Sex, Gender and the Sacred

The road to the sacred runs through the carnal. Not only the Bible but Life itself reveals that sexuality is more spiritual than biological. The erotic is God's poetry of love calling us out of ourselves to awareness of beauty and to an expansive creativity and giving of ourselves. We go to God through one another, via loving, not apart from one another. --Paschal.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

A Catholic Moment of Truth, opinion.

(http://www.boston.com/news/globe/)
JAMES CARROLL
A Catholic moment of truth
By James Carroll | October 3, 2005

ROME
TO BE A Roman Catholic in Rome this week is to remember, among so much else, the way in which leaders of this church have squandered their moral authority in recent years.

In 1968, it was the disastrous anti-birth control encyclical ''Humanae
Vitae," which opened a gulf between the hierarchy and the laity and which lately
has the church on the wrong side of the global fight against HIV/AIDS. The
coterie of American bishops chosen by Pope John Paul II failed their greatest
test by protecting abusive priests instead of the children who were their
victims. Now, church authority stands on the edge of yet another act of moral
self-mutilation with a coming ''instruction" banning homosexuals from seminaries.
Such a policy threatens to turn an imminent program of ''apostolic
visitations" of US seminaries, which overtly targets ''heresy," into a full blown
sexual witch hunt.
Over the last couple of weeks, I have had direct and indirect contact with
well-connected Catholics here -- hardly a hotbed of liberalism -- and the
coming instruction is regarded as a catastrophe in the making. With boards of
Vatican-appointed investigators poised to swoop down on American schools in
which new priests are trained, interrogations of candidates and loyalty tests for
teachers already betray a nostalgia for the bygone era of thought-control
and snitching. A formally licensed obsession with homosexuality will push the
investigation into a realm, as one senior priest put it to me, more of Joseph
Stalin than Jesus Christ.
Instead of asking hard questions about the root causes of the priestly sex
abuse scandal -- facing problems of the clerical culture itself, including
celibacy, authoritarianism, discrimination against women, the immaturity of
church teachings on sexuality -- Rome is preparing to scapegoat homosexuals. The
idea is astoundingly foolish, based on fantasies of sexual deviance.
Supposedly aimed at seminarians, the new discipline is an attack on the priesthood
itself, especially on those openly gay men who have proven themselves as
faithful servants of the church. It is an invitation for such men to return to the
closet, a retreat into psychological imprisonment. Such demonizing of
homosexuals is profoundly unjust.
But the policy, combined with the investigation's threat against all
nonconformity, infantilizes every present or would-be member of the American
Catholic clergy. During the abuse crisis, the ineptness of bishops brought stern
challenges from the middle ranks of clergy. Are bishops now attempting, with
this ruthless discipline, to eliminate the capacity for independent moral
thought that made those challenges not only possible but necessary?
From Boston, the epicenter of the crisis, comes the chilling news that one of
the brave priests who saved the church's soul by calling for Cardinal
Bernard Law's resignation, the Rev. Walter Cuenin, has been unjustly fired from his
position as pastor at Our Lady, Help of Christians in Newton. Cuenin is an
exemplary priest. That he has been slandered by the archdiocese in the process
of his removal is a mortal betrayal. There are reports that many of the
other pastors who challenged Law have been shunted aside as well.
Cardinal Law, the icon of failure, is ensconced in a prestigious position
here in Rome. He is an icon of denial, too. Instead of a reformation of all that
made the sex abuse crisis possible, the hierarchy is circling its wagons.
Good people are being sacrificed. Cruelty as a mode of church governance is
back. Sexual imperialism is reasserted as a method of control. The culture of
dishonesty lives.
Will it work? The people I talk to here think not. There are gay bishops in
the church, some of whom will feel forced to support the new scapegoating.
What happens when, in return for their hypocrisy, they are ''outed"?
Theologians, whose work of rational inquiry requires a free play of the mind, will
reject the strictures of a heresy hunt. Gay priests will refuse to be closeted
again, and their straight brothers will not participate in the denigration.
Religious orders will defend their members. When the grand inquisitors arrive at
seminaries, candidates for the priesthood who have any self-respect will
simply walk away. The Catholic people will not allow their good priests to be
insulted further.
Can the church be spared this disaster? As of now, the power to avert it
rests with one man. The new policy has not been formally promulgated. Pope
Benedict XVI could call it off. Whether that is likely to occur is not the point.
The world has been awaiting the revelation of his capacity for moral
leadership. It is here.

James Carroll's column appears regularly in the Globe.
© Copyright 2005 Globe Newspaper Company.

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