In his interview Tuesday, Gregory said he hopes to "discover areas where [he and Biden] can cooperate that reflect the social teachings of the Church, knowing full well that there are some areas where we won't agree," the very work the committee set up by Archbishop Gomez intends to do.
Gregory is not a member of the U.S. bishops' committee, but the Cardinal Archbishop of Washington is nonetheless a player: As the hometown cardinal, he may well receive a more ready audience from the president than, for example, the Archbishop of Los Angeles; especially so if he has publicly pledged to strike a balance in conversations between the Church's support for areas of agreement with Biden, like comprehensive immigration reform, and points of opposition, like the immorality of killing unborn children.
"I hope that I don't highlight one over the other," Gregory said Tuesday. His stated aim of not "highlighting" one over the other itself appears to be at odds with the U.S. bishops' official position that ending legal abortion is the "preeminent" social concern of Catholics, underlining the likely tension between Gregory's personal contact with the incoming president and the conference's efforts to represent to position of the bishops and Church at a national level.
As Gomez noted last week, a Catholic president committed to opposing Church teaching on a range of issues on the national stage presents a "difficult and complex situation." It was for this reason that the conference formed its committee, to ensure coherence and collegiality in the bishops' response. And it is for this reason that many may not warm to the idea of a soon-to-be Cardinal Gregory dialoguing on their behalf with a soon-to-be President Biden.
Gregory, who will be made a cardinal on Saturday, will be Biden's diocesan bishop once the President-elect moves into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. As Washington's archbishop, he is the local "pastor" who is responsible for sitting a Catholic like Biden down, in private, and addressing the president-elect's various positions against Church teaching.
But, of course, as president, Biden will be more than just a local Catholic, and his actions and example are a national concern for the Catholic bishops. Gregory's public statement could be seen by some as circumvention of efforts to work together in dealing with Biden and his administration.