KJW5551:
no offense, but what would you say about the problems in our seminaries?
So, I would say that it’s important to distinguish between “homosexual tendencies” and “homosexual activity” and “desire to have sex with minors.” Each of these is distinct from the others. Therefore, we have to ask three distinct questions regarding “problems in our seminaries”. In fact, we have to ask not only about
seminaries, but prevailing attitudes in society and ways of addressing each of these questions.
With respect to “homosexual tendencies”, we see an interesting dynamic. Prior to the 1960s-70s, I’d assert, there was
no discussion of these questions in “polite society.” This is just something that wasn’t discussed. With respect to Church teaching, “tendencies” weren’t part of the question; “sinful behavior” was. So, the situation in the seminaries is a topic that would take a lot of time to unpack. We’d have to talk about affective maturity, the development of healthy sexualities in the context of chaste celibacy, existing dynamics in seminaries and “submarine cultures”, and many other issues. Let’s just say that the notion of addressing “homosexual tendencies” in healthy ways wasn’t
then what it is
today.
What about “homosexual activity”, then? Well, I’d still say that we were a closeted society, both in the culture at large and in seminaries in particular. Heck… we all went nuts in the 80’s when Billy Crystal played a gay man in the sitcom ‘Soap’ – do you think there was a national discussion of what it meant for men to act on homosexual tendencies back then? Of course not! But, by then, we
had gone through the “sexual revolution”, which led to widespread changes in the way we reacted to sexual activity outside of marriage. From what I’ve read, there
were ‘underground’ communities of homosexuals in seminaries. (Even into the 1980s, ordination was a ‘respectable’ way for a man to be part of polite society without being married. But, that put his formative years in an environment with other closeted seminarians.
Not. Healthy. Formation.)
The literature is rife with anecdotes of ‘hotbeds’ of homosexual activity in the seminary, through the 90s. The Church, I would claim, has already addressed this dynamic, in its statements asserting that men with “deep-seated homosexual tendencies” should not be admitted to seminary. It is well on the way to isolating and eliminating these environments in seminary (at least in the U.S. (?)).
Continued…