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Pope: No place for politics in Biden Communion matter

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE — Pope Francis said Wednesday that Catholic bishops must minister with “compassion and tenderness,” not condemnation, to politicians who support abortion rights and warned that clerics shouldn’t let politics enter into questions about receiving Communion.

Francis was asked en route home from Slovakia about the debate in the U.S. church about whether President Joe Biden and other politicians should be denied Communion because of their stances on abortion.

U.S. bishops have agreed to draft a “teaching document” that many of them hope will rebuke Catholic politicians, including Biden, for receiving Communion despite their support for abortion.

Francis declined to give a “yes” or “no” answer, saying he didn’t know the U.S. case well enough.

He repeated that abortion is “homicide,” and that Catholic priests cannot give the Eucharist to someone who is not in communion with the church.

Most importantly, he said, was that priests and bishops must respond pastorally and not politically to any problem that comes before them.

He said they must use “the style of God” to accompany the faithful with “closeness, compassion and tenderness.”

“And what should pastors do? Be pastors, and not go condemning, condemning,” Francis said.

Francis said he had never denied Communion to anyone, though he said he never knowingly had a pro-abortion politician before him, either.

And he admitted he once gave Communion to an elderly woman who, after the fact, confessed that she was Jewish.

Francis repeated his belief that the Eucharist “is not a prize for the perfect” but rather “a gift of the presence of Jesus in the church.”

But he was unequivocal that it cannot be given to anyone who is not “in communion” with the church, though he declined to say if a pro-abortion politician was out of communion.

He was similarly unequivocal that abortion is murder, and that even a weeks-old embryo is a human life that must be protected.

U.S. bishops agreed in June that the conference doctrine committee will draft a statement on the meaning of Communion in the life of the church that will be submitted for consideration, probably at an in-person gathering in November.

To be formally adopted, the document would need support of two-thirds of the bishops.

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