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Catholics love their celebrity pope — and most of his priorities

Catholics love their celebrity pope — and most of his priorities

Americans are gung-ho for Pope Francis' U.S. visit — if they know he's coming.

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Cathy Lynn Grossman, Religion News Service 8:07 a.m. EDT August 25, 2015

Americans are gung-ho for Pope Francis' U.S. visit — if they know he's coming.

They really, really like him, too, particularly Catholics — even if they're sometimes confused about what he believes.

But most Americans (52%) and nearly a third of Catholics (31%) say they hadn't heard about the pope's September visit to Philadelphia, New York City and Washington, according to a new survey released Tuesday by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) in partnership with Religion News Service.

Overall, 67% of Americans and 90% of U.S. Catholics hold a favorable view of him.

"Americans embrace Pope Francis as a celebrity — even when they don't know what he thinks or does," said Robert Jones, president and CEO of the PRRI.

Many attached glowing traits to Francis. Asked to describe him in their own words, most just identified him by his role as pope or other neutral terms, but 27% chose positive terms, calling him "humble," "compassionate" and "caring."

The majority share his top priorities — on concern for the poor, the environment and the economy. But the flock veers from the shepherd on doctrine, particularly on sexuality and marriage.

However, on question after question, Jones said, one in five Catholics said they didn't know the pope's views. And when they think they do, they're sometimes wrong.

Consider the confusion over same-sex marriage. Francis has not changed the Catholic Church's official position opposing its legalization. Yet many U.S. Catholics (38%) believe he supports it, according to the survey of 1,331 U.S. adults. It was conducted in English and Spanish Aug. 5-11. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.

Catholics love their celebrity pope — and most of his priorities

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A Maine company has been given the prestigious task of making chairs specifically for the Pope. VPC

The confusion might be because people like to believe the pope — famous for his "Who am I to judge" comment — thinks as they do: 49% of Catholics who support same-sex marriage mistakenly think the pope does as well.

Coming after the eight-year reign of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, a theology professor with a passion for orthodoxy, Pope Francis' "shift in tone has changed people's perceptions," said Jones.

Unlike the popular pontiff, when it comes to the institutional church, 25% of Catholics pile on the negative terms such as "dogmatic" or "hypocritical" or "overly concerned with money." Only 9% of Catholics offered positive associations with the institutional church, such as mentioning its charitable work.

They are down on their bishops, too. While 80% of Catholics say Argentine-born Pope Francis, who has never visited the United States, understands of the needs and views of American Catholics well, only 60% say the same for the U.S. bishops.

Young Catholics are particularly critical of the bishops, perhaps because of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' intense political involvement opposing gay marriage and insurance coverage for contraception, both issues millennials favor, said Jones.

Neither are Catholics uniformly on board with Francis' many calls for social and economic justice. Most (57%), chiefly Democrats and women, say the Catholic Church should focus more on social justice and the obligation to help the poor than on abortion and the right to life. But 33% of Catholics, chiefly Republicans and men, say the opposite.

Overall, Catholics are statistically in line with most Americans on current hot-button social issues:

•72% (like 71% of all Americans) say government should do more to reduce the gap between rich and poor.

•73% of Catholics (66% of Americans) say the U.S. government should do more to address climate change.

•61% (63% of Americans) want to see a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

•51%, chiefly Democrats, (53% of Americans) say abortion should be legal in all or most cases.

The Catholic Church preaches against homosexual behavior. But PRRI finds most U.S. Catholics either don't know or don't heed that teaching:

•53% of Catholics say they don't think same-sex marriage goes against their religious beliefs.

•60% favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry.

•76% favor laws that would protect gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people against discrimination.

•65% oppose a policy that would allow small-business owners to refuse, based on their religious beliefs, to provide products or services to gay and lesbian people.

Reactions to the pope also reflect the complexity of the church in the United States today. Catholics are not only divided by ethnicity, generation and geography; they also differ in the ways they see the church, its role in their lives, in politics and in society.

"There is one Catholic Church in the world, but an anthropologist from Mars who landed in the U.S. today would see two churches," said Jones.

One is conservative, 76% non-Hispanic white, older and centered in the northeast and Midwest, according to PRRI's 2014 American Values Atlas, issued in February 2015, based on a random national sample of 11,115 Catholics.

The other is young, overwhelmingly Hispanic and centered in five states in the Southwest: Texas (where 74% of Catholics are Hispanic), California (70%), New Mexico (70%), Arizona (59%) and Nevada (59%).

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International star Juanes will sing for the Pope in Philadelphia Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

"If Pope Francis were touching ground in Las Vegas (59% Catholic), he'd have a very different audience than he'll see in the Northeast," said Jones.

There's another division — one the Catholic Church would like to erase by bringing former Catholics back to the fold. These are the 15% of Americans who say they grew up Catholic but told PRRI they no longer identify with the faith.

Nearly 2 in 3 (64%) of former Catholics hold a positive view of the pope and 59% say he understands U.S. Catholics well, but only 35% say the same for the American bishops. That aligns with their sour view of the institutional church: Only 43% hold a positive view.

Still, the survey finds, 66% of Catholics and 51% of former Catholics expect Pope Francis will attract more Catholics back to the church.

Jones speculates that the pontiff "might change former Catholics' views of the institutional church if it begins to look and feel more like Pope Francis' persona."

They might engage more in church life, attend Mass or even resume identifying as Catholics — the ultimate "Francis effect."

The open question, said Jones, is whether "Pope Francis will function more like the Dalai Lama. They have warm feelings for him but they are not going to go hunt down a Buddhist meditation center."

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Catholics love their celebrity pope — and most of his priorities
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Catholics love their celebrity pope — and most of his priorities

Americans are gung-ho for Pope Francis' U.S. visit — if they know he's coming.

Try Another

Audio CAPTCHA

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Help

Posted!

A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.

Cathy Lynn Grossman, Religion News Service 8:07 a.m. EDT August 25, 2015

Americans are gung-ho for Pope Francis' U.S. visit — if they know he's coming.

They really, really like him, too, particularly Catholics — even if they're sometimes confused about what he believes.

But most Americans (52%) and nearly a third of Catholics (31%) say they hadn't heard about the pope's September visit to Philadelphia, New York City and Washington, according to a new survey released Tuesday by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) in partnership with Religion News Service.

Overall, 67% of Americans and 90% of U.S. Catholics hold a favorable view of him.

"Americans embrace Pope Francis as a celebrity — even when they don't know what he thinks or does," said Robert Jones, president and CEO of the PRRI.

Many attached glowing traits to Francis. Asked to describe him in their own words, most just identified him by his role as pope or other neutral terms, but 27% chose positive terms, calling him "humble," "compassionate" and "caring."

The majority share his top priorities — on concern for the poor, the environment and the economy. But the flock veers from the shepherd on doctrine, particularly on sexuality and marriage.

However, on question after question, Jones said, one in five Catholics said they didn't know the pope's views. And when they think they do, they're sometimes wrong.

Consider the confusion over same-sex marriage. Francis has not changed the Catholic Church's official position opposing its legalization. Yet many U.S. Catholics (38%) believe he supports it, according to the survey of 1,331 U.S. adults. It was conducted in English and Spanish Aug. 5-11. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.

UP NEXT

03

A Maine company has been given the prestigious task of making chairs specifically for the Pope. VPC

The confusion might be because people like to believe the pope — famous for his "Who am I to judge" comment — thinks as they do: 49% of Catholics who support same-sex marriage mistakenly think the pope does as well.

Coming after the eight-year reign of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, a theology professor with a passion for orthodoxy, Pope Francis' "shift in tone has changed people's perceptions," said Jones.

Unlike the popular pontiff, when it comes to the institutional church, 25% of Catholics pile on the negative terms such as "dogmatic" or "hypocritical" or "overly concerned with money." Only 9% of Catholics offered positive associations with the institutional church, such as mentioning its charitable work.

They are down on their bishops, too. While 80% of Catholics say Argentine-born Pope Francis, who has never visited the United States, understands of the needs and views of American Catholics well, only 60% say the same for the U.S. bishops.

Young Catholics are particularly critical of the bishops, perhaps because of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' intense political involvement opposing gay marriage and insurance coverage for contraception, both issues millennials favor, said Jones.

Neither are Catholics uniformly on board with Francis' many calls for social and economic justice. Most (57%), chiefly Democrats and women, say the Catholic Church should focus more on social justice and the obligation to help the poor than on abortion and the right to life. But 33% of Catholics, chiefly Republicans and men, say the opposite.

Overall, Catholics are statistically in line with most Americans on current hot-button social issues:

•72% (like 71% of all Americans) say government should do more to reduce the gap between rich and poor.

•73% of Catholics (66% of Americans) say the U.S. government should do more to address climate change.

•61% (63% of Americans) want to see a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

•51%, chiefly Democrats, (53% of Americans) say abortion should be legal in all or most cases.

The Catholic Church preaches against homosexual behavior. But PRRI finds most U.S. Catholics either don't know or don't heed that teaching:

•53% of Catholics say they don't think same-sex marriage goes against their religious beliefs.

•60% favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry.

•76% favor laws that would protect gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people against discrimination.

•65% oppose a policy that would allow small-business owners to refuse, based on their religious beliefs, to provide products or services to gay and lesbian people.

Reactions to the pope also reflect the complexity of the church in the United States today. Catholics are not only divided by ethnicity, generation and geography; they also differ in the ways they see the church, its role in their lives, in politics and in society.

"There is one Catholic Church in the world, but an anthropologist from Mars who landed in the U.S. today would see two churches," said Jones.

One is conservative, 76% non-Hispanic white, older and centered in the northeast and Midwest, according to PRRI's 2014 American Values Atlas, issued in February 2015, based on a random national sample of 11,115 Catholics.

The other is young, overwhelmingly Hispanic and centered in five states in the Southwest: Texas (where 74% of Catholics are Hispanic), California (70%), New Mexico (70%), Arizona (59%) and Nevada (59%).

UP NEXT

03

International star Juanes will sing for the Pope in Philadelphia Robert Deutsch, USA TODAY

"If Pope Francis were touching ground in Las Vegas (59% Catholic), he'd have a very different audience than he'll see in the Northeast," said Jones.

There's another division — one the Catholic Church would like to erase by bringing former Catholics back to the fold. These are the 15% of Americans who say they grew up Catholic but told PRRI they no longer identify with the faith.

Nearly 2 in 3 (64%) of former Catholics hold a positive view of the pope and 59% say he understands U.S. Catholics well, but only 35% say the same for the American bishops. That aligns with their sour view of the institutional church: Only 43% hold a positive view.

Still, the survey finds, 66% of Catholics and 51% of former Catholics expect Pope Francis will attract more Catholics back to the church.

Jones speculates that the pontiff "might change former Catholics' views of the institutional church if it begins to look and feel more like Pope Francis' persona."

They might engage more in church life, attend Mass or even resume identifying as Catholics — the ultimate "Francis effect."

The open question, said Jones, is whether "Pope Francis will function more like the Dalai Lama. They have warm feelings for him but they are not going to go hunt down a Buddhist meditation center."

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/1EheSS0

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