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    Pope calls for inclusive Catholic Church

    April 11, 2016

    VATICAN: In a broad proclamation on family life, Pope Francis called for the Roman Catholic Church to be more welcoming and less judgmental, and he seemingly signaled a pastoral path for divorced and remarried Catholics to receive holy communion.

    The 256-page document - known as an apostolic exhortation and titled "Amoris Laetitia," Latin for "The Joy of Love" - calls for priests to welcome single parents, gay people and unmarried straight couples who are living together. "A pastor cannot feel that it is enough to simply apply moral laws to those living in 'irregular' situations, as if they were stones to throw at people's lives," he wrote.

     

    But Francis once again closed the door on same-sex marriage, saying it cannot be seen as the equivalent of heterosexual unions.


    The document offers no new rules or marching orders, and from the outset Francis makes plain that no top-down edicts are coming.


    Alluding to the diversity and complexity of a global church, Francis effectively pushes decision making downward to bishops and priests, stating that a different country or region "can seek solutions better suited to its culture and sensitive to its traditions and local needs."


    But Francis also makes clear the vision he wants local bishops and priests to follow: as a church that greets families with empathy and comfort rather than with unbending rules and rigid codes of conduct.


    The scope of "Amoris Laetitia" is typical Francis: a broad-ranging blend of biblical passages, meditations on marital love, homespun advice on familial manners, passages bemoaning the frenetic loneliness of modern life and a call for families to come closer to the church, and vice versa. He admits that the church has made mistakes in alienating families and dedicates many passages to describing the pressures brought on families by poverty, migration, drug abuse and violence.


    Just as he used his environmental encyclical, "Laudato Si'," to call on national governments to enact legislation to fight climate change, Francis now calls for governments to provide support for families in the form of health care, education and employment. He describes families as under siege by the pressures of modern life.

    - AFP

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