H
Highwayhound
Guest
Compare these words above to those of my cousin Dennis below"I know that these words of truth will cost me dearly,” Fr. Farrow told KFSN.
My cousin Dennis spoke these words to me when I visited him where he lived in Pacific Beach in San Diego, the year was 1996. This was after completing 1,300 miles of bicycling along the pacific coast of Oregon and California. Upon arriving in San Diego I thought it would be great to visit my cousin. At family reunions over the years we had many good conversations. Dennis was a polite intelligent fellow. I did not have his address or phone number so I telephoned back to Oregon to mom’s to get Dennis’ phone number.“Be really careful about what you touch.”
“Say mom do you have Dennis’ phone number? I want to call and see if I can visit him.”
“You know he’s gay, don’t you?”
“No, I didn’t mom.”
It did not matter to me that Dennis was homosexual. I went to visit him. Dennis only let me stay one night at his place because he was so worried about me and my health. Dennis had AIDS and his concern was that I not contact the disease somehow. He was worried about other people first. Dennis died a few years later of the disease.
Compare my cousin and his words to quote from the priest. This priest was first and foremost thinking about himself.
These issues matter. Dennis had a good job and good apartment. He was not discriminated against nor were his human rights being violated. At some point in his life he made a bad choice (haven’t we all). Only his bad choice cost him his life.
The priest also mentions this being a matter of conscience.
The conscience of each individual should formed properly in accordance to God. As a priest he should know this.
People should be treated decently because they are human and thus one of God’s creations. May God have mercy on this priest’s soul.