L
lynnvinc
Guest
I think it is important when Catholics speak against homosexual behavior and gay marriage that they also in very strong terms condemn violence and hatred against gays (and point out that is a much graver sin). As Gandhi said, hate the sin, not the sinner.
I very rarely hear Catholics doing that – they just rant against homosexuals, without mentioning how we are not to hate them and are not to violently attack them. That goes for priests too – the one’s I’ve heard never precaution against attacking or hating gays. We cannot assume this is understood. People are at different levels of moral development. Some hear gays do evil and they figure gays are evil, and it is their duty to attack or kill them – to help purge the world of such evil.
In a similar vein I remember how after 9/11 some youth attacked and killed someone he thought was an Arab (if I recall the person was a Sikh, whom people often confuse with Arabs bec of their distinctive turbins). When they arrested him he was greatly confused as to why they arrested him, since he though he had done the good and right thing. And there would have been a lot more of that had not Pres. Bush gone to the mosque and made an appeal not to attack Muslims.
It is extremely important that our Church leaders speak out against hatred, violence, and mistreatment of gays and others engaged in sinful activities. In this particular case I think it may have been a non-Catholic who attacked the woman (the religion was not mentioned), but I’ve heard of cases in which it is Catholics who do so.
There is also the issue of high rate of suicide among gay youth…
I very rarely hear Catholics doing that – they just rant against homosexuals, without mentioning how we are not to hate them and are not to violently attack them. That goes for priests too – the one’s I’ve heard never precaution against attacking or hating gays. We cannot assume this is understood. People are at different levels of moral development. Some hear gays do evil and they figure gays are evil, and it is their duty to attack or kill them – to help purge the world of such evil.
In a similar vein I remember how after 9/11 some youth attacked and killed someone he thought was an Arab (if I recall the person was a Sikh, whom people often confuse with Arabs bec of their distinctive turbins). When they arrested him he was greatly confused as to why they arrested him, since he though he had done the good and right thing. And there would have been a lot more of that had not Pres. Bush gone to the mosque and made an appeal not to attack Muslims.
It is extremely important that our Church leaders speak out against hatred, violence, and mistreatment of gays and others engaged in sinful activities. In this particular case I think it may have been a non-Catholic who attacked the woman (the religion was not mentioned), but I’ve heard of cases in which it is Catholics who do so.
There is also the issue of high rate of suicide among gay youth…