Evangelical Trump Supporters Want Meeting with Pope over Article Accusing Them of 'Hate'
Dorothy Cummings McLean : Aug 9, 2017
LifeSiteNews.com
"...we have also witnessed efforts to divide Catholics and Evangelicals. We think it would be of great benefit to sit together and to discuss these things. Then, when we disagree we can do it within the context of friendship. Though, I'm sure we will find once again that we agree far more than we disagree, and we can work together with diligence on those areas of agreement." -Rev. Johnnie Moore
(Washington, DC)—[LifeSiteNews] President Trump's Evangelical Christian advisers are "willing to get on a plane tomorrow to Rome" to meet with Pope Francis and repair damage done to American ecumenism by a controversial essay published in a Vatican-approved publication. (Photo: Reverend Johnnie Moore/via LifeSiteNews.com)
The contentious essay, entitled "Evangelical Fundamentalism and Catholic Integralism: A Surprising Ecumenism," appeared in the Italian Jesuit magazine La Civiltà Cattolica on July 13. It was co-authored by Father Antonio Spadaro, SJ, the Italian editor-in-chief of the magazine, and the Reverend Marcelo Figueroa, the Presbyterian minister that Pope Francis hired to edit the Argentinian edition of L'Osservatore Romano. As both men are close advisers to the pontiff, their attack on Christian conservatives in the United States made headlines around the world.
Time magazine reported August 7 that the Reverend Johnnie Moore, 33, one of the world's foremost spokespersons for Christians in the Middle East, had written a letter to Pope Francis on behalf of some Evangelical leaders in response to the controversial essay. The letter, dated August 3, was sent care of the Archdiocese of Washington, DC.
In the letter, Moore expressed a concern that Spadaro and Figuera's essay was an attempt to divide Christians. "It's in this moment of ongoing persecution, political division and global conflict that we have also witnessed efforts to divide Catholics and Evangelicals," he wrote. "We think it would be of great benefit to sit together and to discuss these things. Then, when we disagree we can do it within the context of friendship. Though, I'm sure we will find once again that we agree far more than we disagree, and we can work together with diligence on those areas of agreement."
Catholics and Protestants in the USA, as in other countries, have put aside their confessional differences for decades to work together in support of the right to life of the unborn, and more recently on behalf of traditional marriage. Hitherto, Catholic leaders have seen this as a blessing. As Thomas D. Williams observes, Saint John Paul II, in his encyclical Ut Unum Sint ("That All May Be One"), "explicitly appealed to an ecumenism of shared moral values as an important road to dialogue and unity" in his 1995 encyclical Ut Unum Sit. But despite this history, Spadaro and Figueroa expressed themselves surprised by the alliance.
"Appealing to the values of fundamentalism, a strange form of surprising ecumenism is developing between Evangelical fundamentalists and Catholic Integralists brought together by the same desire for religious influence in the political sphere...
Continue reading here.