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The Impoverished Catholic Conversation

Pope Francis said he was going to shift the Church's focus. So far, he has failed
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Catholic blogger Robert Delahunty says Pope Francis has blown the opportunity he had for turning the global Catholic Church’s conversation away from the culture war of the West, toward the struggles that Third World Christians face with poverty and oppression. Excerpt:

The new Pope would speak for the populations of the emerging world – for their suffering, their desperation, their resilience, their energy, their sense of hope. The “North/South” polarity would supplant the “Left/Right” one. The Church would make the pivot to poverty. In making that turn, it would address the West too – but by awakening it from the deadly self-absorption of the affluent.

So when one learns that the Synod of Catholic cardinals and bishops summoned by the same Pope has returned the conversation to the culture wars of the West – though with unmistakable overtones of capitulation on many of the bishops’ part — it is, to say no more, a disappointment. Try as it may, the Church under Francis seems to be unable to resist scratching the sores of Western sexuality. The consuming obsessions of the West, now in the terminal phases of the sexual and cultural revolutions that have swept over it for more than half a century, are dominating the Church’s agenda once again. At the Pope’s insistence, the bishops did a reset, plunging the Church into renewed debate over divorce and homosexuality and cutting short the conversation that the Pope had earlier invited over famine, persecution and want. With Islamist terrorist groups like Boko Haram recently murdering 2500 Catholics in one Nigerian diocese alone, and with Christian children being crucified or cut in half by ISIS, you might think that the world’s bishops would have more pressing things on their mind than the compatibility of same-sex unions with Church teaching. You would, of course, be wrong.

Delahunty points out that the pope’s point man at the Synod, Cardinal Walter Kasper, let the cat out of the bag when he disdained the Africans. Could it be, Delahunty asks, that the Africans don’t only disagree with the West on homosexuality, but also see the kind of decline in religious faith that they don’t want to import to their own nations? More:

Pope Francis was right (at first): it really is time to change the conversation. The global Church is not the parochial Western Church; the Church of the poor and the marginal is not the affluent, greying Church of Western Europe and North America. The Church should not be shadowing the West’s cultural trajectory all the way downwards. The future of the Church lies elsewhere. Ex oriente, lux.

Read the whole thing.

[H/T: Mark Movsesian]

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