USCCB president visits Salt Lake City to strengthen relationships with LDS leaders

Friday, May. 13, 2016
USCCB president visits Salt Lake City to strengthen relationships with LDS leaders Photo 1 of 2
Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz chats with Elder Don R. Clarke, a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy, during a tour of the Utah Bishops' Central Storehouse. IC photo/Marie Mischel
By Marie Mischel
Intermountain Catholic

SALT LAKE CITY — The Most Rev. Joseph E. Kurtz, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, was in Salt Lake City May 4 at the invitation of leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
They met to discuss matters of common concern and to strengthen relationships between the two churches.
“It was a delight to meet with Archbishop Kurtz and hear his views on family, faith and religious freedom,” said John Taylor, director of interfaith relations for the LDS Church. “Our relationship with Catholic leaders has grown tremendously over the past several years, and this visit only deepened our friendship.”
While in Utah, Archbishop Kurtz met with the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the Presidency of the Seventy, and the Presiding Bishopric, and toured the Utah Bishops’ Cen-tral Storehouse and Humanitarian Center, which are both in Salt Lake City.
Archbishop Kurtz said the opportunity “to see beneath the surface of the work of The Church of Latter-day Saints was so very important. Not just what’s being done but the spirit with which it’s being done; the way in which people come together to serve others.” 
The visit was not only a continuation of an existing dialog between the two churches but also an opportunity to renew friendships with people he has met through efforts such as Faith Counts, said Archbishop Kurtz, the fourth Archbishop of Louisville, who was elected president of the USCCB in 2013.
The ecumenical Faith Counts is a nonprofit that includes the USCCB, the LDS Church, Hillel International, The Seventh-day Adventist Church, and the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, among others, to promote faith values.  
In the past year, the LDS Church has invited several other Catholic officials to Utah, including Archbishop Charles J. Chaput O.F.M. Cap. of Philadelphia, and Archbishop Bernardito Auza, Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations.
The late Cardinal Francis George spoke on religious freedom at Brigham Young University in 2010, and in the past the Catholic Bishop of Salt Lake City has worked with the LDS Church on various efforts of mutual concern at the local and national levels.
LDS leaders also have addressed Catholic audiences. In 2014, President Henry B. Eyring of the First Presidency spoke at a Vatican summit on marriage and met Pope Francis, while one of the speakers at last year’s World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia was Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles.
Establishing good relationships with local, national and international Catholic leaders “I think has created the kind of environment where we can make a difference,” Taylor said. “As we look at relationships with other faiths, I think the LDS Church’s relationship with the Catholic Church has been a model in many ways. There’s a closeness and a trust level that has developed over the years, and what we have found is that we might not agree totally on all doctrinal issues, but there are so many things that we have in common – commitment to family, commitment to helping people in need, humanitarian issues, all of these things that we hold in common – and we’ve found that if we can come together and work together there’s so much more good that can be done through that collaboration.”

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