
 In addition to having the heart for action, realistic perception is 
required, to see the needs of the Church all over the world. Those who 
advise the Pope on the status of the situation globally aid in this 
monumental task.  The role is principally, but not exclusively taken up 
by clergy from all parts of the globe who have regular meetings with the
 Pope to advise him.
 However, it seems that he has had some very questionable advice.  This 
can be seen very clearly in his remarks from his interview on the return
 flight from World Youth Day in Rio. 
 The official Vatican transcript
 of the interview records a reporter asking him: “You did not speak 
about abortion, about same-sex marriage.  In Brazil a law has been 
approved which widens the right to abortion and permits marriage between
 people of the same sex.  Why did you not speak about this?”
 Pope Francis replied, “The Church has already spoken quite clearly on 
this.  It was unnecessary to return to it, just as I didn’t speak about 
cheating, lying, or other matters on which the Church has a clear 
teaching!” 
 When the reporter pressed again saying, “But the young are interested 
in this,” Pope Francis said, “Yes, though it wasn’t necessary to speak 
of it, but rather of the positive things that open up the path to young 
people.  Isn’t that right! Besides, young people know perfectly well 
what the Church’s position is.”
 As many of the activists in the trenches of the culture wars in North America and Europe have remarked, the youth of today do not
 know what the Church teaches on these matters. They have misperceptions
 of the Church’s teachings, viewing them as a big ‘no’ to all things 
fun, but have no clue about the truth, beauty and depth of the Church’s 
teaching. Moreover, as speakers on these controversial topics will 
readily attest, the youth are hungry for such discussion, especially 
from those who, like Pope Francis, are willing and able to speak freely 
and from the heart about these issues.
 Polling
Recent polling
 shows that Pope Francis has a higher approval rating, at 89% favorable 
or very favorable, among American Catholics than both of his 
predecessors. The same poll asked Catholics: “As you may know, Pope 
Francis recently remarked that the church has become too focused on 
issues like homosexuality, abortion and contraceptives. Do you agree or 
disagree?” Sixty-eight percent agreed. 
 The same poll
 that found a majority of Catholics approving of Pope Francis and 
agreeing with his supposed belief that the church is too focused on 
abortion, etc., also showed that Catholic Americans approved of same-sex
 “marriage” at a higher rate than the average American.  The poll found 
56% of all Americans approving of same-sex "marrige," but among 
Catholics it’s 60%. Even among Catholics who attend Mass every week, the
 poll notes a majority (53%) support homosexual "marriage." 
 Similarly, questions on legal abortion found Catholic Americans only 
very slightly less approving than the average American. A majority of 
Catholics - 52% - were found to support legal abortion in all or most 
cases, with the American average at 54%. 
 While it is undoubtedly a good thing that Pope Francis is able to reach
 a wide and diverse audience through his popularity, there are troubling
 questions about whether this popularity is based more upon an authentic
 encounter with the real Pope Francis and everything he stands for, or 
with a fabricated Pope that has been created by media-driven 
misinterpretations of some of the more ambiguous statements in his 
recent interviews.
 There is a considerable body of evidence to indicate that many of the 
Pope’s more unlikely fans are more enamored with a pope of their own 
imagination than the real thing, and that at some point there is going 
to be a necessary correction in the public square, as many of these fans
 recognize that he will not, contrary to their hopes, change any Church 
teachings on their pet moral issues. 
 Media using Pope’s remarks to attack Catholic activists
Since the off-the-cuff papal interviews began, it has become 
commonplace for media pundits to use selective quotes from Pope Francis 
to berate Catholic activists in the life and family arena. A few of the 
many examples will illustrate the trend.
 On September 20, CNN host Chris Cuomo used Pope Francis’ remarks to 
attack the Catholic League’s Bill Donohue, a stalwart defender of the 
Church and her teachings on life and family matters.  “You just heard 
what the Pope said. Why wouldn’t you try to move past this parsing 
rhetoric and try to be what your Church is supposed to be about?” And 
again, cutting off Donohue, Cuomo quipped, “The Pope has given you a 
different message. He’s saying don’t make these statements about the 
homosexuals, don’t make these statements about the Jews, get back to 
what your Church is about. Jesus wasn’t about what you’re doing right 
now. Are you going to hear that message or not? Because it doesn’t sound
 like it.” 
 On Fox News Detroit’s Let It Rip program of September 29, the 
hosts spoke with homosexual ‘marriage’ promoter John Corvino about a 
Catholic college’s decision to disinvite him from speaking on campus, 
and representing the Catholic position was Fr. Paul Nicholson, a priest 
known for his rock-solid evangelization efforts.  
 On the show, not only Corvino, but also the hosts, repeatedly pushed 
Fr. Nicholson over their misreading of Pope Francis’ remarks. Speaking 
of the Pope, one of the hosts said, “He’s not endorsing the gay 
lifestyle but he’s saying we have to be more accepting of it.” Then 
again, answering the priest’s explanation that the Pope did not change 
Church teaching on the matter, the host said, “No, but he is saying, 
didn’t you think that he did say, that we need to be more accepting of 
gay people and not focus on the negatives of these peoples’ private 
lifestyles?”
 An October 6th New York Times article
 covered a Catholic University voting on whether or not to remove 
coverage for elective abortion from the staff health care plan.  Writer 
Ian Lovett began his piece this way: “Not three weeks have passed since 
Pope Francis said the church had grown ‘obsessed’ with abortion, 
declaring, 'We have to find a new balance.' But on the campus of Loyola 
Marymount University, overlooking this city’s west side, a fight over 
abortion now threatens to rip the school asunder.”
 Political Catholics
 House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, known as the leading promoter of 
abortion and homosexuality in Congress while simultaneously proclaiming 
herself to be a devout Catholic, was interviewed on CNN about the Pope’s remarks.  Like President Obama, who recently said he was “hugely impressed”
 with the Pope’s pronouncements, Pelosi was ecstatic. “(He’s) starting 
to sound like a nun. The Pope is starting to sound like the nuns,” 
Pelosi began, in an apprent reference to the liberal reputation of many 
of the older religious orders in the United States, many of which were 
recently investigated by the Vatican and promoting views contrary to the faith. 
 “I was there for his inauguration. And I, being Catholic, believed that
 he was chosen Pope by the intercession of the Holy Spirit, so I pay 
attention to what he says,” she said. “And I can tell you that there is 
great joy among Catholics and friends of Catholics … It’s really quite 
remarkable. It’s a source of joy to us all.”
 When the host noted that the comments were not a source of joy for all 
Catholics and that conservative Catholics had expressed some 
reservations, Pelosi responded: “I don’t know about them because 
certainly when it was another Pope who had something else to say, they 
wanted to hold us all to it.”
 Pro-abortion New York Congressman Charles Rangel wrote in the New York Times
 that the Pope’s remarks were “a much-needed call for the clergy to move
 beyond the threats of excommunication or denying communion to 
pro-choice politicians.”
 “As a former altar boy who has never shied away from pleading with the 
Church to broaden its focus beyond gays, abortion and birth control, I 
thank Pope Francis for urging the Church to refocus on its fundamental 
teachings of love and compassion,” he said.
 Leaders of Catholic institutions
The new President of a Minnesota Catholic college used her reading of 
Pope Francis’ remarks on homosexuality to justify allowing practicing 
homosexuals to be professors at the college.  In her opening speech at convocation,
 Julie Sullivan, President of the University of St. Thomas, announced, 
“It pains me to think that a gay student, staff or faculty member would 
ever feel unwelcome or a need to ‘hide’ at St. Thomas. As Pope Francis 
reminds us, we are not called to judge. We are called to love and 
support everyone in our community regardless of their sexual 
orientation. And, I might add, regardless of the gender of their 
spouse.”
 At a Catholic school board meeting in Ottawa, Ontario in late September, a Catholic trustee invoked Pope Francis to question
 a delegation of parents who were concerned over the board’s promotion 
of a pro-abortion group.  The parents suggested replacing problematic 
partners with those who “refuse to participate in any immoral 
activities.” After the presentation, a trustee demanded to know if the 
parent-presenter had “listened [to] or heard the Pope’s latest statement
 and clarification.”
 Dissident Catholics
Initial euphoric reactions from liberal Catholics were trumpeted in mainstream media all over the world.
 Catholics for a Free Choice, in their press release
 on the day of the publication of the Jesuit interview, said, “We 
welcome what Pope Francis said today when he called for the Catholic 
church to be ‘home for all’ and not a ‘small chapel’ focused on doctrine
 and limited views on moral teachings.”  The pro-abortion ‘Catholic’ 
group’s President, Jon O’Brien, added, “We hope he takes steps to ensure
 that his more open view of how the church should deal with people 
trickles down to his brother bishops around the world.”
 The press release
 from the homosexuality promoting ‘Catholic’ group Dignity USA stated: 
“We find much to be hopeful about, particularly in the Pope’s firm 
desire that the Church be a ’home for all people,’ and his belief that 
God looks on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people with 
love rather than condemnation.”
 DignityUSA Executive Director Marianne Duddy-Burke added: “LGBT 
Catholics and allies will rejoice in the Pope’s call for Church leaders 
to focus on being pastors rather than rule enforcers. We hope that the 
bishops will heed this call and immediately end their anti-LGBT 
campaigns, the firings of church workers for who they are, the attacks 
on people who challenge or question official teachings, and the 
exclusive and judgmental rhetoric that comes too often from our 
pulpits.” She concluded, “The Pope is unambiguous. Leave the bully 
pulpit, and accompany your people.”
 Sister Jeanine Gramick, who heads up the pro-homosexual group New Ways Ministry, which has already been publicly sanctioned by Church leadership, was on MSNBC television
 with a glowing reaction to the Papal interview. ”I cried when I first 
began to read it,” she said.  She repeatedly said the Pope is saying 
that these “these hot button issues” are “not essential.”
 Communists
Paul Kengor, a convert to Catholicism who was drawn, as he says, “to 
the Church initially in large part because of its stalwart 
anti-communism across centuries,” was dismayed to report that he found praise for Pope Francis in the pages of the radical communist publication People’s World.
Writing in the American Spectator,
 Kengor notes, “After decades of slandering, attacking, denigrating, and
 even trying to kill various popes in the Roman Catholic Church — from 
Pope Pius XII to Pope John Paul II — communists are suddenly embracing a
 pope.”
Commenting on the Jesuit magazine interview with Pope Francis, the 
Communist publication argued that “the most important point the Pope 
made regarded the narrow focus of some Catholics on a few controversial 
issues of sexual morality.”
Author Henry Millstein explained: “Why should this matter to 
progressives? Because Catholic (and other) right-wingers, including, 
lamentably, some bishops, have latched on to this narrow set of issues 
to promote a broader right-wing agenda. If the essence of being Catholic
 is to oppose abortion, gay marriage, and contraception, then faithful 
Catholics (and some other Christians) can easily be hoodwinked into 
supporting rightist candidates who line up with this agenda, 
disregarding flagrant violations of other aspects of Catholic teaching. 
Pope Francis knocked the legs out from under this ploy…”
 From the Pews
Some of the first reaction from Catholics in the pews to be publicly revealed came in the column of Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput.   Describing responses he received to the Pope’s Jesuit magazine interview, Archbishop Chaput wrote:
Some people grasped at the interview like a lifeline — or a vindication. One person praised the Holy Father for stressing that the “Church must focus on compassion and mercy, not on enforcing small-minded rules.” She added that “we’re at last free from the chains of hatred that have ruled the Catholic Church for so many years and led to my unease in bringing my own children into that Church.”
More common though were emails from catechists, parents, and everyday Catholics who felt confused by media headlines suggesting that the Church had somehow changed her teaching on a variety of moral issues.
I heard from a mother of four children – one adopted, another disabled from birth — who’d spent years counseling pregnant girls and opening prolife clinics. She wanted to know why the Pope seemed to dismiss her sacrifices.
A priest said the Pope “has implicitly accused brother priests who are serious about moral issues of being small minded,” and that “[if you’re a priest,] being morally serious is now likely to get you publicly cast as a problem.” Another priest wrote that “the problem is that [the Holy Father] makes all of the wrong people happy, people who will never believe in the Gospel and who will continue to persecute the Church.”
 LifeSiteNews co-founder Steve Jalsevac described another perception in his recent blog post
 on Pope Francis’ interviews. He related that his priest gave a homily 
on angels and demons with a strong pro-life emphasis and later there was
 a pro-life announcement that generated applause from the people. 
Afterward in the parking lot a “disgruntled older couple” was overheard 
“complaining about all the abortion talk during the Mass.”  One of them 
said, “Don’t they know what Pope Francis just said?"
 A parish group in Ontario, Canada which has participated in a yearly 
fundraiser for the pro-life cause, has let the pro-life group in 
question know that “because of what the Holy Father has said,” they will
 no longer be participating in the fundraiser.
 Catholics have also found a new need to defend against charges that the
 Pope is no longer pro-life. At a LifeChain on Sunday in Valparaiso, 
Indiana, Dr. Richard Stith reports, “we held our annual peaceful, 
prayerful Life Chain protest against abortion. A  Mennonite protester 
asked a Catholic, "What do you think of your Pope coming out 
pro-abortion?"
 Priests
Priests have not been immune from misinterpretations of Pope Francis’ remarks. 
 A Rhode Island newspaper did interviews with a number of local priests 
in response to Pope Francis’ “Who am I to judge” remark concerning 
homosexuality.
 Father David Thurber, ordained in 2008, told the newspaper
 he saw in Pope Francis’ remarks a justification for refusing to deny 
communion to couples living together without being married. “I am not in
 the business of denying Communion,” he said. “As Pope Francis said, 
it’s not fair to judge. I preach the Gospel, and whoever hears it, hears
 it.”
 Redemptorist priest Fr Tony Flannery, one of the five Irish priests 
censured by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith and 
threatened with excommunication over his stand on women priests and 
contraception, has also lauded the Pope’s interview.
 He told the Irish Independent:
 “What the Pope said seems to amount to a fairly substantial critique of
 the way in which the Curia and, in particular, the Congregation for the
 Doctrine of Faith have been operating.”
 The Pope said that in some cases, when Vatican Congregations are not 
functioning well, "they run the risk of becoming institutions of 
censorship". The paper says the Pope’s call for local bishops’ 
conferences to handle such matters could potentially be "good news" for 
Fr. Flannery and the other censured Irish priests.
 Fr Flannery added: “It changes the rules of the game in the sense that 
it appears that the Curia has largely been taken out of the business of 
dealing with disciplinary matters and it has been handed back to the 
local church to deal with it.”
 He also said there was "no question" that the Pope was criticizing the 
"thought police" who spent their time reporting people to Rome.
 Conclusion
Let us pray for Pope Francis and his collaborators that they may have 
the strength, courage and wisdom to direct the Church in Her mission to 
save souls.  Some contend that “it would be opportune, in order to gain 
those who differ from us, to omit certain points of teaching which are 
of lesser importance, and to tone down the meaning which the Church has 
always attached to them.” However, the Church has already visited such 
suggestions and has determined, “Such a policy would tend rather to 
separate Catholics from the Church than to bring in those who differ.”
 That was the determination of Pope Leo XIII in his 1899 encyclical letter to the then-Archbishop of Baltimore. 
 Concluding his point, Pope Leo said that there was nothing closer to 
his heart “than to have those who are separated from the fold of Christ 
return to it.”  He added, however, “but in no other way than the way 
pointed out by Christ.