O
Other_Eric
Guest
Do you suppose that the Magisterium considers itself competent to define as true or false the origin of any disease of the mind? Perhaps, since you seem to believe that the Magisterium operates as an adjunct to the psychological community, you could tell me what the official Church teaching on the origins of schizophrenia or bi-polar disorder is. If you believe that Christ has given the Church authority beyond faith and morals, allowing her to make scientific pronouncements, I would have to ask you if you believe that the Church’s authority has any limits whatsoever.Of course I recognize their authority. Nothing you quoted contradicts anything I have posted, yet you say I have a “poverty of intellect.” The most recent document (2006) I quoted was from the USCCB, which clearly states that “homosexual inclination is not itself a sin.”
usccb.org/dpp/Ministry.pdf You even mention that the inclination is not a sin in post #783.
You mentioned that “in the thirteen years since the Catechism has been released, science has made great progess in identifying and treating the condition of same-sex attractions.” All of the documents you provided (especially the Scripture) were before the last Catechism was written. Are you saying the Catechism contradicts Sacred Scripture? If something changed in the Magisterial teaching regarding the psychological genesis of homosexual inclinations, you should provide that information rather than insulting me.
We all agree that homosexual acts and lust are sins, I’m not sure what the point is of trying to prove that the inclination itself is a sin. The Church has purposely separated the two issues and given pastoral advice on how to work with those who are struggling with SSA. I think it is best to follow the Church’s lead on this subject.
For my part, I am quite comfortable in restricting the Church’s authority to matters of faith and morals. I do not expect that the Pope will issue an encyclical defining the right way to eat a Reeses Peanut Butter Cup. Therefore, that the Catechism mentions in passing the state of the best evidence from psychology at the time does not imply that the Church has brought her infallibility to bear on the etiology of same-sex attractions. Indeed, even if tomorrow science discovers the “gay gene” and determines that the origin of same-sex attractions has nothing to do with psychology, the moral teaching of the Church would remain unaffected.
The psychological origin of same-sex attractions seems to have been definitively established by individuals including Soccarides, Nicholosi, Payne and van den Aardweg. You will note that nearly every apologetical answer from the staff on these forums refers questioners to NARTH and the data that organization has collected. It seems that should you wish to find any information or studies on the origins of same-sex attractions that has the implicit endorsement of Catholic Answers staff, that you can more than satisfy your appetite by going to www.narth.com.
Since you acknowledge that I have held that the inclination is not itself a sin, I wonder why it is that you continue to hold that I am arguing otherwise. I will say it again: same-sex attractions are not a sin, they are the effect of sin. It is like a young girl with her wrists slashed open. The wounds are not themselves sinful, they are the effect of the sinful despair that caused the girl to lacerate herself.
Like the slashed wrists having their ultimate origin in despair, Sacred Scripture tells us that same-sex attractions have their origin in idolatry. Quibbling over the psychological origin of same-sex attractions would be like arguing over the exact pathology that moved our hypothetical girl to attempt suicide. It is wholly irrelevant since the thing that should be of primary concern is the welfare of the individual. In the case of the suicidal girl, she needs to be rid of the temptations that move her to want to end her life. Similarly, in the case of a man with same-sex attractions, he needs to be rid of the temptations that cause him to seek sexual contact with a member of his own gender.
The moral issue involved is not whether an individual has same-sex attractions. Rather, the issue is, once they are determined to be present, whether the individual will rid him or herself of them. It is my position that there is absolutely no justification for failing to do what is necessary in that regard. Indeed, public health and safety, to say nothing of the individual’s hope of salvation are all involved. It is our charitable duty to ensure that every individual with same-sex attractions understands this.