Gay Catholic group gets VIP treatment at Vatican for first  time
Philip Pullella (Reuters, February 18, 2015) 
A prominent American Catholic gay rights group was given VIP treatment for  
the first time at an audience with Pope Francis on Wednesday, a move 
members saw  as a sign of change in the Roman Catholic Church. 
“This is a sign of movement that’s due to the Francis effect,” said Sister 
 Jeannine Gramick, co-founder of New Ways Ministry, which ministers to 
homosexual  Catholics and promotes gay rights in the 1.2 billion-member Church. 
Gramick and executive director Francis DeBernardo led a pilgrimage of 50  
homosexual Catholics to the audience in St. Peter’s Square. 
They told Reuters in an interview afterwards that when the group came to 
Rome  on Catholic pilgrimages during the papacies of Francis’s predecessors 
John Paul  and Benedict, “they just ignored us”. 
This time, a U.S. bishop and a top Vatican official backed their request 
and  they sat in a front section with dignitaries and special Catholic groups. 
As the  pope passed, they sang “All Are Welcome,” a hymn symbolising their 
desire for a  more inclusive Church. 
A list of participants released by the Vatican listed “a group of lay 
people  accompanied by a sister” but did not mention that they were a gay 
rights  
organisation. 
“What this says is that there is movement in our Church, movement to 
welcome  people from the outside closer to the inside,” Gramick said in St. 
Peter’
s  Square. 
Several months after his election, Francis made his now-famous remark about 
 how he could not judge gay people who are have good will and are seeking  
God. 
But he so far shown no sign the Church will change its teaching that while  
homosexuality is not sinful, homosexual acts are. 
Last October, bishops from around the world meeting in Rome to debate  
questions concerning family issued an interim report calling for greater  
acceptance of gays in the Church. 
That passage was watered down in the final version of the report after  
conservative bishops complained. A second and final meeting on family issues is 
 scheduled for October. 
DeBernardo said Catholic gay and lesbian couples and other non-traditional  
families should be invited to the meeting, known as a synod, to speak to 
the  bishops about their faith and their sexuality.  
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