Vaccine hesitancy among some cardinals is 'a bit strange', says Pope

 (Photo: Unsplash)

The Pope has admitted he is unsure as to why some Catholic cardinals are reluctant to receive the Covid-19 vaccine. 

He made the comments while speaking to reporters onboard the Papal plane as it flew from Slovakia to Italy. 

The Pope said one cardinal had spent time in intensive care because of the virus. 

"Even in the College of Cardinals there are some vaccine negationists," he said, according to the BBC. "But one of them, poor thing, has been hospitalised with the virus. These are the ironies of life."

In other comments, he said the hesitancy among cardinals was "a bit strange because humanity has a history of friendship with vaccines". 

"As children [we were vaccinated] for measles, polio - all the children were vaccinated and no one said anything," he said. 

The Pope himself has been vaccinated against Covid. He said that almost everyone in the Vatican had now received the jab.

Reflecting on the public debate surrounding the Covid-19 vaccine, he said there was a need to "clarify things and speak calmly". 

Some people have refrained from having the vaccine on religious or pro-life grounds because of the use of cell lines from aborted fetuses in the development and testing stages.

Last year, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a statement saying that it was "morally acceptable" to take vaccines made in this way "when ethically irreproachable Covid-19 vaccines are not available". 

In the UK, the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales has encouraged people to get vaccinated.

"Each of us has a duty to protect others from infection with its danger of serious illness, and for some, death. A vaccine is the most effective way to achieve this unless one decides to self-isolate," the bishops said.

The US Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on Doctrine issued a similar statement saying that being vaccinated "can be an act of charity that serves the common good," while adding that it would continue to insist that pharmaceutical companies stop using abortion-derived cell lines.

News
NHS Trust settles with Christian nurse suspended in trans row
NHS Trust settles with Christian nurse suspended in trans row

A Christian nurse who was suspended for 10 months after allegedly misgendering a transgender patient has received a settlement from the NHS. 

Fulani terrorists kill 20 Christians in Nigeria's Plateau State
Fulani terrorists kill 20 Christians in Nigeria's Plateau State

Gunmen described as “Fulani terrorists” raided a village in central Nigeria on Thursday night and killed at least 20 Christians, area residents said.

New ‘Tyndale Trail’ launched to mark 500 years of English New Testament
New ‘Tyndale Trail’ launched to mark 500 years of English New Testament

A new long-distance walking trail tracing the life of Bible translator William Tyndale has been launched in south-west England, as part of commemorations marking 500 years since his groundbreaking English New Testament.

Russia and Ukraine agree to temporary Orthodox Easter truce
Russia and Ukraine agree to temporary Orthodox Easter truce

In the Orthodox calendar, Easter falls one week after the date celebrated in western Europe.