In the Australian context, Pell was regarded as progressive on some issues such as
asylum seekers but strongly conservative on matters of faith and morals. He was often wary of what he called the "callousness" of unrestrained
capitalism. He wrote that a Catholic is someone who is not only a person of personal conscience but "is someone who believes Christ is Son of God, accepts His teachings and lives a life of worship, service and duty in the community. Catholics are not created by the accident of birth to remain only because their tribe has an interesting history."
Theology and worship Ad orientem liturgy In 2009 Pell supported, in the abstract but not as a proposal for immediate application, mandatory celebration of the
Canon of the Mass with the orientation of the priest
ad orientem (towards the east), facing in the same direction as the congregation. "There's nothing like a consensus in favour of that at the moment", he said. "I think I would be in favour of it because it makes it patently clear that the priest is not the centre of the show, that this is an act of worship of the one true God, and the people are joining with the priest for that."
Adam and Eve During a debate against
Richard Dawkins on the television show
Q&A in 2012, in response to whether there had ever been a
Garden of Eden scenario with an "actual"
Adam and Eve, Pell said:
Ordination of women and priestly celibacy In 2005 Pell supported the view that the
ordination of women as priests is impossible according to the church's divine constitution and said that abandoning the tradition of
clerical celibacy would be a "serious blunder".
Pope Benedict XVI Pell said that the decision of
Pope Benedict XVI to retire in 2013 could set a precedent which may be a problem for future leaders. He thought Benedict's decision to step down had destabilised the church and some of those surrounding the Pope had failed to support him in his ministry. "He was well aware that this is a break with tradition [and] slightly destabilising", Pell said. According to him, the Pope was a better theologian than he was a leader. In response to the statement that he had criticised Benedict XVI, Pell said he was stating what the Pope already mentioned himself, and his comments were "not breaking any ground".
Pope Francis In the days following his death, it was revealed that Pell had been the author of a memo published in 2022 on the blog
Settimo Cielo under the pseudonym of "Demos", in which Pell expressed harsh criticisms of Pope Francis and labelled his pontificate as "a disaster in many or most respects; a catastrophe". Pell accused Francis of failing to stand up to the
Chinese Communist Party, of failing to lend sufficient support to Ukraine and the
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and for not doing enough to stop the
Catholic Church in Germany from questioning traditional doctrines on LGBT issues and
women's ordination. The person who had revealed Demos' identity,
Sandro Magister, who was also the memo's publisher, said that Pell had allowed him to reveal he was Demos after his death. In an article he wrote for
The Spectator, published shortly after his death, Pell described
Pope Francis' Synod on the Synod as a "toxic nightmare".
Political issues Asylum seekers and refugees Pell criticised the bipartisan policy of mandatory detention of
asylum seekers in Australia and called for "empathy and compassion" towards displaced peoples. Pell said that while a policy of deterrence was justifiable, the practice of the policy was coming at too great a "moral cost". Describing conditions in some of Australia's mandatory detention camps in 2001 as "pretty tight and miserable" and "no place for women and children", Pell called for investigation of any maltreatment of detainees and said that, while Australia has the right to regulate the number of refugees it accepts, as a rich and prosperous country, it can "afford to be generous" and must treat humanely those refugees who reach Australia.
Environmental positions In a 2006 speech, Pell said that "hysterical and extreme claims" about the natural environment were the result of the "
pagan emptiness" of Western culture. He said: "In the past pagans
sacrificed animals and
even humans in vain attempts to placate capricious and cruel gods. Today they demand a reduction in
carbon dioxide emissions." In a 2007 article for the Sydney
Sunday Telegraph, Pell wrote that while climate had changed, he was "certainly sceptical about extravagant claims of impending
man-made climatic catastrophes, because the evidence is insufficient". Responding to the Anglican bishop and environmentalist
George Browning, who told the
Anglican Church of Australia's general synod that Pell was out of touch with the Catholic Church as well as with the general community, Pell stated: In July 2015, Pell criticised Pope Francis's
encyclical ''
Laudato si''' for associating the church with the need to address climate. Pell said: Pell publicly expressed concern regarding population decline in July 2008 in a homily for the opening Mass of the
World Youth Day in Sydney, in response to comments made by
Pope Benedict XVI regarding climate change. While travelling to Sydney for the event, Benedict stated in a brief interview that Catholics and others must commit "to finding an ethical way to change our way of life and ways to respond to these great challenges" regarding climate change. Pell stated in his homily that mankind has a duty not "to damage and destroy or ruthlessly use the environment at the expense of future generations", but expressed scepticism regarding human activity causing climate change. Pell's views were contested in a global context by the economist
Jeffrey Sachs, who argued that "The planet, everyone can feel, is just right at the limits right now in terms of food, in terms of energy supply, in terms of land use." Sachs also suggested that world population projections "are already too high at around an extra 2.5 billion people by 2050".
Interfaith issues Islam Pell wrote of a need to "deepen friendship and understanding" with
Muslims in the post–
September 11 environment and said that though there is a continuing struggle throughout the Muslim world between moderates and men of violence, he believed that, in Australia, "the moderates are in control". In 2004, speaking to the
Acton Institute on the problems of "secular democracy", Pell drew a parallel between
Islam and
communism: "Islam may provide in the 21st century, the attraction that communism provided in the 20th, both for those that are alienated and embittered on the one hand and for those who seek order or justice on the other." In February 2006, addressing Catholic business leaders in
Naples, Florida, Pell stated: "Considered strictly on its own terms, Islam is not a tolerant religion and its capacity for far-reaching renovation is severely limited." He doubted that Islam possesses the capacity for theological development because "In the Muslim understanding, the Koran comes directly from God, unmediated. The Bible, in contrast, is a product of human co-operation with divine inspiration." In 2012 and 2013, Pell hosted
Iftar dinners to mark the end of the Islamic celebration of
Ramadan. The Grand Mufti of Australia,
Ibrahim Abu Mohamed, expressed his gratitude and appreciation to Pell on behalf of Muslims for hosting the dinner. Pell said during the 2012 dinner that such gatherings are one of the fruits of tolerance that flourishes in Australian society and is a sign of respect for diversity, stating: Pell's remarks to Richard Dawkins led to a clarification from his office, reported by
The Times of Israel as an apology. Pell said, "My commitment to friendship with the Jewish community, and my esteem for the Jewish faith is a matter of public record, and the last thing I would want to do is give offence to either" and that the Holocaust was "a crime unique in history for the death and suffering it caused and its diabolical attempt to wipe out an entire people."
Sexuality, marriage and bioethics Pell received much attention for his attitudes to sexuality issues, particularly homosexuality. When installed as Archbishop of Sydney in May 2001, he said that "Christian teaching on sexuality is only one part of the
Ten Commandments, of the virtues and vices, but it is essential for human wellbeing and especially for the proper flourishing of marriages and families, for the continuity of the human race."
Divorce and remarriage Pell said that, outside exceptional circumstances such as relationships involving physical abuse, it is better for individuals and for society if couples do not divorce, particularly where children are involved. In 2001,
ABC radio's
The World Today reported that Pell wanted a return to a divorce system based on the fault of one spouse. Pell told the program that, in an effort to "focus attention on the damage, personal and financial, that unfortunately often follows from divorce", he had prepared a list for public consideration of possible penalties to discourage divorce (particularly where fault by one party was involved) as well as benefits to support couples who stayed together.
LGBT issues In 1990, Pell stated publicly that while he recognised that homosexuality existed, such activity was nevertheless wrong and "for the good of society it should not be encouraged." He had also expressed his belief that
suicide rates among LGBT youth were a reason to discourage homosexuality, arguing that "Homosexual activity is a much greater health hazard than smoking." In 1998, Pell refused communion to members of the
Rainbow Sash Movement who had attended Mass at the cathedral in Melbourne. He publicly rebuked their actions to the applause of other parishioners. Pell opposed Australian legislation in 2006 that would have permitted LGBT couples to adopt children. In 2007, he said that discrimination against LGBT people was not comparable to that against racial minorities.
HIV/AIDS In 2009, Pell supported the comments made by
Pope Benedict XVI in Africa in relation to controlling the spread of AIDS, in which the Pope reiterated the Catholic teaching that the solution to the AIDS epidemic lay not in the distribution of condoms, but in the practice of sexual abstinence and monogamy within marriage. The Pope said that AIDS could not be overcome through the distribution of condoms, which "can even increase the problem". In response to global coverage of these remarks, Pell said that AIDS was a "great spiritual and health crisis" and a huge challenge, but that "Condoms are encouraging promiscuity. They are encouraging irresponsibility." The president of the AIDS Council of New South Wales, Marc Orr, said Pell's comments were "irresponsible" and "contradicted all evidence" that condoms reduced the transmission of HIV: Mike Toole (
Burnet Institute) and Rob Moodie (Nossal Institute for Global Health) wrote in
The Age that Pell had said a health worker from an African country told him that "people in remote areas are too poor to afford condoms and the ones that are available are often of very poor quality and weren't used effectively". Both professors argue that "this is not an argument against promoting condoms – it is an argument that we need to ensure that good quality condoms are affordable for everyone and are widely distributed with information about how to use them effectively" and concluded "the sexual abstinence message is clearly not working." In 2010, Benedict told an interviewer that while the church did not consider condoms as a "real or moral solution", there were times where the "intention of reducing the risk of infection" made condom use "a first step" towards a better way. Pell released a statement saying this did not signal a major new shift in Vatican thinking.
Stem cell research Pell supported research on the therapeutic potential of
adult stem cells but opposed
embryonic stem cell research on the basis that the Catholic Church cannot support anything which involves "the destruction of human life at any stage after conception". Under Pell, the Sydney archdiocese has provided funding for adult stem cell research but has actively opposed moves by the
Parliament of New South Wales to liberalise laws pertaining to use of embryonic stem cells. Following a
conscience vote in the Parliament of New South Wales overturning a ban on
therapeutic cloning, in June 2007 Pell said that "Catholic politicians who vote for this legislation must realise that their voting has consequences for their place in the life of the Church." Some members of parliament, including ministers such as
Kristina Keneally and
Nathan Rees, condemned Pell's comments, calling them hypocritical; Rees drew comparisons with comments made earlier in the year by
Sheik Hilali.
Australian Greens MLC
Lee Rhiannon referred Pell's remarks to the New South Wales
parliamentary privileges committee for allegedly being in
contempt of parliament. Pell described this move as a "clumsy attempt to curb religious freedom and freedom of speech". In September the committee tabled a report clearing him of this charge and recommending that no further action be taken. The legal scholar and theologian
Cathleen Kaveny wrote that "In every possible respect, Pell's statement backfired" as, following backlash from elected officials and the general public, the bill passed the lower house with what she describes as "an overwhelming 65–26 vote" and passed the upper house with a 27–13 vote. ==Other roles==