Catholic clergy aim to mend rifts
Bishops at odds on audits, who's worthy of rites
Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick, center, joins his fellow clergy in prayer at last year's U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meeting.
J. Scott Applewhite, Associated Press
In a private retreat this week, U.S. Roman Catholic bishops will discuss some internal church rifts that have become uncomfortably public over the clergy sex abuse crisis and, separately, Holy Communion and politics.
Bishops disagree on whether Catholic lawmakers at odds with church teaching should receive the sacrament. They've sparked a national debate on the issue as a Catholic who supports abortion rights John Kerry is poised to become the Democratic nominee for president.
The bishops also will decide whether to override the objections of some U.S. church leaders and authorize a second round of audits of American dioceses reviews that are aimed at determining whether the dioceses are doing enough to combat the molestation scandal.
Bishops hope to emerge from the weeklong meeting, which starts Monday in Englewood, Colo., with a more unified message on both fronts, church observers say.
"When everybody looks at the Catholic Church, they equate it with the hierarchy, and they think the hierarchy speaks with one voice or one mind," said David Gibson, a former Vatican newsman and author of "The Coming Catholic Church." "What these various controversies has shown is the reality that they're not united, that they have enormous differences of opinion within their own ranks."
Each bishop decides policy on interacting with politicians for his own diocese, and even officials in the Vatican have noted the American discord.
Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis has said he would not give the sacrament to Kerry. Other bishops have said Kerry should not attempt to take Communion but would not be denied if he did. Bishop Michael Sheridan of Colorado Springs, Colo., said even those who vote for Catholic politicians who support policy contrary to church teaching should refrain from taking Communion.
Yet several prelates have said Communion should not be used as a sanction.
A task force, led by Washington Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, is looking into the situation and will give an interim report at this week's meeting, but may not release its final guidelines for church leaders until after the November election.
Meanwhile, more divisions have come to light over the abuse audits, which were part of the bishops' toughened policy on sex abuse approved two years ago.
Bishops in Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and elsewhere sent confidential letters to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops asking for the diocesan reviews to be delayed.
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