Vatican ex-doctrine chief pens manifesto amid pope criticism

Cardinal Mueller wrote that a pastor’s failure to teach Catholic truths was the greatest deception “It is the fraud of the anti-Christ.”

February 09, 2019 12:14 pm | Updated 12:15 pm IST - VATICAN CITY:

Pope Francis delivers his message as he celebrates the Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Monday, Dec. 24, 2018.

Pope Francis delivers his message as he celebrates the Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Monday, Dec. 24, 2018.

The Vatican’s former doctrine chief has penned a “manifesto of faith” to remind Catholics of basic tenets of belief amid what he says is “growing confusion” in the church today.

Cardinal Gerhard Mueller didn’t name Pope Francis in his four-page manifesto, released late Friday. But the document was nevertheless a clear manifestation of conservative criticism of Pope Francis’ emphasis on mercy and accompaniment versus a focus on repeating Catholic morals and doctrine during the previous two papacies.

Cardinal Mueller wrote that a pastor’s failure to teach Catholic truths was the greatest deception “It is the fraud of the anti-Christ.”

Pope Francis sacked Cardinal Mueller as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 2017, denying the German a second five-year term.

In the document, which was published by conservative Catholic media that have been critical of Pope Francis, Cardinal Mueller repeats basic Catholic teaching that Catholics must be free from sin before receiving Communion. He mentions divorced and remarried faithful, in a clear reference to Pope Francis’ opening to letting these Catholics receive Communion on a case-by-case basis after a process of accompaniment and discernment with their pastors.

Cardinal Mueller also repeats that women cannot be ordained priests and that priests must be celibate. Pope Francis has reaffirmed the ban on ordination for women but has commissioned a study on women deacons in the early church. Pope Francis has also reaffirmed priestly celibacy but has made the case for exceptions where “pastoral necessity” might justify ordaining married men of proven virtue.

“In the face of growing confusion about the doctrine of the faith, many bishops, priests, religious and lay people of the Catholic Church have requested that I make a public testimony about the truth of revelation,” Cardinal Mueller wrote. “It is the shepherd’s very own task to guide those entrusted to them on the path of salvation.”

The manifesto was the latest jab at Pope Francis from the conservative wing of the church. Already, four other cardinals have called on the Jesuit pope to clarify his outreach to divorced and civilly remarried Catholics.

And the Vatican’s former ambassador to the U.S. has demanded Pope Francis resign over what he claimed was the pope’s 2013 rehabilitation of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick despite knowing the high-ranking American slept with adult seminarians. McCarrick is likely to be defrocked in the coming days after he was more recently accused of sexually abusing minors.

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