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Pope condemns abortion on Latin America trip

Pope Benedict XVI began his first trip to Latin America Wednesday by laying down church law on abortion, suggesting that he agrees with bishops who said Catholic politicians in Mexico had excommunicated themselves by legalizing abortion in that nation’s capital.
Pope Benedict XVI is greeted by a cardinal while accompanied by Brazilian first lady Marisa during the Pope's welcome ceremony in Sao Paulo
Pope Benedict XVI is welcomed upon arrival at the Guarulhos Air Base in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Wednesday.Sergio Moraes / Reuters
/ Source: The Associated Press

Pope Benedict XVI began his first trip to Latin America Wednesday by laying down church law on abortion, suggesting that he agrees with bishops who said Catholic politicians in Mexico had excommunicated themselves by legalizing abortion in that nation’s capital.

Benedict, who will inaugurate an important regional bishops’ conference during his trip, also spoke strongly against abortion during his first speech in Brazil. Speaking in Portuguese, he said he’s certain that the bishops will reinforce “the promotion of respect for life from the moment of conception until natural death as an integral requirement of human nature.”

Hundreds of faithful waiting in the cold rain for a glimpse of Benedict seemed not to care about the major challenges the Vatican says he hopes to confront during his visit, such as the church’s declining influence in Brazil, the rise of evangelism, or his in-flight comments about Mexico City’s politicians.

Catholic officials have been debating for some time whether politicians who approve abortion legislation as well as doctors and nurses who take part in abortions would subject themselves to automatic excommunication under church law. The pope seemed to agree with Mexico City’s bishops who declared that the city’s pro-abortion lawmakers had excommunicated themselves.

“It’s nothing new, it’s normal, it wasn’t arbitrary. It is what is foreseen by the church’s doctrine,” Benedict told reporters aboard a plane to Brazil in his first full-fledged news conference since becoming pontiff in 2005.

Benedict’s spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, later said he wasn’t aware that the pope setting down a new policy.

No intention of excommunication
In a statement approved by the pope, Lombardi said the pontiff did not intend to formally excommunicate anyone — a separate and rare process under church law. “Since excommunication hasn’t been declared by the Mexican bishops, the pope has no intention himself of declaring it,” said Lombardi, who was on board the plane.

But Lombardi said politicians who vote in favor of abortion should not receive the sacrament of Holy Communion. “Legislative action in favor of abortion is incompatible with participation in the Eucharist. ... Politicians exclude themselves from Communion.”

Pressed further by journalists if the lawmakers were excommunicated, Lombardi reiterated: “No, they exclude themselves from Communion.”

Excommunication is the severest penalty the Roman Catholic Church can impose on its members. When someone is excommunicated “his status before the church is that of a stranger,” the New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia says. In practical terms, that means the excommunicated person is forbidden from receiving the sacraments and participating in public worship.

Church teaching says anyone who has an abortion is automatically excommunicated. “Being a conspiring or necessary accomplice” to an abortion also means excommunication under church law.

The Mexican politicians who supported the measure shrugged off Benedict’s comments Wednesday. “I’m Catholic and I’m going to continue being Catholic even if the church excommunicates me,” said leftist Mexico City lawmaker Leticia Quezada. “My conscience is clean.”

'Thirst for God' in Latin America
Before leaving Rome, Benedict said the exodus of Catholics for evangelical Protestant churches in Latin America was “our biggest worry.”

But he said the spread of Protestantism shows a “thirst for God” in the region, and that he intends to lay down a strategy to answer that call when he meets with bishops from throughout Latin America in a once-a-decade meeting in the shrine city of Aparecida near Sao Paulo.

“We have to become more dynamic,” he said. Evangelical churches, which the Vatican considers “sects,” have attracted millions of Latin American Catholics in recent years.

The Vatican also has promised that Benedict will deliver a tough message on poverty and crime during his five-day visit to Brazil — the world’s most populous Roman Catholic country.

Benedict’s predecessor, John Paul II, visited Mexico and addressed Latin American bishops just three months after assuming the papacy. Benedict has waited two years for his first trip to a region with nearly half the world’s 1.1 billion Catholics. But he denied being “Eurocentric” or less concerned about poverty in the developing world than his predecessors.

“I love Latin America. I have traveled there a lot,” he told reporters, adding that he is happy the time had come for the trip after focusing on more urgent problems in the Middle East and Africa.

Open-air Masses planned
Benedict, who visited Brazil as then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in 1990, will celebrate several open-air Masses, including a canonization ceremony for Brazil’s first native-born saint, and visit a church-run drug and alcohol rehabilitation center.

Marcelo Zapata, 19, flew from Chile in hopes of glimpsing the pontiff. “The pope is the representative of Christ on Earth and I’m emotional about meeting him,” he said. “I never met any other pope and this may be the only time he’ll come to Latin America because he’s already 80 years old.”

Ivany Yazbek, 49, managed to touch the hand of John Paul II when he visited Brazil in 1980. “I don’t know if this pope will be as charismatic as the other pope, but we’ll find out,” Yazbek said.

Shivering in the cold, Edmundo Barbosa, a 32-year-old salesman, said, “I just want to see what he looks like, and if I could talk to him I’d ask for peace.”