My friend from church told me he thinks he is interested in other men

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Returning to earth, the OP referred to, if I remember correctly, a kid with feelings for the opposite sex, not on a sodomy rampage in the locker room. And only seduction or recruitment explains this? Not loneliness? Not a desire to confide in another human being?

I’ll pass on those words of wisdom. How long should I give her to mend her ways or is a warning sufficient? Rome wasn’t built in a day, you know.
As I have pointed out, the appropriate fora for the confidential disclosure of this sort of information have already been erected by the Church and secular society. This person’s failure to make use of either therefore leads me to the only other two motives that can possibly exist.

Also, that Rome wasn’t built in a day is irrelevant to the discussion here. Christ was raised in three.
 
As I have pointed out, the appropriate fora for the confidential disclosure of this sort of information have already been erected by the Church and secular society. This person’s failure to make use of either therefore leads me to the only other two motives that can possibly exist.

Also, that Rome wasn’t built in a day is irrelevant to the discussion here. Christ was raised in three.
I’m very glad I’m not a member of your church.
 
Perhaps you are unaware of the gravity of same-sex attraction and the fragile psychological nature of those who are held in its grip. Ministry to such people is best accomplished by truly orthodox individuals and trained therapists. Amateurs need not apply and may end up only making things worse.

Secondly, it seems you may need to reexamine your use of terminology. The celibate state is one in which the individual so called gives up the positive good of family life in order to minister to Christ’s Church. The individual with same-sex attractions has no such licit desire and can only give up something evil. Since there is no genuine sacrifice, neither can there be any genuine call to the celibate state. Indeed, an attempt at Manichaen-style sexual suppression under the heading “celibacy” is a crude parody of the vocation every bit as much as same-sex “marriage” is a crude parody of that vocation.

If the OP lacks the requisite credentials, perhaps her farewell may include a reference to either a therapist or a priest who isn’t so unprepared for this situation.
Thanks for the correction on terminology, but my use was quite correct. Celibacy’s primary definition is one who abstains from sexual relations - that is standard English usage.

I still can’t quite get over your desire to eviscerate (I am using it here in a symbolic and not literal way) a young man who is struggling with SSA attraction by advising apparently a very close friend to cut him off. I agree that he is fragile, so what good can come of removing a person who can support him in a very good way. Since it seems that she is trying to imitate Christ, shouldn’t she support him and tell him the church’s true teaching? He may otherwise never hear it.
 
My friend from church, a boy my age, has confessed to me that he has been having thoughts about other men. He was very upset and wants to be rid of these thoughts. Is there anything I can do for him?

Kimi
You weed such people out when they are so shameless as to disclose such things to you. This is what has happened in the OP’s case.
So, his wanting to be rid of such thought and attractions and asking a friend for help makes him a shameless sinner? I hope you never ask a friend for prayer or advise for a particular sinful habit or inclination… you’d have to advise them to drop you faster than a hot potato. :rolleyes:
It is improper to associate with people who continue to revel in their sins and disorders. If such people must disclose these things to someone, the Church has already provided the appropriate forum: the confessional. If they wish for a secular alternative, there is the therapist’s couch.
Again, the OP’s friend isn’t “reveling” in his homosexuality… he is upset and wants to be rid of these thoughts… how compassionate is it to drop someone who is trying to no longer sin. We’re all human, but it seems to me the OP’s friend recognizes his own potentially sinful behavior (same-sex attraction), unlike others who don’t seem to recognize the lack of charity is also very sinful.
The sad reality is that in “coming out” as this person has done to the OP, there can only be two possible motives: 1. seduction, although I concede this is unlikely since I am assuming they are opposite sexes, 2. recruitment into an ideology.
Again, from the OP, the young friend is upset with the thoughts and isn’t trying to “seduce” or “recruit” anyone. He is asking for help, and maybe doesn’t know anywhere else to get it. If he were looking for seduction or recruitment, wouldn’t he ask a friend that’s in the GBLT of America or some other “unabashed homosexuality is OK group” and not someone that goes to church with him? It seems, from the evidence that we have been given in the OP, that he is trying to do the right thing. I am glad that he has a friend like the OP who is also trying to do the right thing in helping him.

Ericka
 
So, his wanting to be rid of such thought and attractions and asking a friend for help makes him a shameless sinner? I hope you never ask a friend for prayer or advise for a particular sinful habit or inclination… you’d have to advise them to drop you faster than a hot potato. :rolleyes:

Again, the OP’s friend isn’t “reveling” in his homosexuality… he is upset and wants to be rid of these thoughts… how compassionate is it to drop someone who is trying to no longer sin. We’re all human, but it seems to me the OP’s friend recognizes his own potentially sinful behavior (same-sex attraction), unlike others who don’t seem to recognize the lack of charity is also very sinful.

Again, from the OP, the young friend is upset with the thoughts and isn’t trying to “seduce” or “recruit” anyone. He is asking for help, and maybe doesn’t know anywhere else to get it. If he were looking for seduction or recruitment, wouldn’t he ask a friend that’s in the GBLT of America or some other “unabashed homosexuality is OK group” and not someone that goes to church with him? It seems, from the evidence that we have been given in the OP, that he is trying to do the right thing. I am glad that he has a friend like the OP who is also trying to do the right thing in helping him.

Ericka
That hits the nail on the head. Great post.
👍
 
So, his wanting to be rid of such thought and attractions and asking a friend for help makes him a shameless sinner? I hope you never ask a friend for prayer or advise for a particular sinful habit or inclination… you’d have to advise them to drop you faster than a hot potato. :rolleyes:

Again, the OP’s friend isn’t “reveling” in his homosexuality… he is upset and wants to be rid of these thoughts… how compassionate is it to drop someone who is trying to no longer sin. We’re all human, but it seems to me the OP’s friend recognizes his own potentially sinful behavior (same-sex attraction), unlike others who don’t seem to recognize the lack of charity is also very sinful.

Again, from the OP, the young friend is upset with the thoughts and isn’t trying to “seduce” or “recruit” anyone. He is asking for help, and maybe doesn’t know anywhere else to get it. If he were looking for seduction or recruitment, wouldn’t he ask a friend that’s in the GBLT of America or some other “unabashed homosexuality is OK group” and not someone that goes to church with him? It seems, from the evidence that we have been given in the OP, that he is trying to do the right thing. I am glad that he has a friend like the OP who is also trying to do the right thing in helping him.

Ericka
I might remind you that according to Christ, even looking at a woman lustfully is an act of adultery. The OP’s “friend” has been nurturing such lustful thoughts for some time and therefore may as well have acted upon them carnally. Christ sees no difference and neither should we.

Asking a friend for prayer is one thing, but this is not what happened here. Instead, this friend chose to disclose his struggle to a friend in a manner that makes him little better than an exhibitionist. I may ask a friend for his prayers but I needn’t expose him to the specifics of my need for his prayers. I am content to restrict my need for advice to the forum that the Church has provided: the confessional.

If this friend is genuine in his desire to rid himself of these thoughts, than he ought to begin therapy immediately and make substantial progress in it. This is not an issue that either the layman or the amateur is typically prepared to engage. If the OP wishes to be a true friend, she will refer this wayward individual to those professionals who can help him and recognize that her own inexperience on this issue might undermine her friend’s road to recovery. Imitating Christ in this instance involves an honest assessment of what one’s own limits are.

Lastly, it is far from obvious that the friend in this case would go to any sort of gay-rights organization first in his “coming out” process. Indeed, that he is soliciting the “help” of his friends may be nothing more than an early attempt to solidify a base of support and acceptance with those whom he is already familiar with so that he may then progress to those GBLT sorts of groups.

All in all, there is far more potential for spiritual damage to both parties in the continued association between these individuals. Exercising prudence, the OP should submit to her friend a few references to people who posess the professional experience she lacks and then avoid contact with him.
 
Thanks for the correction on terminology, but my use was quite correct. Celibacy’s primary definition is one who abstains from sexual relations - that is standard English usage.

I still can’t quite get over your desire to eviscerate (I am using it here in a symbolic and not literal way) a young man who is struggling with SSA attraction by advising apparently a very close friend to cut him off. I agree that he is fragile, so what good can come of removing a person who can support him in a very good way. Since it seems that she is trying to imitate Christ, shouldn’t she support him and tell him the church’s true teaching? He may otherwise never hear it.
To redefine the celibate state as a mere negative reality perverts the good it is meant to be a sign of. The decision for celibacy is a positive and free choice made by men and women of sufficient competence to make such a decision. A man who is beset with persistent same-sex attractions simply does not possess the freedom to make any such choice. The celibate state is not meant to be a holding tank for the sexually dysfunctional. Such a conception is wholly disrespectful to those good men and women who, in religious life and other forms of consecrated virginity, point to the eschatological destiny of man. If you wish to understand things as the Church does, you will need to start using her terms the way she does. Abstinence from sexual activity and celibacy are simply not synonymous terms.

If the OP was a licensed therapist or had a few degrees in theology, we might then discuss the possibility that she was prepared to bring the truth of the Church’s teaching to this individual. Since she is not, any and all scenarios one might dream up about the OP becoming the springboard for this individual’s growth in the faith are nothing other than sugar-coated fantasies. The pride inherent in the attempt to engage an issue for which she is wholly unprepared stands a much greater chance of bringing both the OP and her friend to ruin.
 
I’ll just say that I pray I never have to ask you for support in a time of trouble. Your response just is not Christlike either in redefining the English language or to harshly cutting off those who are in trouble.
 
I’ll just say that I pray I never have to ask you for support in a time of trouble. Your response just is not Christlike either in redefining the English language or to harshly cutting off those who are in trouble.
Neither is the attempt to provide assistance in spite of one’s own ineptitude Christlike.
 
I asked two priests about this.

One said. Be careful

The other said. Walk with him

From my own person experience, walk with him but be very very careful. As heterosexuals, we initially think that they are the same in every way but sexual orientation. My experience has been that these friendships have been excruiatingly difficult. Maybe whatever causes people to have strong homosexual attraction affects them in other ways as well. These friendships are extremely necessary for the homosexual men who may be lonely and isolated, but extremely draining and difficult all the same. They may have no other sources of support other than you and be unwilling to find other sources of support. They may attack you for being intolerant simply for holding an orthodox Catholic position. They may be suicidal or your friend one day and against you the next. They may be extremely conscious of your feelings, as they interpret them, and make large and significant decisions based on small things that you have said. Be very very very careful. Pray earnestly for your friend. Divine Mercy Chaplet and Most Holy Rosary are key here. 👍

Think about attending the Courage conference yourself as an Encourager/Friend so that you can learn more from an authoritative and orthodox Catholic figure.
 
I asked two priests about this.

One said. Be careful

The other said. Walk with him

From my own person experience, walk with him but be very very careful. As heterosexuals, we initially think that they are the same in every way but sexual orientation. My experience has been that these friendships have been excruiatingly difficult. Maybe whatever causes people to have strong homosexual attraction affects them in other ways as well. These friendships are extremely necessary for the homosexual men who may be lonely and isolated, but extremely draining and difficult all the same. They may have no other sources of support other than you and be unwilling to find other sources of support. They may attack you for being intolerant simply for holding an orthodox Catholic position. They may be suicidal or your friend one day and against you the next. They may be extremely conscious of your feelings, as they interpret them, and make large and significant decisions based on small things that you have said. Be very very very careful. Pray earnestly for your friend. Divine Mercy Chaplet and Most Holy Rosary are key here. 👍

Think about attending the Courage conference yourself as an Encourager/Friend so that you can learn more from an authoritative and orthodox Catholic figure.
It bears pointing out that the advice to “walk with him” need not imply continued association. Simply because you cease to see this individual as a friend does not preclude you from saying such prayers which could provide him far more help than can an ill-informed “friendship”. If this person happens to feel lonely and isolated, it is important to recognize that such feelings are fantasies borne of his pathology and that attempting to address them may only enable such codependency and make it worse. Let this person develop his disinterested friendships exclusively with God and the saints, rather than any of us fallen individuals still in need of perfection.
 
I asked two priests about this.

One said. Be careful

The other said. Walk with him

From my own person experience, walk with him but be very very careful. As heterosexuals, we initially think that they are the same in every way but sexual orientation. My experience has been that these friendships have been excruiatingly difficult. Maybe whatever causes people to have strong homosexual attraction affects them in other ways as well. These friendships are extremely necessary for the homosexual men who may be lonely and isolated, but extremely draining and difficult all the same. They may have no other sources of support other than you and be unwilling to find other sources of support. They may attack you for being intolerant simply for holding an orthodox Catholic position. They may be suicidal or your friend one day and against you the next. They may be extremely conscious of your feelings, as they interpret them, and make large and significant decisions based on small things that you have said. Be very very very careful. Pray earnestly for your friend. Divine Mercy Chaplet and Most Holy Rosary are key here. 👍

Think about attending the Courage conference yourself as an Encourager/Friend so that you can learn more from an authoritative and orthodox Catholic figure.
But remember, the only two outcomes, according to eric, are Besides, you don’t want to be either Seduction or Recruitment.
 
If eric spoke for the Church or even summarized its teachings in this matter, I’d become a protestant tomorrow. HIs smugness and total lack of compassion, fortunately, has passed into the realm of parody, I, for one, cannot take him seriously.
 
If eric spoke for the Church or even summarized its teachings in this matter, I’d become a protestant tomorrow. HIs smugness and total lack of compassion, fortunately, has passed into the realm of parody, I, for one, cannot take him seriously.
Arclight, you and Eric represent different and important sides of the story. In fact, my priest has at times told me to stay away from people trapped in psychological problems at points in time in which I am very vulnerable myself. “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Sometimes it is necessary to admit that one is not capable of handling another’s problems and that God is a more powerful and loving figure than we will ever be.

In fact, in the Bible it says, “do not be unequally yoked.” I have at times cut off friendships where it appeared that I was not helping the other person. In fact, they justified their behavior and refused to set limits on it partially because of the thought that I didn’t take it that seriously. On the other hand, the friendship was extremely damaging/draining to me.

As for gay friends, sometimes they share their experiences with you in a request for help that one as Christian should try to fulfill. Other times they try to pressure you into sinful sexual activity.

Florida psychologist Dennis Todd/Amelia Island writes an article: Gay clubs should not be in our schools Non-homosexual students often come to him depressed because of a one-night homosexual stand and then have thoughts of kiling themselves.
fbnewsleader.com/articles/2009/02/05/opinion/00editavpttodd.txt

Homosexuals are not the only victims. Even in Greek culture, they have a painting The Rape of Ganymede of a male on male rape of a young adolescent boy that Zeus admired. Ancient greek culture had no prohibitions on homosexual behavior. It became the norm that pedastry would occur and egalitarian relationships were very few. Men would regularly sleep with the sons of their male colleagues. The recent scandal in the Catholic Church rarely involved non-adolescent boys. Without appropriate safeguards, a homosexual orientation can have negative impacts on others as well as on the homosexuals themselves, who have too often been victims of sex crimes as well - these early sexual assaults sometimes forming their lifelong identity.

Looking at the prison population or the military, we know that homosexual sex activity is something that easily spreads given lack of appropriate regulations.
 
If eric spoke for the Church or even summarized its teachings in this matter, I’d become a protestant tomorrow. HIs smugness and total lack of compassion, fortunately, has passed into the realm of parody, I, for one, cannot take him seriously.
It may serve you well to stop associating compassion with the saccharine-sweet verses found on your typical Hallmark greeting card. Authentic compassion expressed in this situation keeps in mind the same-sex attracted individual’s beatitude – full communion with God. This compassion does not come at the expense of one’s own beatitude.

The reality is that any difficulty that this same-sex attracted individual encounters in the present, owing to some unfulfilled desire for friendship is temporary in its very nature. The individual has a duty to bear that cross with patience in order to receive the eternity in which that desire is authentically sated. To attempt to make an end-run around the Cross by supplying a finite friendship to appease this individual’s need for an infinite intimacy may very well cause both of you to lose the eternity which genuinely satisfies.
 
I think that Eric’s views are just as legitimate as your own Arclight. …
I’m fairly certain my views are suspect, as I’ve been assured of such time and time again here.

Nevertheless, the OP is talking about a kid who – dig this – recognizes he needs help. Accusing him of having motives of “seduction” or “recruitment” coupled with a relentlessly hard line devoid of any compassion seems to me to be uncharitable, unChristian. I think its just a parody like the Monty Python Spanish Inquisition sketch.
 
It may serve you well to stop associating compassion with the saccharine-sweet verses found on your typical Hallmark greeting card. Authentic compassion expressed in this situation keeps in mind the same-sex attracted individual’s beatitude – full communion with God. This compassion does not come at the expense of one’s own beatitude.

The reality is that any difficulty that this same-sex attracted individual encounters in the present, owing to some unfulfilled desire for friendship is temporary in its very nature. The individual has a duty to bear that cross with patience in order to receive the eternity in which that desire is authentically sated. To attempt to make an end-run around the Cross by supplying a finite friendship to appease this individual’s need for an infinite intimacy may very well cause both of you to lose the eternity which genuinely satisfies.
Besides, who wants to be Recruited or Seduced? Which are, as you insist, the only options to explain the kid’s behavior.
 
Besides, who wants to be Recruited or Seduced? Which are, as you insist, the only options to explain the kid’s behavior.
One cannot allow one’s irrational sentiments to get in the way of a dispassionate cost-benefit analysis.
 
One cannot allow one’s irrational sentiments to get in the way of a dispassionate cost-benefit analysis.
You mean, you applied a cost/benefit analysis to the kid’s situation and determined it was either “seduction” or “recruitment”?

Did you use generally accepted accounting principles?
 
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