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Pope denounces ‘hypocrisy’ of those who criticize LGBTQ blessings

LGBTQ blessings were authorized last month by the Vatican, but that has met with significant resistance in the Catholic Church, particularly from African bishops.
Pope Francis in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside-the-Walls in Rome on Jan. 25, 2024.
Pope Francis in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside-the-Walls in Rome on Jan. 25. Grzegorz Galazka / Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images
/ Source: Reuters

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis said he sees “hypocrisy” in criticism of his decision to allow priests to bless same-sex couples, possibly his most strongly worded defense of the move.

LGBTQ blessings were authorized last month by a Vatican document called Fiducia Supplicans (Supplicating Trust), but that has met with significant resistance in the Catholic Church, particularly from African bishops.

“Nobody gets scandalized if I give my blessings to a businessman who perhaps exploits people, and this is a very grave sin. But they get scandalized if I give them to a homosexual,” Francis told Italian Catholic magazine Credere.

“This is hypocrisy,” he said.

Credere released extracts of the interview on Wednesday, a day ahead of publication.

Francis, who famously said “Who am I to judge?” when asked about homosexuality at the beginning of his papacy, has made it one of his missions to promote a more welcoming and less judgmental Catholic Church.

Conservatives say this risks undermining the Church’s moral teachings.

Francis has defended Fiducia Supplicans on several occasions, but acknowledged the pushback against it, saying for example that blessings do not amount to formal Church approval for same-sex unions.

“When a couple comes forward spontaneously to ask for them, one does not bless the union, but simply the people who together have requested it. Not the union, but the persons,” he said on Jan. 26.

The Catholic Church teaches that gay sex is sinful and disordered, and that people with same-sex attractions, which are not considered sinful, should try to be chaste.

In another interview published last week, Francis said he hoped critics of LGBTQ blessings would eventually understand them, but that Africans were a “special case” in their opposition to homosexuality.

Bishops in Africa have effectively rejected the Fiducia Supplicans. In some African countries, homosexuality is severely punished, with prison sentences or even the death penalty.