SAD SITUATION, BUT CATHOLICISM TEACHES US THAT WE ARE NEVER HOPELESS!
Confidence in Pope Francis Down Sharply in U.S.
By a two-to-one margin, American Catholics now give Francis negative marks for his handling of the sex abuse scandal
(Jeff J. Mitchell/Getty Images)
As allegations and investigations
of sex abuse in the Catholic Church become more widespread, a new Pew
Research Center survey finds that confidence in the way Pope Francis is
handling the crisis has plummeted among U.S. Catholics. Just
three-in-ten Catholic adults say Francis is doing an “excellent” or a
“good” job addressing the issue, which is down 24 points since 2015 and
14 points from when Pew Research Center last asked the question in
January of this year.
While seven-in-ten American Catholics say their overall opinion of
Pope Francis is favorable, six-in-ten now say he is doing an “only fair”
or “poor” job handling the sex abuse scandal, including 36% who say his
efforts on this front have been poor. This is nearly double the share
who said he was doing a poor job at the beginning of this year, and
triple the share who said this in 2015.
The declining confidence in Francis’ handling of the sex abuse crisis
is broad-based, occurring across a wide variety of subgroups of U.S.
Catholics. Since 2015, for instance, the share who give the pope
“excellent” or “good” ratings for his handling of the issue declined by
24 points among Catholic men and 23 points among Catholic women.
Similarly, both younger and older Catholics have grown increasingly
critical of the pontiff’s handling of the situation.
Even among Catholics who say they attend Mass weekly, the share who
give Francis positive marks for his handling of the sex abuse crisis has
been cut in half since 2015; 34% in this group now give Francis
“excellent” or “good” ratings for his handling of the issue, whereas 67%
gave him a positive evaluation in 2015. When
asked about their overall opinion of Pope Francis, roughly seven-in-ten
U.S. Catholics now say they have a favorable opinion of the pontiff,
down 12 points since the beginning of the year. The decline is
especially evident in the share of American Catholics who say they have a
very favorable opinion of the pope, which now stands at 30%.
By comparison, previous Pew Research Center surveys have generally found
that four-in-ten or more Catholics (and as many as 62% in October 2015)
hold Francis in the highest regard.
These are among the key findings of a new national survey by Pew
Research Center, conducted Sept. 18 to 24 among 1,754 adults, including
336 Catholics. Among the U.S. public as a whole (including both
Catholics and non-Catholics), roughly half say they have a favorable
view of Pope Francis, which is the lowest rating he has received in nine
Pew Research Center surveys that have asked about Pope Francis since
the beginning of his pontificate in 2013.
Until now, Francis has generally earned higher favorability ratings
from the U.S. public than did Pope Benedict XVI. In the new survey,
however, Francis’ favorability rating is on par with the ratings
typically earned by his predecessor, and significantly below the rating
Benedict garnered immediately following his visit to the U.S. in April
2008 (61%).
In surveys conducted between 1987 and 1996, John Paul II was viewed
positively by a larger share of Americans than have ever viewed either
Benedict XVI or Francis positively. However, Pew Research Center polling
did not include questions about John Paul II after news of sex abuse in
the church made national headlines in 2002.
In addition to asking about the pope’s handling of the sex abuse
scandal, the survey also asked Catholics to rate the way Pope Francis is
handling his job in three other areas: appointing new bishops and
cardinals, spreading the Catholic faith, and standing up for traditional
moral values. On all three issues, evaluations of the pope have grown
sharply more negative this year.
For instance, U.S. Catholics are now evenly divided between those who
give Francis positive ratings for the job he has done appointing new
bishops and cardinals and those who give him negative marks in this
area. In January, by contrast, the balance of opinion on this question
tilted heavily in the pope’s favor.
And while the pontiff is still rated more positively than negatively
for the job he has done spreading the Catholic faith and standing up for
traditional moral values, the share of Catholics who say Francis is
doing an excellent or a good job on these fronts also has declined
sharply in recent months. It
is possible that respondents could link any of these areas to the sex
abuse scandal. For example, Francis recently admitted that rather than
spreading the Catholic faith, the scandal is driving Catholics away from the faith. In addition, the church has been criticized for elevating bishops and cardinals despite warnings that they were alleged abusers.
The new study also shows that U.S. Catholics’ views of Pope Francis
are increasingly polarized along political lines. For instance, in 2014,
there was virtually no difference in views of Pope Francis between
Catholic Democrats and those who lean toward the Democratic Party (87%
of whom expressed a favorable view of the Pope) and Catholic Republicans
and those who lean toward the GOP (90% favorable). By January 2018,
however, favorable views of Pope Francis were 10 points higher among
Catholic Democrats than among Catholic Republicans (89% vs. 79%). And
today, the share of Catholics who have a favorable view of the pontiff
is 22 points higher among Democrats than among Republicans (83% vs.
61%).
And while Catholic Democrats and Republicans have both expressed
growing doubts in recent years about Francis’ handling of the sex abuse
scandal, Catholic Democrats are now 13 points more likely than Catholic
Republicans to give him excellent or good ratings in this area (37% vs.
24%).
Declining shares of Catholics and non-Catholics view Francis in a positive light
While most Catholics (and majorities within every Catholic subgroup
analyzed in the survey) rate Pope Francis at least “mostly” favorably,
the share who hold him in the highest esteem is shrinking. Just
three-in-ten U.S. Catholics now say they have a “very favorable” opinion
of Francis, which is down from 45% who said the same earlier this year
and merely half as large as the share who had a “very favorable” view of
the pope in the immediate wake of his visit to the U.S. in October 2015
(62%).
These cooler feelings toward Francis are evident across many Catholic
subgroups. Among Catholic men, for example, the share who say they have
a “very” favorable view of Pope Francis has dropped 20 points in the
past nine months. Even among Catholics who attend Mass at least once a
week, just a third (34%) now say they have a very favorable opinion of
the pontiff, down from 56% in January. And Catholic Democrats, who still
broadly see Francis favorably, also are less likely now to say their
opinion is “very” favorable than they were earlier this year (34% vs.
49% in January 2018).
The survey also shows that American Catholics are not alone in their
shifting opinion of Pope Francis. Just a third (32%) of white
evangelical Protestants hold a positive view of the pope, down from 52%
who said the same in January. And there has been a similar decline in
Francis’ popularity among white mainline Protestants: 67% viewed him
favorably in January, compared with 48% today. Among religiously
unaffiliated adults, roughly half view Francis favorably, relatively
unchanged from earlier this year – but down 18 points since January
2017.
Broad-based declines in U.S. Catholics’ views of how Pope Francis is handling sex abuse scandal, other issues
Generally, Catholics who attend Mass regularly have been more
supportive of the pontiff than have those who do not attend Mass
regularly. But ratings of Pope Francis have declined across the board.
And today, weekly Mass-attending Catholics are no more likely than
Catholics who attend less often to say that Francis is doing an adequate
job handling the sex abuse crisis or standing up for traditional moral
values. Similarly, declines in U.S. Catholics’ ratings of Pope Francis
when it comes to appointing bishops and cardinals or spreading the
Catholic faith have occurred across a variety of Catholic subgroups.
2 comments:
Cult of personality....a bit too much of it.
I look upon this as just desserts.
All the rest-home Catholics wanted to finally get their uber-liberal pope.
Well, now you've got him. Live withe the consequences.
Post a Comment