I’m sure psychological factors must come into play at some point, but no one I know says they deliberately chose gender dysphoria
I’m not really sure the reason for the “but” there. Many aspects of our psychology are not chosen, and that includes most psychological problems. Even nurtured problems are often outside our control.
Instead of simply helping and embracing a suffering community, the Church labels them as “disordered.”
If I may offer an alternative perspective:
While the Church does declare a lot within the realm of gender and sexuality as disordered, focusing exclusively on that causes you to miss most of what the Church has to say. Most of what it has to say exemplifies the beauty of what it is calling people to. Just as each individual is an image-bearer of God, so too is marriage an image-bearing union of God.
First, it bears the image of the Trinity, of two person’s coming together in love to become one and that love-induced union bearing another image-bearer of God. That is like how Father and Son are so united in love that it causes the Holy Spirit to proceed.
Second, it mirrors Christ and His Church. The two, in love, come together and help bring life into the world. Scripturally, the marriage union is often framed in terms of Christ (male) and Church (female), both of which are absolutely wonderful entities to represent!
When you consider all the Church says about God, Church, life, and love and come to realize that
all of that is captured in marriage, then it makes marriage too beautiful to adequately describe on this forum in detail. A participation in that beauty is what the Church calls us to.
But of course, we often want what is imperfect. Lust is by far the most common, but some of us desire to wallow in other tarnished reflections. I, for one, struggle in my role as reflecting Christ and, left to myself, would rather destroy any chance of having this union, all for pleasing lesser desires. That’s why the Church warns us of what is disordered. It wants us to participate in the greater beauty, to live out accurately reflecting God or accurately reflecting Christ and Church.
When we focus on the beauty, recognize the beauty, and desire the beautiful, the Church’s teaching becomes less a condemnation and more a call for striving. Do many condemn? Sure, but officially, the Church is calling us to strive for something greater.
Not every person on this planet was meant to have children.
Of all organizations in the world, I think the Catholic Church is among the most aware of that.
They don’t stigmatize people with cerebral palsy, Down’s syndrome, etc., and those are just as much a disorder
Just to be clear: The Church doesn’t call
people disordered. It calls
desires and
conditions disordered. For instance, I’m not disordered, but my gender dysphoria is a disordered desire. Even if I act on that disordered desire, I am not, as a human, disordered.