fbpx
30.6 F
Spokane
Thursday, December 19, 2024
spot_img
HomeNewsUS bishops try to capture some of Pope Francis’ media mojo

US bishops try to capture some of Pope Francis’ media mojo

Date:

Related stories

Moscow Residents Pack Meeting to Combat Christ Church’s Growing Influence

Nearly 200 Moscow residents gathered to discuss combating Christian nationalism after podcast host Heath Druzin's investigation into Christ Church's growing influence in Idaho.

New Spokane Faith Group, Commoners, To Host ‘A Blue Christmas’ to Address Holiday Struggles

Commoners, a new progressive spiritual group in Spokane launches with a Blue Christmas event addressing holiday season difficulties.

Washington State bill would create 5 gender categories for school sports

Explore the proposed changes to gender categories in school sports for trans youth. Learn about the debate surrounding fairness and inclusion in athletic competitions.

Study says less than half of Americans attend church on Christmas

Learn about the changing trends in attending church during Christmas. Discover why less than half of Americans will attend church during this festive season.

Spokane leaders address school gun safety on Sandy Hook Anniversary

Exploe the ongoing impact of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting on national debates about school safety and gun policy, including gun laws in Washington and Spokane County.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

[todaysdate]
BALTIMORE (RNS) Much of the private discussions at the fall meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops have focused on how the American hierarchy can shift its priorities to better track those of Pope Francis, especially on social justice issues such as poverty and immigration.

But what they’d really like to do is channel the pontiff’s media mojo.

“With Pope Francis, we are tending to be identified by what we are for rather than what we are against,” said Auxiliary Bishop Christopher Coyne of Indianapolis, who was elected Tuesday (Nov. 11) to oversee the bishops’ communications strategy.

In fact, since the moment he was elected pope last year, Francis changed the entire media narrative about the Vatican — from a source of scandal and dysfunction under Benedict XVI to the launchpad for Catholic reform and renewal based on a message of mercy.

With his pastoral touch and simple lifestyle, Francis won accolades across the spectrum as he graced the covers of magazines as varied as Time, Vanity Fair and the Advocate, a gay and lesbian glossy.

Yet Coyne — a longtime blogger who has been on Twitter and Facebook for years — said that despite Francis’ enormous popularity, the U.S. bishops still have a lot of work to do on their own.

“We’re like Congress,” he said. “Many people love their congressman and congresswoman, but they hate Congress. Many people love their individual bishops, but they dislike the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Why is that?”

One sobering answer came from research presented Tuesday to the more than 200 bishops gathered in Baltimore for their four-day meeting: The Catholic Church, the multiyear study showed, is seen as “judgmental,” and that finger-wagging attitude is the biggest sin in the view of many lay people, Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski told the assembly.

Indeed, the study found that Catholics tend to hear the church’s message of “hate the sin, love the sinner” as simply, “hate the sinner.”

“What has Pope Francis taught us about how to reach and teach Catholics and the world?” Wenski asked.

Many bishops suggested that speaking more about issues that Francis stresses, like income inequality and poverty, rather than focusing primarily on opposition to gay marriage and abortion, is part of the answer.

But Coyne said that the first step was more straightforward:

“The priority of our conference has to be to proclaim the joy, the mercy and the love of Jesus Christ at all times and in all places and to all people,” he said. “When you have that as your communications starting point, it changes the tenor of what we say and how we are perceived.”

“I don’t think Pope Francis has changed the content so much as he has changed the conversation,” he added.

Not everyone was convinced that the solution was that easy, however.

Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City, Kan. — who earlier in the day lost the race to Coyne by a 114-102 vote — asked Wenski how far the bishops should go in trying to respond to the research showing the church was often seen as judgmental.

“Is this asking for a ‘feel-good’ gospel — a gospel that doesn’t challenge us?” Naumann said.

“The alternative,” Wenski responded, “is not the Gospel of Nice versus the Gospel of Christ.”

 

David Gibson
David Gibsonhttp://dgibson.com
David Gibson is an award-winning religion journalist, author and filmmaker. He writes for RNS and until recently covered the religion beat for AOL's Politics Daily. He blogs at Commonweal magazine, and has written two books on Catholic topics, the latest a biography of Pope Benedict XVI.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x