Abp Cordileone Bars Speaker Pelosi From Communion
The odd thing is how little intelligent coverage this development has had on the right-wing aggregators. As of this morning, it's well below the fold on the Red State blog, although there's an unusually thorough story on Breitbart.
However, the interviewer above from the Jesuit AMERICA magazine draws Abp Cordileone out in some detail on the precise implications of his action. It is not, in his view, excommunication, which he believes would be more severe. Instead, she may attend mass, but she may not present herself for the sacrament, and he has instructed his priests not to admit her to the sacrament if she presents herself for it.
However, Hot Air reports that "Pelosi has a second home in Santa Rosa, and the bishop there plans to honor Cordileone’s declaration." The story quotes The Pillar:
After Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s archbishop said Friday she is barred from receiving the Eucharist, the bishop of the California diocese where Pelosi has a vacation home says he will uphold the prohibition when Pelosi attends Mass in his diocese.
Bishop Robert Vasa of the Diocese of Santa Rosa told The Pillar May 20 he has instructed priests to observe the decision of Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone when Pelosi attends Mass at the parish nearby her Napa Valley vacation home and vineyard.
“I have visited with the pastor at [Pelosi’s parish] and informed him that if the Archbishop prohibited someone from receiving Holy Communion then that restriction followed the person and that the pastor was not free to ignore it,” Vasa said in a statement provided to The Pillar by the Santa Rosa diocese.
Washington’s Cardinal Wilton Gregory has not responded to questions from The Pillar about whether Pelosi can continue to receive the Eucharist when she attends Mass in Washington D.C., where Pelosi and her husband Paul live while Congress is in session.
In the past, Gregory has expressed opposition to prohibiting Catholic politicians from the Eucharist because of the political positions, even on abortion.
In the interview above, Cordileone says the US bishops may differ on individual cases based on their prudential judgment, but they generally respect each other. He notes that the US bishops have discussed the issue extensively behind the scenes, and in particular, he's had discussions with Cardinal Gregory of Washington. So far, there's been no public disagreement with Cordileone's move from other bishops, but the story is still new. At the same time, there's so far been no public reaction from Pelosi.In addition, as of this morning, I find that an attempt to visit the Archdiocese of San Francisco's website results in a 403 Forbidden message, which I assume is the result of a hacker. I'm sure there will be further developments.
UPDATE: It looks like this was a denial of service attack, and it seems to have been alleviated. The text of Abp Cordileone's letter to the faithful is here.
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