Are all Homosexual acts as immoral

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This is why JPII’s Theology of the body needs to be mandatory reading in seminaries. It should also be simplified and adapted for youth education, marriage preparation classes, RCIA, etc. If our seminaries learn it and preach it when they become priests we could turn around this age of sexual concupiscence in a generation or two.
AMEN! From your mouth (or keyboard) to God’s ear (or heart).:clapping:
 
If the Church’s teaching is true, then an honest debate will lead teens towards that truth, right?
What is there to debate? By debating one gives legitimacy to a totally illegitimate position.
 
What is there to debate? By debating one gives legitimacy to a totally illegitimate position.
The debate is “Immoral vs approved”. The OP referenced the first in the CCC, but they are not the same. Just because it is not approved does not make it immoral. It is not a cut and dry issue, it opens up a deep and complicated theological discussion, which I think the pastor was trying to have his seminarian start to do. Reciting the rules is not pastoring towards a flock.
 
The debate is “Immoral vs approved”. The OP referenced the first in the CCC, but they are not the same. Just because it is not approved does not make it immoral. It is not a cut and dry issue, it opens up a deep and complicated theological discussion, which I think the pastor was trying to have his seminarian start to do. Reciting the rules is not pastoring towards a flock.
It has been cut n dried for the Church for 2,000 years and another 2,000 before that for judaism. The fact you dont agree with it is irelevant. There is nothing to debate. There is no theological discussion to be opened up here at all. And you most cetainly dont pastor your flock by lying to them
 
It has been cut n dried for the Church for 2,000 years and another 2,000 before that for judaism. The fact you dont agree with it is irelevant. There is nothing to debate. There is no theological discussion to be opened up here at all. And you most cetainly dont pastor your flock by lying to them
It has not been cut and dry. Branding entire groups as “immoral” is not pastoring to the flock, it is a theological form of divide and conquer. It is a form of sexual relations that some do out of their makeup (a mix of nature and nurture). Just because it does not lead to reproduction does not make it immoral. It is no reason to look down on them.
 
It has been cut n dried for the Church for 2,000 years and another 2,000 before that for judaism. The fact you dont agree with it is irelevant. There is nothing to debate. There is no theological discussion to be opened up here at all. And you most cetainly dont pastor your flock by lying to them
Or even more egrehious - by lying to the CHILDREN in the flock.
 
The debate is “Immoral vs approved”. The OP referenced the first in the CCC, but they are not the same. Just because it is not approved does not make it immoral. It is not a cut and dry issue, it opens up a deep and complicated theological discussion, which I think the pastor was trying to have his seminarian start to do. Reciting the rules is not pastoring towards a flock.
Making the commandments clear is most definitely pastoring toward the flock. In this case, the behavior that is not approved does equate to immoral. It is a cut and dry issue.

This is not to say that a deep and complicated theological discussion cannot also be pastoral and helpful, but there is no case in which sin is “necessary”.
It has not been cut and dry. Branding entire groups as “immoral” is not pastoring to the flock, it is a theological form of divide and conquer.
No one has labelled “entire groups of people”. What is considered immoral is extra marital sex. The church does not teach that homosexual orientation is immoral.
It is a form of sexual relations that some do out of their makeup (a mix of nature and nurture). Just because it does not lead to reproduction does not make it immoral. It is no reason to look down on them.
That is not the only reason that it is considered immoral, though it is one. The church does not “look down on” persons who have sexually disordered desires. The Church calls them to repentance, just like she does every other sinner.
 
It has not been cut and dry. Branding entire groups as “immoral” is not pastoring to the flock, it is a theological form of divide and conquer. It is a form of sexual relations that some do out of their makeup (a mix of nature and nurture). Just because it does not lead to reproduction does not make it immoral. It is no reason to look down on them.
What you’e quoting is a certain form of social commentary. It is not the substance of revealed faith or even of common sense.
 
What you’e quoting is a certain form of social commentary. It is not the substance of revealed faith or even of common sense.
I view it as an application of teachings to our modern world.
 
Or even more egrehious - by lying to the CHILDREN in the flock.
Actually, as children grow and gain wisdom just by being and living out in the world, they will see that it is just part of what some people are (some may be their close friends as they grow and move on in life). Most will accept a live or let live relationship and others will still see their friends (or friends of friends etc…) as just a normal person who does things this way, but it does not detract from his/her overall person.
 
It has not been cut and dry. Branding entire groups as “immoral” is not pastoring to the flock, it is a theological form of divide and conquer. It is a form of sexual relations that some do out of their makeup (a mix of nature and nurture). Just because it does not lead to reproduction does not make it immoral. It is no reason to look down on them.
In you opinion. BUT the Pastor is there to relate the teachings of the Catholic Church and in the Church there is no debate.
 
Actually, as children grow and gain wisdom just by being and living out in the world, they will see that it is just part of what some people are (some may be their close friends as they grow and move on in life). Most will accept a live or let live relationship and others will still see their friends (or friends of friends etc…) as just a normal person who does things this way, but it does not detract from his/her overall person.
It is not a user-friendly world for most children. We owe them faith and truth for all the days of their growth. The Church owes us (adults) that forever. (I’ve worked with children in great need for more than 40 years.) One should never be “taught” ways in which to accept sin in self or others.
 
In you opinion. BUT the Pastor is there to relate the teachings of the Catholic Church and in the Church there is no debate.
Yet relating is the first part of any debate/discussion. To relate to others is to exchange ideas, views on ideas, and applications of ideas. There is black and white theory (theological philosophy in this example), and there is the real world. When you mix in human inter-relations, things are not black and white but a infinite spectrum of grey. As the exchange continues, both parties come out with something out of it, which leads to a mutual level of change from both parties.
 
It is not a user-friendly world for most children. We owe them faith and truth for all the days of their growth. The Church owes us (adults) that forever. (I’ve worked with children in great need for more than 40 years.) One should never be “taught” ways in which to accept sin in self or others.
And as adults we have to trust children to live the best lives they can, to keep away as many prejudices from them as possible to not burn bridges towards others they never knew the differences about when they were young. It is a teaching of youth that adults often forget as the work their way through the hard world. If this was remembered more, the world would be a better place. It is never wise to sow seeds of division in our young.
 
And as adults we have to trust children to live the best lives they can, to keep away as many prejudices from them as possible to not burn bridges towards others they never knew the differences about when they were young. It is a teaching of youth that adults often forget as the work their way through the hard world. If this was remembered more, the world would be a better place. It is never wise to sow seeds of division in our young.
Teaching the truth of faith, the truth of sacrificial love as lived in Jesus Christ, fulfilling the promise of God to His people and the descent of the Holy Spirit destined to enliven our faith and our practices - in no way can that be called divisive. Morality exists as an absolute. Truth exists as an absolute. In no way will the big cloud of gray relativism bring truth, peace or joy to the world.
 
I view it as an application of teachings to our modern world.
Presantism at it worst The idea that we are the most enlighted people in the History of the world and all those who went before it were wrong.

Sin is sin-it does no change from day to day, century to century or even millinium to millenium.
 
Yet relating is the first part of any debate/discussion. To relate to others is to exchange ideas, views on ideas, and applications of ideas. There is black and white theory (theological philosophy in this example), and there is the real world. When you mix in human inter-relations, things are not black and white but a infinite spectrum of grey. As the exchange continues, both parties come out with something out of it, which leads to a mutual level of change from both parties.
A religious education class is not a debate. Homosexual behavior is a grevious sin that puts the particpants souls at great risk. When a Pastor waters down that teaching he is not only bearing false witness to his flock he is puting their souls at risk.
 
I just came out of a youth group meeting where I had a riff with the pastor of the parish. He challenged me to show a source where the Church has declared homosexual acts to be immoral. I held that this is what the Church teaches. When I arrived home, I found that my catechism states very cleary that homosexual acts do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved" [CCC 2357]. He also told the us that we should follow what we truly believed to be right (although not what we think is easiest). How this distinction can be translated to a 16 year old, I have no idea!

He claims as well that because they are in a loving relationship, certain homosexual acts are necessary sins. He argued that we would prefer them in these relationships than in promiscuous ones. This is his idea of the pastoral approach. What do teens know of the pastoral approach? And does that make it right or acceptable? I look forward to your response. Please furnish me with definitive Church statements which I can bring back to him.
You have two issues:
  1. objectively immoral actions But he already admits this!! His assignment of a demand for ‘absolute proof’ distracts you from the problems inherent with his theology of sin and conscience.
  2. The ‘infallible’ conscience. will it save you from hell?
    even the pastor (is it a priest?) agrees that Homosexual acts are intrinsically immoral, however, he is arguing that it is a necessary immoral act, even a lesser evil. He tries to mitigate the essential evil in his ‘pastoral’ rationalization with the “not nessessarily the easiest”. This is a treacherous path that pits psychology and aquinas against each other, and, in the confusion, allows grave sin to be rationalized.
    an observation: rationalization does NOT equal a clear conscience. very important detail.
    Sexual sin, even the ones done alone, cannot be relegated to ‘necessary evil’. Nor can the conscience, seared to that sin, save your soul or protect you from the killing consequences of sinful acts.
    Cardinal Ratzinger considered all this better than I (no suprise there) in “Conscience and Truth” I suggest you read it.
    ewtn.com/library/CURIA/RATZCONS.HTM
    Please consult with your teachers as well. I will also suggest you call the apologist line here at catholic answers. 619-387-7200
    Monday–Friday, 9 AM–5 PM, Pacific
    Fr Serpa might also be able to give you straegic advice.
    perhaps also the canon law guy: colin donovan, (ewtn on Fridays),
PS: BTW. start your paper trail now. Write down in detail, in your own personal notes, what happened, who was there, what you felt, what you did, who you consulted, what you intend, what you plan. and continue to maintain it. It will be useful for your growth and learning from this situation and where it leads.
I shall pray for you.
 
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