THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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Wilton Gregory becomes first Black American cardinal

Wilton Gregory becomes first Black American cardinal

ROME - Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington,on Saturday became the first Black American to earn the rank of cardinal, in a pandemic-altered Vatican ceremony that was strange and historic like none before it.

Because of virus travel concerns, two of the 13 new cardinals didn't come to Rome. The others wore masks and sat in socially distanced rows inside St. Peter's Basilica. Gregory, like some other new cardinals, had quarantined for 10 days before the ceremony at a Vatican resident building, with meals and towels dropped off at his door.

After testing negative for the third time at his Rome quarters, Gregory's quarantine lifted Saturday morning.

Hours later, he'd received a title that heightens his clout and profile inside the Catholic Church - and makes him one of the papal electors - at a time of fierce American racial inequities and division.

Gregory said in a videoconference interview that he hopes to be a "voice for the African American community in the pope's ear."

"Among the people that have congratulated me and wished me well, friends and colleagues, I've heard this: It's about time," Gregory said, referring to a Black American becoming a cardinal. "But it is also an important recognition that the African American, the Black Catholic community, is an important component within the larger, universal church."

It was the seventh time that Pope Francis has convened a consistory, as the ceremony is known. The events generally are colorful and full of ritual, and they have played an underappreciated role in Francis's efforts to remodel the church, as he gradually builds a church leadership that reflects his priorities and styles.

The Catholic Church now has 229 cardinals, 128 of whom are under 80 years old and eligible to vote for the next pope. Of those 128, 73 have been named by Francis. That means Francis-picked cardinals will comprise the majority in the next conclave.

The event Saturday was attended by old cardinals as well as the new ones - with the new ones sitting in individual seats flanking the pope. Francis recited a homily as well as the names of the incoming cardinal class. Most chose to remove their masks when kneeling before the pope to receive their red hats; Gregory kept his on. The pope, as has been his habit throughout the pandemic, did not wear a mask.

After the ceremony, Francis took the new cardinals to pay a visit to retired Pope Benedict XVI, 93, who lives in a monastery inside the Vatican. According to a Vatican spokesman, Benedict "expressed his joy" for the visit and gave the cardinals his blessing.

In recent years, he has selected new cardinals interested in migration and critical of nationalism. He has also gone further than his predecessors in appointing non-European cardinals, an acknowledgment of how Catholicism's power base has tilted toward Africa and South America.

Gregory, who turns 73 this month, is the fourth American named a cardinal by Francis.

Gregory said he received the news of his elevation only after Francis had announced it publicly, in an October Angelus service in St. Peter's Square. Gregory was told of the decision in a 6:30 a.m. phone call by Cardinal Kevin Farrell.

"I want to be the first to congratulate you," Gregory remembers Farrell saying.

"I was humbled and grateful and a little tearful all rolled up in one," Gregory said.

When Francis first announced the new cardinals, it was unclear whether the Vatican would even try to hold an in-person consistory. But Gregory and most of the other new cardinals decided to come. Gregory tested negative for the coronavirus before leaving Washington, was tested again upon arrival in Italy, and then went into quarantine in the same residence where Francis lives.

"I thought I could do it safely," Gregory said. "And finally, I think the Holy Father wants a face-to-face consistory."

Gregory's promotion to cardinal had been anticipated, dating to his appointment last year as archbishop of Washington - a position that normally comes with a cardinal's hat. The position is both high-profile and complicated, part religion and part politics, and it has pushed the normally moderate, mild-mannered Gregory to become more outspoken. In June, he criticized President Donald Trump's visit to a Washington shrine to Pope John Paul II, taking particular aim at the shrine's leadership, saying the facility was being "egregiously misused and manipulated."

Days earlier, law enforcement used rubber bullets and tear gas to clear peaceful protesters outside the White House so Trump could stage a controversial photo op holding a Bible in front of St. John's, the Episcopal church on Lafayette Square.

Gregory's next challenge involves working with President-elect Joe Biden, who will be the first Catholic president since John F. Kennedy. Some Catholic traditionalists say that Biden, who regularly attends Mass, should be denied the sacrament of Communion because of his support for abortion rights.

The Catholic News Agency noted that in 2004, the Vatican's doctrinal chief, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger - soon to be Pope Benedict XVI - told U.S. bishops that politicians "consistently campaigning and voting for permissive abortion" laws were committing a grave sin. Such politicians, Ratzinger wrote, should be informed of church teaching and not given Communion.

But individual bishops have greatly differing interpretations, with some arguing that pastors should not withhold Communion as a way to pressure politicians.

Biden last year was denied Communion during a campaign stop in South Carolina. But Gregory noted that the bishop in Biden's hometown of Wilmington, Del., Fran Malooly, has not imposed such a restriction. Gregory indicated he would follow in Malooly's path.

"I don't envision imposing any restrictions on his participation in the church. I have to challenge him," Gregory said. "I have to confront him. I have to remind him of what the church believes and teaches. But I have to respect and treat him with the dignity he deserves, not just as president but as a human being."

 

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