The Catholic Church’s stance on homosexual activity is well known. There probably isn’t an intelligent Catholic in this country, perhaps even in the Western world, who isn’t aware of the church’s clear teaching. The Catechism teaches that homosexual activity is “intrinsically disordered,” that is, always and everywhere wrong. It also teaches that the inclination itself is an "objective disorder."
More recently, the Vatican and many local church leaders have communicated the church’s strong opposition to same-sex marriage, as that issue has increasingly come to the fore in many countries. Archbishop (soon Cardinal) Timothy Dolan of New York, who serves as the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, has spoken out against same-sex marriage, calling it an “ominous threat” to society. The archbishop of Minneapolis-St. Paul, John Nienstedt, recently wrote to his priests about the “gravity of this struggle, and said he expected them to support his efforts opposing same-sex marriage or remain silent. (Last year Archbishop Nienstedt sent out 400,000 DVDs explaining the church’s position to Catholics in his archdiocese.) And Charles J. Chaput, the newly installed archbishop of Philadelphia, called it “the issue of our time.”
As I said, the church’s stance on homosexual activity and its opposition to same-sex marriage are well known. The excerpt from the Catechism that underlies these teachings may now be one of the most well known of all church teachings. Line 2357 reads: “Basing itself on Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of grave depravity, tradition has always declared that ‘homosexual activity is intrinsically disordered’.” (The quote within the quote comes from a document from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.)
I’m not writing to contradict these teachings in any way, nor to contradict any of these church leaders. (Some of the men above are friends as well.) Rather, I’d like to turn our attention to another part of the church’s official teaching, something equally as valid. It is contained in the very next line, and is an important aspect of our tradition that is often overlooked. Line 2358 of the Catechism reads: "The number of men and women who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not negligible. This inclination, which is objectively disordered, constitutes for most of them a trial. They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided." (The original 1994 version included the line "They do not choose their homosexual condition.")
That line says much that is important, even though it is less well known than the previous line.
First, it says that gays and lesbians are not a negligible part of the population, Catholic or otherwise. They are not a minuscule minority that can be overlooked or that should be ignored; as such, they are a valid concern for the church and its ministers. To use the language of the Second Vatican Council, their “joys and hopes, and their griefs and anxieties,” matter.
Second, while some gays and lesbians may not appreciate having their situation described as a “trial,” the Catechism reminds Catholics that being a homosexual in many modern cultures is still fraught with difficulty. It can be a painful struggle for a gay person to accept himself or herself as someone loved by God. As most of us know, bullying, beatings and, in rare cases, murder, is often part of being a gay or lesbian teen. As a result, the rate of suicides among gay teens is significantly higher than it is for straight teens in our country. In other parts of the world the situation is more dire: in some countries homosexual activity can bring imprisonment or execution.
Finally, the Catechism says that every sign of unjust discrimination must be avoided when it comes to gays and lesbians. That’s every sign. (And remember a “sign” in Catholic theology is a broad term.)
But buried within #2358 are three words that warrant further attention, particularly in these times, when tensions flare, controversies arise and people feel pitted against one another. Gays and lesbians, says the Catholic church’s official teaching, are to be treated with “respect, compassion and sensitivity.” What might that mean?
Respect
My old Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary defines “respect” as a verb that means “to consider someone worthy of high regard.” The definition of the noun form includes words like “honor,” “deference” and “esteem.” The word derives from the Latin respectus, meaning to look back, or to “regard.” Respect is a way of looking at someone, and looking at them with “high regard.” The Catechism says that Catholics should look at gays and lesbians in this way—with respect. But what does that mean?
Certainly this means not denigrating them in any way, not making sweeping generalizations about them, not treating them as second-class citizens. But that’s the minimum. Showing someone honor, deference and esteem means going far beyond that; it means treating them with a special care. Respect is more than just acceptance.
One of the hallmarks of respecting a person, for example, is listening to him or her. If a child interrupts an adult, or fails to listen to a teacher, the child may be told, “Show some respect.” You would scarcely say that you respected a person if you showed no real concern for what they said, or, likewise, for their personal experiences. So, to show real respect Catholics need to listen carefully to the experiences of gays and lesbians. Indeed, I think one reason for the fraught nature of the church’s relations with gays and lesbians is an absence of listening. (On both sides.)
Also, out of respect for the church, gays and lesbians may themselves be moved to share their experiences and thoughts. This should sound familiar to American Catholics in particular. In the first line of the Declaration of Independence, the writers state that they are setting forth their grievances “out of decent respect to the opinions of mankind.” The signers respected the rest of humankind enough to explain why they were taking a momentous step. Respect impelled them to speak out. This is something of what I mean when it comes to gays and lesbians. No, I’m not comparing them to the Founding Fathers. But in a similar way they respect the church by sharing their joys and hopes, their griefs and anxieties, and especially, the way that God is at work in their lives.
What would it mean for the church to listen to the experiences of gays and lesbians? First, it would mean willingly and honestly listening to what it is like to grow up as a homosexual child and adolescent. It would mean paying attention to the voices of young people who feel persecuted or who are bullied. It would mean taking seriously the heightened threat of suicides among gay and lesbian youth, which is, after all, a “life issue.” It would also mean listening to what it is like to be an adult gay or lesbian, particularly within the church. That would mean another, more difficult, kind of listening: trying to understand the widespread feeling among many gay and lesbian Catholics that their own church doesn’t “respect” them. Then it would mean asking the difficult question: “Why is this?”
The Holy Spirit works not only from the top-down, but also from the bottom-up. It “blows where it will,” as Jesus says in the Gospel of John. Each of us, as St. Paul says, is a Temple of the Holy Spirit, wherein God dwells. Respect means not only loving each person as a child of God, with a unique vocation, called in baptism to the Body of Christ. It also means accepting the way that the Spirit might be at work in that person. As the Second Vatican Council says, “The holy People of God share also in Christ's prophetic office.” The Spirit blows where it will; it’s up to us to listen to it. Or not.
The prophetic office is often exercised in a powerful way by people on the margins, by the “unexpected” ones. Think of people in the Old Testament, like Samuel, the young boy who surprisingly hears God’s call, or David, the last person imaginable thought worthy to be a leader. The prophet who speaks from the margins may give voice to experiences that are not well known, or in some cases understood, but are nonetheless important. This is not to say that every gay Catholic is a prophet. But can the church listen to the experiences of gays and lesbians to discern where God might be at work in new ways? Because the question “How much does the church listen?” is the same as “How much does the church respect?”
Compassion
When Jesus sees someone who is struggling, the Gospels often say that he is moved with pity. But the original Greek word used is far more vivid: splagchnizomai. It means that his bowels were moved with compassion. In other words, Jesus feels that emotion “in his guts.” Catholics are called to treat gays and lesbians with that same kind of visceral compassion. When we see them suffering, we are called to be moved in the same profound and transformative way.
What about our use of the term? The English word “compassion” comes from a Latin root meaning to “suffer with” or “experience with.” What would that mean in this case?
To suffer with gays means to be with them, and to stand with them, in solidarity. It means to be, and to be seen to be, on their side, battling "every sign of unjust discrimination.” It means sticking up for them when others mock or belittle them. It means reaching out in ways that might move us beyond our comfort zones. It might mean finding ourselves mocked as a result. It means aligning ourselves with them. That’s what Jesus did, after all. Even more than that, it means showing the kind of love that Jesus shows for those on the margins—a special kind of love.
Jesus made a special effort to reach out to those on the margins. He could easily have ministered solely to those who were thought to be “acceptable,” like observant Jews and the wealthy and the well. Over and over, though, Jesus moves beyond those groups, and takes his ministry to those who have been shunned by polite society—the “unclean,” the lepers, the poor, the sick, the tax collectors, prostitutes, “sinners.” It is an intentional ministry on the margins.
For Jesus there is no “other.” He works to bring all—through healing, welcome and forgiveness of sins—into the community. And often he does this before the sin is forgiven. For example, the Gospel of Luke tells the story of Zacchaeus the tax collector (a hated role among the Jews in Roman-occupied Palestine). Passing through the town of Jericho, Jesus sees the short man climbing a sycamore tree and calls up, “Zacchaeus, hurry and come down; for I must stay at your house today.” This was a public sign of acceptance, and it must have seemed shocking to those for whom Zacchaeus was supposed to be hated. After he climbs down from his branch, Zacchaeus offers to pay back anyone that he has cheated four times over and give his money to the poor. But Jesus offers to go to his house before Zacchaeus does any of that.
Jesus is not afraid to stand with those on the margins. He always calls people to conversion, but most of all he “suffers with,” and “experiences with.” This is one of the meanings of compassion.
There are many examples of such compassion in the Catholic church. Gay and lesbian ministry is more widespread than most observers (and most Catholics) may think. On the local level, in parishes, gays and lesbians are ministered to in quiet and private ways by pastors and pastoral associates. More publicly, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, to take one of many examples, runs a successful and long-lasting (founded in 1986) ministry to gays and lesbians, a sign of their respect for these men and women. “The Ministry with Lesbian and Gay Catholics (MLGC) recognizes that all persons with a homosexual orientation are capable of living a full Catholic life in union with all the members of the Church,” says its website, quoting the former archbishop, Roger Cardinal Mahony. “MLGC has as its primary goal "to foster a spirit of community and fellowship among gay Catholics so that they can offer and receive mutual support in living their lives of faith with the Church."
Sensitivity
What would it mean to treat gays and lesbians with “sensitivity” in the church? The word connotes that you are dealing with something that is itself “sensitive.” And that’s true. This is not to say that gays and lesbians are not strong people; rather, their experiences growing up often leaves them hurt and scarred. (Yes, other groups are also hurt and scarred but we’re talking about one group that often feels that the church has not been “sensitive” to them.) Can Catholics treat gays and lesbians with the same sensitivity that they would treat another victim or wounded soul?
What do you do with someone who has been hurt? You treat them with great attention and a special care. This would mean going out of our way to be loving and listening.
Another thing for Catholics to remember: Words matter. Words can hurt. Words can also heal. Not long ago, Francis Cardinal George, the archbishop of Chicago, compared certain gays and lesbians activists to the KKK--out of fear that a gay pride parade could possibly turn anti-Catholic. The cardinal’s original fear was that a scheduled pride parade would interfere with people entering a Sunday Mass along the parade route. The remark stung many in the gay community. In response, the organizers changed the time of the parade. Initially the cardinal issued a statement that repeated the analogy of the KKK, which caused further hurt. Later on, though, he issued an outright apology. “I am truly sorry for the hurt my remarks have caused,” he said. “Particularly because we all have friends or family members who are gay and lesbian. This has evidently wounded a good number of people. I have family members myself who are gay and lesbian, so it’s part of our lives. So I’m sorry for the hurt.” His apology, to me, seemed an example of sensitivity.
Another area of sensitivity is the way that the church’s overall teaching on gays and lesbians (not just about activity but about individuals as well) is presented. Or not presented. Some Catholic leaders lead off with the “thou shalt nots” and never get to the “thou shalts.” If all gays and lesbians hear about is the church’s opposition to same-sex marriage (to the exclusion of anything else about gays and lesbians), then it’s perhaps not surprising that many would report feeling rejected. Some of this may be the result of the media coverage focusing on one issue—but not all. What a difference it would make if Catholic leaders could speak as often about the great contributions of gays and lesbians in the church, for example. Or about treating gays with “respect, compassion and sensitivity.” Or if they raised their collective voices against gay suicide.
This way of proceeding has always struck me as surprising. It would be as if the first thing that a priest said to a group of married Catholic couples at a retreat was not “Welcome,” but “No extramarital sex!” Or if a group of Catholic business leaders was greeted at a luncheon by a bishop who said, “No unfair wages!” Or if a group of Catholic physicians was told at the beginning of a conference, “No abortions!” Gay people sometimes feel as if the “thou shalt nots” are the entirety of the church’s teaching on who they are. Because sometimes that’s all they hear.
An old scholastic dictum is helpful here. St. Thomas Aquinas wrote in the Summa Theologiae, "Quidquid recipitur secundum modum recipientis recipitur." Loosely translated: That which is received is received according to the mode of the receiver. So when trying to communicate something, one needs to be sensitive not only to how it is communicated, but how it is received.
Part of sensitivity, in other words, is knowing how your message is coming across. And presenting the whole message, not just part of it.
As I said, none of what I say contradicts Catholic teaching. Quite the contrary. Treating gays and lesbians with “respect, compassion and sensitivity” is Catholic teaching. It may sound odd to hear these things discussed, which are all perfectly in line with church teaching, because Catholics don’t hear it all that much. And that is a great loss to gay and lesbian Catholics, to all Catholics for that matter; indeed, to all people of good will.
There is an elephant in the room, I believe. In 2000, Fr. Donald Cozzens, at the time the Rector of the Major Seminary of the Cleveland Diocese, with years of experience working in priestly formation, wrote the book, The Changing Face of the Priesthood. Fr. Cozzens described what he described at the time as a growing gay culture in our seminaries. Soon after the publication of the book, he was relieved of his responsibility at the Major Seminary. His book was not so much condemnatory as eye-opening.
As one who lived for 30 years as a religious, 20 of them as a priest, I and many others recognized the truth Fr. Cozzens was writing. Our experience was that celibacy was being observed in the breach by a growing number of priests and religious men, both heterosexual and homosexual. We never spoke of it, but we knew that a growing number of actively sexual men were being ordained. Some of these are now bishops.
It is no secret - though we hesitate to speak of it - that the Roman Church is, among mainline Christian communities, the most homophobic, which is ironic when you consider the experience of Fr. Cozzens and many of us. Could it be that all of this talk of homosexuality being 'disordered' comes from deep conflict in the hearts of men who cannot come to terms with their own orientation. We are all sinners in one way or another, but in the area of sexuality, we Catholics seem to throw the biggest stones, to point at the specks in the eyes of our brothers and sisters while being unable - or refusing - to see the plank in our own. God forgive us.
The article begins to create what we at the Kaleidoscope Insitute call the Grace Margin - a place outside our safe zone, but not pushed to our fear zone. It's a place where dialogue can occur with respect, sensitivity and compassion. It also suggests a model we call the Cycle of Gospel Living - the powerful and the powerless model Christ and are invited to listen and speak. Zaccheus is one of the people we use to describe this model. I found myself longing for a prophetic voice inviting dialogue about what to do. What does having compassion, respect and sensitivity mean in relation to same-sex marriage. That issue is not, and should not be a theological or religious one. It is a matter of civil justice. A class of people are discriminated against by the government, not the churches, in over 1,000 legal and finacial ways. How are we to respond as Christians?
I am a postulant for Holy Orders. I am in a faithful, committed relationship with my husband of 20+ years. I stuggle at Roman Catholic Masses to feel welcome despite my belief that nothing will separate me from the love of God. Jesus does not have to forgive me for my sin of being gay. God created me, and you, in infinite diversity. We are all created in the image of God. Our trouble is, we humans decided to define and limit what that image of God is.
How can we have a faithful, respectful, sensitive and compassionate conversation if some believe there is "sin" that some should repent of but they haven't seen to take the log out of their own eye? All must be willing to step away from and let go of our individual truths and ponder those of others. Then we will see the light of Christ and the face of God in each other.
Can such a dialogue happen in churches?
This is what I have suspected for a long time and is something that the PTB do not want to confront honestly and openly. A close friend who has spent 30 years working very closely with priests (teaching) estimates that at least 30% of all priests are gay and that the percentage is higher among younger priests (50 and younger). She has found that those who have come to terms with their orientation are often exceptionally pastoral priests - they understand emotional suffering because of their lifelong struggles with their orientation. Once they settle it, they often can honor their celibacy vows with less struggle and are more empathetic with their parishoners.
It is likely that the failure of some priests/bishops to come to terms with their sexuality may be because the official church clings to the notion that homosexuality is ''disordered'' and that homosexual expressions of love physically is sinful. These priests and bishops must know that they did not choose homosexuality, it was part of their God-given nature at birth. Until they can come to terms with homosexuality as a normal variant of sexuality rather than a disorder and sinful if expressed, the church will be an agent whose expressed teachings can unfortunately encourage anti-gay emotions in others. The church is a teacher, so it must be far more careful about what it is teaching, and that includes re-examining ideas that may be centuries old and may also be wrong (it took 2000 years for it to admit that slavery is intrinsically evil, rather than ''moral and in accord with natural law.''
What does matter is when what it opines creates an environment of hatred and legitimizes bigotry and discrimination. This foolish dualism between being and doing might have been fine for Thomas Aquinas, but for us of the 21st century with a much more developed understanding of personhood, it doesn't work.
It must be remembered that when a national campaign to address suicides of gay teens came to light last year (''It Get's Better'') the RC hierarchy - to the bishop - stood in silence. How can that not be understood as the classical definition of sin?
Then there is the reality that the majority of Roman priests are same-sex attracted. It stands to reason that a similar percentage would of the hierarchy. These are malformed, underdeveloped egos bent on reaction-formation behavior that results in hatred to gays.
So while the pointed hats pontificate on high, the rest of us have long moved on - both in our spirituality and in our claiming of what is truly Catholic for a new day and time. New York and the limits of even the UCCB President should be a warning for the future.
"Never ascribe to malice what can be sufficiently explained by stupidity." Mark Twain
It remains sad, however, that although Fr. Martin seems to be ''Gay Friendly,'' he does not have the guts (conviction) to stand up against the Church's official teaching that homosexuality is intrinsically disordered and that homosexual acts are sinful ? in spite of the building scientific evidence that sexual orientation is inherent, a biological characteristic like left-handedness or hair color: not a choice and therefore not a sin.
I would ask Fr. Martin to not be afraid to speak truth to power.
Would Fr. Martin also have been afraid to offend Catholic Church leaders by defending Galileo's treatise that the earth goes around the sun and not vice versa? Would Martin have advised the Church to be kind and sensitive to Galileo while still being very careful not to disagree with the official condemnation of his science and his punishment?
Will Gay People, like Galileo, suffer waiting 500 more years to be vindicated and liberated from a Catholic Church with official homophobic teachings?
Amazingly, my partner and I just celeberated our 24th anniverary last Monday. And we did it without detroying one heterosexual marriage.
People who are heterosexual will remain so, and most will marry, and most will have children. People who are homosexual will remain so. If they marry, some will adopt or perhaps some of the women will have a child using in vitro with a donor, and so some gay couples also will have families. Some among both hetero and homosexual couples will not have children. Nothing will change except that homosexual couples who can marry and choose to do so will automatically gain certain legal rights from the state accorded to all married couples related to inheritance, property division in the event of a split/divorce, certain rights in the medical system etc.
How any of this is going to destroy the family/society/humanity I have no idea. So if anybody wants to explain how gay marriage will wreak all of this havoc, please do comment.
"Will Gay People, like Galileo, suffer waiting 500 more years to be vindicated and liberated from a Catholic Church with official homophobic teachings?"
Only those silly enough to (1) consider that necessary, and (2) stick around continue to be beaten up by "Holy Mother" church.
Bill Freeman: congrats on 24 years. My Greg and I will celebrate 40 on May 15th. And all without blessing of church nor approbation of state. But, of course, we all know that to be threatening to the "sanctity" of holy matrimony. Greg and I pray to Sts. Newt and Callista the Vestal Virgin for help each day.
And someday, odds are he'll be a doctor of the church.
But sometime in between, he may do something more important and emerge as a patron to many wonderful Catholics who feel like they've been left to wander on the margins of the church.
A person's sexual orientation is not a choice, it is intrinsic to their unique personhood. I believe that God made us all, all man and woman in His/Her image and likeness. How can someone be called "disordered" if that is the way they were created?
For those of us who live and work in the real world, we have friends, neighbors, work partners, children, and parents that are LGBT. They struggle, as we do, to lead a loving and moral life. They also struggle with the ugly undercurrent of vicious hostility directed towards them because of their sexual orientation. As you so eloquently stated, Anne, I fail to see how their lifestyle is a threat to the traditional family.
To condemn a group of people to celibacy because of their sexual orientation, something beyond their control, seems to me to be the height of cruelty. Where is the "respect, compassion, and sensitivity" in this policy? We are social sexual beings and that is the wonderful way we are designed. Chosen celibacy is a gift, usually supported by communities of similar lifestyles. But to deny a fellow human being the opportunity for a lifelong relationship with its friendship, daily kindnesses, challenges and opportunities to grow as a person is to deny him or her one of the great blessings of life.
What are the bishops really afraid of? A God that is more loving than they could imagine?
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/secretariat_state/2008/documents/rc_seg-st_20081218_statement-sexual-orientation_en.html
Thanks for writing this article!
You wrote: Line 2358 of the Catechism reads: “The number of men and women who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not negligible. They do not choose their homosexual condition; for most of them it is a trial. They must be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard must be avoided.”
The CCC actually says:
2358 The number of men and women who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not negligible. This inclination, which is objectively disordered, constitutes for most of them a trial. They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. These persons are called to fulfill God's will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to unite to the sacrifice of the Lord's Cross the difficulties they may encounter from their condition.
So the phrase: They do not choose their homosexual condition… is not in the citation.
I am sure you will agree that it is important to present a citation accurately.
Just this. It is undoubtedly true that those who hold positions of power in the Church, need to ''listen'' to the voices of LGBT Catholics. But where are they to find those voices? For many in our community, the perceptions and even experience of hostility are so strong and deeply hurtful, that they either stay away entirely from the sacramental life of the church, or if they do participate, they do so quietly, fearful of disclosing their sexuality. Even if fully out in the rest of the lives, the tendency is to remain closeted in church.
The closet though is not good for either emotional or spiritual health - and also is in conflict with the verses from scripture which are quoted towards the end of the CDF letter on the pastoral care of homosexual persons: ''Speak the truth with love'', and ''The truth will set you free''.
It's not easy, but we need LGBT Catholics to find the courage to be out and open in Church - and to speak up about their lives, so that others may find the voices to which they should be listening.
If I am not wrong the passage that you quoted Fr. Jim was in the first edition of the catechism. There were a series of revisions and, if I'm not mistaken, this was one of the places where there was a change. (Another area of change was on the death penalty which was changed to reflect Pope John Pual II's strong statements.)
This I think helps to explan the discrepancy.
Thanks for addresing these and other issues.
Fr. Martin is correct in stating that there are a lot of ministry models being implemented which emphasize "respect, compassion, and sensitivity. As he states, there is a lot of private pastoral counseling and also public solidarity. Education is yet another model, especially since information about homosexuality, and sexuality in general, is often lacking in church settings.
"Suffering with" someone is an important form of compassionate ministry. Another equally important form of compassionate ministry is not just suffering with, but also working for. While Jesus had a ministry of solidarity, he also had a ministry of healing and a ministry of advocating for the marginalized. Gay and lesbian ministry in the church needs to grow in this direction of assisting and advocating. It is a part of ministry to every other minority group in the church (racial and ethnic minorities, senior citizens, youth, immigrants, day laborers), so why isn't there advocacy for gay and lesbian people, too? When gay and lesbian people see that church leaders are concerned about their social situation, and are working to improve it, they will easily see the "respect, compassion, and sensitivity" that the church teaches.
An easy first step in this direction would be to advocate against bullying.
We are blessed to have Fr. Martin's voice in our church.
Often we humans don't begin to understand the delicate balance of life systems.
Possibly human population is out of control in the delicate balance of earths system.
If we truly understand God creates out of Love,
- and what God creates is Good , why would we have this conversation.
Possibly God is helping population find some balance. There are many mysteries
in life we can't begin to understand. Every part of Gods creation has value .
It is our job to discover it through Respect, Compassion, and Sensativity.
Those words were prophetic to me.
In the term following, I sat in a human sexuality course listening to Dr. Evelyn Hooker talk about the ground breaking studies she began in the 1940s with a group of gay men in Los Angeles. No, she found, gay men were certainly not intrinsically disordered. (It took the American Psychiatric Association until 1973 to come to the same conclusion.)
Those words were prophetic to me.
They were prophetic in no small part for their source and their context: A Catholic priest and university.
Fr. Martin, thank you for your reflections here. They are a beautifully articulate expression of a Christianity and a Catholic church I know. However, as a gay man I can't help but be somewhat disappointed that you do not go just one small step further. I think I can understand why you choose not to contradict church teachings or church leaders. But it is the prophetic step that must happen, actually is happening throughout the church. No gay man or woman can read line 2357 of the catechism and not cringe (if not feel a good deal of hurt and outrage). ''Intrinsically disordered.'' I can't imagine it is your intention, but those words—to our ears— are a hurdle that become an implicit ''but'' to everything you've shared here. The church loves and respects you, BUT ...'' It's a conjunction that I don't think Jesus used much.
What might prophetic sound like? It would not take much:
With all do respect to my brothers Benedict, Timothy, John and Charles: You are mistaken.
How does it feel to be considered objectively disordered?
When others treat you with respect, compassion and sensitivity is it because you are objectively disordered?
Do these kind people sometimes feel "thank God I am not."
Mary E. Nolan
'Gay Marriage Threatens Humanity's Future" @:
www.nydailynews.com/.../pope-gay-marriage-threatens-humanity-future-article-1.1003549
As someone who, from experience, applies a hermeneutic of profound suspicion to what passes for the news industry's ''religion coverage,'' I tried to find the article you reference on the New York Daily News site, but I couldn't. Reuters, however, carries a story with the same title:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/01/09/us-pope-gay-idUSTRE8081RM20120109
though it's reading of the Pope's remarks:
http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/28642.php?index=28642&lang=en#TRADUZIONE%20IN%20LINGUA%20INGLESE
seems tendentious at best. Here, as far as I can tell, is the address's offensive section:
...In addition to a clear goal, that of leading young people to a full knowledge of reality and thus of truth, education needs settings. Among these, pride of place goes to the family, based on the marriage of a man and a woman. This is not a simple social convention, but rather the fundamental cell of every society. Consequently, policies which undermine the family threaten human dignity and the future of humanity itself. The family unit is fundamental for the educational process and for the development both of individuals and States; hence there is a need for policies which promote the family and aid social cohesion and dialogue. It is in the family that we become open to the world and to life and, as I pointed out during my visit to Croatia, ''openness to life is a sign of openness to the future''. In this context of openness to life, I note with satisfaction the recent sentence of the Court of Justice of the European Union forbidding patenting processes relative to human embryonic stem cells, as well as the resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe condemning prenatal selection on the basis of sex.
I suppose, with a great deal of work, an editor can get from these words to the sensational headline, but we are on a Jesuit website, and Ignatius would have us interpret another's words in the best possible light, though you and I may have different notions of ''best'' in this case.
According to the Church, homosexual persons must practice life-long celibacy. The problem with this moral assertion (a moral absolute) is that it is in contradiction with the Churh's own teaching about celibacy. Many men and women who wish to enter the religous order are called but few are chosen, because for at least one reason...they will not be able to embrace celibacy. The Church teaches that celibacy cannot be "imposed", it is a special gift from God given to the very few!!
If the gift of celibacy is given by God to the very few, it cannot be forced upon individuals by ecessiastic authority. If homosexual individuals must strive to embrace this moral abolute, they will fall under the weight of an unreasonable norm. They will become "habitual sinners" through no fault of their own. The principle of gradualness, given to "certain" habitual sinners in the sacrament of reconciliation, such as contraceptive couples, is not given to other habitual sinners like the divorsed and remarried or to homosexuals. This is called hypocracy at worse, and a contradiction at best. Contraceptive couples are given absolution without a firm purpose of amendment. They are expected to confess the sin, and "try" to avoid the sin. Realistically, this never happens. Most contracepion couples simply view this pastoral practice as absurd, and ignore it. They stand in line each week and receive the Eucharist when the pastor knows full well that most of these married couples practice contraceptoin.
The moral of this story is that the Chuch imposes a forced celibacy upon the great many Catholics who are homosexual. They are estanged from the Church and cannot receive the Eucharist if they have homosexual relations, even when they enter into a secular marriage with the promise of fidelity, a life-long commitment, et al. There is a clear contradiction between the theology of celibacy, the principle of gradualness for habitual sinners, and the Church's teachings about homosexual behavior.
There are many examples of contradiction and inconsistency regarding the sexual ethical teachings of the Church. Celibacy is the only option for a young husband who is seropositive, and for a young married woman whose life is threathened by another pregnancy....it would be imprudent for her to practicie risky NFP. Somehow, celibacy seems like stoic insensibility in these cases as well.
The problematic is that the Church does not offer an adequate answer to these issues that cause suffering and moral dilemma for many Catholics. They merely repeat doctrine without remainder and ignore the reality of our times, and the voices and cries of the many. There are no easy answers to these issues. However, a Church that keeps its ears open to the winds of the Holy Spirit that blows within its heirarchy, but closes its ears to the winds of the Spirit that blows in and through many of its members, seems to be missing the message that Christ has taught us.
Yes it is, and it's also well past time for clergy and laity to talk about institutionalized misogny too.
So I asked him, what reason the church has to change its teaching (and if the church changes the morality of homosexual behaviour it has to change a whole lot of other things), or in other words 'What changed and made the current teaching wrong ?'
and he couldn't answer
And that is in my view one of the problems with all those complaints about 'homophobia', namely the conflation between behaviour of catholics (which is unfortunately too often sinful in this regard, and Fr.Jim points out ways in which we all can improve in this regard) and the actual teaching of the church (which is internally consistent, based on scripture and tradition and an expression of God's love)
Obviously marriage as an institution had ups and downs over time, so nothing is irreversible, but the current trajectory is clearly towards oblivion. And no, that didn't start with same-sex marriage. The current practice of divorce already carved out a large chunk by shifting the concept of marriage from permanent to essentially temporary. Same-sex marriage now goes one step further and changes the definition, and if it goes on marriage simply becomes a contractual arrangement and then will loose all meaning it still has.
Don' get me wrong, should society find institutional ways to recognize and value the love of same-sex partnerships, yes it should, but sacrificing marriage to do so should not be part of this