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Bubba_Switzler
Guest
In a 9,400-word essay published by Commonweal and funded by a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation (“The Things We Share”), Joseph Bottum attempts to make a “Catholic” case for same-sex marriage. It’s a daring — not to say doomed — enterprise, and a practicing Catholic pundit facing a challenge like that ought to write with swagger enough to create momentum, seeing as how little else can power the argument. Yet Bottum writes with diffidence that he hopes the rest of us will mistake for nuance. Head and heart both conspire against the case he is trying to make: On the one hand, Bottum rightly notes that Lumen Fidei, the new encyclical letter, “grants the faithful Catholic little room to maneuver on same-sex marriage,” despite the fact that its message is focused elsewhere (and note the implications of his choice: ought we to be thinking in terms of “maneuver” rather than “understanding” or “acceptance”?). On the other hand, Bottum grieves the loss of an amicable relationship with a musician he knows who grew “increasingly angry at first at the Catholic Church for its opposition to state-sanctioned same-sex marriage and then at Catholics themselves for belonging to such a church.”
spectator.org/archives/2013/08/29/preemptive-surrender-to-same-sSplitting the difference between Catholic teaching and American culture is a dicey enough proposition when you start from a solid premise, but Bottum is hobbled from the outset by an instinct for preemptive surrender. Questions about the legality of same-sex marriage are moot, he writes, because 13 states have already made them so by approving that arrangement, and “there is no coherent jurisprudential argument against it.” When the U.S. Supreme Court had a chance to articulate something worthwhile, it chose to punt instead. As a result, Bottum contends, arguments about same-sex marriage, if we insist on still having them, must be made on other-than-legal grounds.
commonwealmagazine.org/things-we-share