Pope Francis apologises for using homophobic slurs while saying 'no' to gay priests
During a closed-door meeting with 200 Italian bishops last week, Pope Francis allegedly used derogatory terms to describe gay people during debates about whether the Italian church should allow gay men to enter the seminary.
According to local reports, the Argentine pope said "there is already enough faggotry" in Catholic seminaries, in his speech to prelates on May 20. The pope used the Italian term "frociaggine," a rarely used slur to describe flamboyant gay attitudes. Francis allegedly also used other disparaging words to describe gays.
"The pope never meant to offend or express himself with homophobic terms, and he issues his most sincere apologies to all those who felt offended by the use of a term reported by others," read a statement by Vatican spokesperson Matteo Bruni on Tuesday.
The Vatican did not deny that the pope used those terms and offered no clarification on who were the "others" who reported the pope's words.
The statement clarified that the pope is aware of the news reports regarding his private meeting with the Italian bishops and that Francis wants to reiterate his belief that "in the church there is place for everyone, for everyone! No one is useless, no one is superfluous, there is space for everyone. Just the way we are, everyone."
The Italian bishops, who were convened for the national assembly meeting in Rome, are considering relaxing the ban on admitting gay men to the seminary.
Individuals who are engaging in same-sex sexual encounters or have "deeply rooted homosexual tendencies" are not allowed to enter the seminary, according to a 2005 Vatican instruction. Inspired by the pope's opening toward LGBTQ faithful, Italian bishops are discussing the possibility of removing the ban on those who have gay tendencies.
During the meeting, which lasted an hour and a half, the pope allegedly stated that the church should continue to bar entry to the priesthood to gay men.
The pope has seemed to offer an unprecedented opening toward LGBTQ faithful, meeting with gay dignitaries and advocates at the Vatican, supporting the pastoral outreach to the LGBTQ community of Jesuit priest James Martin and helping trans communities.
But the pope's words of welcoming to LGBTQ faithful have not led to any change to the church's teachings on homosexuality, including that gay acts are a sin. Last year, the Vatican's Department for the Doctrine of the Faith cautiously allowed priests to bless same-sex couples, but the pope took a step back on the historic decision by stating that gay unions cannot be blessed because they are contrary to natural law in an interview with "60 Minutes" that aired May 20.
In the same interview, Francis said that gay people can be blessed as individuals and that "everyone" is welcome in the church.
The long speech to Italian bishops was delivered in Italian, which isn't the pope's native language, but this isn't the first time Francis has used colorful language to get his message across. While speaking to sex abuse victims in Dublin in 2018, the pope said that priests who covered up abuse are "s***" and he has accused media outlets of "coprophilia," meaning that they are aroused by excrement.
The pope's comments come shortly before Rome's gay pride parade, which is set to take place on June 15.
© Religion News Service