Francis has called mercy "the keystone of the life of faith" by which people "give visibility to the Resurrection of Jesus." In opening the
Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy year, Francis spoke of how it "wrongs God when we speak of sins being punished by judgment before we speak of their being forgiven by God's mercy". Cardinal
Walter Kasper has called mercy "the key word of his pontificate... (while) Scholastic theology has neglected this topic and turned it into a mere subordinate theme of justice." "Francis' watchword is mercy, but mercy adheres, first, not in alterations of doctrine but in the new way that Catholics are invited to think of doctrine," in pastoral practice and conformity with what "Jesus wants – a Church attentive to the goodness which the Holy Spirit sows in the midst of human weakness." which was, for some, people a shocking gesture. In its spirit of
aggiornamento, Vatican II perceived a need for making the manuals of moral theology more relevant toward peoples' real-life situations, and, as
Cardinal Montini pointed out, toward "audacious change" that "subordinated law to charity." Francis, in turn, has said that "Christian morality is not a form of stoicism, or self-denial, or merely a practical philosophy, or a catalogue of sins and faults. Before all else, the Gospel invites us to respond to the God of love who saves us, to see God in others, and to go forth from ourselves to seek the good of others." Saint
Thomas Aquinas pointed out that the precepts which Christ and the apostles gave to the people of God "are very few". Citing Saint
Augustine, he noted that the precepts subsequently enjoined by the Church should be insisted upon with moderation "so as not to burden the lives of the faithful" and make our religion a form of servitude, whereas "God's mercy has willed that we should be free". Francis also warned against "codification of the faith in rules and regulations, as the scribes, the
Pharisees, the doctors of the law did in the time of Jesus. To us, everything will be clear and set in order, but the faithful and those in search will still hunger and thirst for God." He went on to describe the Church as a field hospital where people should come to know God's warmth and closeness to them, where the shepherds have "the smell of the sheep". The last statement went viral and became the title of the book
With the Smell of the Sheep: Pope Francis Speaks to Priests, Bishops, and Other Shepherds in which by "warning against the sins of '
self-referentiality',
clericalism,
careerism, and worldliness, [Francis] stresses the importance of mercy." The remark of "the smell of the sheep," however, brought a negative critique from the conservative media which asked: "For the 'field hospital' Church, who are the gatekeepers?... a Roman-style pantheon of national conferences of bishops, or maybe only a schismatic and flat 'congregational theocracy' more like Islam? The 'smell of the sheep' is one thing; the smell of wolves in sheep's clothing would be another."
Sexual morality Argentinian Archbishop
Víctor Fernández has explained controversies that have arisen over Francis' words: "The problem is that the fanatics end up converting some principles into a lifelong battle and deliberately discuss only those issues... There are other issues that are non-negotiable: love your neighbor, do justice to the oppressed..." The
scholastic-philosophical approach to morality, stemming largely from
Thomas Aquinas, had been used during the papacy of John Paul II to give attention to the "intrinsic evil" of abortion. Francis "finds in the Bible an alternative tradition, touched on in the Second Vatican Council... which takes as its subject 'sins of strength', including the failure to take personal responsibility for the state of the wider world."
M. Cathleen Kaveny wrote in
America that she believes it is incorrect to apply the term "intrinsic evil" to determine the gravity of an evil, nor should intrinsic evils be so narrowly delimited. In 2013,
Massimo Faggioli wrote: "The Catholicism of movement 'to the margins' announced by Pope Francis also means trying to take leave of the political culture of neoconservative and neoliberal Catholicism... a return to a Catholicism that is in search of 'common ground', such as that of the Cardinal of Chicago
Joseph Bernardin." This return has been seen as a departure from the
neoconservatism among Catholics in the United States that had reigned since the Reagan era, based on an "anti-abortion stance that was isolated from the 'social question'" of market regulation, or other basic rights. At the same time, while Francis may be seen as a "radical reformer", he also nonetheless believes that "the task of the papacy is the preservation of the doctrine handed down by Jesus Christ." This means preserving the Church's doctrine, as on abortion and artificial contraception, where he hasn't respond to specific misinterpretations of his words but instead uses later opportunities to clarify his orthodoxy. Francis has criticized those homilies "which should be
kerygmatic but end up speaking about everything that has a connection with sex... whether or not to participate in a demonstration against a draft law in favor of the use of condoms." He added: "We end up forgetting the treasure of Jesus alive, the treasure of the Holy Spirit present in our hearts, the treasure of a project of Christian life that has many implications that go much further than mere sexual questions." In his view, the church should not be "obsessed' with gays, abortion and birth control." This was contrasted with the priorities of Francis' predecessors, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, who saw doctrine as the paramount guide for clergy. Clergy in the United States had already shown dismay that Francis had not emphasized the Church's teaching on abortion, contraception, and homosexuality. Instead, Francis added: "This Church with which we should be thinking is the home of all, not a small chapel that can hold only a small group of selected people. We must not reduce the bosom of the universal Church to a nest protecting our mediocrity." In naming Francis its "Person of the Year",
The Advocate pointed out his "stark change in rhetoric from his two predecessors". It is a well-known fact that the Church's teaching on
artificial contraception, in
Humanae vitae, has been very poorly received in the living tradition. Francis has spoken freely to reporters on the plane during his travels, and while defending
natural family planning, he commented: "Some people think that in order to be good Catholics we have to breed like rabbits, right?" In the
Extraordinary General Assembly of Bishops in 2014, in preparation for the
Synod on the Family of 2015, Francis recommended "true spiritual discernment... to give answers to the many discouragements that surround and suffocate families." The survey Francis called for before the synod revealed that in Germany "huge percentages of the people (as many as 97% on some questions) had been ignoring the church's teachings in these areas (related to sexuality, remarriage, birth control...)."
Divorce In the 2015 Synod, the question of
Communion for divorced Catholics living in a civil marriage grew heated. Francis' successor to the
archiepiscopal office in
Argentina wrote, of him: "He recommends that we never stop reading the words of St.
Ambrose and
St. Cyril of Alexandria... which invite us to not be rigid in administration of the Eucharist." As archbishop, Francis had said Mass among the poor of
Buenos Aires and "in a shanty town 90 percent of your congregation are single or divorced. You have to learn to deal with that. Communion for the divorced and remarried is not an issue. Everyone takes Communion." The bishops in Germany had been debating this issue for over a decade; Francis sided with the majority, which included Cardinal
Walter Kasper, against those who were led by Cardinal
Gerhard Ludwig Müller. Francis strengthened the hand of those German bishops who, along with Kasper, wrote that "Catholics who have been remarried under civil law after a divorce are invited to go to church, participate in their lives, and mature as living members of the church," offering "no general rule", not insisting that priests give Communion to divorced people but calling for "differentiated solutions, which are appropriate to the individual case." A 25-page letter, accusing Francis of spreading heresy through
Amoris laetitia, bore 62 signatures from Catholics such as clergy and religious, but
Richard Gaillardetz of
Boston College stated that all the signatories were "marginal figures". In May 2019, a coalition of conservative Catholic clergy and academics cited Francis for many counts of heresy, among which was allowing divorced Catholics to receive communion. Cardinal Gerhard Müller, dismissed by Francis as the Vatican's doctrinal chief, came out in February 2019 with what the media described as "a clear manifestation of conservative criticism of Francis' emphasis on mercy and accompaniment versus a focus on repeating Catholic morals and doctrine during the previous two papacies."
Thomas J. Reese has defended Francis' changes as consistent with other cases where the understanding of Catholics preceded change in church teaching, citing the cases of
usury,
heliocentrism, and religious freedom. In a book of his own reflections, Francis has written: "Scholars of the law represent the principle opposition to Jesus; they challenge him in the name of doctrine." The fear of losing "the sheep who are already safely inside the pen... (is) the logic of the scholars of the law... The logic of God... welcomes, embraces, and transfigures evil into good... He teaches us what to do, which logic to follow, when faced with people who suffer physically and spiritually."
Liberation theology Just six months into his papacy, Francis invited
Gustavo Gutiérrez to meet with him. They had shared a common teacher in . Gutiérrez, considered to be one of the most outstanding proponents of
liberation theology, had attended a conference in
Petrópolis in 1964 that is considered to have given birth to liberation theology. At that conference, Gera spoke on "The Meaning of the Christian Message in the Midst of Poverty and Oppression". Gera had also been a teacher of Bergoglio who, as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, showed his esteem for Gera by allowing him to be buried in the crypt of the cathedral. When Francis later became pope, liberation theology could no longer "remain in the shadows to which it has been relegated for some years, at least in Europe," according to the Vatican's semiofficial newspaper, ''
L'Osservatore Romano''. The conservative–progressive divide among bishops in Latin America has become apparent in the question of how involved the clergy should be in politics.
Óscar Romero was appointed bishop in
San Salvador as a conservative but moved toward the progressive perspective just 17 days after his consecration as bishop, at the assassination of Father
Rutilio Grande. Francis gave his clear support to the progressive perspective by moving forward the causes for canonization of Grande and Romero which had been on hold under the previous pontiffs. He also chose to promote for canonization along with Romero
Pope Paul VI, who was described as similar in his care for the poor and for social justice and "an icon of the church that Francis is seeking to build." The decline of
base communities, small communities within a parish, during the papacy of Pope John Paul II has been attributed to his appointment of hundreds of new bishops, some 300 in Brazil alone, "and almost all of those new bishops have been more conservative than their predecessors." Under Pope Francis, however, base communities had been making a comeback with his encouragement and blessing.
Application to specific issues Regarding
gay people, Francis has reportedly gone beyond the current
Catechism and expressed sympathy to LGBT people, stating: "I believe that the church not only should apologize to the person who is gay whom it has offended, but has to apologize to the poor, to exploited women, to children exploited for labor; it has to ask forgiveness for having blessed many weapons." Francis has also appealed to consumers to reject low-cost goods produced by forced labor or exploitative means and called low-wage labor a form of slavery. Speaking about those who cannot satisfy their basic needs for food and health care, Francis has called upon all nations to show "a willingness to share everything and to decide to be
Good Samaritans, instead of people who are indifferent to the needs of others." In calling for the abolition of the death penalty and of life imprisonment, Francis criticized attempts to solve society's problems through public punishment rather than through "implementation of another type of social policy, economic policy, and policy of social inclusion." Francis reduced a sentence for sexual abuse by a priest from imprisonment to instead a lifetime of prayer, as well as a barring from saying Mass or being near children, along with five years of psychotherapy. He said, of the case, "I was new and I didn't understand these things well, and before two choices I chose the more benevolent one... It was the only time I did it, and never again." == Official papal letters ==