Consider This from NPR - For LGBTQ Catholics, a lot depends on the next Pope

Episode Date: May 6, 2025

On the eve of the conclave to elect a new pope, some of the biggest questions hanging in the air have to do with LGBTQ Catholics. Will the church continue the path of outreach charted by Pope Francis,... softening its harsh positions? Will it allow LGBTQ Catholics to fully participate in the church?Rev. James Martin, an American Jesuit priest, has built a ministry aimed at making gay, lesbian and transgender people feel more welcome in the Catholic church and advised Francis on the issue. He says Francis himself changed the church, but so did the many LGBTQ Catholics who have come out — changing the church at the level of the family and parish. That trend, he says, will continue.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:32 NPR Plus or another means, thank you. Your support means so much to us now more than ever. You help make NPR shows freely available to everyone. We are proud to do this work for you and with you. Now, on to the episode. On the eve of the conclave to elect the next pope, St. Peter's Square in the Vatican is bustling with activity. There are tourists and religious pilgrims. There are also a lot of reporters waiting to spot
Starting point is 00:01:03 the stars of the coming event, the Cardinals who will vote to elect the next head of the Roman Catholic Church. When any of them walk through the square, dressed in their black cassocks, draped with red sashes and often holding briefcases, people swarm them. Since the Cardinals make their way through the square, they're being stopped by the reporters and also being stopped by people asking for blessings. It's an interesting mix. One of the big questions hanging in the air?
Starting point is 00:01:30 Whether the church will continue the path Pope Francis set in softening its harsh positions on LGBTQ Catholics and whether they can fully participate in the church. To better understand this tension point, we walked a few blocks off the square. Thanks for meeting us. Of course. Let's see if we can get a space in here. and meet an American priest wearing a green Philadelphia Eagles cap. This is Father James Martin, a high-profile Jesuit who in recent years has carved out a ministry aimed at making gay, lesbian, and transgender people feel more welcome in the Catholic Church.
Starting point is 00:02:01 It's a ministry Pope Francis personally encouraged. Martin meets us at the Jesuits' global headquarters, called the General Curia. He walks us to an old-fashioned elevator, and we head to the roof. Pull the little thing. Pull it and push. Wow. The Jesuits have good real estate.
Starting point is 00:02:20 The roof opens up to a lush hillside Mediterranean garden. This was Nero's wife's palace or something. And overlooks the square and St. Peter's Basilica. Let me show you the view. Oh look, they have the curtains up already. That's so cool. Oh yeah, those weren't up yesterday. The ornate balcony where the next pope will first appear has been draped in red velvet
Starting point is 00:02:40 curtains. Consider this. The new pope will decide whether to continue Pope Francis's outreach to the LGBTQ community or whether to revert to doctrines and messaging that pushes them out of the faith. Ahead, we'll talk it through with Father Martin, who advised Pope Francis on this issue. From NPR, I'm Scott Detro. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things and other currencies. With WISE, you can send, spend, or receive money across borders, all at a fair exchange
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Starting point is 00:04:38 And what are the members of the College of Cardinals thinking right now? That's the question I raised with Father Martin. We're at that moment where the Cardinals have not gone into the conclave yet. They're meeting every day. There's a lot of buzz around the city. Have you heard stray thoughts one way or another that give you a sense of kind of where that conversation
Starting point is 00:04:56 is going among the people that matter? Well, exactly what we were saying before, that they're thinking about the legacy of Pope Francis. Do they want someone sort of in his vein? Do they want someone who might be a little more sort of sedate, right, bland, maybe even kind of an administrator? And what I've been hearing also is a surprising amount of cardinals being pretty blunt about their critiques of Pope Francis and also their critiques of the critiques of Pope Francis. So I think it's, which is good, they really are looking for someone
Starting point is 00:05:28 who is holy, someone who's a good evangelizer, and someone who's a good administrator. And frankly, those three things are hard to find in one person. We were interviewing people the other day at St. Mary Major, where of course Pope Francis' tomb is, and we talked to one person who I thought really embodies this challenge the church faces. She's somebody who grew up in the church, playing the organ in the church. You could hear her talking about it, that was a fond memory. But she said she's LGBTQ and she felt increasingly pushed out and pushed out and pushed out. And she said, I don't consider myself Catholic anymore because I felt alienated by this church.
Starting point is 00:06:03 And I feel like that story plays out in so many places right now. And it's just been this incredible challenge for the church. And I know it's one that you've thought a lot about. Yeah, there are a lot of people that feel that way. By the same token, there are a lot of people that feel under Francis, they've had this experience of welcome. I would say Francis probably did more for LGBTQ people. Well, not probably. Then all of his predecessors combined, right? The first pope ever to use the word gay came out against the criminalization of homosexuality. He met with LGBTQ people, he met with me and other people who minister to them.
Starting point is 00:06:36 So I think there is still this sense of alienation, but I think it really diminished under Francis. I've heard you talk about this over the past few weeks. I've seen you write about it. How do you think of his lasting legacy when it comes to this? Because there were so many gestures and statements that were welcoming, but then there's critics who say, well, when you look at the formal teachings, when you look at the writings, the rule setting, not much did change. Well, I think the approach changed, and that's a kind of teaching itself.
Starting point is 00:07:03 So his change in the conversation, the way he treated LGBTQ people. But actually he did change some things. So the ability to bless same-sex couples, I mean, that's a change. The decriminalization of homosexuality, that's a change. One thing I want to say is that I think the media tended to overlook, in the last few years of his life, he used to meet regularly with transgender people. It was kind of under the radar. But that's a big deal. I mean, and at his entombment, you could say at St. Mary Major, there was a representative from the transgender community
Starting point is 00:07:35 officially there at the invitation of a Vatican. So that's a change. And that would not have happened before Francis. You mentioned the blessing of same-sex couples though. That, of course, quickly became a non-starter in Africa due to pretty swift measures by African cardinals. And I think that gets to this tension point in the church. And I'm curious what you think the path forward is, that when you look at the parts of the world where the church is most rapidly growing, there's real resistance to things like that from parishioners, from leaders, including from some cardinals who could be in contention to be the next pope. How do you think the church moves forward keeping those views in mind, but also being welcoming, not being, frankly, some people would say at times,
Starting point is 00:08:16 hateful toward people who are gay? Right, and it is a breaking point. I think by balancing the tension between what you might call prophecy and unity. Unity is a value in the church. We don't want to split the church over any issue. By the same token, we have to stand up for people who are being marginalized. I always say there were two trends in the church in the last 12 years for LGBTQ people. One was Pope Francis, right? And that trend is over in terms of his gestures and who he appointed as Cardinals. The other trend, though, is as more and more people come out, right, and more and more
Starting point is 00:08:44 Catholics come out, their families are changed, their parishes are changed, priests are changed, bishops are changed, and that trend is not going to stop. People are going to continue to come out. So it is a frustration that there are many places where cardinals and bishops are pretty homophobic and pretty, I would say, sometimes mean to LGBTQ people. And I think that really has to change. The only way that's going to change, frankly, for these church leaders is encounter. This is one of the reasons Pope Francis was so big on the culture of encounter. It's coming to know people. That's basically it. You've written a lot of books. You're one of the most prominent priests in the United States. Why did you decide that this was something that you wanted to focus on and really create
Starting point is 00:09:29 a ministry reaching out to LGBTQ people? Well, it's funny, I didn't really decide it. I didn't get up one morning and say, I want to do this super controversial ministry. In fact, I don't like controversy. After the Pulse nightclub massacre in 2016, when 49 people were killed in a gay nightclub. I just saw the bishop's response, in my own opinion, as pretty tepid. And I thought, boy, what does this community have to do to get the attention of the church? Is it not enough that they're murdered? So I gave a talk and then wrote a book called Building a Bridge, and that led into this
Starting point is 00:10:02 ministry. So I didn't really get up and decide one day to do this, it just sort of happened. But at each turning point, I think it's important for me to say I sought approval from my Jesuit superiors, and then eventually met with the pope who said in 2019, I want you to continue this ministry in peace. And so that's what I've tried to do. In this moment where we don't know who the next pope will be, a lot of people who deeply appreciated that approach that Pope Francis took Are worried that the next pope will not be like that. Well, we'll reverse course on so many things you wrote an article The headline was something along the lines of don't fear the outcome of the next conclave addressed to people who are worried What did you say? Well, I can only approach that from a spiritual point of view, which is to remind people that the Holy Spirit is not exactly, you know, picking the Pope, but He's guiding the process.
Starting point is 00:10:50 And then we have to trust that the Cardinals are opening themselves up to the activity of the Holy Spirit and really are trying to find the man who they think is the best. And look, these are very prayerful people. They've spent their whole life in service to the church, in service to Jesus, and they want the best guy. It may seem political, but we really have to trust in the process. And you know, as a Jesuit, we will work with whoever steps out on that balcony in a couple of days. Fr. James Martin, SJ, thank you so much for talking to us. My pleasure.
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