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StCsDavid
Guest
The Archdiocese of Portland is making the following workshop available. If you were a priest or Catholic educator, and your pastor asked you to attend, would you be obedient?
Click this link to see a description of the seminar.
Here is the bio on the speaker.
Information on speaker…
From the “Jewish Weekly News”…
…According to the Rev. Jim Schexnayder of Catholic Charities of the East Bay, the Catholic Church is going through a transition and easing up on its anti-gay position, although the progress is slow.
“We are working with Catholic parishes to be more welcoming of gays and lesbians and their families,” he said. Teachers receive in-service sensitivity training, and Catholic high schools have gay-straight alliances and hold discussions on homosexuality. But a fundamental problem for the church still exists: "It’s OK to be gay, but to act on it is a sin."
The Catholic Church teaches that the only acceptable relationship is heterosexual, monogamous and non-contraceptive, according to Schexnayder.
“We have no tradition around same-sex marriages or other ceremonies,” he said. To navigate conflicts between church teachings and individual practices, Schexnayder talks to youths about sex in terms of spirituality and commitment rather than the specifics of a relationship.
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"The church is often in trouble because it operates as if everything is simple and clearly defined," he added.
Click this link to see a description of the seminar.
Here is the bio on the speaker.
Information on speaker…
From the “Jewish Weekly News”…
…According to the Rev. Jim Schexnayder of Catholic Charities of the East Bay, the Catholic Church is going through a transition and easing up on its anti-gay position, although the progress is slow.
“We are working with Catholic parishes to be more welcoming of gays and lesbians and their families,” he said. Teachers receive in-service sensitivity training, and Catholic high schools have gay-straight alliances and hold discussions on homosexuality. But a fundamental problem for the church still exists: "It’s OK to be gay, but to act on it is a sin."
The Catholic Church teaches that the only acceptable relationship is heterosexual, monogamous and non-contraceptive, according to Schexnayder.
“We have no tradition around same-sex marriages or other ceremonies,” he said. To navigate conflicts between church teachings and individual practices, Schexnayder talks to youths about sex in terms of spirituality and commitment rather than the specifics of a relationship.
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"The church is often in trouble because it operates as if everything is simple and clearly defined," he added.