D
djeter
Guest
dj808: There is no “precise view of sex” in the article. Nowhere does Dr. Schindler discuss anything related to sexual orientation or gender
Having falsely accused me of using the word “sexuality” to mean “sexual orientation”, now you are accusing me of using “sex” to mean “sexual orientation”. By “precise view of sex” I mean “particular detailed interpretation of sexual nature (and its privileged expression in male-female spousal relationship)”.
Schindler’s Third Principle does not address sexuality, except as leading to the Fourth Principle. This expands on the significance of the “spousal” relationship, and the concomitant potential for parenthood. It effectively has nothing to say either to the homosexual or to the celibate. The Fifth Principle elaborates a theory of the ontological-spiritual significance of sexual difference. The Sixth Principle discusses love and the role of the human as creature, and though it gives pre-eminence to filial and spousal relations, it regards them as “uniquely privileged”, not as the sole expression of the giftedness of creation.
Following John Paul II, I have proposed that the physical-sexual difference, precisely in and as physical-sexual, symbolizes an ontological-spiritual and also psychological difference. (Schindler)
It is this proposal that is compromised by the mere existence of human persons who do not fall into the unambiguous categories of male and female. Rare though they may be, they challenge the notion that maleness/femaleness must have a parallel “ontological-spiritual” dimension with regard to the indiviual human person, whatever spiritual aspect they may have in the field of generalized spiritual anthropology. If, it appears, Schindler’s theory requires that physically male/female persons must be psychologically and spiritually male/female, he denies them the “complex or differentiated unity” which he himself invokes against nominalists.
***The posting by fermat adds nothing but a lengthy restatement of the observation that the Roman Catholic Church regards homosexual acts as sinful.***You do not address at all my suggestion that homosexuals, as embodied souls whose bodies are “good qua ens”, must partake in this bodily expression of divine generosity through love of another person, presumably because it is inconsistent with the doctrine of the sinfulness homosexual acts, and so morally or juridically unthinkable, even if the theology of man as embodied soul and corporeal imago Dei were to offer an opening in that direction.
You keep saying that the embodied soul is the basis of “the resurrection of the dead" but you have nowhere demonstrated this. Schindler’s presentation does not entail that male-female duality or “spousal” relations are fundamental to the Catholic concept of the embodied soul; in fact (in the passages I have emboldened above) he specifically states that sexual nature is secondary to human nature.
“Catholic homosexualists” would obviously have to reject specific Biblically-grounded moral teachings of the Church; but to say that they would have to reject the credal belief in the resurrection is nonsensical, and Schindler’s article does not support it.
***I doubt the Catholic Homosexual would find any solace in an answer that essentially rejects the teachings. ***
I have no words of solace for Roman Catholic homosexuals in the current circumstances. They must either suppress their sexual nature and accept compulsory celibacy, which for heterosexuals is either a free choice or a special vocation; or they must appeal to conscience against the teachings of the Church concerning the physical expression of homosexuality; or they must live out their Catholic faith outside the Roman Church (perhaps becoming Affirming Catholic Episcopalians). But this arises from the moral teaching of the church as quoted from the Catechism, not from any supposed credal implications of John Paul II’s theology of the embodied soul and its exaltation of the male-female relationship. With respect to this, the homosexual is in the same position as the celibate: outside the loop.
Only an atheist could contest any of it.
I think that’s a silly statement. I am sure there are serioous theologians in the Anglican, Protestant, and even Orthodox Churches who would be more able than I to contest it from a theistic position.
Message edited by its author, Today, 11:07pm.
For those who are helping me deal with my problem here I hope you can find this stuff. Somewhere along the line we have been joined with a group who want to litigate the John Jay Report again. I really only asked that the subject of the thread deal with the Homosexualist’s response from Library Thing. So if you could devote your posts to the exchanges between myself and MyopicBookworm that would be greatly appreciated.
Having falsely accused me of using the word “sexuality” to mean “sexual orientation”, now you are accusing me of using “sex” to mean “sexual orientation”. By “precise view of sex” I mean “particular detailed interpretation of sexual nature (and its privileged expression in male-female spousal relationship)”.
Schindler’s Third Principle does not address sexuality, except as leading to the Fourth Principle. This expands on the significance of the “spousal” relationship, and the concomitant potential for parenthood. It effectively has nothing to say either to the homosexual or to the celibate. The Fifth Principle elaborates a theory of the ontological-spiritual significance of sexual difference. The Sixth Principle discusses love and the role of the human as creature, and though it gives pre-eminence to filial and spousal relations, it regards them as “uniquely privileged”, not as the sole expression of the giftedness of creation.
Following John Paul II, I have proposed that the physical-sexual difference, precisely in and as physical-sexual, symbolizes an ontological-spiritual and also psychological difference. (Schindler)
It is this proposal that is compromised by the mere existence of human persons who do not fall into the unambiguous categories of male and female. Rare though they may be, they challenge the notion that maleness/femaleness must have a parallel “ontological-spiritual” dimension with regard to the indiviual human person, whatever spiritual aspect they may have in the field of generalized spiritual anthropology. If, it appears, Schindler’s theory requires that physically male/female persons must be psychologically and spiritually male/female, he denies them the “complex or differentiated unity” which he himself invokes against nominalists.
***The posting by fermat adds nothing but a lengthy restatement of the observation that the Roman Catholic Church regards homosexual acts as sinful.***You do not address at all my suggestion that homosexuals, as embodied souls whose bodies are “good qua ens”, must partake in this bodily expression of divine generosity through love of another person, presumably because it is inconsistent with the doctrine of the sinfulness homosexual acts, and so morally or juridically unthinkable, even if the theology of man as embodied soul and corporeal imago Dei were to offer an opening in that direction.
You keep saying that the embodied soul is the basis of “the resurrection of the dead" but you have nowhere demonstrated this. Schindler’s presentation does not entail that male-female duality or “spousal” relations are fundamental to the Catholic concept of the embodied soul; in fact (in the passages I have emboldened above) he specifically states that sexual nature is secondary to human nature.
“Catholic homosexualists” would obviously have to reject specific Biblically-grounded moral teachings of the Church; but to say that they would have to reject the credal belief in the resurrection is nonsensical, and Schindler’s article does not support it.
***I doubt the Catholic Homosexual would find any solace in an answer that essentially rejects the teachings. ***
I have no words of solace for Roman Catholic homosexuals in the current circumstances. They must either suppress their sexual nature and accept compulsory celibacy, which for heterosexuals is either a free choice or a special vocation; or they must appeal to conscience against the teachings of the Church concerning the physical expression of homosexuality; or they must live out their Catholic faith outside the Roman Church (perhaps becoming Affirming Catholic Episcopalians). But this arises from the moral teaching of the church as quoted from the Catechism, not from any supposed credal implications of John Paul II’s theology of the embodied soul and its exaltation of the male-female relationship. With respect to this, the homosexual is in the same position as the celibate: outside the loop.
Only an atheist could contest any of it.
I think that’s a silly statement. I am sure there are serioous theologians in the Anglican, Protestant, and even Orthodox Churches who would be more able than I to contest it from a theistic position.
Message edited by its author, Today, 11:07pm.
For those who are helping me deal with my problem here I hope you can find this stuff. Somewhere along the line we have been joined with a group who want to litigate the John Jay Report again. I really only asked that the subject of the thread deal with the Homosexualist’s response from Library Thing. So if you could devote your posts to the exchanges between myself and MyopicBookworm that would be greatly appreciated.