In
a wide-ranging 80-minute conversation with journalists on the aircraft
that brought him back to Rome from a week-long visit to Rio de Janeiro
for World Youth Day, the pope said: “If a person is gay and seeks God
and has good will, who am I to judge him?”
He
continued: “The catechism of the Catholic Church explains this very
well. It says they should not be marginalised because of this
(orientation) but that they must be integrated into society.”
He added: “The problem is not having this orientation. We must be brothers.”
The GCVI group said in a statement it welcomed what the pope said, for two reasons.
“Firstly
the pope’s comments accept the existence of gay people as a
recognisable part of the Catholic Church community for the first time.
This is a significant development from previous papal pronouncements,
which have usually referred to a ‘homosexual condition’ rather than a
group of people within the church who are gay.”
The
group welcomed the fact “that this is the first time a pope has used
the word ‘gay’, a word originating from within the LGBT community,
rather than ‘homosexual’, a word originating from the medical
profession, in acknowledging gay people as a recognisable and legitimate
group within the church.”
The group also welcomed
the pope’s comments “because we believe that it is a small but
important step towards undermining the spurious religious legitimacy
used to underpin homophobic violence against LGBT people”.
The
group continued: “Pope Francis’s comment ‘Who I am to judge?’ in
reference to gay people helps to take away the religious cloak of
legitimacy from groups who seek to judge and condemn gay people for no
other reason than that they are gay.
“While such
judgments and condemnations are still made in Ireland, they are made to a
far greater degree in other countries around the world where gay people
continue to suffer harsh discrimination because of their sexual
orientation. We welcome Pope Francis’s comments as a helpful
contribution in this struggle.”