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Francis breathes new life into "Cardinal" Bernardin’s contested legacy
David Gibson religionnews.com "The election of Pope Francis in March heralded a season of surprises for the Catholic Church, but perhaps none so unexpected – and unsettling for conservatives – as the re-emergence of the late Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin as a model for the American Catholic future. While there is no indication that Francis knows the writings of Bernardin, who died in 1996, many say the pope’s remarks repeatedly evoke Bernardin’s signature teachings on the 'consistent ethic of life' – the view that church doctrine champions the poor and vulnerable from womb to tomb – and on finding “common ground” to heal divisions in the church. Ironically, the re-emergence of Bernardin — a man who was admired by a young Chicago organizer named Barack Obama — is exposing the very rifts he sought to bridge, especially among conservatives who thought his broad view of Catholicism was buried with him in Mount Carmel Cemetery outside Chicago. Francis, for example, repeatedly stresses economic justice and care for the poor as priorities for Catholics, and he warned that the church has become 'obsessed' with a few issues, such as abortion, contraception and homosexuality, and needs a 'new balance.' The new pope has also sought to steer the hierarchy away from conservative politics and toward a broad-based view of Catholicism 'that is not just top-down but also horizontal' — focused on dialogue in the church and with the wider world. 'The point that (Bernardin’s) consistent ethic makes is exactly the same point that Pope Francis is making – let’s look at the whole picture and not just focus almost exclusively on three or so issues,' said Archbishop Michael Sheehan of Santa Fe, N.M., who had been close friends with Bernardin since the 1970s. 'I certainly think that if Cardinal Bernardin were alive he would be very pleased with what Pope Francis is saying and doing,' echoed Archbishop Joseph Fiorenza, retired archbishop of Galveston-Houston, whose 1998-2001 term as president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops was seen as one of the last in the mold of Bernardin. 'The consistent ethic of life theory that Bernardin proposed is getting a second look,' Fiorenza said. to read more click here: religionnews.com
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