More than 150 Catholics – bishops, priests and academics – have launched a statement in support of Pope Francis.
The Pro Pope Francis open letter, available in English and German, follows the “filial correction” of Pope Francis, which claimed that the Pope had helped to spread heresies.
The signatories, including eight bishops, address the Pope, saying: “Your pastoral initiatives and their theological justification are currently under vehement attacks by a group in the church. With this open letter, we want to express our gratitude for your courageous and theologically sound papal leadership.”
They congratulate the Pope on “reshaping the pastoral culture of the Roman Catholic Church”, adding: “We share your dream.”
Prominent signatories include the German politician Wolfgang Thierse, once Bundestag president, and László Sólyom, the former president of Hungary.
One signatory, Martha Heizer, was excommunicated by Pope Francis in 2014 for co-hosting private “Masses” in her home at which no priests were present.
Another, the philosopher Gerard Hughes SJ, has written in a piece on abortion: “The embryo is a potential person, but that is very different – and morally different – from being a person … I don’t think we can draw any sharp lines.”
The other UK-based signatory, Prof Thomas O’Loughlin, is an academic patron of the Wijngaards Institute, whose website records that “Our clash with traditional views came to a head in 1994 when the Vatican declared that the exclusion of women from the ordained ministries was definitive and should no longer be discussed.”
Some signatories are members of the group We Are Church, which advocates sweeping changes to the Church, including the admission of women to the priesthood.
Fr Paul Zulehner, an organiser of the petition, said: “The letter deliberately does not address controversial issues. The question of women’s ordination does not play an explicit role in our action.”
Benedict ‘near death’ rumours denied
Archbishop Georg Gänswein has rejected rumours that Benedict XVI is close to death.
The Pope Emeritus’s personal secretary said a quotation circulating on social media, attributed to him, is a “pure invention”. It said: “Pope Benedict … can no longer walk without help and can no longer celebrate Mass.” The archbishop said that he had received many messages asking about this “false and wrong” story.
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