NEWS, SPORTS, COMMENTARY, POLITICS for Gloucester City and the Surrounding Areas of South Jersey and Philadelphia

Penns Grove too Strong for Gloucester Catholic, Final 36-0 / MaxPreps
NFL Week 4: Quick Reactions to the Early Games

Is The Pope Progressive? /NEWSWORKS

September 23, 2013hero Pope Francis poses for a photo after a meeting with youths in downtown Cagliari, Italy, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Francis denounced what he called big business's idolatry of money over man as he traveled Sunday to one of Italy's poorest regions to offer hope to the unemployed and entrepreneurs struggling to hang on. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

  By Meg Frankowski

author's-bio-image

 It was at a small, now closed, Catholic school in Northeast Philadelphia where Morning Edition Production Assistant and reporter Meg Frankowski realized she wanted to be a journalist. She's kept up the questioning and the curiosity over the years and got her start with the WHYY NewsWorks team as an intern in 2011.

Since then, she has worked at the station as a production assistant for the 2012 presidential election show and as a research assistant for StateImpact Pennsylvania. She has led efforts to create the NewsWorks Street Team and co-produces a civic engagement project, Street Level Conversations.

Meg has also written for Temple’s Fox Focus Magazine and a Philly.com-powered suburban newspaper, My Community Trend. As a Temple grad and Philly native, she can talk craft beer, history and Phillyisms with the best of them. In her spare time you can find her exploring the city and on the lookout for interesting people, issues and trends.


  • As Catholics filed out of Mass at St. Martha's in Northeast Philadelphia, some stopped to share their opinion about the pope's comments that the faith needs to find a "new balance."

Pope Francis said in an interview published by the Jesuit magazineAmerica that the church has become "obsessed" by "small-minded rules" and said pastors should focus on compassion over condemnation, specifically pertaining to issues of abortion, homosexuality and contraception.

Parishioner Nancy Panepresso said she doesn't agree with the pope's views.

"It goes against the teachings of the church," said Panepresso. "I think he's just trying to draw people back to the church to make it grow, I don't know if he necessarily believes that."

Andrea Kennedy said she welcomes the Vatican's shift in perspective.

"I have a lot of homosexual friends and I would never judge somebody. When you love someone you love someone, you can't help it," Kennedy said.

Larry Steffen stressed the church needs to change in order for more people to come back to the faith.

"It's about time that somebody stepped up and said what needed to be said," Steffen said. "Everybody's welcome. God loves the people. He hates the sin, he loves the people. I think it's time for change."

His wife, Carol, says the pope's words are an invitation for those who have felt unwelcome in the past.

"I think he teaches what Christ taught, I don't know that he's progressive, I think he's refreshing," she said. "He's not saying what man would say, he's saying what Christ taught. So I love Pope Francis, I really do."

The pope also spoke about a need for new roles for women in the church, although he did not go so far as to endorse admitting women to the priesthood. Patricia Woods said that's encouraging.

"I think that women should have more say in things and have more jobs within the church. We have a lot of woman that work in the church here, in fact we're voting now for people to be in the council, women have a lot to say, and should have a lot to say."

The pope also stated that the church "is likely to fall like a house of cards" without change. While his comments show a departure in emphasis compared to his predecessors, they have not altered any church teachings.

NewsWorks is supported by

Featured Stories

NewsWorks is supported by
Enhanced by Zemanta

Comments