advertising
Link to jump to start of content The Seattle Times Company Jobs Autos Homes Rentals NWsource Classifieds seattletimes.com
The Seattle Times Local news
Traffic | Weather | Your account Movies | Restaurants | Today's events

Sunday, April 3, 2005 - Page updated at 12:00 a.m.

Local Catholics admired pontiff's deep faith, but not always his policies

Seattle Times staff reporter

Enlarge this photoELAINE THOMPSON / AP

The Martinez family of Des Moines prays at St. James Cathedral yesterday to mourn the death of Pope John Paul II. From left are Naomi, 12, father Jose, mother Maria Diaz and Marcie, 10. The pope died yesterday in his private quarters at the Vatican after a long and public illness.

For some of the state's 1.6 million Roman Catholics, Pope John Paul II was a role model, admired for his deep personal faith, his global reach, his fight against communism and the relationships he forged with other denominations and faiths.

For others, he was a throwback, behind the times on issues such as sexuality and the role of women in the church. Yet others thought he wasn't conservative enough on such issues.

And among the 800,000 Catholics in the Seattle Archdiocese, some may remember him most for launching a Vatican investigation two decades ago of former Seattle Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen.

Regardless of differences with the pope, "the most striking feature of Pope John Paul's legacy will be his sheer strength, his longevity in office and the charismatic power of his character," said the Rev. Patrick Howell, a Jesuit and dean of the School of Theology and Ministry at Seattle University.

John Paul II pushed for unity among Christians and for understanding among different faiths, convening a historic 1986 gathering in Italy of rabbis, imams, bishops and other world religious leaders to pray for peace.

Seattle Archbishop Alexander Brunett said interfaith efforts were a priority for the pope — "not a peripheral life of the church, but an essential part of the ministry that we have."

Number of Roman Catholics


Worldwide about 1 billion

Nationally about 67 million, the largest faith group in the country (followed by the Southern Baptist Convention, with about 16 million).

Washington state about 1.6 million Catholics who go to Mass at least once a week

Archdiocese of Seattle about 800,000 who go to Mass at least once a week

Sources: Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Religion News Service, the Seattle Archdiocese.

Brunett, who heads an international group of Roman Catholic and Anglican leaders working on relations between the two churches, said the pope has inspired him "by giving absolute encouragement" to such efforts.

Bishop Vincent Warner of the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia said the pope's legacy will be that of "a prayerful man who just stayed with it through difficulties, through assassination attempts ... you have to respect that kind of courage and steadfastness."

Rabbi James Mirel of Bellevue's Temple B'nai Torah said the pope's past led him to reach out to other faiths. His "unique experience of being a Polish Christian who experienced the Nazi regime in Poland and communism first-hand gave him a much deeper understanding of the importance of a relationship with the Jewish community."

"He brought that empathy to the discussion," said Mirel, who is also president of Washington Coalition of Rabbis.

Servando Patlan, a Seattle University sophomore, was also inspired by the pope's commitment to interfaith work. "I think that's something that's needed now that cultures are coming closer and closer together. He's inspired me to respect other religions."

Jeff Ryan, a senior at Seattle U., admired the pope, too, for "just being a very prayerful man. Spiritually, he's been a very good leader for the church. He's always been outspoken against societal evils of today, such as lack of regard for the sanctity of life."

Other Catholics expressed mixed feelings.

Carrie Sheehan of Seattle said she supported the pope's stance against the death penalty and his spirituality. But she disagreed with him on the ordination of women and reproductive rights.

"In society and culture, the role of women has changed," she said. "But the church has not kept up with that."

James Weston, president of Dignity/Seattle, a group for gay, lesbian and bisexual Catholics, admired the pope's outreach to other denominations and his world travels. But "he's not been nearly as pastoral in his approach to gays as he could have been."

Weston cited a 1986 Vatican letter to the U.S. bishops that called homosexual activity immoral and warned church leaders not to allow groups that disobey church teachings to use church facilities. Dignity was one such group. And Dignity/Seattle, which had sponsored a weekly Mass at a Seattle church since 1980, was removed from sponsorship.

"With this conservative pope, it seems the church is really coming down more and more on gay and lesbian people," Weston said.

Louise McAllister, a local member of the progressive Catholic organization Call to Action, said while she agreed with the pope's opposition to capital punishment and the war in Iraq, "at the same time, he took a lackadaisical approach to the pedophile scandal" and "packed the ranks of the hierarchy with conservative bishops."


G. GILBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Purple bunting, a symbol of mourning for the late pope, blows in the wind at St. James Cathedral.

She had been hopeful after Vatican II, which she saw as calling lay Catholics to have a greater voice in church governance. She also had hoped it would lead to greater discussion about ordaining women and celibacy for priests.

But John Paul II "just stymied everything," McAllister said. "I think of it mainly as there was a momentum going and he put the brakes on."

In the Seattle Archdiocese, some Catholics have strong feelings to this day about the Vatican's intense scrutiny of Hunthausen in 1983, when it launched a two-year investigation of the archbishop for deviating from official church teachings in several areas.

For some Catholics the investigation was seen as part of a larger effort by the pope to retain power in the Vatican, ensuring that churches around the world followed orthodoxy.

After the investigation concluded that Hunthausen was too lax about such issues as divorce, homosexuality, liturgy and education of priests, the Vatican asked that he surrender control in those areas to an auxiliary bishop appointed by the Holy See — an arrangement Hunthausen later deemed unworkable.

Eventually, the Vatican removed the auxiliary bishop, restored Hunthausen's powers and appointed a coadjutor archbishop, Bishop Thomas Murphy, who succeeded Hunthausen as archbishop.

McAllister, the Call to Action member, remembered the investigation as divisive and hurtful. Some Catholics saw it differently. For them, it was an overdue admonition.

While the investigation "established the pope as something of a hero to local conservative Catholics, the general hope that John Paul II would take further actions in this archdiocese went unfulfilled," said Peter Miller, president of Northwest Laity for Truth, a nonprofit organization of conservative Catholics in Western Washington.

Still, Miller said, he would remember the pope as dedicated to his beliefs — his denunciations of war, violence, abortion and euthanasia. "He has left a distinctive mark upon the Catholic Church and the world as a whole."

Jason King, chairman of Una Voce Western Washington, which holds the only Vatican-approved Latin Mass in the archdiocese, gives the pope credit for his ability to bring people to Christ. "He's reached out to people across the globe in a way most other spiritual leaders have not."

Janet I. Tu: 206-464-2272 or jtu@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company


advertising

Search

NWsource shopping

shop newspaper ads

advertising