K
kozlosap
Guest
Yes! If everyone would Google back to the very beginning of this controversy , it would show that this had absolutely not one thing to do with what is being taught in the classroom . It’s about the private thoughts and lives of teachers outside the classroom. If a teacher, whether Catholic or not, was seen by someone entering or leaving an IVF clinic and that was reported to the Archdiocese, for example, that teacher could be fired. The students and parents in the City did not want their teachers subjected to that wonderful group of “Holier than the Pope Catholic Snitches”!Wow. The Archdiocese, and its supporters in this effort to enforce these morality clauses on teachers, are certainly doing a fine job of playing the victim. What seems to be missing is the acknowledgement that Archbishop Cordileone is the one who instigated this conflict, that has caused teachers to feel that their jobs are in jeopardy. A little honesty about that would be utterly refreshing.
This insistence that this new language does “not introduce anything essentially new” and is “not intended to target teachers for dismissal” is shamefully dishonest, as that is precisely the reason these “clarifications” are being insisted upon. After all, if it’s not introducing anything new, why is there any need for clarification, unless the Archbishop has noted problems with teachers in diocesan schools that cannot be handled to his satisfaction under the current language? The message is that if you have any hesitance in your acceptance of Catholic teaching, you’re job may be in jeopardy. Get your conscience in line with Church teaching or start looking for another job.
And if that’s what he wants, fine, but he should be honest about it. If you’re going to work in a diocesan school, you need not apply if you are not Catholic, or if you have any disagreement with Catholic doctrine. Period.