C
CrimsonThorn
Guest
Never said that. He has given them a cross though and has called them to live a chaste and celibate lifeGod doesn’t call anyone to sin.
Never said that. He has given them a cross though and has called them to live a chaste and celibate lifeGod doesn’t call anyone to sin.
It’s called the Objective Truth.I wonder what is the Catholic equivalent of ‘homosexualist’, as in ‘the Cath…whatever…ualist Agenda’?
I don’t think homosexuals have a monopoly on that age difference occurence. I’m 23 and I’ve been approached by men in their 50s and 60s, one notable occurence was when I was 16 and the man was 45+. It is a very common experience for young women. Just about every teen girl and young woman has dealt with the advances or at least lascivious gazes of significantly older men, our mothers’ warnings are regarding older straight males who prey on young girls. She never thought it necessary to warn me about homosexuals. Older men, most especially when they come into money, often seek significantly younger women. I really can’t see a greater frequency with homosexuals. Their relationship age-differences seem as varied as heterosexuals.Most homosexual couples that I’ve personally known throughout life have had a relationship, or are presently in one, with a vast age difference. A lesbian at work is low 30’s and her girlfriend just turned 19 last year. To me, that’s “legal” pedophilia. There is a link between the two, though that doesn’t mean one stems from the other every single time. But it is foolish to say in many cases experiences of pedophilia don’t lead to homosexuality or other psychological perversions and disorders.
I stand corrected. My apologies.Never said that. He has given them a cross though and has called them to live a chaste and celibate life![]()
Excellent point there. Age-differing relationships exist in those with same-sex attraction or just the usual couples.Older men, most especially when they come into money, often seek significantly younger women. I really can’t see a greater frequency with homosexuals. Their relationship age-differences seem as varied as heterosexuals.
It’s too bad your experience in scouting was so negative. There was one kid on our troop who must of us figured was gay, but he was also everyone’s friend. I guess it varies from region to region…Excellent point there. Age-differing relationships exist in those with same-sex attraction or just the usual couples.
And to answer other questions- no, there is no such thing as heterophobia- you never find a homosexual suggesting that heterosexuals be rounded up behind electric fences, as certain “enlightened” Protestants have suggested. Whereas homophobia, whether you agree it is a word or not, affects even those who do not have same-sex attraction. For example, when I was younger and in the Boy Scouts, I was wrongly accused of being homosexual for years and routinely shunned because I did not seem as sterotypically masculine as the other boys. I hated, and still hate, sports and rough activities, and love reading and quiet- and for that, I was always labeled as a “fag” and permanently excluded. Homophobia, under the definition of an irrational fear or hatred of homosexuals, effects both those with same-sex attraction and those who are heterosexual; especially here in the Deep South, it’s unfortunately as part of the culture as any other kind of bigotry.
This was part of what I was trying to get at in my earlier post (which was ignored in favor of arguing about the term homophobiaDear BTNYC,
Please note that “freedom” is and will be, the primary marketing word for defying Church teaching, now and in the future, both inside and outside the Church
Next, is the Land O’Lakes Statement that separated some Catholic Universities from Church authority. And think of Catholic Universities today.
catholichistory.net/Events/LandOLakesStatement.htm
Yes, once you get a number of professors gradually feeding the wrong things to their students, who were taught to respect such people, the flock becomes confused and begins to scatter. And some of those students became professors and continued the problem well into the future.
continued…
I’m sorry you were subjected to that. Good point about how this fear or prejudice negatively affects those who are not even homosexual. It’s pretty ignorant and philistine how people come to conclusive judgments about a man’s sexuality based on the fact that he may be literary, non-physical, contemplative.Excellent point there. Age-differing relationships exist in those with same-sex attraction or just the usual couples.
And to answer other questions- no, there is no such thing as heterophobia- you never find a homosexual suggesting that heterosexuals be rounded up behind electric fences, as certain “enlightened” Protestants have suggested. Whereas homophobia, whether you agree it is a word or not, affects even those who do not have same-sex attraction. For example, when I was younger and in the Boy Scouts, I was wrongly accused of being homosexual for years and routinely shunned because I did not seem as sterotypically masculine as the other boys. I hated, and still hate, sports and rough activities, and love reading and quiet- and for that, I was always labeled as a “fag” and permanently excluded. Homophobia, under the definition of an irrational fear or hatred of homosexuals, effects both those with same-sex attraction and those who are heterosexual; especially here in the Deep South, it’s unfortunately as part of the culture as any other kind of bigotry.
I am not sure of your point here? The term homophobia has multiple definitions and uses depending on the user’s intention. In common usage it refers to discriminaton against homosexual persons. I say that it is a political tool. It is a contrived term like “gay” and “pro choice”.I will provide evidence once you acknowledge that all the other aspects of my post are correct, especially that I have successfully dismantled the OP’s claim that homophobia is an “invented evil.”
Those groups in the church are for those people who are trying to overcome / suppress their desires and live a life of chastity in line with the Church’s teachings. For the other groups you mentioned, there is sexaholics anonymous, or any other of a number of support groups for people struggling will all manners of addiction, sexual or otherwise.I agree.
More than a few Dioceses have a Gay and Lesbian Ministry. Why?
Are there special ministries for men who want to wear a diaper or get spanked by a woman in a leather catsuit? Why not? It’s just another perversion.
No one has to know what anyone’s particular sexual deviance is. By catering to the homosexuals and adopting their language, the Church legitimizes their activities.
Too many bleeding-heart types drag out “hate the sin, love the sinner,” but why? They proudly call themselves “gay,” which tells me they are reveling in their sin, not trying to overcome it. Their whole identity is wrapped up in their disorder. There is no contrition, no shame. Would we be so quick to love someone who promotes dogfighting? We’d hate the sin but not the sinner there? I think not.
Relatively-speaking, of course, and hardly an answer to the question.It’s called the Objective Truth.
You did the right thing by writing this. It is a documented fact that the 1960s and 1970s were the prime time of the Catholic dissent movement in the Church.This was part of what I was trying to get at in my earlier post (which was ignored in favor of arguing about the term homophobia). This happened, essentially, at my seminary. One time, some of my classmates and I, were having an informal discussion with “a priest in authority” in one of our dorm rooms, and the subject of celibacy came up. For some reason, this priest suddenly said “As diocesan priests, you will not be held by a vow of chastity.” We were confused about where he was going with that, and he continued “When you stand before the bishop for ordination, you will be making a *promise *of celibacy. It’s not a vow.” This only made us more confused.
Essentially, what he had done so effortlessly, was sew the seeds of confusion in us for a while. Nobody challenged him angrily as it’s true that religious take a “vow of chastity” and diocesan priests make a “promise of celibacy.” There came to be a kind of counter culture in our seminary (or at least, we were being “indoctrinated” into the counter culture) that sometimes “things happen” and “we’re all human” and “God forgives” and somehow the difference between a promise and a vow made all of this possible. I wonder can anyone see what I’m getting at? It was so tiny, the crack that he made in the foundation of our faith, a crack the size of a hair. It lead some of my classmates to the error “Well a promise isn’t as big of a deal as a vow.” This ties in with the OP in that this priest was later known to me as an active homosexual (not just SSA). This was a widespread fallacy in the culture of the seminary, and it was begun (and maintained) by the gay community in my seminary.
I’ve spent over a decade being medicated for depression (which I never had before the seminary) and I’m coming to the belief that “ceding too much ground to the homosexual aganda” is just what we’re doing. I watched the Fulton Sheen video the OP posted and realized that “false compassion” is exactly what has allowed gay marriage to occur in our country. I’m not normally a conspiracy theorist, but I’ve realized that my experience at the seminary was poisoned because so many of the homosexuals there were more concerned about “changing the atmosphere” at the seminary in their favor than they were concerned about preaching Christ. And in the secular world, they have created this beast of homophobia (and blaming the Catholic Church of it and bigotry) just so they can “play house” at the expense the authority of the Church and thus hurting our ability to preach the true Word of God.
Why am I even bothering to type this out? Apparently I’ve misunderstood where this thread was going.
That’s the thing. There is no “Relatively speaking” about Objective Truth. It simply IS, and neither your nor my opinions and beliefs have any affect on it.Relatively-speaking, of course, and hardly an answer to the question.
Their whole identity is wrapped up in their disorder? It does seem that a good deal of homosexuals are over-fixated on their sexuality. They over analyze and theorize. This is probably due to the fact that they have been shunned and shamed for their sexuality, for manifesting any bit of sexual desire for their own sex. Extremely lustful straight males are not especially shamed for being promiscuous or unfaithful, to some extent it is seen as a mark of manliness. Homosexuality is perceived as something especially abhorrent and damned and spoken of with more disgust than the other sexual sins. If it was treated as casually and normally as the sins(I don’t think of it as sin) of lust, adultery, and divorce seem to be, then perhaps homosexuals wouldn’t be over-fixated. Treating it with special disgust and disdain drives and sustains this obsession and over-identification.I agree.
More than a few Dioceses have a Gay and Lesbian Ministry. Why?
Are there special ministries for men who want to wear a diaper or get spanked by a woman in a leather catsuit? Why not? It’s just another perversion.
No one has to know what anyone’s particular sexual deviance is. By catering to the homosexuals and adopting their language, the Church legitimizes their activities.
Too many bleeding-heart types drag out “hate the sin, love the sinner,” but why? They proudly call themselves “gay,” which tells me they are reveling in their sin, not trying to overcome it. Their whole identity is wrapped up in their disorder. There is no contrition, no shame. Would we be so quick to love someone who promotes dogfighting? We’d hate the sin but not the sinner there? I think not.