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Dakota_Roberts
Guest
Depending on the child a sound birching might do him some good.Yes, from the perspective of the parent of one of the children doing the excluding. I would appreciate receiving advice from your perspective, as a parent of a child that has been excluded. Thank you very much for replying.
In French it is either fait de complete or fait accompli, make up your mind.If, as you say this child is Catholic, what in the world is this kid going to a GLBT support group for? Identifying as a homosexual certainly is a dilema. Why not just identify as a Catholic?
Here you are saying that being gay is what this person is as a fai de complete…or he is born that way=Essentialism.
You cannot expect a conversation about anything if you corral the conversation about what it is you believe things to be or what you want things to mean.
No such thing as being born gay and to identify as gay in this context handcuffs the discussion.
Pandora’s Box is open, no use trying to close it.Coptic: I do understand your point about the genesis of homosexuality, and I understand how it is reflective of the definition of homosexuality from the CCC 2357. I am not arguing that nor calling that part of the catechism into question
DexUk: You have described the predicament precisely.
Though it would be simpler if the young man chose not to identify himself as homosexual, he chooses to do so and sees this as directly relevant to the portions of the catechism as presented in my OP.
Indeed, you could beat a lefty into exclusively using their right hand, but it doesn’t mean it is a good idea..
No it is not. It is not too late. I pointed out how I would handle this with my child. If this child trusted me and I caused this child to trust me and in time understood that you can’t trust everyone…it is possible…just maybe, since I have children and perhaps you do not…
children can say things one day and the next day say another…if someone said to this kid…hey you like boys…he could easily be taught to say…“hey that was yesterday…let us just play chess”…and move on…
Nothing is set in stone in childhood, and you would know that if you were a parent, and you would know that if you had children…
and I would tell this kid…you can trust your parents and me…and if someone gives you a hard time let me know and I will work with you to resolve it…I have done that…I am a parent…
it is never too late…
In the real world people don’t don’t make gay into their whole identity and in some ways “same sex attraction” is so reductionist as to be offensive.jamesjoseph72,
I like the way I am hearing many faithful Catholics refer to people bearing this cross as “having same-sex attraction” and not as “being gay.” I think it frames the problem more correctly as a burden rather than as an identity (as it has already been pointed out, “Male and female He created them…”).
Also, there is a FABULOUS article in the current (May-June 2013) Catholic Answers Magazine concerning this topic that you NEED to read. The article could possibly be used in some way to properly catechize the youth and their parents at your parish. It might also be a source of encouragement for the afflicted young man.
It’s called “The Nature of Man” by Daniel Mattson. I was hoping to find it online and link it for you, but I am having no luck with that.