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US bishops' rifts unlikely to ease after Benedict's death

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FILE - Bishops watch Pope Benedict XVI on a large video monitor during a rally with young people and seminarians at Saint Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y., Saturday, April 19, 2008. Many of the conservative prelates who dominate the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops were appointed by Benedict. Even after his death in December 2022, Catholic academics and clergy say his absence is unlikely to weaken the conservatives' collective power or end the culture wars that have divided the USCCB. (AP Photo/File)

NEW YORK ā€“ Many of the conservative prelates who dominate the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops were appointed by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. His recent death deprives them of a symbolic figurehead but is unlikely to weaken their collective power or end the culture wars that have divided the USCCB, according to Catholic academics and clergy.

David Gibson, director of Fordham Universityā€™s Center on Religion and Culture, noted that conservative-leaning bishops were appointed over a 35-year period by Benedict and his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, and routinely prevail in voting over the relatively more liberal group of bishops appointed since 2013 by Pope Francis.

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ā€œThat conservative core is better organized and, as shown by the recent election of USCCB officers, more motivated as it reacts against the more open and unpredictable style of Francis,ā€ Gibson said via email.

ā€œThe Francis-style bishops are not as numerous nor as well-organized,ā€ Gibson added. ā€œBut they are also contending with well-organized conservative Catholic activists who can make their jobs exceedingly difficult if those bishops are perceived as being too focused on social justice or other teachings perceived as ā€˜progressive.'ā€

The USCCB doesn't track the number of bishops appointed by individual popes, according to its spokesperson, Chieko Noguchi. A sociology professor who does do such tracking, Katie Hoegeman of Missouri State University, said says that of more than than 200 bishops now active in the USCCB, about half were initially appointed by Francis and half by his two predecessors.

Massimo Faggioli, a professor of historical theology at Villanova University, says he doesnā€™t foresee any major shift in the USCCBā€™s decision-making in the aftermath of Benedictā€™s death.

ā€œIt is a fact that whenever thereā€™s an election (within the USCCB), the more conservative side always wins,ā€ he said in a telephone interview.

One reason for the conservativesā€™ sustained dominance, Faggioli said, is that Benedict and John Paul II appointed bishops at relatively young ages. For example, outspoken conservative Salvatore Cordileone was 46 when named a bishop by John Paul in 2002; he was promoted to be archbishop of San Francisco by Benedict 10 years later.

Cordileone has been among the USCCB members to differ openly with Pope Francis on high-profile issues, notably barring U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi ā€“ a Catholic from San Francisco ā€“ from receiving Communion in the archdiocese because of her support for abortion rights. Francis has made clear he opposes using denial of Communion for this type of repudiation.

ā€œItā€™s difficult to say what a Francis bishop stands for ā€“ they donā€™t correspond to a single profile,ā€ Faggioli said, ā€œItā€™s easy to say what a Benedict bishop stands for ā€¦ they brought in a very distinct cultural war mentality.ā€

The divisions within the USCCB are so pronounced that they were highlighted in a statement from Timothy Broglio, the Archbishop of the Military Services, USA, after his election in November as the conferenceā€™s new president.

ā€œWe do suffer from a damaged unity,ā€ Broglio said.

ā€œWe have a responsibility to cultivate that unity, which does not mean that we are carbon copies of one another or always have the same approaches to a problem.ā€ he said. ā€œIt does mean that, if we disagree, we first speak among ourselves. We are not obliged to imitate the society around us by contributing to diatribes about others.ā€

One of the minority of U.S. bishops who energetically align with Pope Francis is John Stowe, bishop of Lexington, Kentucky.

During the November USCCB meeting at which Broglio was elected, Stowe unsuccessfully urged his fellow bishops to overhaul a longstanding statement on ā€œFaithful Citizenshipā€ so it would reflect some of Francisā€™ priorities, such as climate change and economic justice.

Stowe was subsequently asked by the Jesuit magazine America what he saw ahead for the USCCB during Broglioā€™s three-year term.

ā€œWeā€™re definitely not going to be going in the direction of Pope Francis any more than we have, and thatā€™s unfortunate,ā€ Stowe replied. ā€œI hope Archbishop Broglio can bring us together a little bit better than we have been, but Iā€™d also like to see Francisā€™ agenda much higher on the bishopsā€™ priorities.ā€

America then asked Stowe if lay Catholics were wearying of the confrontational approach of some USCCB bishops.

ā€œI think the conference is becoming more and more irrelevant to average Catholics,ā€ Stowe replied.

Indeed, the hardline stances of many conservative U.S. bishops are not shared by a majority of lay Catholics, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research in June. Most respondents said abortion should be legal, favored greater inclusion of LGBT people, and opposed the denial of Communion for politicians who support abortion rights.

Stowe was appointed bishop by Pope Francis in 2015.

Francis, in addition to his appointment of bishops, has appointed five cardinals during his papacy, most recently San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy. He was picked over higher-ranking prelates such as Cordileone and Los Angles Archbishop JosƩ H. Gomez

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, who has been the archbishop of New York since his appointment to that post by Benedict in 2009, expressed relief that the opposing ideological camps within the USCCB had responded to Benedictā€™s death with ā€œinclusive praise.ā€

ā€œIā€™m just very touched by it,ā€ he told The Associated Press in Rome.

But he demurred when asked if the USCCBā€™s culture wars might subside.

ā€œUnfortunately, youā€™re talking to a church historian, so I have to say, that is nothing new,ā€ he said. ā€œTheyā€™ve always been going on and theyā€™ll continue.ā€

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AP Vatican correspondent Nicole Winfield contributed to this report.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APā€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


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