C
Corki
Guest
Homosexuality, or heterosexuality, isn’t the sum total of someone’s sexuality. Sexuality starts with maleness and femaleness. That cannot be denied. The desire for sexual relationship with someone of the opposite sex should not be ignored but it is still disordered. As with any disorder, such as blindness or parapalegia or OCD, the person dealing with the disorder needs to find a way to live a full life without the disorder defining him/her. A disorder is only an affliction if one cannot learn to cope.Grace & Peace!
This language of affliction is precisely why I refuse to use the term SSA to refer to homosexuality.
The OP has a very good question, though–one I’ve asked before but have yet to see answered or engaged thoughtfully on these boards. If a heterosexual catholic chooses to be celibate or is called to the celibate life, there’s no sense that he or she need deny his or her sexuality in the process, or should look upon the desire they will feel for the opposite sex as an affliction.
Celebrate their sexuality - yes. In order to celebrate the part of their sexuality that is disordered it would be necesarry to find the benefit that that disorder offers. For example, people with OCD can be particularly suited for certain occupations. Is there some societal benefit that homosexuality affords? If so, then it could be celebrated.Similarly, is it possible for a Roman Catholic who is homosexual to observe the rule of abstinence, but celebrate their sexuality?
Yes, as long as one was a woman and one a man as was the case with Our Lady and St. Joseph.Is it possible for a Roman Catholic homosexual to engage in a chaste romance / a proper platonic relationship as Socrates describes at the end of the Symposium? Could a Roman Catholic homosexual be in a relationship with another Roman Catholic homosexual and model their relationship after the example of Our Lady and St. Joseph (which, while chaste, I would like to believe was passionately and sweetly romantic!).
That’s not true.I understand that the catechism does not actually believe in homosexuality as a viable sexuality, so perhaps the answer is, in fact, “no.”
Well, the more scientific study is done on the causes and effects of homosexuality, the more the Church’s position seems to be correct. BTW, the Catechism doesn’t have a “view” - it is a summary of the teaching of the Church.But the catechism’s view of sexuality is looking more and more like a defense of geocentrism in the midst of the Copernican revolution–i.e., more and more untenable given our growing scientific understanding of human sexuality.
And as that view of sexuality passes away, I think that one day we will be able to find ourselves actually having a conversation regarding the appropriate expression of homosexual desire within a Roman Catholic moral context.
We already have been having that conversation for decades. Homosexuality is not a forbidden topic in the Church. The appropriate expression of homosexual desire within a Catholic moral context is well discussed.We may have to wait quite a while for the conversation, but I think it is inevitable.