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newsday.com/news/new-york/pope-francis-visit/pope-francis-draws-criticism-from-some-conservative-catholics-over-stances-on-economy-environment-social-stances-1.10770830
…A Gallup poll released last month showed Francis losing support among conservative Catholics. It found his favorable rating among them fell from 72 percent last year to 45 percent in July. His favorable rating among all Catholics dropped from 89 percent to 71 percent.
The decline among conservatives “may be attributable to the pope’s denouncing of ‘the idolatry of money’ and linking climate change partially to human activity, along with his passionate focus on income inequality – all issues that are at odds with many conservatives’ beliefs,” the Gallup poll analysis said. [Conservative Catholics don’t idolize money]
For conservative Catholics, broadly defined by experts such as Fordham University theology professor James McCartin as people who attend Mass regularly and support the church’s teachings on birth control, same-sex marriage and other issues, taking on the pope is not easy.
“It’s a very uncomfortable position to be in for a faithful Catholic,” said Elizabeth Yore, a Chicago-based advocate for children who attended a Vatican meeting in Rome last year about human trafficking. "In my lifetime I’ve never had a concern about the papacy, the direction of the papacy . . .
“There’s a reluctance of faithful Catholics to criticize the pope because we’ve never done it before,” said Yore, who was a teenager in the 1960s when the church went through its last major liberal reform. “It’s a new situation for conservative Catholics.” …
…“We always felt under John Paul II and Benedict XVI that at least the pope has got your back. That feeling . . . for the last couple of years has really begun to leave,” said John-Henry Westen, 44, co-founder of Voice of the Family, a conservative international religious group that runs a website based in Front Royal, Virginia…
…Robert Miller, 44, a Roman Catholic from Sayville who grew up in St. Aidan’s parish in Williston Park and graduated from Chaminade High School in Mineola, said that "adopting a bunch of very, very controversial positions on the environment, on economics, on the causes of certain economic conditions in a papal encyclical, and lending the prestige of the Roman pontiff to this, in my opinion is a very dangerous idea . . .
“If the church starts talking about things that are beyond its competence, it’s likely to get them wrong. And that brings the church into disrepute and causes people to think the church doesn’t know what it’s talking about on any matter whatsoever,” said Miller, a law professor who splits his time between New York University and the University of Iowa. “It also causes dissension in the church when some Catholics mistakenly think they are required to agree with the opinions of the pope on matters unrelated to faith and morals.” …
…A Gallup poll released last month showed Francis losing support among conservative Catholics. It found his favorable rating among them fell from 72 percent last year to 45 percent in July. His favorable rating among all Catholics dropped from 89 percent to 71 percent.
The decline among conservatives “may be attributable to the pope’s denouncing of ‘the idolatry of money’ and linking climate change partially to human activity, along with his passionate focus on income inequality – all issues that are at odds with many conservatives’ beliefs,” the Gallup poll analysis said. [Conservative Catholics don’t idolize money]
For conservative Catholics, broadly defined by experts such as Fordham University theology professor James McCartin as people who attend Mass regularly and support the church’s teachings on birth control, same-sex marriage and other issues, taking on the pope is not easy.
“It’s a very uncomfortable position to be in for a faithful Catholic,” said Elizabeth Yore, a Chicago-based advocate for children who attended a Vatican meeting in Rome last year about human trafficking. "In my lifetime I’ve never had a concern about the papacy, the direction of the papacy . . .
“There’s a reluctance of faithful Catholics to criticize the pope because we’ve never done it before,” said Yore, who was a teenager in the 1960s when the church went through its last major liberal reform. “It’s a new situation for conservative Catholics.” …
…“We always felt under John Paul II and Benedict XVI that at least the pope has got your back. That feeling . . . for the last couple of years has really begun to leave,” said John-Henry Westen, 44, co-founder of Voice of the Family, a conservative international religious group that runs a website based in Front Royal, Virginia…
…Robert Miller, 44, a Roman Catholic from Sayville who grew up in St. Aidan’s parish in Williston Park and graduated from Chaminade High School in Mineola, said that "adopting a bunch of very, very controversial positions on the environment, on economics, on the causes of certain economic conditions in a papal encyclical, and lending the prestige of the Roman pontiff to this, in my opinion is a very dangerous idea . . .
“If the church starts talking about things that are beyond its competence, it’s likely to get them wrong. And that brings the church into disrepute and causes people to think the church doesn’t know what it’s talking about on any matter whatsoever,” said Miller, a law professor who splits his time between New York University and the University of Iowa. “It also causes dissension in the church when some Catholics mistakenly think they are required to agree with the opinions of the pope on matters unrelated to faith and morals.” …