A
aspirant
Guest
As someone has already pointed out, any Catholic in a state of grace who has made first communion may receive the Eucharist. I would also add that the Church obliges us to do so at least once a year, and I would heartily recommend frequent communion to any gay Catholic striving to live a chaste life.Openly gay people certainly arent allowed to receive the Eucharist.
The USCCB stressed this in the pastoral message “Always Our Children”:
"USCCB:
Similarly:Christ summons all his followers—whether they are married or living a single celibate life—to a higher standard of loving. This includes not only fidelity, forgiveness, hope, perseverance, and sacrifice, but also chastity, which is expressed in modesty and self-control. **The chaste life is possible, though not always easy, for it involves a continual effort to turn toward God and away from sin, especially with the strength of the sacraments of penance and Eucharist. ** Indeed God expects everyone to strive for the perfection of love, but to achieve it gradually through stages of moral growth (cf. John Paul II, On the Family, 1981, no. 34). To keep our feet on the path of conversion, God’s grace is available to and sufficient for everyone open to receiving it.
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith:
An authentic pastoral programme will assist homosexual persons at all levels of the spiritual life: through the sacraments, and in particular through the frequent and sincere use of the sacrament of Reconciliation, through prayer, witness, counsel and individual care. In such a way, the entire Christian community can come to recognize its own call to assist its brothers and sisters, without deluding them or isolating them.
There is nothing wrong with someone having a gay orientation and trying to live a chaste life while attending a Catholic school. Gay teens can even support each other in following Church teaching.
I once attended the prom with a group of friends in this way, myself.There are always groups of friends at dances who didn’t bring dates but still wanted to go for the social aspect or to get professional photos taken with their friends.
Yes, there is. I’ve known more than one homosexual person who was, for a time, “closeted,” i.e. not publicly acknowledging his or her sexual orientation. “Coming out of the closet” was, for these people, often a gradual process: it began with telling trusted confidants on an individual basis, such as a confessor, family members, and friends. Over time, it became more and more broadly known. Now they are generally open about it.Dakota, there is no closet.
No, that’s not what it means.Being openly gay means living the lifestyle of a gay person which signifies living in sin.