Francis: said in a letter published by the Vatican yesterday that during an extraordinary Holy Year or ‘Jubilee’, all priests will be able to forgive women who have had an abortion if they repent ‘with a contrite heart’.

Reuters
Vatican City

Pope Francis will give all priests discretion during the Roman Catholic Church’s upcoming Holy Year to formally forgive women who have had abortions, in the Argentine Pontiff’s latest move towards a more open and inclusive church.
In church teaching, abortion is such a grave sin that those who procure or perform it incur an automatic excommunication, which can only be lifted by designated church officials.
However, from December 8 to November 26, during an extraordinary Holy Year or “Jubilee” on the theme of mercy, all priests will be able to do so if the women repent “with a contrite heart”, the Pope said in a letter published by the Vatican yesterday.
Francis described the “existential and moral ordeal” faced by women who have terminated pregnancies and said that he had “met so many women who bear in their heart the scar of this agonising and painful decision”.
The Pope’s letter did not mention those who perform abortions.
Francis is the first non-European pope in 1,300 years and has marked himself out for tolerance on taboo topics.
Although he has shown no intention of retracting the church’s opposition to abortion, he has alarmed conservatives by taking a less forceful tone than his predecessors.
“This is by no means an attempt to minimise the gravity of this sin, but to widen the possibility of showing mercy,” Vatican chief spokesman Father Federico Lombardi told reporters.
Deputy Vatican spokesman Father Ciro Benedettini said that “for now” the change would apply only during the Holy Year.
Usually only a bishop, missionary or the chief confessor of a diocese can offer absolution for an abortion, Benedettini said, although bishops in countries such as the United States and Britain, have delegated this authority to parish priests.
Boston College theology professor James Bretzke said that the Pope was “emphasising mercy and not retribution ... embracing reconciliation and not excommunication”.
Liberal group Catholics for Choice welcomed the move as a gesture of engagement with women, but said that Catholic women in the United States have abortions at the same rate as non-Catholics, highlighting the gulf between religious teaching and real life.
“This is a Pope who is not stuck in the pelvic zone, and perhaps his message on how he thinks about abortion is more for his brother bishops than Catholics in the pew,” Catholics for Choice president Jon O’Brien said.
The Holy Year is one of the 1.2bn-member church’s most important events, and sees the faithful make pilgrimages to Rome and other religious sites.
It takes place every 25 years unless a pope decrees an extraordinary one to bring attention to a particular topic or need.
Catholics performing pilgrimages or good works during the Holy Year can traditionally gain indulgences, or the remission of punishment for sins, under certain conditions.
Unlike in previous holy years, when pilgrims had to come to Rome, cathedrals and other religious venues around the world are expected to be designated national pilgrimage sites.
In his letter, the Pope also said indulgences would be available to prisoners who cannot pass through the Holy Doors of the papal basilicas in Rome and the Vatican City, which are bricked up in non-Jubilee years.
Of prisoners, Francis said: “May the gesture of directing their thought and prayer to the Father each time they cross the threshold of their cell signify for them their passage through the Holy Door.”
Holy Year activities will also be open to adherents of the ultra-traditionalist Roman Catholic splinter group known as the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX).
The Swiss-based SSPX, which rejects some of the reforms made at the historic 1962-1965 Second Vatican Council, defied Rome in 1988 by illegally consecrating four bishops, triggering their excommunication by the late pope John Paul II.
Pope Benedict XVI lifted the excommunications in 2009 and made some concessions to the group. But one of the bishops, British-born Bishop Richard Williamson, caused an uproar by denying the Holocaust.


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