Where did I address the sinful nature of same sex activity? Nowhere.
And furthermore, our desires are not evil in and of themselves. They are neutral. See the following.
ewtn.com/library/HUMANITY/homo14.htm
You’re making a sweeping statement here that is false.
You’re saying that “our desires are not evil”.
But of course our desires can be good or evil. If I desire to murder someone, that is not only a sin but it’s the basis of pre-meditated murder.
Now, you might be saying “homosexual desires” are not evil - they’re just neutral.
Well, if they’re unconscious desires or orientations - yes, they’re just physio-emotional movements. But anybody who identifies himself as a homosexual has gone beyond that unconscious stage. The desire has become part of the identity.
Regarding wanting sex - well, lust is not confined to homosexuals. We are not permitted to lustfully want to fornicate at all (and that’s what gay sex is anyway).
Jesus teaches us: “If a man looks on a woman with lust he has already sinned with her”.
So, I understand your interest in eliminating guilt where it should properly be eliminated - that is good and helpful. But when this extends beyond to a conscious desire for homosexuality, then that is not helping anyone since it is not true to say there is nothing evil there.
It’s these kinds of distinctions that need to be made.
Your comments about ‘we have the duty to teach. God does the converting.’ So you can tell people things that would never inspire them to seek the truth and disclaim responsibility by saying it’s God who does the converting? You are hardening their hearts. You aren’t doing anything to inspire them to seek God, you’re just fulfilling what you believe is your desire to claim you follow Jesus. That does nothing to inspire others to do the same. So what is the point?
You’re assuming that by telling someone the truth about something, this would never inspire them to seek the truth and that it will harden their hearts. Is it better to tell them a lie in order for them to seek the truth?
Now, I could agree with one thing there, I “am not doing anything”.
Yes, Our Lord’s command to us is not merely to talk about things - but we have to pray first. We have to be close to Him, filled with the Holy Spirit.
When that happens, we can truly say “it is not me speaking but the grace of God” - our words will have the power of the Holy Spirit.
Most people either deny that or find it impossible to believe. But if you think you can change people by your words alone, then that is blocking the power of God.
It is His role to change hearts. We can plant the seeds and teach the Good News, but He does the rest.
I gave you the example of St. Stephen the Martyr. Did he disclaim responsibility for his own actions when the Jews hardened their hearts against him? They got so angry they killed him. Should that have been avoided by not telling them the truth?
We all have different callings and different roles to play. The priest is called to proclaim the Gospel truth, as best he can. Sure, as St. Paul says, he can give “milk” of doctrine to the infants in faith - making Catholic teaching simpler. No everybody can handle the fullness of everything.
But the danger we run into today is that nobody ever wants to tell the complete truth about the matter, at any time.
Cardinal Tobin claimed that he was just welcoming and greeting, but then “we can talk later” - meaning, we can point out the moral problems that homosexuality has.
That’s fine - certainly the first words out of our mouth when encountering a gay person is not that they’re in sin.
But the point here is that eventually, that has to be said. Cardinal Tobin claimed he would do that. But experience shows that it is only very rarely when there is a teaching session that will correct the false impression given that homosexuality is now “ok” - since we’re living in the Church of Pope Francis now, etc.