Pope Francis reached out to gays on Monday, declaring that it is not his place to judge them, while also condemning the Vatican’s reported gay lobby as a “serious problem.”
The remarks to journalists as he flew back to Rome from a high-profile trip to Brazil appeared to be more conciliatory toward homosexuals than his predecessor Benedict XVI.
“If someone is gay and seeks the Lord with good will, who am I to judge?” the pope asked.
“The problem is not having this orientation, it is lobbying. That’s the most serious problem,” he said.
The pope had admitted last month that there was a “gay lobby” in the Vatican’s secretive administration, the Roman Curia, according to a Latin American Catholic Web site.
It followed earlier Italian media reports claiming that a secret report by cardinals investigating Vatican leaks included allegations of corruption and blackmail attempts against gay clergymen, and on the other hand, favoritism based on gay relationships.
Francis also fielded questions about Battista Ricca, appointed by the pontiff to a key position at the troubled Vatican bank. He is embroiled in allegations that he had gay relationships with male prostitutes.
The pope said he had ordered a “brief investigation, but we found nothing on him.”
“I have not seen anyone at the Vatican who is registered as gay on his identity card,” he said, adding, however: “We acknowledge that there are [gays].”
“The catechism of the Catholic Church says clearly that we must not marginalize these people, who should be integrated in the society,” he added.
Gays and lesbians should be “treated with respect, compassion and sensitivity, without discrimination,” he said.
Gay rights and liberal Catholic groups in the US gave the pope’s remarks a qualified welcome.
Prominent gay rights group the Human Rights Campaign, said that while his “words do not reflect a shift in Church policy, they represent a significant change in tone.”
Progressive US group Catholics United said his comments “speak to what every young person knows: God loves gay people, and so should the Catholic Church.”
Gay rights groups had voiced hopes on Francis’s appointment that the Argentine would be friendlier to homosexuals than his predecessor.
Benedict had angered the gay community with his suggestion in 2008 that homosexuality was as much of a threat to the survival of the human race as climate change.
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