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Bishop Taylor ‘at threshold of apostles’ to meet with pope

Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas bishops urged to teach discernment

Published: January 24, 2020      
CNS / Vatican Media
Pope Francis meets with U.S. bishops from Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas Jan. 20 during their “ad limina” visits to the Vatican. Bishop Anthony B. Taylor is visible near the middle of the line of bishops facing the camera.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Sometimes the political choices people face can seem like a choice between supporting a “snake” or supporting a “dragon,” but Pope Francis told a group of U.S. bishops their job is to step back from partisan politics and help their faithful discern based on values, said Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston.

Meeting the bishops of Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas Jan. 20, Pope Francis mentioned how, in an election, “you sometimes seem to be caught, you know, are you going to vote in one sense for a snake or you going to vote for a dragon?” Cardinal DiNardo said.

The pope’s advice to the bishops was “teach your people discernment by you stepping back from the sheer politics of it” and focus on the values at stake, Cardinal DiNardo told Catholic News Service. “If you try to step back and say, ‘but here are the major moral issues that we face,’ that’s what is most important.”

The region’s 26 bishops, including auxiliaries and retired bishops, spent about two-and-a-half hours talking with Pope Francis in English and Spanish. The pope responded in Italian so his aide could translate the responses into English.

This was Bishop Anthony B. Taylor’s second ad limina visit. His first one was in March 2012. Ad limina visits are supposed to be every five years but in practice they are generally every seven or eight years.

The topics were wide-ranging and included the clerical sexual abuse crisis, migration, the challenges of a media-permeated culture and forming Christian consciences, especially in a time of deep political divisions.

Bishop Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville, Texas, one of four Texas dioceses on the border with Mexico, said all of those issues were important, but for him the key was listening to the pope and being listened to him by him.

Citing the “whole host of issues” they discussed with Pope Francis, Bishop Edward J. Burns of Dallas said, “I am really looking forward to sitting, digesting, reflecting and praying over the conversation we had this morning with the successor of St. Peter.”

“It was exciting. It was exhilarating,” he said.

Pope Francis is attentive to and knows the pastoral challenges posed by modern social media and their pervasive presence in many people’s lives, said Bishop Flores, a daily Twitter user. But the pope has “a calmness about how we address that,” mainly by remaining true to the identity as pastors, proclaiming the Gospel and encouraging people to act according to it.

Bishop Flores said all the bishops realize they must learn “how to be a pastor in a media world where you keep justice and charity and a steady focus on the Gospel.”

The “ad limina” visits are “very important for deepening our sense of personal communion” with the pope, the successor of Peter, he said. “It’s not just the office, it’s the affection for your father spiritually that we need to cultivate, because it is part of the gift that is the communion of the Church.”

“The narrative” that Pope Francis and many of the U.S. bishops “are on different pages,” he said, is “overblown.”

Sometimes that impression may arise when a bishop reacts to a news or social media report about something the pope has said. “It is our responsibility to hear him in his own words and to resist the temptation that sometimes hits across the spectrum of the church to jump to a conclusion because of some line that was quoted here or there.”

Even in the fast-paced world of social media, “we can afford to be judicious and thoughtful,” he said. “It’s part of our intellectual responsibility.”

Cardinal DiNardo said the pope and the bishops recognize the value and importance of media. However, he said, some on social media “may represent only a small number of people, but they make a lot of noise, and we try to sift through that,” both in what is said about the pope and what is said about the Church and bishops.

Bishop Flores said he was surprised by how much Pope Francis knew about the life and witness of Blessed Stanley Rother, the Oklahoma native martyred in Guatemala in 1981. After his name appeared on a death list, Blessed Rother went back to Oklahoma, but refused to stay.

“It was very moving to hear the Holy Father, the successor of Peter, recount to us a story we all know so well,” the bishop said. It showed the pope’s awareness of “that missionary spirit and how it is alive in the United States.”

“He talked about the importance of pastors who accompany their people,” Bishop Flores said. “I found that encouraging, because they are the unsung heroes who accompany their people, day in and day out.”

Pope Francis also encouraged the bishops to be pastors, in a real sense, spending time with their faithful “not just at confirmations and on the big feast days,” he said. The pope said, “The people have a nose for the deep reality of the church, and that is that where the bishop is, there is the Church.”

Contributing to this story were Cindy Wooden, Carol Glatz and Junno Arocho Esteves.

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