C
Corki
Guest
I realize this thread has flown along while I was at work, but I didn’t want to leave this comment unanswered.Your post shows very little concern for evangelizing gay people. If you think that romantic relationships between people of the same sex are immoral, even apart from sexual contact, then you should be encouraging people to stop such relationships. You do not encourage them to stop when you deny them communion. If you have no reason to believe they are committing a mortal sin, you risk alienating them from the Church entirely by such an action. You tacitly encourage them to continue in their sin.
And the goal working with a same-sex couple is exactly the same: it is to get the couple’s situation remedied so that they can return to fullness of life in God’s church. In their case, this means friendship or separation, not marriage. But often straight couples become friends or separate, too, and the Church has no problem with those outcomes.
- How is what I said showing a lack of concern? I am very concerned although I wouldn’t call it evangelizing. The topic of this thread is welcoming, not evangelizing.
- In your earlier comment, which I was addressing here, you indicated that romantic relationships might be sinful but not mortally sinful. On what basis would they be sinful if not for immorality?
- I never mentioned Communion – you brought that up. I said that this was a mater for the priest to deal with in private conversation.
- The Church doesn’t deny Communion, in any case. But a couple who is sinning should not present themselves for Communion. As the Pope said recently, when referring to the divorced and remarried, it’s not a sanction or a punishment. It’s a recognition that something is missing in the person’s relationship to the Church.
- As for the same-sex couple’s situation, there is no regularization that is possible for the couple, only for the individuals. The focus should be on the individuals. With a cohabiting couple or a couple in a civil marriage, a remedy is possible, though not, as you point out, the only possibility.