B
blaskoman
Guest
OP: you may as well have asked whether the Church would change its position on the morality of adultery. Homosexual acts are on a same footing.
Not exactly. Adultery is typically a normal marital act that is done outside the bond of marriage. It is the misuse of the marital embrace. Homosexual acts are instead intrinsically disordered, an abomination that is a misuse of one’s very body. They are a perversion of the marital embrace, a parody of it. Both are grave matter and both will remove a person from a state of grace, so in this way they are “equal” but they are not morally equivalent.OP: you may as well have asked whether the Church would change its position on the morality of adultery. Homosexual acts are on a same footing.
Help me understand…Not exactly. Adultery is typically a normal marital act that is done outside the bond of marriage. It is the misuse of the marital embrace. Homosexual acts are instead intrinsically disordered, an abomination that is a misuse of one’s very body. They are a perversion of the marital embrace, a parody of it. Both are grave matter and both will remove a person from a state of grace, so in this way they are “equal” but they are not morally equivalent.
Ok,I just finished saying that they do inflict the same wound, but in their source they are not equivalent types of sin. What is so hard to understand about that?
Actually, while many may have emotional reasons–they see their gay brothers or daughters struggling with the Church’s teaching for example–many more have actually thought through the issue–maybe not completely through to the degree many on this forum would wish, since most of are the opinion that the teaching cannot change. Still.The OP states that many Catholics worldwide disagree with the Church on this matter because they have a “gut feeling” the Church is wrong.
Precisely why most Catholics are deceived, because they think with their feelings and not with theor logic, faith, and reasoning. Therefore, the world deceives them easily.
I do not think the Church can rewrite the Bible. the Church infallibly defined the books of the Bible at the Council of Trent.I would like for you to answer this question;
Can the Church rewrite the Bible?
Unless your answer is YES then your question has answered itself for you![]()
Not everyone who considers the Church to be in need of looking at its current teaching on homosexuality would agree with your evaluation: There is not only one type of people that is serious about sex, you know. If–IF–the Church could ever develop its understanding on this issue such that homosexual acts are no longer seen as “intrinsically evil,” that would not mean the seriousness of sex, the holiness of sex is thrown out the window!Unfortunately, many, many Catholics have been infected by secularism and modernism to believe that our bodies are ours to use as we see fit. The teachings on homosexuality are simple and logical and elegant. They are about the proper use of God’s gifts of body, sexuality, and fertility. We are called to be stewards of creation, not spendthrifts in a dirty sandbox.
Thank you for this respectful response.Once again you have presented apples and oranges. Divine Law is crystal clear in its prohibitions of illicit sexual activity. The inner workings of salvation and God’s attitude toward His Church have not always been so apparent. The Church is a relatively new institution. Compared to the history of Judaism we are still in our infancy. Judaism settled the question of homosexuality thousands and thousands of years ago, and the Church only validates those decisions of Divine Law. Now a young Church understood herself differently in regards to salvation. It is true that EENS does not look the same as it did 2000 years ago when Jesus said the things he did. Development of doctrine brings legitimate change in the understanding between Church and God. Theologians are researchers, and have discovered that God grants exceptions to this doctrine and we are only just finding out all the exceptions that can be made. We have always maintained that God is not bound by His Sacraments or His Church. His love and mercy is much greater than the earthly institutions left by Jesus for us to follow. God can save a Buddhist if He so wishes. God can send a sinner to Heaven if that is the true measure of mercy and justice. We on earth are somewhat blind to His true nature, but the things He has revealed infallibly through His Church are abundantly clear to us. The more theologians study homosexuality, the more it is realized to be immoral and wrong for humanity. That is why the understanding will never change. Homosexuality is not a question of God and Church. Homosexuality is a question of God’s law for humans, eternally ordained, true before the Church was founded and true after the Church passes away. God set marriage in motion in the Garden of Eden, and the more we look at it, the more right it seems. Married love is a reflection of the Holy Trinity. The holy vocation of marriage will withstand the assaults coming to it from secularism, atheism, modernism and homosexualism. Good will triumph over evil in the end and homosexualists will meet an undignified end in judgement.
Last issue first: It is not about a syncretism of Catholicism and the world. The Church should never teach something on the basis of pressure, cultural consensus, popularity, etc. But if it is the truth, then for the sake of truth, the Church should teach it. I brought up this question in the first place because many homosexual persons within the Church find no place for themselves at all. Some do, but I would have to guess (but only guess) that this is a very, very small minority. Hence, the great struggle and possibly suffering (as personal experience testifies to) of “gay Catholics,” “Catholics with same sex attraction,” whatever naturally leads to the question: Is the Church even right, here? How could such a hard teaching be true?Okay, let’s say that the Church changes her teaching on homosexuality and endorses “marriage” between them. Where does their “love” fit in as a vocation for the sake of the Kingdom? What good can come of people committing sodomy “in a loving committed relationship”? Will the Church come to see sodomy as unitive, that a man can “become one flesh” with another man? Does that mean that our understanding of Divine Law was a house of cards? If non-procreative sex is OK with the Church, then what’s to stop us from using artificial contraception? Will polygamy be fair game again, what if three gay men, two bisexuals and four straight women want to enter a committed relationship, how will that be seen as a reflection of the love of the Holy Trinity and a building block of the family?
Can’t you see that the Deposit of Faith is a mighty fortress that is built strongly and logically and protects itself against assault? If bricks start coming out of the side then the edifice crumbles and fails. The teaching on homosexuality is a logical conclusion, it is not an arbitrary rule we made up. It is just one of the many things that are prohibited as being outside the nature of what God ordained for the human race.
Look, God prohibited stealing to the Israelites through Mosaic Law in the Commandments. Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, the Native Americans had little concept of personal property; it was not part of their culture or religion. As the Church spread throughout the world, she introduced this uniform concept, taught that it was good for people to own things, and wiped out the previous practice. She also abolished things like human sacrifice. Does this mean that when thieves rise up and pagans who sacrifice humans demand equal rights that the Church can integrate them into the Deposit of Faith, and say maybe stealing and sacrifice isn’t so bad after all, let’s be one happy family? No, God has revealed these things to us as true. It is up for us to convince the world of right and wrong. That is the Church’s holy mission. It is not for the world to impose its beliefs on the Church. That will never happen.
And I can only refer back to my previous post, which predicted such a biblical passage…[BIBLEDRB]John 6:61-67[/BIBLEDRB]
It is just as bad as sodomy within marriageNot exactly. Adultery is typically a normal marital act that is done outside the bond of marriage. It is the misuse of the marital embrace. Homosexual acts are instead intrinsically disordered, an abomination that is a misuse of one’s very body. They are a perversion of the marital embrace, a parody of it. Both are grave matter and both will remove a person from a state of grace, so in this way they are “equal” but they are not morally equivalent.
Again, I understand that there is suffering, and that suffering paired with the faith is fruitful (redemptive suffering, etc.). I am very sorry for your situation.You need to open threads on whether the Church could change her teaching on the Eucharist, and why hasn’t she cured cancer yet.
Yes, homosexuals have to suffer. As a single, straight 41-year-old man, I identify with people who feel they have no vocation in the Church. Some of us with disabilities of some kind simply can’t enjoy the fullness of Church life and will never realize a vocation as God calls most Christians to have. We are still called to love God and live as He intends.
If a child is afflicted with cancer, did God intend for her to suffer? Doesn’t it pain God to see someone die young and unfulfilled? A child with cancer may die young, but does not die unloved or unfulfilled. She has lived the life God wanted for her by being faithful. The only person who dies unfulfilled is a person who, given the Gospel news, turns away from the Church and dies unrepentant and goes to Hell. That is the only true tragedy, that some souls are lost forever.
There is no absolute prohibition on a homosexual being married or entering the priesthood. It can happen; it is rare. If someone masters self-control and continence then they may be able to cope as a celibate priest. If someone meets a woman he can truly love for life, there is the small possibility of a Josephite marriage (of course, even such a marriage must be able to be consummated…) A chaste homosexual can explore avenues of lay ministry and apostolate that do not require a conventional vocation. He is not useless to the Church. Nobody will be thrown away if they are faithful and willing to serve.
But it is just a simple fact of life that some people with a disability cannot enjoy the life they want. That is the cross for many. As someone who once had a promising career in Information Technology, I now make near-minimum wage in a part-time job which I am lucky to have. This is not the life I wanted for myself, but I remain faithful to God who has rewarded me abundantly for that fact.