OtherEric, you are right: you are not the Church (or, apparently Catholic) and neither is goofyjim. However, as I pointed out (and gave links to), goofyjim is witnessing Church teaching. You have no cause to continually insist that he, or anyone else living in accordance with the teaching on chastity, try to “change” what is not sinful behavior. By doing this, you confuse other posters who think that you are representative of what Catholics believe.
What I believe some are “witnessing to” is not the full teaching of the Church at all. It is instead an abridged version of what the Church genuinely teaches, selectively edited in order to accommodate whatever one is already predisposed to do. In the end it is nothing more than sloth animated by the presumption of God’s mercy.
To begin with, the Church teaches that all the baptized are called to chastity. (1) What the Church means by “chastity” is
the successful integration of sexuality within the person and thus the inner unity of man in his bodily and spiritual being. (2)
In one with same-sex attractions, the sexuality is disordered, (3) its every expression is a grave sin against the natural law, which can never be approved of. (4) Since it is impossible to integrate a disordered sexuality within a person, chastity is impossible in the presence of same-sex attractions. The ethic of simple suppression, advocated by some, is no more than “an expression of repression and unrealism.” (5)
Disordered or not, it is impossible for the human person to live without the sexuality. The Church teaches that sexuality governs even those relationships between individuals that are platonic in nature. (6) Indeed,
one of the most dangerous forms of this [sexual] unrealism is to think that one can live without sexuality. This is the old heresy of manicheism or albigensianism which long ago led to terrible excesses on the part of those who sought to be absolutely pure. (7)
The authentic call of the Church to those with same-sex attraction is not repression, but redemption. Thus, mere abstinence flies in the face of John Paul II’s Theology of the Body:
John Paul’s anthropological vision seeks to reclaim everything that is authentically human – everything that God created man to be “in the beginning.” But this cannot happen if man ignores or suppresses his sexual desires. (8)
Since those with same-sex attractions can neither express their sexuality nor extract it from their being, the question becomes, how does one do what one should and “gradually and resolutely approach Christian perfection?” (9) The answer is obvious, at least to me. The person with same-sex attractions approaches Christian perfection as he or she approaches a heterosexual orientation.
It is therefore in charity that I direct all with same-sex attractions to do what it is that the chastity they are obligated to follow requires. I will not endanger my own soul nor display such casual indiference for those with the disorder by offering them a remedial form of sexual morality on the malformed theory that they are unable to live up to the real thing.
(1) Catechism of the Catholic Church. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1993. ¶ 2348. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P85.HTM#$2DY
(2) Ibid., ¶ 2337. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P85.HTM#$2DY
(3) Ibid., ¶ 2358. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P85.HTM#$2DY
(4) Ibid., ¶ 2357. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P85.HTM#$2DY
(5) Groeschel, Benedict J. The Courage to Be Chaste. Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1985. p. 42.
(6) Catechism of the Catholic Church. ¶ 2332. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P84.HTM
(7) Groeschel. p. 35.
(8) West, Christopher. Theology of the Body Explained: A Commentary on John Paul II’s “Gospel of the Body”. Boston, MA: Pauline Books and Media, 2003. p. 197.
(9) Catechism of the Catholic Church. ¶ 2359. Available online at:
vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P85.HTM#$2DY