H
Hadrianus
Guest
InsOG,
Thanks for posting those texts which I was unfamiliar with. They seem to follow the same thought as the Catechism. Actually, I do think there is a difference between “orientation” and 'inclination." I don’t think the Church ever uses the word orientation whether homosexual or heterosexual in any official document. The reason is because, unlike Freudian thought, Catholic teaching does not consider sexual attraction to be absolutely integral to being a human being. Gender is, but sexual desire is not. Many of the greatest saints seem through grace to have transcended all carnal desires whether sexual or any other kind, and sexual desire will serve no purpose in heaven and thus not exist.
Our society today is hypersexualized and defines people in ways which our predecessors, Christian, and probably even Pagan, would find extreme to say the least.
Let us not forget that the best Pagans themselves regarded perpetual continence as an ideal state though they may rarely have practiced it.Let us remember that in the ancient polemic against Christinaity it was “atheism” ie impiety towards the pagan gods, that was the chief crime in their eyes. Few people before the 19nth Century would have objected to the Catholic sexual ethic itself even if Protestants did object to the monastic orders.
In saying this I don’t mean to disparage the use of the term ‘orientation’ which is convenient so long as one remembers not to view sexual matters in an exaggerated light.
Thanks for posting those texts which I was unfamiliar with. They seem to follow the same thought as the Catechism. Actually, I do think there is a difference between “orientation” and 'inclination." I don’t think the Church ever uses the word orientation whether homosexual or heterosexual in any official document. The reason is because, unlike Freudian thought, Catholic teaching does not consider sexual attraction to be absolutely integral to being a human being. Gender is, but sexual desire is not. Many of the greatest saints seem through grace to have transcended all carnal desires whether sexual or any other kind, and sexual desire will serve no purpose in heaven and thus not exist.
Our society today is hypersexualized and defines people in ways which our predecessors, Christian, and probably even Pagan, would find extreme to say the least.
Let us not forget that the best Pagans themselves regarded perpetual continence as an ideal state though they may rarely have practiced it.Let us remember that in the ancient polemic against Christinaity it was “atheism” ie impiety towards the pagan gods, that was the chief crime in their eyes. Few people before the 19nth Century would have objected to the Catholic sexual ethic itself even if Protestants did object to the monastic orders.
In saying this I don’t mean to disparage the use of the term ‘orientation’ which is convenient so long as one remembers not to view sexual matters in an exaggerated light.