The great battle of our
times has been the personal elimination of irrational prejudges learned on our
mother’s knee and to then stand up for what is right. I personally do not understand it or relate
in any way, but I do understand the power of biological imperative and know
that acceptance is the first step in forming a rules based civilization.
In fact the Catholic Church
has become the leader in confronting the nuances of the biological imperative,
however unwillingly. That is certainly
for the betterment of our civilization for which we can be thankful.
This pretty well
dismisses the issue of homosexuality for the Church. It does not change the vow of celibacy. In fact such celibacy is beginning to look
better and better for all Church leaders.
I would like to make a
comment here. Celibacy is a practical
option for those past their child bearing years. We are now entering a world in which most
will live active healthy lives through to their first century at least. Thus embarking on a religious life at the age
of sixty is not impractical at all or soon will not be. A celibate life in scholarship and contemplation
while attending to the needs of the community can be appealing to a lot of both
men and women. I certainly am finding that
desire out there.
Thus the Church has the
opportunity to restructure their clergy to take full advantage of this. While they are at it they should make it a
vegan rule in order to maximize the life spans.
This will also win natural respect.
Pope Francis on Gay
Priests: "Who Am I to Judge?"
|
Posted Monday,
July 29, 2013, at 8:52 AM
Pope
Francis, followed by Vatican secretary of state cardinal Tarcisio Bertone,
disembarks as he arrives at Ciampino Rome's international airport from Brazil
on July 29, 2013
During
his transatlantic flight home following a hugely successful week-long trip to Brazil, Pope Francis
ambled back to the press section of the papal plane for what turned into a
wide-ranging conversation with reporters with few—if any—subjects deemed out of
bounds. "Not since John Paul II, prior to the debilitating effects of his
illness, has a pope engaged in such a free-wheeling and spontaneous exchange
with the press," observed the National Catholic Reporter's John L. Allen Jr. The
impromptu presser would have likely made headlines for simply happening, but
then Francis dropped this bombshell in response to a question about rumors of a
so-called "gay lobby" within the Vatican, via theAssociated Press:
Pope
Francis reached out to gays on Monday, saying he wouldn’t judge priests for
their sexual orientation.... "If someone is gay and he searches for the
Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?" Francis asked.
His
predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, signed a document in 2005 that said men with
deep-rooted homosexual tendencies should not be priests. Francis was much more
conciliatory, saying gay clergymen should be forgiven and their sins forgotten.
Here's
a longer version (and slightly different translation) of that quote, via NCR:
"When
I meet a gay person, I have to distinguish between their being gay and being
part of a lobby. If they accept the Lord and have good will, who am I to judge
them? They shouldn’t be marginalized. The tendency [to homosexuality] is not
the problem … they’re our brothers.”
For
those who need a refresher course on those gay-lobby rumors: They were the
most-attention-grabbing detail from Italian newspaper reports from this past
February that claimed that Benedict decided to call it quits not because of his
old age but instead to avoid the fallout that could come from a
secret 300-page dossier compiled by three cardinals tapped to look into last
year's leak of confidential papers stolen from his desk. The Vatican, of
course, hasn't confirmed those rumors, but Francis did appear to acknowledge the existence of the gay lobby earlier
this summer during closed-door remarks. This time, however, he brushed the
rumors off with something of a joke: "There’s a lot of talk about the gay
lobby, but I’ve never seen it on the Vatican ID card."
It's
also worth remembering that, before he was pope, Francis waged an ultimately
unsuccessful push to prevent Argentina from becoming the first Latin American
country to legalize gay marriage, and declared that allowing gay couples to
adopt was discrimination against children.
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