T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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335.1 | | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Thu Oct 31 1991 08:39 | 10 |
| jim,
i beg to differ with you..ACT-UP and Queer Nation taken together
are a very small minority within the gay community. if you choose
to believe that they represent gay people as a whole so be it but
i can assure you as someone who has been "out" (a part of that
community) for more than 20 years that they are indeed not
representative neither in ideology nor in behavior.
peter
|
335.2 | When criticism is expressed | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Passionate Peace | Thu Oct 31 1991 15:13 | 5 |
| Is there a "good" way to express criticism to the church?
Is there a "good" way to respond to criticism?
Richard
|
335.3 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Thu Oct 31 1991 16:36 | 10 |
| Peter,
those that were present, probably don't represent the majority,
but neither do those minority of Christians who attack gays represent
the majority. I would also say that those who do attack other
people for no matter what cause, shouldn't call themselves Christian
period.
Peace
Jim
|
335.4 | Let's put things in perspective. | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Thu Oct 31 1991 21:30 | 138 |
| Re: Topics 335 and 305 ....
These two topics are very powerful ones, not only for those who call
themselves "Christian" but also for those who once were Christian, as
well as those who have never been Christian but have associated with
Christians and Christianity -- ALL of us essentially!
First, let me address this spin-off topic, which seems to be seeking
respect and tolerance toward the Catholic church from -- peculiarily
enough -- gay persons. (I'll address topic 305 a little later.)
I have a somewhat different perspective, Jim. And it is this: The
Catholic church has not earned, and does not deserve, the respect and
tolerance from gay persons -- most women too -- simply because the Catholic
church is disrespectful and intolerant of gays and women. (Not their
so-called "sins" -- but disrespectful of THEM, the PEOPLE THEMSELVES.)
This is a baffling phenomenon to many of us, since SO MUCH of the
Roman Catholic clergy comprises lesbians and homosexual men. (Hey --
better to hide your identity and attempt a celibate/loveless life for
a GOOD reason, rather than to fake it and lead a double life, I
suppose.)
I liken the Catholic church to Southern lunch counters and bus
companies during the 50s and early 60s. Like those establishments,
reeking with bigotry and intolerance, the church, too, generally
demeans the human dignity of gays and women. Throwing condoms and
spitting out communion wafers is, in my eyes -- blind as I am ... I
know -- similar to the defiant acts of black citizens sitting at the
front rows in busses or sitting at Woolworth's lunch counter or
marching through the streets or rallying at town halls demanding
their right to vote. Our mainstream society in those days was just as
OUTRAGED at the disrespectful, provocative behavior of these black
citizens as you are outraged now at similar behavior toward the
church by some gays.
You might argue, "Well, religion is not a matter of civil rights."
True. But tens of millions of people are born into the Catholic
community, as well as many other Chritian communities. So many
Christians -- gays, females, and others who are the targets of scorn
and intolerance -- want desperately to "belong" to the family of Christ.
That's why harm inflicted by one's religion/church can cause as much
damage as harm inflicted by one's government or secular society.
That's why it is so painful for people to simply "turn away." Shame.
Rejection. Trampled dignity. Religious disfranchisement can be as
painful as -- sometimes more painful than -- secular disfranchisement.
So, the issue is more complex than merely saying, "Well, if you don't
like our ways, go elsewhere." People whose roots run deep in the
church have a stake in their religion, and, needless to say, their
God. A lot of people have difficulty walking away from their
church/religion because it is supposed to represent the family of
Christ -- a family to which a lot of gays and others still want to
belong, even after their human dignity is trampled over (and over
again) by said church/religion.
By the way, Peter is right. The vast majority of gay persons not only
do not participate in this sort of behavior (toward the Church) but
also are not yet out of the closet! (Why would any gay or bisexual
person, living in mainstream Christian communities, in his/her right
mind, want to come out of hiding, as long as they know they will be
ridiculed, trashed, and demeaned by so many hateful persons out
there masquerading as "men/women of God."?) Peter is also right when
he says the media, sadly, plays up these confrontations with the
church thereby giving you and the rest of us the impression that the
vast majority of gay persons, gays as a whole, like to throw condoms
and participate in similar protests.
Be that as it may, however .... Let me say, the sight of condoms
flying through the air, frankly, makes me laugh. The thought of them
flying in the direction of Bernard Law is even funnier! The bottom
line, IMHO, is this: Why should anyone have sympathy for the
Catholic church? For what good reason? Because millions of people
demean and do not respect the church, its clergy, and what it stands for?
Who should care, really? How can the church demand any more
respect or tolerance than those lunch counters? The Church demeans
large numbers -- millions -- of people through the practice of its
very doctrine. Making its young gay flock feel ashamed -- SO ashamed,
in fact, as to induce feelings of suicide, to prefer death over
acknowledging who/what they are. Treating its young female flock in
a way that makes them feel subservient to males, in the eyes of God.
The CHURCH is the one wielding its VAST POWER over individual
parishioners, not the other way around, as you might have us believe.
As a former Roman Catholic, I know all too well.
In recent years, the Church administration put out a decree in which
it differentiated between the gay "orientation," which, according to
the Pope is not a sin, and the gay "practice," which is a sin. (This is
an impossible thing to differentiate, by the way. If you condemn the
so-called sin in the case of homosexuality, you automatically condemn
the sinner, IMHO. The sooner Christendom realizes this the sooner
it will stop young gay Christians from hating themselves and from
killing themselves.) Anyway ... In this decree, the church condemned
physical violence against gays -- gay bashing. In the same breath,
however, it said, in effect -- I am not sure of the precise quote:
"On the other hand, given that homosexual behavior is such a crime in
the eyes of God, it is understandable how some people can be driven to
violence against homosexuals."
Now how are good Catholics to read that? Don't strike a gay person,
but if you do, we understand your motives? If anything, it
fans the flames of hatred and fear. And if the sheer number of
hateful, violent crimes against gays is any indication, apparently a
lot of people may be interpreting the church's position as just that way.
And how are gay Catholics to read that? Perhaps like this: "The
church is more understanding of those who commit violent acts against
me than it is understanding of *ME*" Or how bout this, especially for
gay teenagers or young adults: "I am bad. I am evil. I am so evil in
fact, I don't dare reveal myself. And if I DO, death is a much more
welcome fate than going through life as someone so evil, so full of
shame, as the target of incessant scorn."
THIS is the gist Christendom's legacy to its gay flock, irrespective
of all the good, decent Christians out there who celebrate God and
preach their faith with LOVE and COMPASSION in their hearts and with
OPEN ARMS. Sadly, there aren't nearly enough of these folks. They're
overshadowed by the seedier side of American Christianity. Just tune
into the 700 club or Mother Angelica or Jimmy Swaggart, or ...
So let's put things in perspective. When you talk about the poor
church being the target of SO much intolerance and demeaning behavior
.... well .... there is much to be said about two wrongs not making a
right. But if you were to weigh the two sides -- the wrongs committed
by the church against gays and women (now and throughout the history)
alongside the wrongs committed by gays and women against the church,
I think the scale would break; it would be weighted down and
crushed by so much heavy religious hatred, fear, intolerance,
scorn, judgement -- ANYTHING BUT LOVE.
So when the Church, like Rodney Dangerfield, whines about getting no
respect ...... I, for one, don't feel sorry for them. Not one bit.
As Spiro Agnew used to say: "It's like listening to germs complaining
about disease."
More to come ....
Paul
|
335.5 | what were you thinking? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Fri Nov 01 1991 00:08 | 6 |
| re Note 335.4 by BUFFER::CIOTO:
> Roman Catholic clergy comprises lesbians and
Given the usual definitions of "clergy" and "lesbian", not at
all likely!
|
335.6 | Your Attitude Is A Problem | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 08:11 | 41 |
| RE:4
Paul,
your note is so full of crap I can hardly believe you wrote it !
In my 40yrs as a Catholic, I have never witnessed the Catholic Church
attacking gay people. Nor have I EVER heard a priest condemn someone
for their sins. In fact, it would be a sin for any Catholic to do so.
They condemn the practice, but so don't they condemn any sex outside of
marriage. But, the condemnation of the sin is condemnation by God which
is found in Scripture. The way you want it, they should ignore
Scripture and let everything fly for the sake that somebody might feel
ashamed. Well, even Jesus told the adultress, to sin no more.
As far as women are concerned. No other institution has upheld the
dignity and respect for women more than the Catholic Church. Mary
is honored, as well has other women who have become Saints. Women have
been given doctorates by the Church, in recognition of their holiness.
Read about St. Cathrine Of Sienna if you want to know what I'm talking
about.
You want it to be like secular society. Well, it can't be that way.
Society moves by the fads and whims of the populace. The Church is
moved by the Holy Spirit.
Before you start justifying acts of violence against the Church, and
comparing them to the segregation of days past, you should get over
your own bigotry so that you can get factual information on where the
Church was in the days of desegregation.
The Church is in the process of canonizing a black slave. I don't
recall his name, but it was the Catholic Church that helped gain
his freedom.
I find your note to be really narrow, and full of hate. I don't know
why I even bothered to respond.
Have a good day
Jim
|
335.7 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 01 1991 08:37 | 11 |
| "No institution has upheld the dignity and respect for women more than
the Catholic Church".
I think that is a bit of an exaggeration. The Church's record with
respect to women may not be all bad, and may even have its good points;
but in certain areas it clearly lags far behind other denominations.
If and when the all-male hierarchy in Rome decides that women can be
priests, or that a woman can become Pope, then I think it will have
room to talk.
-- Mike
|
335.8 | Your Opinion Based On The Worldly Opinion | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 08:47 | 10 |
| RE:Mike
Well, perhaps not allowing women to become priest is only a sign of
disrespect in secular views. I'm sure there's more that goes into
respect than giving out or restricting roles to people. I'm a
married person who is not allowed to become a priest or hold power
in the Church, yet I don't feel disrespected by the Church.
Jim
|
335.9 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 01 1991 08:52 | 7 |
| Jim, calling my views "wordly" does not make them untrue. Actually,
given the rampant sexism that pervades the world, I would argue that
the misogyny of the Catholic Church in this area is much more worldly
than the more enlightened position that would treat men and women as
equals.
-- Mike
|
335.10 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 09:27 | 17 |
| RE:9
> Jim, calling my views "wordly" does not make them untrue. Actually,
> given the rampant sexism that pervades the world, I would argue that
> the misogyny of the Catholic Church in this area is much more worldly
> than the more enlightened position that would treat men and women as
> equals.
Mike I meant no disrespect on your views, however it was you who
pointed at the Catholic Church's position as being flawed. The point
is that what the Church holds as being true, is often not held true by
secular society, by the same token as you state here, that would not
make the Church's views untrue either.
Peace
Jim
|
335.11 | speaking of attitudes | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Fri Nov 01 1991 10:08 | 22 |
| Jim, (.6)
<< I find your note to be really narrow, and full of hate. I don't know
why I even bothered to respond.
Funny you should write that to Paul. I thought of writing something
similar to you regarding your recent notes on homosexuality. I found
some real hate and homophobia there, but I let it pass.
I read anger in Paul's note, justified anger, but I don't see hate.
Guess it is all in the eye's of the beholder, huh? Perhaps, this
string will somehow teach us all to be less judgemental.
I wonder Jim if your child came to you and told you they were gay,
lesbian, or bisexual, just how you would react. Then again perhaps
with your attitude, your child would be afraid to come out to you.
Would you still hate the sin and love the sinner? Would you stop
loving your child? Would your views change? I imagine you think this
scenario could never happen to you.
Ro
|
335.12 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 11:21 | 21 |
| RE: Ro
I don't know where you've seen me attacking gay people in this
conference nor have I justified any attacks against gay people.
If you read .0 in this note, I clearly stated that I'm repulsed
and saddened by what gays and lesbians have suffered in the name
of Christianity.
Paul, in his note, justified the attacks that groups like ACT-UP
committed against people of the Catholic Church.
How come you where silent then ? Perhaps you agree that people are
justified in spitting and throwing condoms at people ? I'm really
surprised by the silence of people in this in this conference that
would allow forms of violence to be justified. Your reply really
has me concerned, cuz this is the same conference that complained
about the attitudes in the Golf::Christian conference. I guess
the attitudes are really equal when all comes said and done ?
Jim
|
335.13 | | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Fri Nov 01 1991 11:39 | 11 |
| jim,
in no way do i believe that Jerry Falwell and his ilk represent
the majority of Christians. funny that you should use this analogy
because i was thinking of using one somewhat like it to demonstrate my
point about ACT-UP being a minority viewpoint.
nor do i believe that you personally, jim, harbor any ill will towards
gay people.
peter
|
335.14 | makes me sad | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Fri Nov 01 1991 11:53 | 46 |
| Jim,
I didn't say you 'attacked' gay people, I said I found 'real hate
and homophobia'. Here is the note I'm refering to (which is also found
in the base note of this topic, although the offending paragraph was
not included):
Note 305.52 On distancing yourself from Christianity 52 of 58
PCCAD1::RICHARDJ "Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun" 28 lines 28-OCT-1991 17:27
-< >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE:50
>> Please understand however, that I don't understand. That is, I don't
understand the gay lifestyle, not that I'm condemning in anyway, I just
don't understand it. I see gay males, having the ability to have sexual
relations with women, but the thought of having a sexual relationship
with another man, makes most heterosexuals including myself repulse the
idea. It's not our fault, just as gays claim that their orientation is
not a choice. To further complicate things, we heterosexuals have
Scripture to support (or at least we believe we do) our repulsive
feelings towards homosexual sodomy.
I'm sorry Jim, but this whole paragraph indicates your underlying hate
and clearly your homophobia.
You say the 'ability of gay men to have relations with women', what
does that mean? Because they are physically capable of doing so, they
should? Huh? They should be untrue to their core being. Then you
write "makes most heterosexuals' repulse to the idea.
Ah, nevermind, you don't even see how cruel and unkind your remarks
are. To me Christianity is about trying to walk a mile in someone
else's shoes in order to understand, be compassionate and loving.
I'm sorry Jim, I've met you and I like you. I just think that you are
blinded on this issue by your own fears. So when I see someone like
you who is a decent nice person with a 'log in his eye' on this
subject, I feel a sense of hopelessness...
I guess I've never commented on this stuff before as I wasn't as
sensitive to it as I am now. I need to take a more active stand on
this but perhaps C-P is not the forum for me to do so....
Ro
|
335.15 | | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Fri Nov 01 1991 12:22 | 19 |
| ro,
i read a letter-to-the-editor in the paper the other day that
impressed me. the author pointed out that when the Europeans first
came to Polynesia one of the natives pointed out that when Europeans
talked about morality they meant sex but that when Polynesians talked
out morality they meant how they treated one another.
one of things i remind myself of is "don't ascribe to malice what
can be laid to ignorance". real cruelty and spite stem from the
intention of doing harm. i know i've caused hurt because i wasn't
tuned in to other's feelings. i hope that people recognize that
fundamentally i am not a malicious person despite that fact.
of course, you're correct regarding sexual orientation. i would
feel profoundly "wrong" or perhaps "inauthentic" if i were to have
a sexual relationship with a woman.
peter
|
335.16 | Strong action begets strong reaction. | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Fri Nov 01 1991 12:33 | 169 |
| Jim,
Your note is so full of crap I can hardly believe you wrote it !
Why? Because I am usually so sensible? ;) I knew full well what I wrote
would press a lot of buttons with Roman Catholics. But I didn't write it
to press any buttons; I wrote it because I truly believe in the credibility
of what I said. This is a very powerful, explosive issue. My response on
the Catholic church, and American Christendom at large, regarding the way
it treats gays and women, is quite justified, considering the church's
track record. Much of what you have said -- and what the church has said
-- strikes me as pure crap, and ridden with hate. Such behavior naturally
begets a strong response. So don't be so surprised.
I have no apologies to make for what I said in .4 -- in fact, all I
said was I don't think the church has earned, or deserves, the respect
of gays and women. Because of the way church TREATS gays and women.
I also said I don't feel sorry for the church when it whines about not
getting said respect.
In my 40yrs as a Catholic, I have never witnessed the Catholic Church
attacking gay people. Nor have I EVER heard a priest condemn someone
for their sins.
Oh wow. You and I must know live in two different worlds .... unless, of
course, the way in which the church treats gays doesn't bother you and sits
well with you. Then, naturally, you wouldn't notice it.... or even care
about it.
In fact, it would be a sin for any Catholic to do so.
Please .... I know what Catholicism is all about. I've been there.
Homosexuality, and any sexuality, is a state of being, not a "practice."
You simply cannot attack the "practice" without attacking the state of
being. Whether or not the clergy's INTENT is to demean, shame, frighten,
ridicule, and induce suicidal feelings in the minds/hearts of young
gay Christians is one thing. But it DOES happen, whether the clergy
wants it to or not. It happens a lot.
When the clergy uses words like "pervert" and "sick" to describe
homosexuality, how do you think it is interpreted by those on the
receiving end? Do you think it fosters an atmosphere/environment in
which gay Catholics, especially the young ones, are treated with love,
compassion, and respect? I submit that many mainstream churchgoers --
perhaps even the majority -- interpret their church's position on
homosexuality in such a way that an environment conducive to
ridicule, disrespect, intolerance, and chastisement, is formed.
And in this environment, this sort of treatment of gays is tolerated
as the norm. Again, it may not be the church's intent, but it
happens more often than not, IMHO.
They condemn the practice, but so don't they condemn any sex outside of
marriage.
The vast majority of Americans, including Catholics, do not save themselves
for their wedding nights, as the church teaches. In fact, I think most
Catholic Americans do not agree with the church's forbiddance of pre-
marital sex. Nevertheless, you know as well as I do that the church
and American Christianity as a whole do not create the same sense of
FRENZY and hysteria over the "sin" of premarital sex as it does over
the state of being homosexual. So, again, it boils down to the climate
of feelings the church fosters among its flock; the climate the church
fosters around premarital sex is different, much different. It is
insignificant, really, to the point where young Catholics simply do not
feel it is that "bad" if they break the rules and have sex before marriage.
However, compare this with what young gay Catholics feel about just BEING
gay -- even the ones who have never had ANY sexual experiences!
So what do we have here -- really? Premarital sex is an activity, known
as a "sin," over which the church does not generate a very strong feeling
of shame, disgrace, intolerance, and disfranchisement. On the other hand,
homosexuality is a state of being over which the church DOES generate all
of the above, to the point where it drives many young gay Christians to
induce self-hate and consider suicide. How sad. Before you compare
sins as "separate but equal," first put things in perspective.
The way you want it, they should ignore Scripture and let everything
fly for the sake that somebody might fee ashamed.
Yes, biblical scripture has commonly been used as justification for
Christians to shame their brothers and sisters. Is that Christlike?
Well, even Jesus told the adultress, to sin no more.
He said a whole lot more about the self-righteous, arrogant, intolerant
Pharisees. What do you think he would say about the clergy controlling
the upper ranks of the Catholic church? There's a big difference between
the way Jesus treated the Pharisees, and say, prostitutes.
As far as women are concerned. No other institution has upheld the
dignity and respect for women more than the Catholic Church.
I have to laugh at this to keep from crying. Talk about crap. The
Catholic church has done more throughout the ages to delay the day
when women and men are considered equals, in the eyes of organized
religion as well as secular societies. When the Pope comes
to America, in the face of large numbers of nuns and other females
in the church, protesting blatant discrimination within the church
and an inability for women to serve in the upper ranks as priests,
bishops, and cardinals, and says: "Women have their rightful 'place'
in the church. It is not a question of human rights ... priests
must be men because Jesus was a man," that says a lot about the
amount of dignity/respect the Catholic church affords women.
Mary is honored, as well has other women who have become Saints. Women
have been given doctorates by the Church, in recognition of their holiness.
So women are "holy," but apparently not holy enough to serve the church
as priests, bishops, cardinals?
You want it to be like secular society. Well, it can't be that way.
Society moves by the fads and whims of the populace. The Church is
moved by the Holy Spirit.
Wrong! Throughout history, the evolution of the Catholic church and
secular society have been very intertwined -- so intertwined, in fact,
at times throughout history it is difficult to tell the difference
between the norms of secular society and the norms of the church. How
unfortuante. If the church is and always has been moved exclusively
by the Holy Spirit, it doesn't say much for the Holy Spirit .... or
the church.
Before you start justifying acts of violence against the Church,
Tell me about incidents where a gay/female protestor injured or killed
a Catholic clergy member and I will denounce it and certainly not
"justify" it. I don't think spitting out communion wafers on the
sidewalk and throwing condoms at Bernard Law qualifies as "violence."
It is not the sort of thing I would do, or even advise, but let's keep
this in perspective.
comparing them to the segregation of days past, you should get over
your own bigotry ...
All I said was this: The church's treatment toward gays and women today
is very similar -- just as demeaning, intolerant, and disrespectful --
to the ways in which lunch counters and bus companies treated black
citizens in the South years ago. And it's TRUE, IMHO. The church's
historic treatment of blacks is another topic... and, incidentally,
not as pristine as you think.
As for my own "bigotry" ... I never pretended to be a saint or give off
an air of false piety, though my personal relationship with God is very
deeply felt and important to me. I usually react strongly to what
I see as intolerance, bigotry, chastisement, ridicule, and so forth.
I see it happening to a very large extent in American Christendom
today against gays and women. Whether my strong reactions toward
bigotry constitues bigotry in and of itself remains to be seen
and judged by God.
The Church is in the process of canonizing a black slave. I don't
recall his name, but it was the Catholic Church that helped gain
his freedom.
How nice for him! ;)
I find your note to be really narrow, and full of hate.
Well, I do not feel hatred in my heart. Anger and disgust and
bewilderment perhaps, but I am not aware of hate. However, if I did
feel hate toward the Catholic church, I suspect it would be dwarfed by
the face of what I perceive to be a policy and course of conduct
toward gay Christians, that does indeed involve LOT of deep,
institutionalized hate.
Thank you for responding. I'm glad we're getting all these viewpoints
out on the table.
Paul
|
335.17 | Heavy Heart Right Now ! | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 12:50 | 19 |
| re:14
Well, Ro, I as I expressed in the first line of the paragraph, of which
your referring, "I DON'T UNDERSTAND." The point in which I wrote the note
was to try and get some understanding. How does my admission of not
understanding translate into hate ?
I'll say it right now to be sure people are clear about my intention.
I'am noway condemning homosexual behavior. I don't understand it, but
I'm trying. I also, apologize to anyone who felt hatred in anything I
wrote.
With that aside, I'll just be quite and let the rest of you express
your feelings to whatever degree you wish.
Peace
Jim
|
335.18 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:05 | 7 |
| Re: .17
Your note and what you meant are very clear to me. I too don't
"understand" the Homosexual orientation. I welcome calm,clear
comments.
Marc H.
|
335.19 | I rest my case. | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:39 | 68 |
| re .15 Ro, thanks for pointing Jim's statements out here. You
beat me to it. This comment struck a real raw nerve with me as well:
I see gay males, having the ability to have sexual relations with
women, but the thought of having a sexual relationship with
another man, makes most heterosexuals including myself repulse the
idea. It's not our fault, just as gays claim that their orientation is
not a choice.
To further complicate things, we heterosexuals have
Scripture to support (or at least we believe we do) our repulsive
feelings towards homosexual sodomy.
You may be respulsed by your thoughts of certain sexual relationships,
but your comment here is downright revolting. And this is PRECISELY
the kind of thing that feeds into that church climate of disrespect,
intolerance, ridicule, demeaning behavior toward gay Catholics
I talked about in .16. If a 40-year Catholic can make such statements
such as these -- us-against-them statements that by their very nature
incite hate, fear, shame, intolerance, and on and on -- so casually,
I rest my case.
One can find the thought of LOTS of things of a sexual nature one can find
"repulsive"... that's easy. The thought of Richard Nixon having sex with
ANYBODY, male or female, is pretty repulsive to me. The thought of
heterosexual couples using battery-powered toys is repulsive to many.
What about two ugly people -- male and female -- having sexual relations?
Do you find anything that involves non-beautiful people "repulsive"?
To a whole LOT of men the sight of any naked male body, including
their own, is repulsive; they much prefer the thought of two
women having sex than a man and a woman. (That's why lesbian porn
is so commonplace and why its audience is almost exclusively male.)
Does the thought of two males hugging/kissing each other, as they
do so casually in Mediterranean cultures, repulse you too? When a
guy shakes your hand for more than four or five shakes, does that
repulse you too? It's all RELATIVE!
What really gets me about what you said is : "We heterosexuals have
Scripture to support our repulsive feelings toward homosexual sodomy."
This is divisive, provocative, and self-righteous.
If your views and perspectives represent the norm in the Catholic
church, then I rest my case on everything I said in .4 and .16.
To work yourself and other Catholics up into a frenzy by these
inflammatory, hateful comments in the name of God/scripture, pretending
God is on "my side" in all this -- this happens a lot in Christian
circles -- is not consistent with the Holy Spirit you speak of so
frequently.
Ah, nevermind [Jim] you don't even see how cruel and unkind your remarks
are.
Amen, sister. And the church, as a whole, doesn't see, either.
To me Christianity is about trying to walk a mile in someone
else's shoes in order to understand, be compassionate and loving.
Interesting perspective, Ro.
Paul
P.S. Jim, why do you so much want to *understand* something that
you write off so quickly as a crime against God, a "sin."? Do
you finally recognize that hating the "sin" but not the "sinner"
is much more complex than you realized?
|
335.20 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:48 | 38 |
|
The posting in .2 asked a question about criticizing the church.
I ask why should they not be above critical inspection. The church
as an instution is not perfect, is is about people who are imperfect.
It is not saying they aren't trying.
RE: last few
There is violence, and insult. The actions of ACTup and others as
I have seen (I may be unaware of some events) are of the rude and
insulting kind but they are not violence. No one gets physically
hurt but, people are shaken by actions that are held as sacrilege.
They become angry, and maybe even hate. They now have expereinced
the pain they(collective) subjected others too. It's up to the
church to recognize the expereince and meld it into actions that
create peace not hate or anger. My seeing those things do offend
me at the same time I recognize that these people feel deeply hurt
buy the actions of people in the name of the church. Are their
actions warrented? I'm sure that the violence they experience is
real and they would like it to end.
Additional point:
I grew up with the idea that any church/temple/whatever is a place
where respect should be accorded as an peaceful act by an invited
guest. That respect does not negate disagreement or anger it only
recognizes certain rules of behavour. I will not attend a Roman
Catholic service except to be respectful of those that practice and
wish me there. I left that church because they can not accomodate nor
recognize me as a unique human. I am critical of that church and it's
limitations, I do respect the idea that many people draw strength and
support from it.
Allison
|
335.21 | Now I don't understand... | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:50 | 8 |
| Jim,
In .6 you said it's OK to condemn the "practice" of homosexuality.
Yet in .17 you said "in no way am I condemning homosexual behavior."
This strikes me as two opposite positions. Which is it?
Paul
|
335.22 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 01 1991 14:40 | 13 |
| Yeah, your right Paul in whatever you say !( You can take whatever I write
out of context and use it to inflame rather than understand or help to
understand.
My .17 was meant to say that I don't condemn any homosexuals,
and also, that I don't understand the behavior because FOR ME,
the attraction to another male, doesn't make sense. OK ?
I was trying to make an apology as well. Somehow you missed it
or you chose to ignore it.
I'm through talking here. I'm too pissed off to continue in this
discussion with you.
|
335.23 | This is not a easy, benign topic. | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Fri Nov 01 1991 17:15 | 88 |
| re .22
Yeah, your right Paul in whatever you say!
How flattering. ;)
You can take whatever I write out of context and use it to
inflame rather than understand or help to understand.
I find it uncanny that you're asking ME to make a noble attempt to try
to understand you when you level comments like this at me:
"Your attitude is a problem ... Your note is so full of crap I can
hardly believe you wrote it ... I find your note to be really narrow
and full of hate. I don't know why I even bothered to respond."
My .17 was meant to say that I don't condemn any homosexuals,
and also, that I don't understand the behavior because FOR ME,
the attraction to another male, doesn't make sense. OK ?
Maybe the way in which a lot of Catholics do not "understand" people
different from themselves inadvertently comes across, as Ro put it, "cruel
and unkind." I think saying that scripture supports your feelings of
repulsion falls into that category. Maybe gay Catholics don't know
that you and the church do not mean to hurt them. Like I said,
irrespective of clergy's intent, the damage is indeed happening
bigtime, whether you choose to see it or not.
As for "attraction to another male doesn't make sense" -- well,
let me take a stab at this: Are you married or do you have a girlfriend?
Did you ever bother to ask her: "Why are you attracted to me physically?
Why are women in general attracted to men physically/sexually/emotionally?"
I think perhaps your "obstacle" could be acknowledging that the male form
is capable of being attractive to ANYONE, even females. You are not
attracted to your own body, physically/sexually, but presumably your
wife is/was. I got a hunch that if you collect answers from females,
these answers would be very similar to those things about men that
are attractive to gay men. Better yet, go ask gay men what attracts
them to men! Am I making any sense? Perhaps not. ;)
I mean, when you say you don't "understand" the attraction, what I hear
is something like, "I don't understand why you enjoy tropical climates;
I hate them" Or "I don't understand why you enjoy the taste of fish;
I hate fish!" Or, "I don't understand why you enjoy the sound of
classical music; I hate classical music." So, in a sense, I guess
I don't understand why it is so difficult for you to understand.
The difference, I think, between sexual attraction and attraction to
food/music/weather is important; that is, I think sexuality is more
engrained and "hardwired" to one's soul and deep-rooted instincts than is
attraction to food/music/weather. Also.... I think we are all born
with our basic sexuality, hetero, homo, or bi, for the most part.
One thing to remember Jim: The human species is truly remarkable.
We are, as a race, capable of bisexuality, in that large segments of
humanity are born bisexual and homosexual. It always has been that way,
and it always will be that way. And in that sense, bisexuality is a
NATURAL part of our species, part of nature, part of the creation.
I don't understand why we continue to pretend that we as a race are not
the way we are. I know this comment will trigger a lot of outrage,
but that's my opinion.
I was trying to make an apology as well. Somehow you missed it
or you chose to ignore it.
I missed it. Thank you.
I'm through talking here. I'm too pissed off to continue in this
discussion with you.
Well, I'm sorry you feel that way because I think it is important to
get these feelings out in the open. I think we all could stand to
learn something via this very candid exchange. But consider this:
If my comments hurt your feelings or pissed you off so sufficiently
to cause you to walk away from this discussion -- and you and I don't
even KNOW each other -- think of how hurt and dejected millions of gay
Christians must feel when they perceive their family of Christ -- the one
they grew up with, trusted, relied upon -- has demeaned their human
dignity and has tormented them to the point where they feel THEY
have to walk away from the church.
I know it sounds harsh ... but... given this stark reality of
Christian treatment of gays, I personally do not have much sympathy
for whatever backlash the church may be experiencing right now.
It dwarfs by comparison, IMHO. Maybe that shows I lack
sensitivity -- you know, what's good for the goose ...
but that's just the way I feel.
Paul
|
335.24 | | DECWIN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Nov 01 1991 17:24 | 34 |
| Re: .12 Jim
> How come you where silent then ? Perhaps you agree that people are
> justified in spitting and throwing condoms at people ? I'm really
> surprised by the silence of people in this in this conference that
> would allow forms of violence to be justified. Your reply really
> has me concerned, cuz this is the same conference that complained
> about the attitudes in the Golf::Christian conference. I guess
> the attitudes are really equal when all comes said and done ?
You've raised some difficult questions, Jim.
Although I sympathize with the goals of ACT UP I don't approve of their
tactics. In some ways ACT UP is similar to Operation Rescue (although I doubt
that there is very much overlap between the two groups :-) ). Both groups
seem to think that their cause is so just that it gives them the right to
be obnoxious and harrass other people.
On the other hand, I also don't approve of many of the positions taken by the
Catholic Church. I think the Church has contributed to the oppression of gays
and women. Now the problem is, how can I oppose the Church's moral teaching
without becoming a mere "Catholic basher"?
I try to strike a balance: I respect the right of Catholics to hold certain
religious beliefs, but at the same time I criticize those beliefs where they
are contrary to my own sense of morality. I try not to let my disagreement
with Catholic doctrine turn into hatred of Catholics in general or of the
Church hierarchy.
As a moderator I'd like to ask everyone in this discussion to avoid criticizing
individual people, since this just leads to bad feelings. Each of you may wish
to review the conference rules in note 8.
-- Bob
|
335.25 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Passionate Peace | Fri Nov 01 1991 19:32 | 19 |
| In all fairness to the Roman Catholic Church, I must assert that
whatever criticism can be leveled against it cannot be leveled
against it *exclusively*.
Furthermore, there are some important exceptions within the RCC.
Many of my friends are Catholic. Some are religious by vocation.
Three women in particular come to mind. One is a Francisican Sister,
one a Benedictine Sister, and one a Sister of Charity. All three are
outspoken advocates of rethinking concerning the role and status of
women and persons blessed with minority sexual orientation within
the Church.
Two of these woman played an integral part in presenting a sermon
last summer at the church where I worship, the composition of which is
predominantly gay. And yes, they knew it.
Peace,
Richard
|
335.26 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Mon Nov 04 1991 08:45 | 43 |
| Well, it's Monday and I've had a week-end to get away from this
discussion and take time to try and purge whatever feelings that
were left over from from last Friday and start with a
fresh new approach to this topic.
To me, there seems to be an attitude, that goes, if the Church and
that includes most Christian denominations, condemns the homosexual
act, that in itself is condemnation of the homosexual person.
Perhaps, because I'm not on the receiving end, and probably due
to my inability to relate to the homosexual orientation, I'm not
sensitive to what it is like. However, when the Church, other Christians
and myself included, read Scriptures condemnation of the homosexual act,
and in conjunction to our own feelings towards homosexuality, we end up
denouncing the sin, and in so doing, offended homosexuals. This is not
the intention and I'm only just starting to become aware that this is
indeed what is happening.
What I hear gay people saying to both Church and Christians is, "don't
condemn the sin, because in doing so, your condemning us."
I believe divorced people as well, may have similar feelings when the
church has condemned divorce as it did in the past.
My question right now is, what is the Church suppose to do ? Can the
Church simply ignore Scripture ? I don't think it can. To me, it is
impossible for the Church to look at homosexual acts, in relation to
what Scripture says and simply say, "it's not a sin." I think the
Church would be contradicting Scripture to do so. The issue at this
point is, will the Church end up being looked at as being bigoted
views towards homosexuals ? Apparently this is the attitude
many people are developing in their view of the Church. Perhaps a
closer look at how the Church interprets Scripture, and how the Church
responds to it, would give people a different view of what the
Church is really saying.
In all, this seems to be a very difficult issue to resolve.
Peace
Jim
|
335.27 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Mon Nov 04 1991 13:53 | 21 |
|
< I believe divorced people as well, may have similar feelings when the
< church has condemned divorce as it did in the past.
Jim,
Not a perfect analogy but it comes close. Homosexuals are not alone
in that respect. There are many who the church (I'll limit myself to
RCC that I know) would expell or condem for their actions. I know
my own situation though different from above is outside the accepted
for the RCC.
You pose some good questions about scriptural interpretation. Up till
now most of what I have encountered is to support the "it is a sin"
and therefore bad belief. Might there be as much support in scripture
for living the best life possible given who and what you are? We are
all born with gifts and how productively we use them to enhance our
life and those lives around us is what life is about.
Allison
|
335.28 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Nov 04 1991 15:08 | 14 |
| > Might there be as much support in scripture
> for living the best life possible given who and what you are?
There might but I doubt it. It goes contrary to what I've been
tought all my life that the best we can do is not enough.
> We are
> all born with gifts and how productively we use them to enhance our
> life and those lives around us is what life is about.
That may be what life is all about to you but it is not to everyone.
Life is all about serving God to me.
Alfred
|
335.29 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Mon Nov 04 1991 15:23 | 42 |
| re:27
Allison
> You pose some good questions about scriptural interpretation. Up till
> now most of what I have encountered is to support the "it is a sin"
> and therefore bad belief. Might there be as much support in scripture
> for living the best life possible given who and what you are? We are
> all born with gifts and how productively we use them to enhance our
> life and those lives around us is what life is about.
IMHO, Scripture tells us how to live a good life by obeying the
commandments of God. For many the Ten Commandments are binding,
to believers, they are liberating. The Commandment to love
God, and to love your neighbor as our self is a way of living
a good life. Can we love God with our heart and soul, and our neighbor
as ourself, and still not commit sin ? To love God would mean to me,
that we would be doing the best we can to obey his commandments.
Ignoring his commandments would be trying make our love for God
conditional. The condition being, that I'll love God with the condition
that certain commandments can be ignored or not taken seriously.
Jesus gave the disciples, the first leaders of the Church, the authority
to forgive sins or hold them bound;
"If you forgive men's sins they are forgiven them; If you hold them
bound, they are held bound" John 20:22
Note however, that I don't believe Jesus would have given this authority
had he not known that the Holy Spirit would be sent to guide them.
Today, it seems that people believe that God is love and any
commandments given to us is contrary to the Love God has for us.
I don't see it that way. To me, the commandments God gave us, is a
sign of his love for us, for they teach us how to live free lives
which will bring us closer to Him. This in my opinion, is what a good
life is all about.
Peace
Jim
|
335.30 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:38 | 22 |
|
Alfred,
I am not prepared to go to extremes on this. My beliefs are different
but funamentally compatable.
Perfection, a goal only. In my day by day I try to achieve the best
I can do. When the day is done I forgive myself for my limitations
and resolve to make tommorrow better.
< That may be what life is all about to you but it is not to everyone.
< Life is all about serving God to me.
<
< Alfred
Since what I wrote was very general in scope, can you accept that by
using my gift(s) of life wisely and well (non-hedonistic) that I would
serve my concept of god well.
Peace,
Allison
|
335.31 | some thoughts... | BSS::VANFLEET | Dreamer, your moment has come! | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:50 | 27 |
| My question would then be, how is it possible to "love thy neighbor
as thyself" as the church teaches and then turn around and drive
gay people from the spiritual fellowship because they express
their God-given sexuality? In condemning the gay lifestyle this
is often the result what the church effects.
And how do you follow God's commandments if they contradict each other?
The "love thy neighbor as thyself" is the second greatest commandment,
second only to "Love the Lord, thy God with all thy...". It seems to
me that the things that the Bible teaches about human sexuality (and a
lot of things, for that matter) contradict that. Does loving God
entail putting loving your fellow humans at the bottom of the priority
list in terms of how a Christian acts?
And another observation, the commandment is to "love thy neighbor as
thyself", not "understand thy neighbor as thyself". I don't know
about the rest of you but, for me, loving implies acceptance. You
don't have to understand someone in order to accept them for who and
what they are. It seems to me that if God doesn't accept the person
and their lifestyle, well, that's between that person and God. No one
else has the right ot make that jugdgement, whether they be an
individual or a collective church body.
I've said more than I intended to so I'll just disappear again for awhile.
Nanci
|
335.32 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Mon Nov 04 1991 16:59 | 21 |
|
Jim,
Please don't attack an idea or a possible concept. I hold different
beliefs but at no time did I say throw the book out. Your response
was far stronger that I would have expected based on simple ideas
and beliefs presented. I did suggest that some of the scriptures
oft quoted are used to convict "sinners", I ask is that holding
judgment of another? In my beliefs that is itself a sin against
my higher power as I am responsable for what I do and will be judged
by what I did in life.
I neither ask others to change their beliefs nor would I judge an
individual for their beliefs. That would place me in the position
that I know better than they, and I don't.
Peace,
Allison
|
335.33 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Mon Nov 04 1991 17:08 | 60 |
| I could not agree more with the importance placed on loving God and
loving our neighbor. In fact, that is really the point. I don't
believe that these two stances are in any way contradictory or mutually
exclusive. When we express bigotry or intolerance towards our fellow
humans, we are not only working against the principle of loving
others--we are also not expressing our love for God. That is the
problem with the prejudice towards homosexuality that many churches
promote. If we believe that God commands us to behave in a hurtful and
prejudicial fashion towards others, perhaps the problem lies with our
understanding of God and God's will.
A few years ago, a couple who belonged to a fundamentalist church were
so dedicated to the principle of tithing at all costs that they ended
up starving their child to death. I don't remember all the details,
but the point here is that these people believed that they were obeying
God's commandments. Was that an expression of love for their child?
Does God wish for us to obey commandments even if it means starving our
children to death? If we ask ourselves what it means to love our
neighbors, really love our neighbors, then we have to come to some hard
conclusions. It means coming to the conclusion that intolerance
against homosexuality makes no sense, is not expression of love for
others, and amounts to no more than a mindless rendering of
"commandments" instead of a full expression of the commandment to love
others.
When I hear certain Christians condemning homosexuality, I sometimes
feel honest despair about the human capacity for empathy. This rigid
adherence to a set of supposedly divinely mandated rules at all costs,
even at the cost of compassion and empathy, is truly amazing to me,
especially in light of the kinds of battles that Jesus fought against a
doctrinaire religious sensibility. Where is the compassion in that?
Where is the love? Is is really so hard for those who throw their
stones at others to consider what it might be like to walk in another
person's shoes? When they tell others that they are not allowed to
experience the loving, tender relationship with another human being
that the person doing the condemnation freely and fully has the right
to enjoy, for reasons that are not the other person's fault, because
them's the rules and there's no way around it--I sometimes feel like
throwing up my hands and saying, "What has happened to empathy, anyway?
Is that the kind of God you worship?"
Unfortunately, I see this often in Christianity. The Bible is often
perceived to be a kind of divine rule book, and Christianity becomes
not a religion of love and compassion but of intolerance, rigidity, and
adherence to culturally inherited prejudices. Prejudice, violence, and
even hatred are thus justified in the name of the Bible. Christians
have in common, despite their diversity, the historical figure of
Jesus; but the interpretation of his live and teachings for us is so
diverse among Christians as to be truly amazing. Did Jesus preach a
religion of love, forgiveness, and reconciliation, or a religion of
rules and vengeance? You'll get completely different answers,
depending on who you talk to. Frankly, I have to wonder if some people
have read a completely different New Testament than I have, because
their images of Jesus and the Christian faith seem so devoid of the
commandment to love one's neighbor and to love God. Christianity is
supposed to be a liberating faith; but what I often see instead is a
religion that binds and oppresses, with rigid rules and a suppression
of the compassionate instinct.
-- Mike
|
335.34 | So, what do you say to Danny? | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Mon Nov 04 1991 19:32 | 215 |
| re .26
Thanks Jim for your very thoughtful, sincere entry here. In spite
of the rough way I came across in past replies, I honestly believe you
truly do not mean to hurt anyone and that you are sincerely trying to
understand. Moreover, I will try very hard from now on to phrase my
viewpoints in a way that does not outrage anyone or does not add fuel
to the flames. After all, I want everyone to understand the meaning
of what I am saying rather than get caught up in, offended by, the
inflammatory way in which I might say it.
re .33 Mike .... I always enjoy reading your beautifully worded,
powefully articulate entries. I agree with almost all of what you
say and admire your command of the language. (Are you channeling
something inspired from above?) ;) Good job!
Jim ... you pose a good question: How does the church reconcile sticking to
its doctrine while reaching out to, and not offending, gay Catholics
simultaneously.
Let me share with you a real-life story that happened to me over
the weekend. It's funny how this situation happened in my life right
now, in the middle of this hot and heavy debate ....
I've known this young man, Danny, for several months now. He's a
friend of a friend, but he and I have become pretty close friends
ourselves in recent months. Danny is a 24-year-old guy -- a very
kind-hearted, soft-spoken, shy Irish-Catholic young man, who comes
from a large Irish-Catholic family (one of eight kids) from a
prominent middle-class Boston suburb. Danny is also sort of a "jock"
type. He is a very masculine, handsome young man who played high school
and college baseball and soccer. He still hangs around with and
plays soccer/baseball with some of his "jock" buddies. They
all like to get together to drink and carouse once in a while.
Anyway, over the weekend Danny and I bumped into each other. We
got to talking about his life -- ups and downs -- and out of the blue,
he tells me that he is gay. He said I was the only person he felt safe
enough to tell -- he's told no one else -- and that he needed to talk
about it with someone because the isolation, the hiding, and the
pretending (to be someone he is not) was driving him crazy.
[For some strange reason, in recent years, many young men have
felt comfortable in opening up to me. It never used to be that way,
but I do welcome this trend. Perhaps many young men sense that I am
a guy they can feel safe enough with, to talk about subjects other than
business and sports ... the usual fare between males.]
Danny is living in great fear ... fear of someone -- ANYONE -- finding
out. He's terrified of getting rejected, snubbed, and disowned by his
family, his athlete friends, people in the church, and society at
large. Having lost his job and being forced to move back home with
his parents is making him extra vulnerable and nervous now, simply
because he is convinced that his traditional-Catholic parents would
disown him and throw him out of the house, if they found out. He is
convinced his brothers, also macho athletic types, would either
ridicule him or refuse to talk to him. He said his family verbally
lambastes and scoffs at a gay cousin behind the cousin's back, regularly.
He is also convinced his buddies would treat him the same way -- maybe
even harm him physically -- if they found out.
Danny says he "plays the game" pretty well. That is, he says he can
hide his true identity very effectively, since he is athletic and non-
effeminate. Girls are a tricky problem, however. Most girls, he
says, find him very attractive and think nothing of asking him out
on dates. He turns them down gently -- finnesses excuses to give
them -- yet sometimes they become persistent and do not take 'no' for
an answer. He says it gets downright exhausting sometimes having to
come up with alibies, not only for the girls, but also for his
male friends, who regularly ask: "So, why aren't you going out
with Kathy yet?"
To date, he says he has had sexual relations with just a couple guys
-- these both began as anonymous encounters, in dark, outdoor
places, like their cars. (There was no where else to go without being
"caught," he says.) One of the guys he has seen several times, and says
that, for the first time in his life, he is getting emotionally
attached and is finding himself falling in love with this person --
and that it is scaring him to death, he says, because he knows he
is "not ready" logistically. In other words, he believes that if he
plunges head-on into a love affair with this person, it would dramatically
increase the chances of his being "found out." It's too risky,
he says.
I asked Danny point blank: "What do you want out of life?"
He responded, without hesitation, "I want a loving, caring, committed
relationship with one guy -- something that lasts a long, long time.
I want to share my life with one other guy. But it may be a long time
before I can reach the point of safely having that kind of
relationship. I mean, I can't consciously imagine others finding
out about it. I couldn't bear the thought of getting rejected
and treated like an outcast by just about everyone in my life.
It's too risky right now." He continued to say that, for now, he
must put all his energy into hiding his true identity, rather than
in cultivating the kind of relationship he wants ... he believes
it's out of reach, like an "impossible dream" right now.
Being close to tears at this point in the story, I enquired about his
spiritual life. He said that he abandoned the Catholic church about a
year ago, though he said he does have a strong belief and faith in
God. He concluded that he could not reconcile "who and what I am"
with the church's views and treatment of homosexuality. He said the
church -- clergy and parishioners alike -- "just do not understand
what I am all about, what it means to be gay. This is the way I am,
the way God created me. It's part of me."
Trying to be objective, I continued my questioning: "You realize that
the church condemns the act of homosexuality, not the homosexual person,
don't you?" Danny shrugged his head and said, "They would have me become
a celibate old man, someone who would die without knowing what it means
to be in love with another person. In fact, if I don't get over my
fears about being 'found out,' I just might end up that way. They
just don't understand that they are asking me to reject MYSELF."
I continued: "The church says that if you pray to Jesus long and hard
enough, Jesus will deliver you from Satan's evil deceptions -- in this
case, the illusion that you are homosexual -- and bestow a miracle on
you, making you heterosexual." Danny got a little irritated with this
one. He laughed and said, "That's silly. I'm sure God has better things
to do. I might as well pray to God to change the color of my eyes.
That's not the way it works."
I asked him if he was ever made to feel ashamed or dumped on by his
Catholic friends, churchgoers in general, or by the church itself. He
said that he heard a lot of denegrating, negative comments -- jokes,
names, and other things -- in his CCD classes while growing up; he also
said the CCD group leaders didn't seem to care that there might be gay
children in the class and that they might be hurt by all the negative
comments. He said that the clergy never out-and-out condemned
homosexual people; however, he said they DID condemn homosexuality.
And each time he heard a priest/nun knock homosexuality, he
interpreted it as condemnation of him, his being, rather than some
sort of sinful "activity" that he might perform. "There's no other
way to take that," he said. He added that the negative bombardment on
homosexuality came from all quarters -- his friends, from school, his
family, AS WELL AS from the church community. He viewed the church as
just another part of society that didn't care and didn't understand --
just one more slice of society to hide himself from, for fear of
rejection and chastisement.
NOTE: I noticed that most of his friends and family were and still
are Catholic. And, sadly, these are the people who he fears would
lambaste him the most.
I gave Danny my personal advice in several areas. I told him that,
though it was easier said than done, he should not worry about what
others might think of him, that others might not like him, that others
might even reject/torment him if he ever came out to his
family/friends/church. I said he has a birthright to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness and he has a right to fulfill himself in
life -- especially in the area of love/romance -- as long as he didn't
hurt anyone else. I told him these feelings and yearnings for a
loving relationship were not going to go away, and that they might
drive him even more crazy, as the years pass, if he continued to deny
himself a love life. I told him to go easier on himself, to love
himself, and allow himself to BE himself -- if not in public,
then in private.
He said, "Yeah, I know you're right, except I sort of feel like a
Jewish person living in Germany in the 30s, hiding my identity. Right
now I just can't imagine myself acting in any other way except
continuing to 'play the game' by 'playing it straight.' Maybe it
won't be THAT many years before I can be more myself."
I finally gave Danny a copy of a fantastic book I read over
summer vacation: "Behind the Mask" by Dave Pallone -- the bestseller
autobiography of a National League umpire who came to grips with
his homosexuality before and during the time he served in the major
leagues, between 1979 and 1988. It is a very powerful, poignant story
not only of his private life, but also of some of the startling
behind-the-scenes daily life in professional baseball. In the story,
Pallone reveals his painful coming-out process, from his childhood
to the point where he left the major leagues. It seemed to address
many of the situations and feelings that Danny is experiencing in
his life right now. And it goes without saying ... Danny (like Pallone)
is also into baseball and has also always been involved in the
sports world. I'm sure Pallone is someone to whom Danny can
relate. He may benefit greatly by realizing, "Hey -- this guy is
just like me. I'm not alone, after all!"
Since Danny chose to confide in me -- not without a lot of fearful
trepidation, I'm sure -- I pray that the advice and support I gave
this wonderful young man will have a positive, constructive effect on
him and will help enrich his life.
Perhaps Danny will at some point ask me, as a former Catholic, to
share my perspectives on Divinity, the Holy Spirit, as well as the
nature of my personal relationship with God. While I look forward
to that day, I am not going to press the issue.
Paul
P.S. Jim ... to answer your question, I really don't know how the
Catholic church and American Christian community in general can or
should reconcile its doctrine with its treatment of homosexuals.
All I can say at this point, with all due respect, is this: The way
in which the church approaches gay Catholics and homosexuality in
general -- condemning the "act" and the "practice" rather than the
person -- just doesn't seem to be working. I cannot recommend a
better approach the church might take, as long as it believes that
homosexuality should be condemned. Maybe it should just leave the
issue alone and let each Catholic work out this issue privately,
with God.
Do you have any suggestions? I mean, the church tells its gay
parishioners: Homosexuality is bad; it's a crime against God. OK,
but now what? What would you, Jim, say to someone like Danny. I
really would like to know in order to understand where Catholics are
coming from these days. You're a long-time Roman Catholic, who has
deep faith in the church and its teachings, and I am sincerely
happy for you. But what about Danny? Pretend Danny is sitting
across from you. Specifically, what do you say to him?
|
335.35 | Prayer And Meditation Needed | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Tue Nov 05 1991 08:45 | 53 |
| RE:34
Gee Paul, I'm really moved by Danny's story ! It's gonna take time
to digest and reflect on. I pray that he finds what Christ wants
for him, no matter what it may be. His faith in Jesus Christ is paramount
to his affiliation with the Church. Without Faith, the Church would only
end up being equivalent to a poor social club.
As far as how should we as Catholics respond in retrospect ?
For one, Catholics should love gay people as they love
themselves. I know that Catholics including myself, have been
anything but loving towards gay people. The high school jokes
were almost taken in the sense that we were talking about some
non-existent entity. I never realized how damaging this attitude
was until my conversion to Christianity some years ago.
How should the Church respond ? I really don't have an answer, but
I'm searching, that's why I've been involved in this dialog. When
the Church put a ban on gay activities in the Church, such as gay
support groups, etc., their reasoning was, that to allow it would
be the same as approving homosexuality itself. They compared it
to allowing swinging couples groups to have support groups within
the Church as well.
I suppose the closest parallel that I can think of in terms of
what a gay person, such as Dan, can come to, is the heterosexual
male, that also desires a relationship with someone, but isn't able
to find some one because they just aren't attracting to females or
they just don't have the skills in the dating scene. I know many single
males, who would love to find the right woman to share their lives with
but, cannot. Many of these guys also, find that the Church is condemning
in their sexual activities such as masturbation or going with prostitutes
to fulfill their sexuality which they feel is a very natural part of them
and should not be suppressed. Now, I don't mean to equate sleeping with
prostitutes with gay relationships, I'm just attempting to show that there
are lonely people that are asked to remain celibate outside of marriage,
other than gay people.
The Church's advice is to pray, and this is not so gay people can be
cured of sexual orientation or heterosexuals to be relieved of sexual
desires, but to pray so that the power of Christ can guide the person
in their struggles. Even St. Paul says; "And now my brothers, I beg you
through the mercy of God, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice holy
and acceptable to God, your spiritual worship." Romans 12:1 The only way
you can be successful in what St. Paul says, is to Pray. This is difficult
to say the least! Myself, as a married heterosexual, have to realize that
it's easier for me to give advice to live a life I don't have to live, than
it is for the person who may have to live it. But, nonetheless, it's the
only answer I have right now. Pray !
Peace
Jim
|
335.36 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 08:47 | 9 |
| > Since what I wrote was very general in scope, can you accept that by
> using my gift(s) of life wisely and well (non-hedonistic) that I would
> serve my concept of god well.
Sure. The focus is different. You would be serving God as a side effect
of using your gift(s) well. I would serve man as a side effect of
serving God. I see this as a significant difference however.
Alfred
|
335.37 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 08:55 | 27 |
| >My question would then be, how is it possible to "love thy neighbor
>as thyself" as the church teaches and then turn around and drive
>gay people from the spiritual fellowship because they express
>their God-given sexuality? In condemning the gay lifestyle this
>is often the result what the church effects.
I am sure that the church's attitude towards stealing drives some
people out as well. What would you have us do? Must we abandon all
principles and beliefs so as to include all?
>And how do you follow God's commandments if they contradict each other?
Fortunately they don't.
>The "love thy neighbor as thyself" is the second greatest commandment,
>second only to "Love the Lord, thy God with all thy...". It seems to
>me that the things that the Bible teaches about human sexuality (and a
>lot of things, for that matter) contradict that.
I disagree. I believe that what the Bible teaches about sexuality
fully supports love. I believe that those who demand the church accept
homosexuality are showing less tolerance than the church. And a whole
lot less love. You don't encourage people to do self destructive things
if you love them. And the changes to the church involved in accepting
homosexuality as valid would most definitely be self destructive.
Alfred
|
335.38 | no dice! | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Tue Nov 05 1991 10:42 | 11 |
| sorry, Alfred
but i can't buy the argument that being gay is the same as
stealing...doesn't wash with me...nor do i buy into the idea
that it's the same as prostitution or masturbation.
neither will i accept the idea that somehow gay people are
intolerant of the church...to my way of thinking this is
merely blaming the victim...
peter
|
335.39 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 11:08 | 17 |
| > but i can't buy the argument that being gay is the same as
> stealing...doesn't wash with me...nor do i buy into the idea
> that it's the same as prostitution or masturbation.
I didn't say it was the same. Not at all. I just said that asking
people to disregard any one thing is in principle the same as asking
them to disregard any other thing in the Bible.
> neither will i accept the idea that somehow gay people are
> intolerant of the church...to my way of thinking this is
> merely blaming the victim...
Glad to hear that gay people accept the idea that it's ok to
disapprove of homosexuality. I somehow got the idea they felt
otherwise. Thanks for clearing that up.
Alfred
|
335.40 | Bring the theories down to real life. | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:00 | 15 |
| Last several:
Alfred, much of what you say sounds nice and pristine in theory.
But how about applying these theories to real life. Specifically,
what would you say to, advise, that young man I wrote about in
reply .34? That's a classic real-life example of what we are
talking about here if I've ever heard one.
Also Alfred, I think there is a big difference between the
church leaving gay Catholics alone to be who and what they are,
to be themselves, and "encouraging them to to self-destructive
things to themselves." Would you care to define 'self destructive'?
Paul
|
335.41 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | a deeper wave rising | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:09 | 21 |
| Alfred .37,
> You don't encourage people to do self destructive things if you
> love them. And the changes to the church involved in accepting
> homosexuality as valid would most definitely be self destructive.
Could you elaborate a bit further on the issues of self-destructiveness
you perceive Alfred?
If I understand correctly, it sounds as if you see homosexuality as
inherently self-destructive to the homosexual, so the church would be
wrong to "encourage" such behavior. Is this correct? And if so,
could you elaborate on how you see homosexual behavior as being self
destructive?
Conversely, are you saying in your next sentence that it would be
self-destructive for the church to alter its doctrine to a more tolerant,
accepting position on homosexuality?
Thanks,
Karen
|
335.42 | huh? | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:11 | 16 |
| alfred...
i don't know where you got the idea that i said that gay people
condone the proposition that's "it's okay to disaprove of
homosexuality"...personally, i concur with this but wherever you
found this is something only you know.
i don't at all agree with your statement "disregard(ing) any one
thing is in principle the same as asking them to disregard any other
thing in the Bible"...this is entirely too simplistic.
tell me (if you would please) do you hold as closely to the teachings
on divorce? and if you do, would you want the legal system to reflect
your religious views on the matter?
peter
|
335.43 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Tue Nov 05 1991 12:43 | 7 |
| Perhaps the what the Church ought to be doing is discarding bad
principles and emphasizing good ones. The bad "principles" are those
that are hurtful, unloving, and lacking in compassion, such as the
condemnation of homosexuality; good principles, on the other hand, are
those that emphasize loving one's neighbor.
-- Mike
|
335.44 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:38 | 25 |
| > Specifically,
> what would you say to, advise, that young man I wrote about in
> reply .34? That's a classic real-life example of what we are
> talking about here if I've ever heard one.
Advise I have none. All I could tell him is that I love him. I'm
not qualified to tell him what to do about coming out/staying in.
Perhaps if I were face to face God would give me other words but
right now I don't have them. This is what I've done in the past
and I know of no reason to change.
> Also Alfred, I think there is a big difference between the
> church leaving gay Catholics alone to be who and what they are,
> to be themselves, and "encouraging them to to self-destructive
> things to themselves." Would you care to define 'self destructive'?
I'm not sure where this question is coming from or how to answer.
I believe that asking the church to approve homosexual behavior would
be destructive to the church because it would create internal
inconsistancy. Thus all doctrine based on the Bible would have to
be concidered discardable and the church loses all moral authority.
This I regard as self destructive.
Alfred
|
335.45 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:41 | 14 |
| > If I understand correctly, it sounds as if you see homosexuality as
> inherently self-destructive to the homosexual, so the church would be
> wrong to "encourage" such behavior. Is this correct?
Not correct. See .44.
> Conversely, are you saying in your next sentence that it would be
> self-destructive for the church to alter its doctrine to a more tolerant,
> accepting position on homosexuality?
Tolerant and accepting I don't see as a big problem. Calling homosexual
sex OK would clearly be self destructive to the church. See .44.
Alfred
|
335.46 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:49 | 13 |
| > i don't at all agree with your statement "disregard(ing) any one
> thing is in principle the same as asking them to disregard any other
> thing in the Bible"...this is entirely too simplistic.
I disagree.
> tell me (if you would please) do you hold as closely to the teachings
> on divorce? and if you do, would you want the legal system to reflect
> your religious views on the matter?
Which teachings are those? What verses of the Bible do you refer
to?
Alfred
|
335.47 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 13:49 | 13 |
| RE: .42 In .38 you said:
> neither will i accept the idea that somehow gay people are
> intolerant of the church.
As tolerance of homosexuality as always been equated to
approving of it I assumed that when you said that homosexuals
were tolerant of the church that meant they approved of the
churches right to believe what it does. So either the church is
not intolerant of homosexuals or homosexuals are intolerant of
the church. Which is it? Thank you.
Alfred
|
335.48 | | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Tue Nov 05 1991 14:00 | 27 |
| Alfred,
i'll admit your last reply..that is the one dealing with
tolerance...has me confused as to what you are trying to
say.
but then your brand of logic has eluded me in the past...
i question the proposition that "tolerance of homosexuality
is equal to approval"...
the fact that gay people are not intolerant of the church does
not that they approve or disapprove anything...are you just trying
to bait me?
...
divorce
if you hold so very tightly to the strictures regarding heterosexual
marriages...i believe the discussion is found in Chapter 10, Gospel
according to St. Matthew..then straight people are not to divorce.
if you hold to that teaching, are you against our legal system allowing
heterosexuals to divorce one another?
peter
|
335.49 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Tue Nov 05 1991 14:39 | 29 |
| I think we have come to the crux of the matter. Not only do I not see
anything wrong with opening up for discussion any and all church
doctrine, even those ostensibly based on the Bible, I in fact think it
is a very good thing indeed. But then, I have never had any use for a
Church hierarchy telling me what to think. An earlier note in this
topic (I don't remember which one) suggested that the Church might want
to consider leaving the question of homosexuality up to each individual
member. What a radical concept--allowing people to think for
themselves! But this is the one thing that many churches will never
accept. This really boils down to the question of creeds, and
doctrinal authority within a denomination. For some, it is unthinkable
that a Church would not spell out in detail what its membership can and
can't believe. Openness, uncertainly, and a lack of dogmatic certainty
is definitely discomforting for many people.
As an alternative, I prefer an environment that is more open than that.
I suspect that a moral authority that must be enforced by Church fiat
is of questionable value to begin with, and that perhaps a moral
concept should carry its own moral authority, without the need for
institutional repression of ideas. It is certainly threatening to a
ridigly established dogma to begin questioning any of the elements of
the belief structure, because then the entire belief system might
crumble. The problem then becomes one of holding on, at all costs, to
"principles" that are immoral, hurtful, or bigoted, simply because they
are part of the doctrinal edifice. Thus taking a compassionate and
enlightened position towards homosexuality is resisted, despite the
lack of empathy and love that underlies this position.
-- Mike
|
335.50 | Miracle of miracles? ;) | BUFFER::CIOTO | | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:23 | 33 |
| re .44 Alfred,
"Advice I have none ... I'm not qualified to tell him what to do
about coming out/staying in."
This startles me. It's real good news, however. What happened to
all this talk about not tolerating the sin of homosexuality. Are
you advocating that the church treat its gay Catholics with a hands-off
live-and-let-live policy? That is a radical departure from what I have
heard from you, Jim, and others, who say that the sin of homosexuality
ought to be condemned by the church. It is also a radical departure
from what I find in Catholic circles these days in general.
I am confused. Please clarify. I continue to want to know
how Catholics in general would approach that guy I wrote about in .34.
(You all seem to be ignoring that story! ;) I slave over a hot keyboard
all night, and see how you treat me in turn??? ;) ;) ;)). Seriously,
what would Catholics say to him? What should priests say to him? I
think we could all benefit by knowing this. Please spell it out.
.49 Mike, nice note, as always.
I think it was me (I) in .34 who said something like: Perhaps the
Catholic church should just leave its gay flock alone to be themselves,
and to leave the issue of homosexuality up to each individual gay
Catholic and God -- let the person and God work through it between
themselves, privately, without interference from any church "position".
I said this because it it is clear that the current approach to
homosexuality -- condemn the sin but not the sinner -- is not only
a paradox but is failing miserably.
Paul
|
335.51 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:27 | 3 |
| Thank you, Paul. I think that the approach you suggest makes sense.
-- Mike
|
335.52 | If The Church Is Wrong, Why Stay In It ? | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:43 | 11 |
|
So then, why don't gay Catholics or anybody that interprets Scripture
differently than what the Catholic Church does, just go ahead and form their
own denomination of believers, and stop asking the Church to reject
what it believes ? Why isn't there tolerance for allowing the Church to
believe what it does, from those who don't want to accept it ? Isn't
freedom of religion still guaranteed in the U.S. ?
Peace
Jim
|
335.53 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:53 | 31 |
| > i question the proposition that "tolerance of homosexuality
> is equal to approval"...
I agree but that is the proposition that seems commonly advanced by
those who criticize the church. If you don't accept that proposition than
the church is generally tolerant of homosexuality. And I definitely am.
>are you just trying to bait me?
Of course not. Are you me?
> if you hold so very tightly to the strictures regarding heterosexual
> marriages...i believe the discussion is found in Chapter 10, Gospel
> according to St. Matthew..then straight people are not to divorce.
I read this chapter twice and do not find the reference to divorce.
In fact I could find not reference to divorce in all of Matthew though
there may be one without using the word divorce. In general I believe
the Bible says that divorce is undesirable but not prohibited. There
have been Jewish rules allowing it since Old Testament days.
> if you hold to that teaching, are you against our legal system allowing
> heterosexuals to divorce one another?
There appears to be some thought that I want to legal system to outlaw
all that I do not approve of. That is not the case.
Alfred
|
335.54 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Tue Nov 05 1991 15:54 | 19 |
|
Paul, Mike,
It's more than that. Consider all the "decrees" sent down from Rome
stating the churches position on things of importance to the parisoner
such as divorce, interfaith marriage, even their own identity. The
people that feel the most hurt are not against the church yet at the
same time the church has attacked the reality of their life. Hands off
is much to trivial an approach. Life can be difficult, the support of
your chosen church is important to maintaining a healthy spritual life.
It's upsetting when I can name a document from Rome that declares me
invalid and unacceptable to the church for who I am. There is a
difference between what the scriptures contain and church doctrine
(law?). Yet if doctrine stands long enough it too becomes scripture
to a future generation hundreds or thousands of years from now.
Allison
|
335.55 | no surprises from me | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:00 | 17 |
| > "Advice I have none ... I'm not qualified to tell him what to do
> about coming out/staying in."
>
> This startles me. It's real good news, however. What happened to
> all this talk about not tolerating the sin of homosexuality. Are
> you advocating that the church treat its gay Catholics with a hands-off
> live-and-let-live policy? That is a radical departure from what I have
> heard from you, Jim, and others, who say that the sin of homosexuality
> ought to be condemned by the church. It is also a radical departure
> from what I find in Catholic circles these days in general.
I see no contradiction. This is the same way I would treat anyone. I
also see no contradiction between condemning the sin of homosexual
sexual relations and a hand-off-live-and-let-live policy. I see no
radical departure in my statements.
Alfred
|
335.56 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:07 | 10 |
| RE:54
Allison,
could you please provide us with the name of the doctrine put
out by the Catholic Church that says you are invalid because of who you
are ? I'd be interested in reading it.
Thanks
Jim
|
335.57 | fwiw | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:22 | 15 |
| Paul,
I think having you to talk to was a wonderful first step for the young
man. My advice would be to have him find a support group to join.
Did you say he was in college? Many colleges today have gay/bi/lesbian
support groups for their students. Even if he doesn't attend, he might
be able to join one or find out more through them. Another possibility
is for you to give him a copy of the latest EarthStar publication; it
has a reference section with counselors who specialize in support
groups. He needs to know that he is not alone...becoming acquainted
with others in a similar situation helps.
Ro
|
335.58 | | APOLLO::ANDREWS | What's the matter, Mata? | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:26 | 27 |
| jim,
in regards .52...why would gay catholics wish to remain within
the church? ...as you may already know, many do not. many gay
christians do leave their "native" church and join more welcoming
congregations. and if you're not aware of it there is MCC whose
ministry is primarily for gay and lesbian peoples.
but why remain? i've asked myself this more times than i could
possibly count. the best reply i could give you is to try 'n turn
this around so you can place yourself in the position that gay/lesbian
catholics are in..i recognize that this may be difficult..
but what if the church taught you something that you absolutely could
not (in good conscience) go along with...i have friends who support
a woman's right to an abortion for example...would you leave the church
because of it? i get the impression that it would take more than a
doctrinal disagreement to get you to relinquish the faith you have
in the church.
at one point the church held that the earth was flat...if no one
questioned this (in your words, if folks were tolerant of this
falsehood) then perhaps all us European-American types might still
be in Europe. there's no growth without questions. i find it difficult
to believe that you would stifle all dissent within the church.
peter
|
335.59 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:40 | 12 |
| > but what if the church taught you something that you absolutely could
> not (in good conscience) go along with...i have friends who support
> a woman's right to an abortion for example...would you leave the church
> because of it? i get the impression that it would take more than a
> doctrinal disagreement to get you to relinquish the faith you have
> in the church.
More than a doctrinal disagreement? You mean there is something bigger?
Not for me. Would I leave a church that supported abortion? In a
minute.
Alfred
|
335.60 | | DECWIN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Nov 05 1991 16:59 | 31 |
| Re: .53 Alfred
>> i question the proposition that "tolerance of homosexuality
>> is equal to approval"...
>
> I agree but that is the proposition that seems commonly advanced by
> those who criticize the church. If you don't accept that proposition than
> the church is generally tolerant of homosexuality. And I definitely am.
I didn't quite understand your second sentence; did you mean "*then* the
church is generally tolerant..."? It seems to me that the Church isn't exactly
"tolerant" of homosexuality, since it actively opposes gay rights laws etc.
>> if you hold so very tightly to the strictures regarding heterosexual
>> marriages...i believe the discussion is found in Chapter 10, Gospel
>> according to St. Matthew..then straight people are not to divorce.
>
> I read this chapter twice and do not find the reference to divorce.
> In fact I could find not reference to divorce in all of Matthew though
> there may be one without using the word divorce.
"It was also said, 'Whoever divorces his wife, let him give her a
certificate of divorce.' But I say to you that everyone who divorces
his wife, except on the ground of unchastity, makes her an
adultress; and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery."
Matthew 5:31-32
Also Matthew 19:3-12, which I don't have time to enter right now.
-- Bob
|
335.61 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Tue Nov 05 1991 17:00 | 33 |
| RE:58
Peter,
there may be differences on certain teachings that I may not
agree with but I choose to obey and just offer it as a sacrifice. Of
course they would not be to the degree that a gay person would
have to deal with. If however, I was certain that what the Church
taught against me was wrong, it wouldn't take much for me to leave.
Dissent is an issue that is being talked about more frequently in
Catholic news print, such as "The Catholic Free Press." They often
talk about dissent of Saints and how their first rejection was later
met with approval. However, there is a difference in the dissent
of certain individuals and those of the Saints in that, saints such
as St. Francis of Assisi or St. Catherine of Sienna, in that they
were called to change the church by Christ revelation of his will through
apparitions, and their method of dissent was through obedience, not
rebellion. They lived the gospel so purely that the Church came to realize
what this person was saying came from God. Most of the people who dissent
these days do so solely on their own, which is why they don't succeed. When
one wants to change the Church for their own merit rather than the will of
Christ, they are sure to fail.
I often wonder why it is that some of the clergy who have dissented on
issues of women's ordination, or abortion, have not gone to Christ to
have the Church change ? It's probably because they don't really believe
that He still guides His Church ? Pope John XXIII prayed that the Church
would experience a new Pentecost when he was only a seminarian. He became
Pope, and changed it in a way that no one thought possible and I
believe it has experienced a new Pentecost.
Peace
Jim
|
335.62 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Tue Nov 05 1991 20:48 | 54 |
| I think that loyalty to one's denomination is often a difficult issue
for people who disapprove of what the denomination does at an
institutional level. Each individual has to work out in their own mind
the boundary between, on the one hand, loyalty to a church that one
feels an affinity for as one's home, and on the other hand leaving a
hopeless situation.
Undemocratic institutions do not change very easily under pressure from
below. The RCC never claimed to be a democracy, and in fact claims to
be the One True Church with its authority proceeding directly from the
Holy Spirit, if I am not mistaken. If you believe that a current Pope
is a hopeless reactionary, do you sit on your hands and hope that the
next one is more benevolent and responsive to progressive change?
Note that the RCC hierarchy appoints its own successors. True, genuine
reformers *can* emerge out of a self-perpetuating hierarchy (for
example, Gorbachev and Dubcek in the political arena), but I suspect it
helps if there are strong practical pressures for reform (e.g.,
economic problems in the USSR). Do those exist in a religious body, or
are practical considerations irrelevant when dealing with the realm of
religious ideas? What can induce someone like John XXIII to make
positive changes for the church? What can serve as a kind of
theological crisis that can push a church out of its firmly entrenched
medieval paradigm?
As far as I can tell, the RCC is not a church that advocates free and
open debate over theological issues. My understanding is that it does
not admit even the possibility that it can be wrong about its formally
conceived doctrines (I have been told that there is a distinction
between mere teachings and actual doctrines, but that is another
issue). Members are thus expected to accept unquestioningly what they
are taught, as formulated from above. If a denomination defines itself
in that way, it doesn't seem to leave much room for dissent, since that
is inherently opposed to the church's self-definition.
To me, the problem is only partially that a church teaches or doesn't
teach a particular doctrine that I may or may not disagree with; it
also lies in how those doctrines are formulated, and in how the laity
is expected to react to those doctrines as they are formulated. I
believe this because, after all, it is often the case that many people
find no church that is an exact fit for them on doctrinal matters; and
if this is so, there are other issues that may also come into play in
denominational loyalty. A church may be a "best fit", and may present
the member with a sense of community affinity. With the RCC, then, it
is not just a matter of what its doctrines are, but also how they are
conceived and disseminated; and in this case, they are conceived and
disseminated strictly from the top down. How does that leave room for
dissent? I am not sure that I see that it does.
Many are comfortable in that kind of environment; others may prefer a
creedless church where specific doctrines can be more freely explored.
The whole issue of loyalty and affinity is often difficult, though, and
perhaps other factors besides doctrine come into play.
-- Mike
|
335.63 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Looking for reality | Tue Nov 05 1991 21:48 | 8 |
| RE: Christians.....
IMHO...I believe that its important that the
Christian bring *PEOPLE* to the cross and let God handle the situation.
What could be more easy?
Dave
|
335.64 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Tue Nov 05 1991 22:20 | 17 |
|
Dave,
I think it's because everyone wants to do it right. They read the
books and fervently believe they got the best answer and are serving
god right and their way is the only way. Please nobody get that
wrong and take it as condemnataion. We do disagree in the path to
whatever our definition of salvation is and being human we fix on
the idea ours is the correct path. We have to believe we are right
or it's going to be a long stay in a bad place...
Maybe a better way to say it is when I claim speaking the one true
way I'm just as wrong as anyone else. I hope not... ;-)
Peace,
Allison
|
335.65 | Christ Will, Not Ours | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Wed Nov 06 1991 08:22 | 22 |
| The RCC does not believe that their way is the only way to salvation.
Since Vatican II it has taught that there is salvation outside of
the Church. That God's graces fall where he will's. However, the Church
does believe that their way is a valid way, and that people can find
the salvation of Jesus Christ within it.
As far as dissension, there is room for dissent when that dissent is
motivated by the will of Christ. Again, I mention St. Catherine of
Sienna because, she was the catalyst for change at the time of the
reformation. One of her followers was, Martin Luther. The difference
was that Christ appeared to her, and directed her in order to
accomplish the change he wanted. She couldn't even read, and ask Jesus,
"How can I go to the doctors of the Church and convince them ? I don't
even know how to read." Jesus said, "I will teach you." And sure enough
He did, because she not only was listened to, she was given a doctorate
of the Church. The point is that, change to the church must be of
Christ will, not ours. We pray in the Lords Prayer, "Thy will be done."
It is important to keep that in mind when we talk about dissent within
the Church, which is the body of Christ.
Peace
Jim
|
335.66 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Nov 06 1991 08:27 | 12 |
| RE: .58
On the general topic of "why not leave the church?"
I did just that. I left the RCC because I could not support some of
its teachings and the "structure" of the church. I also removed my
family. We have since joined a Congregational Church,which has improved
my life greatly.
My reasons had nothing to do,however,with homosexuality.
Marc H.
|
335.67 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Wed Nov 06 1991 08:46 | 30 |
| I didn't say that the RCC claimed to be the only way to salvation. I
said that the RCC claims to be the One True Church. Those are two
completely different issues. What I refer to here is the RCC's
self-defined role as an institution, and how it believes that it
relates to God. As a corporate body, it claims to be the only true
heir to the apostles, for example; and (as I understand it) it claims
that its doctrines infallibly proceed from the Holy Spirit. The RCC
does not see itself as just one Christian denomination among many; that
is a Protestant concept. True, it doesn't claim that Protestants will
go to hell (not any more, anyway--at one time the Church catch phrase
was "there is no salvation outside the church"), but it does believe
that it, and no other Christian church, is a divinely sanctioned
institution. Others may be saved outside of it as an institution, but
that is really another issue. Analogously, the RCC believes that some
non-Christians have the possibility of achieving salvation, although it
believes that Christianity is the One True Religion.
Does the RCC officially admit the possibility that one of its doctrines
could be wrong? My understanding is that it does not, and that
therefore reversing itself on an official doctrine is out of the
question. By this I mean that (as I understand it) the Church admits
the possibility of continuing developments in theological
understanding, expressed through the Church and formulated and enforced
by those in authority--but not outright reversals. And if that is
true, that does not leave much room for dissent. It seems to me that
thinking for yourself is really not an option if you are going to be a
Roman Catholic, and that if you don't agree with its doctrines your
choices are "love it or leave it".
-- Mike
|
335.68 | some see the alternatives quite differently | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:16 | 28 |
| re Note 335.59 by CVG::THOMPSON:
> > because of it? i get the impression that it would take more than a
> > doctrinal disagreement to get you to relinquish the faith you have
> > in the church.
>
> More than a doctrinal disagreement? You mean there is something bigger?
> Not for me. Would I leave a church that supported abortion? In a
> minute.
Some of us believe so strongly that "the Church is one" that
the issue can never be abandoning the Church, joining, or
even founding a new one, but MUST be to reform the one and
only one, no matter how impossible the odds. (The unity of
the church appears to be a major doctrine in the new
testament, much more so than, for example, teaching on the
subject of abortion.)
(I would amplify this by saying that I believe that all the
apparently separate denominations on earth are in fact one
organization, one with some real problems. I am not simply
saying that the Roman Catholic Church organizationally is
identical to the one church. I could conceive of, for
example, joining an Anglican denomination, yet my task would
be the same and the object of that task, reform of the one
true church, would be the same.)
Bob
|
335.69 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:34 | 7 |
| RE: .68 I suspect we agree pretty closely. There are churches and
there is The Church. The Church is the whole body of Christ. That
I would not and could not leave. Individual collections of people
that make up a church - that I could and would leave over doctrine
differences.
Alfred
|
335.70 | Not All Are Infallible | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:50 | 25 |
| RE:67
Mike,
The Catholic Church claims to be "the one true Church" established
by Christ. This claim is Scriptural based.
As far as doctrines and infallibility, I believe you misunderstand
what it means. Papal writings, such as encyclicals and statements
by the different conference are not held to be infallible and can be
and have changed. There have been few infallible teachings made that the
church claims to be without error. The Pope officially speaks ex cathedra
when making a teaching infallible. Since 1870 the only doctrine that has
been proclaimed infallible is the Assumption of Mary. Another infallible
doctrine is the divinity of Jesus that was made in the first century,
in response to Gnostics that were teaching otherwise.
Doctrines on birth control, divorce, etc. are not infallible
and can be changed.
The point is that it is Christ who changes and guides the Church. I
feel people really don't believe that Christ has the power to change
whatever he wants changed.
Peace
Jim
|
335.71 | it's a choice | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Wed Nov 06 1991 10:56 | 18 |
| re: Note 335.52 by Jim "Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun"
> -< If The Church Is Wrong, Why Stay In It ? >-
Maybe because they love it? Because they have made some level of commitment
that they are responding to? Maybe they are called to reach out, not asking
the church to reject what it believes, but to honestly and prayerfully think
about what it believes, because maybe even after 20 centuries there is still
room for growth and maturity? Maybe for the same good reasons that some
people stay married, in sickness and in health, for rich or for poor...and not
get a divorce the moment some difficulty or disagreement comes up?
Sometimes one must walk away, but everyone needs to prayerfully find their own
way to tread the path that Jesus trod.
Peace,
Jim
|
335.72 | | FLOWER::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Nov 06 1991 11:33 | 5 |
| Re: .71
Nicely said Jim!
Marc H.
|
335.74 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | my other life was different | Wed Nov 06 1991 12:50 | 16 |
|
<re: Note 335.52 by Jim "Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun"
<
<> -< If The Church Is Wrong, Why Stay In It ? >-
I think Jim in .71 said it well. Also It's hard to say the church is
wrong because it is not wrong about everything in the monolithic sense.
There are choices love it and try to change is is one, leave it and
seek one that is able to see the difference another.
It's not easy to leave your church, I did when I was young about 13
because I could not reconcile the differences... They (clergy at that
time) did make it easier by saying they wouldn't help me.
Peace,
Allison
|
335.75 | Let Go And Let Christ Do It | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Wed Nov 06 1991 13:29 | 43 |
| RE:71
I agree with you too Jim ! However within the context of this note, the
description of what the Catholic Church's treatment of certain people
that has been described here, would be hardly anything that one could love.
If it caused the pain described, I would hardly see a reason for
remaining.
I think that the position that I'm really trying to emphasize is the
power of prayer, and submission to the will of Christ. If I pray and
surrender myself totally to Christ, I will be able to live according
with the Church, and offer those things that I don't agree with as
a sacrifice.
Years ago, when my daughter was in the second grade at our Catholic parish
school, we were told that we would have to find another school for
her. We were told that they could not put up with her un-Christian
behavior. Well, my wife and myself were devastated. My daughter was
an "A" and "B" student, but because of a hearing disorder which we
found later, she gave them some trouble. Mostly getting out of her
seat to see the board or constantly asking the teacher to explain
things that she didn't hear to begin with. I became bitter, to the
point of leaving. I was angry because, I put so much faith and energy
into the Church and ...look what they were doing ? My bitterness followed
me to a week-end retreat at Calvary retreat center in Shrewsbury, Mass.
I went in to confession and talked with the priest about by bitterness.
He said; "you have every right to be bitter you were treated unjustly.
However, what I would like you to do is, to reflect on the Blessed Mother
Mary, and how it must of been for her. Here she was, a devoted Jewish woman
who obeyed her religion and was faithful to it all her life. She
raised her son in it, and followed all the traditions of it. Then look
what they did to her son ?" The priest then said," ask Mary to help you
get through your pain as she got through hers." So I did. Mary led me
back to the cross that Jesus died on, and I came to really understand what
he meant by, "Father forgive them, for they know not what they do." My
feelings of bitterness left me, and in their place I was filled with
compassion and forgiveness for those who had wronged my daughter. I
felt the freedom that only Christ peace can give.
My only advice I can give to anyone how is feeling hurt and wronged,
is to Pray.
Peace
Jim
|
335.76 | hooray, we agree! ;') | ATSE::FLAHERTY | That's enough for me... | Wed Nov 06 1991 14:50 | 14 |
| Hi Jim (.75),
<<My only advice I can give to anyone how is feeling hurt and wronged,
is to Pray.
I agree with your advice and I would take it a step further to say 'then
let the Holy Spirit guide your actions'. I find I turn more and more
of my problems over to the Holy Spirit, especially when I am tempted to
speak out in anger or fear...A Course in Miracles has been instrumental
in teaching me how to do this.
Ro
|
335.77 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:07 | 34 |
| Re: 70 (Jim)
I am aware that Papal infallibility applies only to statements made ex
cathedra; however, I was not referring to ex cathedra infallibility.
However, I was working on an assumption that, beyond the specific
question of ex cathedra statements, the Roman Catholic Church
assumed a position of inerrancy on matters of faith and morals, at
least in certain areas. Perhaps I am incorrect in that assumption, and
if so I stand corrected, although the issue is far from clear to me as
an outsider. It seems to me, thought, that the Church assumes a de
facto posture of infallibility in that Catholic theologians are not
allowed to dissent from the Church's official teachings; in other
words, they are expected to propagate unquestioningly the doctrines
officially formulated by those in authority.
I brought up the issue of the RCC claiming to be the One True Church,
not to debate its validity, but merely to point out that this is part
of the church's self-understanding. Whether or not there is scriptural
basis for this claim can be debated, although I would think that it is
a bit irrelevant, given that the Catholic Church disagrees with the
fundamentalist Protestant perspective of "sola scriptura". The RCC
points out (and I agree) that the New Testament is itself a product of
the church, and its various prevailing traditions which were inherited
from the early Christian community. Furthermore, since the church
claims to be the One True Church, it claims the right to interpret the
Bible; the Protestant claim of sola scriptura inevitably results in
individual differences in interpretations (or, as one commentator in
the Catholic magazine New Oxford Review wrote, "everyone becomes their
own Pope"). From this I infer that Catholic criticism of Protestant
theology relies on a certain assumption of the desirability of
monolithic control over doctrine. Is this where the Magisterium fits
in?
-- Mike
|
335.78 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 08 1991 09:51 | 28 |
| RE:77
Mike,
only doctrines that the Pope speaks ex cathedra are infallible.
As far as dissent, this is also misunderstood. Theologians may disagree,
but where theologians, such as Fr. Curan get into trouble, is that they
teach their own theology as being correct. Fr. Curan is not allowed to
teach at the Catholic University as a theologian, because what he taught
was contrary to Catholic doctrine, on matters of birth control, abortion
etc. Now that didn't mean that he couldn't disagree, what it meant however,
until a study is done by the entire theological body of the Church, and
this includes lay theologians as well as clerical, consensus agreed upon,
and then accepted as official church doctrine, he could not teach it.
Theologians can try to have the church accept their theology, but
it must be accepted by theologians as a whole.
Also, you should be aware that the western countries of the world,
such as the U.S. and Europe, only make up less that 1/3 of the
Catholic Church. The more than 2/3 of the Catholic Church is in second and
third world countries. So when the church teaches on certain doctrines,
it takes into consideration the majority of Catholics, who come from
cultures that are much different than ours. We Americans tend to think
the world evolves around us, and in the secular world it does, in the
religious it does not.
Peace
Jim
|
335.79 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 08 1991 10:42 | 57 |
| Jim, according to the discussion in topic 648 in the Catholic-Theology
conference, I am getting a different impression. In reply 3, the
writer quoted from a book "The Catholic Catechism", stating that the
Magisterium is inerrant:
5. The scope of the collegial infallibility extends to the whole
ranges of doctrine on faith and morals, comparable to what the
First Vatican Council had defined regarding the Pope. Accordingly,
the freedom from error is not limited to matters of strict
revelation, but covers also whatever is in any way connected with
revealed truth and on which the bishops of the Catholic world agree
in their authentic teaching, i.e., in their official capacity as
shepherds of the flock of Christ. In the moral order, the Church's
teaching on contraception exemplifies this kind of inerrancy.
From that, I infer that Church infallibility applies not just to papal
ex cathedra pronouncements, but to general matters of doctrine
(including the teaching on contraception, according to that quote). If
that interpretation is correct, that leave no room for dissent.
Perhaps the above passage is an incorrect formulation of Catholic
doctrine; but, if so, it is apparent that the question of Church
inerancy is not fully agreed upon or universally understood by
Catholics.
But, even if we grant that theologians can disagree with Church
doctrines and still be good Catholics (which differs from the above
statement), the problem is, as I mentioned earlier, that they must
nevertheless propagate ideas that they disagree with and that they had
no direct role in formulating. You mentioned Curan, and he was in fact
who I had in mind (along with Kung). From these individuals, we can
see that there is a de factor inerrancy in place here--if the Church
formulates a doctrine, it expects its theologians to promote and teach
those doctrines, no questions asked. What's wrong with that, you ask?
Well, nothing, if you believe that these doctrines are inerrant. But
if you admit the possibility that they might be wrong, then you admit
that the dissenting theologian might just be right in disagreeing with
the Church. Maybe all those doctrines that they wanted to teach but
were forbidden to do were right all along after all. If that is the
case, then the suppression of dissenting views makes no sense--not to
me, anyway. That is the whole point of academic freedom. Thus, in my
view, the Church takes a position of de facto inerrancy in its
doctrines.
I think you raise a valid point by mentioning the fact that the Roman
Catholic Church spans a diverse number of cultures. The basic problem
is that the democratic spirit, which is so important to North
Americans, is not necessarily accepted universally among all Roman
Catholics. The RCC operates under a medieval paradigm of strict
hierarchy and top-down dissemination of doctrines, which is consistent
with the political culture of many nations. Concepts like academic
freedom, or freedom of thought in general, are not necessarily a part
of the society and culture of all who belong to the Church. Thus the
Church's methodology is probably very comfortable to many Catholics
worldwide; on the other hand, this may explain why there is perhaps a
greater tendency to dissent among American Catholics.
-- Mike
|
335.80 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 08 1991 11:51 | 50 |
|
Mike,
I stand corrected on my reply in .78 teachings other than
what the pope speak ex cathedra on are infallible. Here's
what I found.
Infallibility does extend to the Bishops as a
group, along with the pope. My understanding is that if
they are in disagreement, it is then that the pope would
speak ex cathedra on an issue. Here what the book I have
in my hand says.
"Catholic Answers to Fundamentalist Teachings" by
Phillip St. Romain.
"Vatican II states, 'The infallibility promised to the Church resides
also in the body of bishops when that body exercises supreme teaching
authority WITH (my emphasis) the successor of Peter.'"
So to me, the bishops have to be in agreement as a group along
with the pope for a teaching to be considered infallible. The
book goes on;
" Furthermore, recalling that the pope and bishops are the voices of
the authentic, 'sensus fidelum' (the consensus of the faithful) and
that the faithful are 'the Church', we can rightly say that it is
'the Church,' under the guidance of Spirit, which proclaims what is
and what is not authentic Catholic belief. As Vatican II states,
'The body of the faithful as a whole, anointed as they are by the
Holy One cannot err in matters of belief.'
Finally, it is important to remember the role of conscience. It is
possible to have a moral conviction that is at odds with Church
teaching. If the person studies and reflects and prays, and then is
still convinced that his or her conscience is correct, the person is
morally obliged to follow conscience."
Also form the same book;
"Papal writings, such as encyclicals, and statements by conferences,
regional groups, of Catholic bishops are authoritative documents.
But they are not statements proclaimed ex cathedra by the pope. Because
these documents are expressions of the Church's authentic teaching,
however, faithful Catholics give these writings full consideration
when forming their consciences on topics in question."
Peace
Jim
|
335.81 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 08 1991 12:40 | 3 |
| Jim, thanks for posting that information.
-- Mike
|
335.82 | Hi Mike | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Sat Nov 09 1991 02:15 | 116 |
| Hi all,
Very interesting discussion going on here. I'd like to add a few
points to Mike's reply.
>>From that, I infer that Church infallibility applies not just to papal
>>ex cathedra pronouncements, but to general matters of doctrine
>>(including the teaching on contraception, according to that quote). If
>>that interpretation is correct, that leave no room for dissent.
>>Perhaps the above passage is an incorrect formulation of Catholic
>>doctrine; but, if so, it is apparent that the question of Church
>>inerancy is not fully agreed upon or universally understood by
>>Catholics.
You are right. All teachings of the Church are infallable and upon
reflection you realize that they really have to be. To not claim
infallability with moral issues is simply stating "We have the
keys to the kingdom, but we don't know where to find the door..." ;^)
>>But, even if we grant that theologians can disagree with Church
>>doctrines and still be good Catholics (which differs from the above
>>statement), the problem is, as I mentioned earlier, that they must
>>nevertheless propagate ideas that they disagree with and that they had
>>no direct role in formulating. You mentioned Curan, and he was in fact
>>who I had in mind (along with Kung). From these individuals, we can
I think your forgeting Mike that these people that propagate these
ideas have taken a vow of obedience to the Church. I know that must
sound a bit lame, but its their JOB to proclaim what the Church is
teaching. If someone has a problem with a teaching of the Church they
shouldn't join it, or choose a job that doesn't deal with teaching the
issue they have the problem with. And I think that ALL Catholics take
part in formulating doctrine. The Church does not tell us we must
bow down to the teaching and except it unconditionally. The Church
invites all of us to take the time to sit down and find out why the
Church teaches what it does. I only agree with what the Church
teaches on abortion, contraception, etc... because I've only formulated
and agreed with them in my own mind. Sadly, to many priests as well
as Laity do not take the time to work these issues through to know
why its wrong.
>>Well, nothing, if you believe that these doctrines are inerrant. But
>>if you admit the possibility that they might be wrong, then you admit
>>that the dissenting theologian might just be right in disagreeing with
>>the Church.
I think everyone has a right to disagree. Just because a priest is
not allowed to teach his doctrine in the classroom, church, or the
confessional does not mean that he can not go to his superiors or the
head of the Diocese and start proceedings that re-examines the issue
in question. It all comes down to this: You can do it with discretion
and go through the proper channels and bring it to prayer and ask God
to change things or you can go to the press, start teaching it in the
classrooms, etc... but I really believe by doing this you are not going
through the right channels, and your giving your opinion in all the
wrong places.
>>Maybe all those doctrines that they wanted to teach but
>>were forbidden to do were right all along after all. If that is the
>>case, then the suppression of dissenting views makes no sense--not to
>>me, anyway. That is the whole point of academic freedom. Thus, in my
>>view, the Church takes a position of de facto inerrancy in its
>>doctrines.
But, Mike, how are we supposed to know that? Just because one man stands
up and disagrees are we supposed to change everything and agree with
him? You have to remember the Church has been around for 2000 years.
All these arguements that people bring up have been heard before.
Their nothing new, believe me. And even if they are new, when put
against the Church's philosophy, natural law, they can be easily
dispelled because natural law is unchanging. You can add to it only
if nothing contradicts it, and you can never take away from it. And
the fact of the matter is that a lot of these arguements try to do this.
>>The basic problem
>>is that the democratic spirit, which is so important to North
>>Americans, is not necessarily accepted universally among all Roman
>>Catholics. The RCC operates under a medieval paradigm of strict
>>hierarchy and top-down dissemination of doctrines, which is consistent
>>with the political culture of many nations.
I agree! The Church is run under a VERY strict medieval paradigm!
And that is the way it should be. The Church could NEVER be a Democracy.
How could ANY church run under a democratic system? We are governed by
a KING! Are we going vote God out of office? ;^) ;^) Just because we are
rational beings does not mean that every one of us knows what is truly
right and what is truly wrong. We cannot run the Church by a show of
hands, throwing out teachings that are not popular and replacing them
with different ones that agree with the majority of people. As a
matter of fact a lot of things that have been considered morally wrong
have been to most people down through the centuries perfectly fine.
That is why the Church is there, because most people don't think about
what is right or wrong, they just want to do what they want.
>>Concepts like academic
>>freedom, or freedom of thought in general, are not necessarily a part
>>of the society and culture of all who belong to the Church. Thus the
>>Church's methodology is probably very comfortable to many Catholics
>>worldwide; on the other hand, this may explain why there is perhaps a
>>greater tendency to dissent among American Catholics.
I agree, there is a greater tendency to dissent among American
Catholics because a lot of people in this country have forgotten that
with freedom comes responsibility. We have taken freedom to such
an extreme in this country that we have become immoral in the process.
One good look at the way this country should show give you
all the proof in the world why the Church is set up the way it is.
Mike, if you could set up the Church any way you wanted to, how would
you? I'd be very interested in hearing your view.
The Lord be with all,
Jeff
|
335.83 | not so fast | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Sat Nov 09 1991 08:17 | 22 |
| re Note 335.82 by NEMAIL::WATERS:
> You are right. All teachings of the Church are infallable and upon
> reflection you realize that they really have to be. To not claim
> infallability with moral issues is simply stating "We have the
> keys to the kingdom, but we don't know where to find the door..." ;^)
"They really have to be" is far from the truth.
For every Christian teacher or theologian who claims this,
there are as many who do not. Your second sentence above is
pure emotionalism, not logic. It also happens to be
incredibly self-serving on the part of those teachers who
proclaim it.
We are told to be "wise as serpents" -- self-serving
pronouncements should set off an immediate red flag.
Of course, in religion as well as politics, nothing, and
certainly no logic, beats a good dose of emotionalism.
Bob
|
335.84 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Looking for reality | Sat Nov 09 1991 10:12 | 16 |
| RE: .82
I will have to agree with .83. For *ANYONE* to claim that
their idea's are "infallable" is running the risk of being *SO* far
outside the will of God that they won't even recognize truth when it
jumps up and smacks them in the face. I am in a constant searching
mode for truth as God gives it to me. I believe that it is important
for every Christian to be open to Gods will at all times in their
lives.
I *AM* fallable.
Dave
|
335.85 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Sun Nov 10 1991 01:29 | 83 |
| Jeff,
I am not a Catholic. Most of my comments are in the form of
observations from the point of view of an outsider. My intention was
not really to engage others in a debate on how the Catholic Church
should be run, since it really isn't my business. The point I have
been making in this discussion is that the Roman Catholic Church has a
certain self-understanding which affects the whole question of dissent.
Whether that is good or bad depends on your perspective, and as I
mentioned before many people are no doubt comfortable with its medieval
hierarchical paradigm which, it appears, may not allow for dissent.
The issue here for me is whether or not those who are *not* comfortable
with that the church's self-understanding would be better off leaving
the church for a denomination organized in another way.
You mentioned on the one hand that the Church's teachings are
infallible, but then you said that the Church does not tell its members
to "bow down to the teaching and accept it unconditionally." I am not
sure to reconcile those two statements, but at one point in your note
you *appear* to be implying that if everyone studies the Church's
teaching they should come to the conclusion that the Church is right
after all. I don't think monolithic agreement is a realistic
possibility. The fact is, if you have people within any denomination
who think honestly and seriously about important matters (like
theology), there are bound to be disagreements. A Church that claims
infallibility for itself but which also expects its membership to think
for themselves has to brace itself for the problem of diversity of
views. The Church can dismiss disagreement as irrelevant; those who
disagree are simply wrong, and must obey. Either that, or thinking is
not an option in the first place. But in either case, the question
still arises, for me anyway, on when dissent is preferable to simply
leaving the Church.
You have justified the Church's treatment of Curran and Kung on the
basis of the Church's self-understanding and the resulting role that
theologians must play. I have not really been defending dissent within
the Church at all, as perhaps you infer I have; I have in fact have
been posing the question of why dissidents remain within the Church,
rather than leave it for a more democratic denomination. So in a sense
I am in sympathy with the point you raise--that the Church seems (as
far as I can tell) to expect its theologians to serve as mouthpieces of
the Vatican, and are not entitled to the freedom of creatively
formulating theological ideas, with the subsequently dangerous
consequence of letting the chips fall as they may. Whether that is how
Catholic theologians *should* be operating is not a question that I, as
a non-Catholic, can answer. The fact that I am not a Catholic has
partly to do, in fact, with the fact that I don't choose to participate
as a loyal dissident within such a hierarchical mode of
organization--so I admit that the question of Catholic dissent is
something that I don't fully understand.
Your comments about proper and improper methods of dissent presuppose
the validity of the Church's strictly hierarchical paradigm. I think
that it goes along with the Church's understanding of its role as a
divinely established institution, and its corresponding method of
formulating doctrine in the first place. Restricting dissent to
private channels is a way of maintaining Church authority, I believe,
since open and public dissent in any undemocratic institution can
present problems in the perceptions of legitimacy.
What is boils down to is that you believe that the Church's strictly
hierarchical paradigm is the proper one. I don't have a problem with
that--what I have been saying all along is that many people are clearly
comfortable with that style of organization. However, you also suggest
that this is not only the best way, it is the *only* conceivable one.
How could a church not be this way, you ask? Well, perhaps given the
church's self-understanding, you could make a case that there *is* no
other way. Other Catholics might disagree. In any case, the fact is
that denominations are run in a variety of different ways; as a member
of a non-creedal denomination , I can attest to this, and the reason I
belong to that denomination is that its mode of organization suits me;
it might not suit everyone. Now if you wish you can certainly argue
that the Church, or denominations in general, should be organized in a
strict hierarchy; but it is not true that this type of denomination
does not or cannot exist.
I think it gets back to the question of what people are comfortable
with. Many people are loyal to a given denomination for a variety of
reasons, and the reasons behind some individuals' decisions to leave
their denomination form an interesting topic in itself.
-- Mike
|
335.86 | ... | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Tue Nov 12 1991 19:47 | 39 |
| Hi Bob,
>> "They really have to be" is far from the truth.
>> For every Christian teacher or theologian who claims this,
>> there are as many who do not. Your second sentence above is
>> pure emotionalism, not logic. It also happens to be
>> incredibly self-serving on the part of those teachers who
>> proclaim it.
I think your confusing emotionalism with an act of faith, Bob. My
arguement I believe is very rational. Could you explain what your saying
a little bit more? The impression I get from the above paragraph
is telling me that you MIGHT believe that a God came down from Heaven
and died a horrible death for our sins and then returned to Heaven,
leaving us in darkness on how we can follow Him there. Is THAT logical? I
think not. Sure doesn't seem like it. Why would an all loving God,
that is supposedly very eager to see us walk the way of Truth not
leave something that we can follow? A moral code that we can follow?
A Church that we can look to that has the ONE Truth. To think that a
all-loving God would just brush us off and let us "figure it out for
ourselves" seems very illogical; especially if you believed that He did
die a horrible death. I'm sorry if I misinterpreting you, but I don't
know what angle your coming from here.
>> Of course, in religion as well as politics, nothing, and
>> certainly no logic, beats a good dose of emotionalism.
I agree! But, the strongest faith in God a person can have is faith
based on reason. Over 2000 years Aristotle (or was it Plato - no, not
Playtoe, but the other guy :^) by way of logic proved there was one
God. Yes, he was considered but one unmovable act, and not personal,
but the point is that the existance of God was proved through reason.
Why should our faith be based on anything less?
The Lord be with you,
Jeff
|
335.87 | .... | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Wed Nov 13 1991 00:20 | 72 |
| Hi Dave,
>> I will have to agree with .83. For *ANYONE* to claim that
>>their idea's are "infallable" is running the risk of being *SO* far
>>outside the will of God that they won't even recognize truth when it
>>jumps up and smacks them in the face.
Read the previous reply to answer your question, Dave. I'd like to add
here that your statement is a bit circular. You said, "For *ANYONE* to
claim that their idea's are 'infallable" is running the risk of being
*SO* far outside the will of God". What your saying here, I believe,
is that anyone that thinks they are incapable of erring; incapable
of failing. Certain. Will never know the truth of God, right? You go on
to say "they won't even recognize truth when it jumps up and smacks them
in the face." Now if the Lexical definition of Truth is the conformity
to knowledge, fact, or TO BE CERTAIN, what your statement is REALLY saying
is that someone should not make a choice at all, and wait and see approach.
The only reason you think the Church is wrong is because it
has made a choice, thus taking them "out of the running" of what real
truth is. But, Dave, your saying there is no Truth. If truth is
the conformity to knowledge, to a fact, to be CERTAIN about something,
and your telling me that anyone that makes a choice and stands by that
choice as being infallable does not know real truth, then my friend,
THERE IS NO TRUTH. Because with infallability comes "true" Truth. And
if you truly believe in what you said above, you can't even argue with
me! Because the Truth that your arguing is not truth at all but just
something you believe until something better comes along.
>>I am in a constant searching
>>mode for truth as God gives it to me. I believe that it is important
>>for every Christian to be open to Gods will at all times in their
>>lives.
That's Great. What is important though Dave is that you make a choice NOW.
Because if all your doing is going through life picking up what you
believe is "Truth" and then putting it down for another one that looks
better is not Truth. Truth is unchanging. God can reveal to
us MORE Truth of the TRUTH down through the ages, but he can NEVER
change it. In doing so he would be contradicting himself, and God
cannot do that. God is limited in that way (you know the ol' saying
can God make a rock he can't lift?) That is why I'm amazed how some
people sitting around waiting for things immoral to become moral.
Abortion, contraception, homosexuality, pre-marital sex or phone sex is
one day not going to be moral. ITS NOT. It never will be. Because to
pull one brick out would be pulling the whole building down. And that
cannot happen without TOTAL CHAOS.
>> I *AM* fallable.
Hey, I can appreciate that. Humility leads to TRUE knowledge, right?
I'm fallable to! I was never given the right to be infallable. Christ
gave that infallability to the apostles telling them things like:
"On this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell will not
prevail against it."
and
"but when he, the Spirit of Truth, comes, he will guide you into ALL
TRUTH"
There is a candle in the window gentlemen. We have a Church to look
to that points straight to the way home.
The Lord be with you all,
Jeff
|
335.88 | I hear you! | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Wed Nov 13 1991 00:28 | 19 |
| Hi Mike,
I'm not going to be able to get to your note tonight. I would
like to say that I do respect your opinion, and we actually see
eye to eye on more things that at least I thought we did. The
one thing about your memo that can't understand is how could a
Church proclaim the word of God within a Democratic format.
Its impossible. Could you shed some insight on this? I do agree
that those that are dissented with the Church should leave, but
I don't always think that is the best way. That is because I
believe that if one were to study the Church's phiolosophy
(natural Law) properly I think it is the most sound foundation
that was ever created. And if would people would take the time,
they would be very suprised indeed. I will save the rest for later.
Peace be with you,
Jeff
|
335.89 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Wed Nov 13 1991 08:59 | 42 |
| Jeff,
As I mentioned in my earlier note, I don't consider it realistic for
any church--I don't care what claims for the Truth that is makes about
itself--to assume that if everyone seriously studies a given issue,
they will realize that the church is really correct after all. This
kind of expectation of monolithic agreement among thinking people has
nothing to do with the real world that we live in. In fact, I find the
suggestion rather insulting, since it implies that if I disagree with
the Church over an issue then I must not have thought about it enough.
To me that is shear condescending nonsense. What it really boils down
to is that if a church is going to claim infallibility for itself, and
thus clamp down upon any dissenting voices, then I see only two options
for the membership when they disagree with the Church: leaving, or
unquestioning obedience. This is no doubt a problem for theologians,
and probably explains why they are sometimes prone to dissent; they are
expected to think (since their job requires it), but not too much
(because their superiors prohibit it).
I think that your question about denominational democracy presupposes
the Roman Catholic self-understanding. Given the RCC's conception of
itself as an institution established by God and infallibly informed by
the Holy Spirit, then yes, there is no possibility for a democratic
organization. If that is how you view the Church, then its
mode of organization is no doubt appropriate to you. I have been
trying to avoid getting into the issue of whether the Roman Catholic
Church's self-understanding is right or wrong, correct or incorrect,
good or bad. What I have been trying to understand is how individuals
within the Church can relate to it, given its self-understanding.
As you know, not all Christian denominations share the Roman Catholic
institutional paradigm. Protestant churches typically reject the
concept of institutional infallibility, although conservative and
fundamentalist churches replace that with a strong reliance on
scriptural infallibility. There are some who reject both conceptions
of infallibility, and they are unlikely to feel comfortable in either
type of church.
There is a discussion about the various positions concerning doctrinal
authority in topic 26.
-- Mike
|
335.90 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Looking for reality | Wed Nov 13 1991 13:53 | 18 |
| RE: .87 Jeff,
I have seen Churches (and Christians) who are *SO*
sure that they are right that even if God wanted them to change, they
couldn't.....or wouldn't recognize God was speaking to them. IMHO..it
is *VERY* easy to believe that you (me) have all the answers. When
that happens I believe that your no longer seeking truth but now you
are trying to *MAKE* it. I also believe in first steps....step out in
a direction, with God in your life, and I think that you will be "set"
on the right path.
Its like witnessing. My thought is to bring people
to a knowledge of God (Christ) and then assist them to trust in God. I
never want to be in a position of telling them what God's wants when
God can do it so much better than I can.
Dave
|
335.91 | The Keys of Heaven | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Wed Nov 13 1991 16:24 | 22 |
| RE:90
The difference between what the other Churches believe and what the
Catholic Church believes is found in Scripture.
"Then he breathed on them and said:
'receive the Holy Spirit.
if you forgive men's sins,
they are forgiven.
If you hold them bound,
they are held bound."
John 20:22-23
Jesus gave the keys to heaven to his apostles, who in turn handed them
on to their successors, the Bishops of the Catholic Church. Other
denominations have their belief's based on their own teachings.
The Catholic church has Scripture and 2000 years of history to base its
belief in authority on.
Peace
Jim
|
335.92 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Looking for reality | Wed Nov 13 1991 16:54 | 7 |
|
Just for clarification....the Baptist Church is *NOT* a
protestant organization and can trace their roots back to the time of
Christ.
Dave
|
335.93 | learn something new every day | SHALOT::LACKEY | Birth...the leading cause of death | Wed Nov 13 1991 16:59 | 14 |
| Hi Dave,
> Just for clarification....the Baptist Church is *NOT* a
> protestant organization and can trace their roots back to the time of
> Christ.
That's really interesting. As someone who knows little about the origins
of the various denominations of Christianity, I always assumed that Babtists
(or anyone non-Catholic) were considered protestants. I'm sure a lot of
other people (outside this notesfile) think this way as well.
What *is* the origin of the Babtist Church?
Jeff
|
335.94 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Wed Nov 13 1991 17:19 | 18 |
|
RE:92
> Just for clarification....the Baptist Church is *NOT* a
> protestant organization and can trace their roots back to the time of
> Christ.
Yeah, except that we've only been hearing about its claim to origin
recently.
Not much if anything mentioned about the Baptist throuhout the past
2000 years in historical documents. Jeff Waters is the historian,
maybe he can help ?
Peace
Jim
|
335.95 | Movements resulted in denominations | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Passionate Peace | Wed Nov 13 1991 17:30 | 14 |
| Re: .93
Jeff,
I know what Dave is speaking of. United Methodists also embrace
all of church history (for better or for worse) beginning with Jesus
of Nazareth.
Methodism, like the Anabaptists, did not deliberately set out to
"become a new denomination." Rather these, as with most groups called
Protestant, were initially "movements."
Peace,
Richard
|
335.96 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Looking for reality | Wed Nov 13 1991 17:35 | 9 |
|
I am "reaching" for this but I believe that Anabaptists began
in Greece as a result of Christians traveling north thru what is now
Turkey and crossing over during Christ's ministry. At any rate there
are some documents which refere to the early Anabaptists. They weren't
highly thought of.....like now. :-}
Dave
|
335.97 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Wed Nov 13 1991 17:35 | 5 |
| It is interesting to note that many Quakers don't consider themselves
to be either Protestant or Catholic, but a "third way" (admittedly, not
a "way" that very many people have chosen to follow).
-- Mike
|
335.98 | | SHALOT::LACKEY | Birth...the leading cause of death | Wed Nov 13 1991 18:39 | 18 |
| Re: .95
Richard,
> Methodism, like the Anabaptists, did not deliberately set out to
> "become a new denomination." Rather these, as with most groups called
> Protestant, were initially "movements."
I guess what I hadn't realized was how early the Babtists got started,
assuming (as Dave says) it started with the anababtists. Some denominations
(like the Methodists) occured much later, like between the sixteenth and
eighteenth centuries. I hadn't realized that any non-Catholic denomination
had been around since the time of Christ, or even within a few hundred years
of that time.
Thanks for the responses...
Jeff
|
335.99 | ... | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:34 | 134 |
|
Re: 335.89
Hi Mike,
>>As I mentioned in my earlier note, I don't consider it realistic for
>>any church--I don't care what claims for the Truth that is makes about
>>itself--to assume that if everyone seriously studies a given issue,
>>they will realize that the church is really correct after all. This
>>kind of expectation of monolithic agreement among thinking people has
>>nothing to do with the real world that we live in. In fact, I find the
I do not agree. Simply because if you really feel that way Mike, then
your just claiming a free for all that is anything but real. You can
believe what you want Mike, all I ask is you make it your own...:^)
To walk through life thinking that nothing is binding, everyone is free
to look on Truth as they see it is not consistent. All I am claiming
is that I believe there is ONE Truth, and ONE Church, that has the
crystal clear Truth. I also claim that if anyone studies the Church's
moral teaching properly they will come to the conclusions of what the
Church teaches pertaining to morals.
>>suggestion rather insulting, since it implies that if I disagree with
>>the Church over an issue then I must not have thought about it enough.
>>To me that is shear condescending nonsense. What it really boils down
I thought maybe this would come up. Instead of explaining it myself I
brought in Thomas Aquinos's "Summo Theologica" to explain it for me.
Thomas was posed with that same objection. Thomas response was this:
"We arrive at a understanding of Natural Law by making
conclusions following closely from the first commom
precepts already evident in Natural Law. "
The first commom precept of Natural Law is that good is to be done
and promoted, and evil is to be avoided.
"It is the first evident principles that cannot be blotted out
from men's hearts. In this way there is no difference of
knowledge of Natural Law in man."
Which is true. *ALL* men and women know that good is to be done and
promoted and evil is to be avoided. This is because NO ONE can will
evil as evil because the proper object of the will is the
intellectualy known good. If we choose evil it is either by involuntary
ignorance, not knowing any better; or voluntary ignorance were we
choose to reject the standard for judging that moral action. This next
part is critical to your response.
Conclusions, which are derived from the first principles may be
different among people to the extent of EACH MAN'S CAPACITY TO
REASON. Man's capacity to reason for instance could be defective
through weakness, corrupt habits, or vicious customs.
I'm an not saying that anyone is stupid, Mike, but not everybody has
the capacity to understand things because their opinion, habits, life-
style, etc... can interfere with that reasoning. And that is why a lot
people will probably not understand what I'm talking about - because
they let their opinion interfere with their reasoning. To truly under-
stand ANYTHING we must put are opinions, habits, lifestyles, aside and
look at the FACTS and make a decision based on reason the best that we
can.
Thomas goes on in the sixth article, "Whether Natural Law can be
Abolished from the heart of man" to say:
"There belong to Natural Law common precepts that are known to
all. And secondary precepts which are conclusions following
closely from the first principles. As to the common principles
they cannot in any way be blotted from mens hearts. But, they can
be blotted out in the case of particular action (applying the
first principle "Do good and avoid evil" to particular action such
as abortion, homosexuality, Euthanasia, divorce, etc...) insofar
as reason is hindered from applying the common principle to the
particular action because of consupiscence or some other passion.
Secondary precepts (the understanding of moral issues) can be
blotted out from the human heart by evil persuasion, viscious
customs, corrupt habits, and unnatural vices."
You want to reason for yourself about morality, Mike? Go right ahead
my friend, but you are really obligated to find out what the great
thinkers have said about it first. To not understand their view before
formulating your own view is not being informed.
>>to is that if a church is going to claim infallibility for itself, and
>>thus clamp down upon any dissenting voices, then I see only two options
>>for the membership when they disagree with the Church: leaving, or
>>unquestioning obedience. This is no doubt a problem for theologians,
>>and probably explains why they are sometimes prone to dissent; they are
>>expected to think (since their job requires it), but not too much
>>(because their superiors prohibit it).
You can disagree, lets make that clear. I have friends that are
priests that are pro-choice and they speak their opinions privately.
But, when it comes to instructing the community their opinion means
NOTHING because they took a vow to teach the Church's teaching. Look
at someone like Thomas Aquinos, he voiced his opinion that he could
find nothing in Scripture to prove the Assumption. He submitted to
the Church's teaching however because he felt it better to submit
the Magistarium (Sp?) of the Church then listen to his own opinion.
>>As you know, not all Christian denominations share the Roman Catholic
>>institutional paradigm. Protestant churches typically reject the
>>concept of institutional infallibility, although conservative and
>>fundamentalist churches replace that with a strong reliance on
>>scriptural infallibility. There are some who reject both conceptions
>>of infallibility, and they are unlikely to feel comfortable in either
>>type of church.
Yes, and I find a problem with protestents idea of Scriptural
infallibility. They don't consider that the Bible means nothing
without a body (that is quided by the Holy Spirit) behind it. Everyone
has their own opinion on what things mean and that is a terrible way
to look at Scripture, because everyone is not entitled to their
opinion. Christ made that clear. Those who reject both should not
even be a Church because their teaching is strictly their opinion and
that is not based on anything, because nothing is true.
See, guys, I am not sitting here telling you to become Catholic. That is
not the point I'm trying to make. What I'm claiming is that I believe
ONE Church has the complete Truth. If any Church disputes a moral
teaching of the Church (say abortion) the Church can prove that organiz.
wrong by reason. That is one thing about the Church that is different
from the rest. Most Church's define by Scripture what is right or wrong
but they give no reason for believing that way. The Catholic Church defines
its moral code by reflection. Its a powerful thing to be able to not
only point to Scripture to teach morality, but also base that teaching
on reason that if understood clearly (as St. Thomas states) is
irrefutable.
The Lord be with you all,
Jeff
|
335.100 | This is the way it was explained to me | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Passionate Peace | Wed Nov 13 1991 21:50 | 17 |
| Note 335.98
Jeff,
> Some denominations
> (like the Methodists) occured much later, like between the sixteenth and
> eighteenth centuries. I hadn't realized that any non-Catholic denomination
> had been around since the time of Christ, or even within a few hundred years
> of that time.
While what you say here is true, I am speaking more in terms of church
roots or heritage. Yes, Methodism is a little over 200 years old. At the
same time, Methodism sprang from the Anglican Church, which has historic links
to the Roman Catholic Church, which traces its roots to Christ and the Twelve.
Peace,
Richard
|
335.101 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Wed Nov 13 1991 22:40 | 6 |
| Re: 335.99 (Jeff Waters)
In order to avoid going any further down a rathole, I have entered my
reply to your comments a different topic, note 26.30.
-- Mike
|
335.102 | Anabaptists | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Thu Nov 14 1991 18:58 | 51 |
| Hi guys,
After reading Dave's reply about Baptists not being Protestant, and
questioning that claim I decided to do a little research into the
subject, because I always thought baptist were Protestants. Dave
was right, they are not Protestants. Here's a little history about
how they were formed and what they believed:
The anabaptist movement was found by Conrad Grebel around 1525 because
some people believed that Luther and Zwingli had not carried their
ideas to their logical conclusion and regarded Lutheranisn and
Zwinglianism as almost as bad as medieval Catholicism. Anabaptism was
especially attractive to those peasents, weavers, miners, and artisans
who had been adversely affected by the economic changes of the age.
By the way, one of the earliest anabaptism movement was found in
Zurick, Switzerland. This is what they believed:
The true christian church was a voluntary association of believers who
had undergone spiritual rebirth and had been baptized into the Church.
Anabaptists advocated adult rather than infant baptism.
They took seriously a return to the practices and spirity of early
Christianity. Adhering to the accounts of early christian accounts
in the New Testament, they followed a strict sort of democracy (there's
your Democracy, Mike ;^) in which all believers were considered equal.
Each church chose its own minister, who might be any member of the
community since all Christians were considered priests (women were
excluded from this).
Anabaptists rejected theological speculation in favor of simple
Christian living according to the pure word of God.
The Lord's supper was interpreted as a remembrance.
Anabaptists believed in the complete seperation of Church and state
(which was VERY different from the Catholic and Protestant movements
of the time). Not only was gov't to be excluded from the realm of
religion, it was not even supposed to exercise political jurisdiction
over real Christians. They also refused to hold political office or
bear arms (although some anabaptist groups did become quite violent).
They were prosecuted by Catholics and Protestants, and executed in the
most ruthless ways.
Peace be with you,
Jeff
|
335.103 | | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music of Perfekchun | Fri Nov 15 1991 11:21 | 9 |
| RE:Jeff,
The fact that the anabaptist refused to be in communion with the
universal or Catholic Church would make them protestant, wouldn't it ?
I believe that's how the Catholic Church see's it.
Jim
|
335.104 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Noteblind. | Fri Nov 15 1991 16:38 | 6 |
| Jim, I can't speak for the Anabaptists, but Quakerism often identifies
itself as neither Protestant nor Catholic; so, even though Quakers are
not in communion with the Catholic Church, it is not (in this view) a
Protestant denomination.
-- Mike
|
335.105 | The condensed version | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Passionate Peace | Fri Nov 15 1991 17:57 | 13 |
| Re: .104
I understand in Northern Ireland where there exists a great deal
of tension between Catholics and Protestants, Quakers are not
categorized as either.
Quakerism is about 300 years old. It, too, started out as a movement,
but not in protest of church teachings, polity or policies. Rather,
Quakerism was an entirely fresh attempt to discover and reinitiate
"primitive Christianity."
Peace,
Richard
|
335.106 | nah! | NEMAIL::WATERS | Thank you Lord for just being YOU! | Fri Nov 15 1991 18:09 | 16 |
| Hi Jim,
I don't think so, only because they did not "originally" break away
from the Catholic Church in the first place. Those church's that
are referred to as Protestant are called that because of their direct
seperation with the Church in the reformation period. The anabaptists
on the other hand broke away from the Protestant movement directly,
and formed something VERY different because the Protestant movements
of that period still resembled the Church in a lot of ways. So, I
would say they are FAR from being Protestant. The belief over whether
the Bread and wine is the real presence of Christ really has nothing
to do with it.
The Lord be with you,
Jeff
|
335.107 | Criticize | ACE::MOORE | | Fri Jan 24 1992 08:12 | 8 |
|
A wound caused by words is more painful than a wound caused by an
arrow.
Ray
|