CHURCH TEACHING ON TRIAL
The recently published North American Final Document for the Continental Stage of the 2021–2024 Synod (NAFD) confirms suspicions that the discussions at the October 2023 Synod on Synodality will almost certainly center around the alleged failure of the Church to be inclusive, welcoming, and respectful. The supposedly aggrieved include well over half of the faithful: “women, young people, immigrants, racial or linguistic minorities, LGBTQ+ persons, people who are divorced and remarried without an annulment.” Not listed here are faithful Catholics, exiled from their parishes, who prefer to attend the Traditional Latin Mass. Not all grievances are created equal.
The NAFD takes for granted that there is a tension between being inclusive, welcoming, and hospitable and being faithful to Christ: “Alongside the desire to be a more inclusive and welcoming Church was the need to understand how to be more hospitable, while maintaining and being true to Church teaching.” The just-below-the-surface assumption here is that fidelity to the Church’s teaching needs to be re-imagined and re-worked so that various people will not feel that they are being excluded and rejected. Church teaching is put on trial. Rejection of that teaching is accorded pride of place.
What is going on here? Women who want to receive Holy Orders, people who are unhappy that their immoral sexual acts are categorized as being gravely sinful, divorced people who remarry outside the Church and want to receive Holy Communion—all of them claim that they are being unfairly treated. They claim that Church teaching is hurtful and un-Christian, and they will only feel fully welcomed and affirmed by the Church when their desires and actions are recognized as legitimate, and the Church changes her teaching. The NAFD considers all this to be up for discussion, which means that those pushing for doctrinal change are being treated as prophets needing to be heeded, and not as heretics needing to be rebuked.
On women:
[D]elegates also named women as a marginalized group in the Church. “We have come a long way, but we deplore the fact that women cannot invest themselves fully”. While clarity is still needed around exactly what a fully co-responsible Church looks like, delegates proposed the examination of a variety of aspects of Church life, including decision making roles, leadership, and ordination. Central in the discernment of these questions is the faithful acknowledgement of women’s baptismal dignity.
Women are not marginalized in the Church. Women who reject the Church’s teaching that only men can validly receive Holy Orders put themselves in a position of defiance and distance themselves from Christ and his Church.
On so-called sexual minorities:
As one participant explained, “we think we are welcoming, but we know that there are people who feel ‘outside’ the Church”. Another suggested that this is because “we get caught up in the minutiae of evaluating the worth of people on the margins”. “There is a need to differentiate between the importance of teaching and the need to welcome those into the Church, especially as it relates to our LGBTQ+ brothers and sisters”.
The Church’s unchanging and unchangeable teaching on the grave immorality of sodomy is in no way minutia. It is supremely important for the salvation of souls and cannot be abolished to placate those who reject it.
I must also note that the acronym “LGBTQ+” has no proper place in the Church’s discourse. Church teaching does not recognize homosexuals or bisexuals as a constitutive category of persons created by God that is distinct from the category of heterosexuals. Rather, some people misuse their God-given sexual and reproductive faculty by engaging in homosexual acts. And no one can change into a member of the opposite sex. That is impossible.
On divorced and remarried Catholics:
Some participants in the synodal process reported on the profound sense of suffering of those prevented from receiving the Eucharist. While there are a variety of reasons for this reality, perhaps preeminent among them is Catholics who are divorced and remarried without an annulment, and others whose objective situation in life contradicts the beliefs and teachings of the Church.
Is not this “profound sense of suffering” a grace-filled reaction of our conscience to sinful behavior, a blessing from God who calls sinners to repentance? Adulterous unions cannot be whitewashed without repudiating Christ’s crystal-clear teaching on the indissolubility of marriage. As for others whose way of life contradicts the Church’s teachings, their desire to be united to Christ in the Eucharist necessarily must include a rejection of their wayward way of life. Christ sets the conditions for being united to him, not us.
The NAFD also contains reflections by bishops who participated in the discussions. This observation is noteworthy: “The bishops also noted that the great majority of our people had little or no direct contact with the synodal process and are unsure of their role in it. Likewise, many are unsure of the discerning role of the local bishop and the college of bishops in union with the Pope as the process unfolds.”
After a year and a half of the synodal process, the recognition that most Catholics are not involved, and that many bishops do not know what their role is, should make all involved pause for reflection about this whole endeavor. The NAFD earlier reports the same concern: “As a participant at one of the virtual assemblies noted, ‘People don’t know what the Synod on Synodality is for. They don’t understand the purpose, couldn’t grasp what was trying to be achieved.’”
The synodal process is an exercise in “platforming” the grievances of selected “Catholic” interest groups that unapologetically reject the Church’s teaching. The claim that this out-in-the-open subversion is the work of the Holy Spirit speaking to the Church today is a gambit to insulate this revolution from criticism. What is happening is an attempted power grab by those who want to change the Catholic Church’s teaching according to their worldly views about power, sex, and anything else they decide is important. That this is happening is a scandal and a disaster. We must pray that God spare us from this calamity.
The Rev. Gerald E. Murray, J.C.D. is pastor of Holy Family Church in New York.
I have never seen a higher concentration of un-Christian bigotry and cant in so few words. Patronising, condescending, belittling crap.
ReplyDelete"Women are not marginalized in the Church. Women who reject the Church’s teaching that only men can validly receive Holy Orders put themselves in a position of defiance and distance themselves from Christ and his Church."
ReplyDeleteWell said!
GENE
Pompous, unchristian twattery. Who DO you think you are to write off half the human race like that?
Delete"I must also note that the acronym “LGBTQ+” has no proper place in the Church’s discourse. Church teaching does not recognize homosexuals or bisexuals as a constitutive category of persons created by God that is distinct from the category of heterosexuals. Rather, some people misuse their God-given sexual and reproductive faculty by engaging in homosexual acts. And no one can change into a member of the opposite sex. That is impossible."
ReplyDeleteWell said!
GENE
When are you lot going to twig that the Catholic Church is not God? Pompous wanker.
ReplyDelete" ... the acronym “LGBTQ+” has no proper place in the Church’s discourse. Church teaching does not recognize homosexuals or bisexuals as a constitutive category of persons..."
ReplyDeleteHear! Hear!
Or does ANYONE have the obligation to pay any attention to the LGBTQ+ - other than to condemn them>
GENE
Now let me make it clear that I don't mean we should condemn any individual persons within the so-called LGBTQ+.
DeleteWhat we should condemn is the claim that there is any such community. There are individuals who practice all sorts of sexual perversions but that does not make for a community.
GENE
And you accuse me of losing it! And only a few weeks ago you were smarming away about what a “fine man” Nick Chamberlain is. You two faced arsehole.
DeleteHats off to Rev. Gerald E. Murray. This article really socks it to the Gay Lobby and fellow travellers. If only more of the clergy - both Catholic and Anglican - had the guts to stand up for the faith like this.
ReplyDeleteGENE
Well in the meantime we have your example of the Catholic faith in action to follow - lying, plagiarism, spite, dirty mindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy and utter, whole hearted nastiness. Not to mention pretentiousness - tell us again when “Granny Vincent lost his marbles in Wetherspoons” is coming out?
ReplyDeleteOoh! Matron!
ReplyDeletePathetic.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things which would make giving you a good kicking a pleasure, Gene, is the way in which you never enter into actual discussion on this matters. All you ever do is reiterate the Vatican orthodoxy which, as we both know, is honoured as much in the breach as in the observances by thousands of Catholics - including you - who nevertheless frequent the altar with an easy mind. Your own use of artificial contraception in your marriage [at least until your drunkenness, halitosis, crude pawings and ejaculatio praecox proved to be equally effective contraception when your wife ejected you from the marital bed] is a case in point.
ReplyDeleteA month ago you wrote this: "(The heretics) are surely clever enough to know that, officially detached, they would sink into the abyss of uninteresting insignificance, whereas this way, (by staying) they, of course, go on and on playing a splendid sensational role and yet, at the same time, do what suits them." In other words outside the Church they know they would be nothing more than snarling nobodies. GENE
To this post I wrote the following reasoned reply:
"This would only hold true if the people whom you call heretics were secretive or underhand in proclaiming their beliefs about such matters as Christian attitudes to sexuality. They are not. Nor do they argue for a total change in doctrine, but rather for greater inclusiveness such as is proposed by St Paul in Galatians 3:28. He was proposing the inclusion of the greatest disparities he could imagine: Jews, Greeks, men, women, slaves, free men - who are all one in Christ Jesus. That is why we stay in the church - to enable its ministry to become available to all who are willing to receive it, irrespective of any of their differences, be these political, emotional, social, intellectual or sexual. I worship each week alongside people who think that homosexuality is a sin, or a sickness to be cured. They recite the same creed that I do and reconcile their beliefs about sexuality with that creed, as I do, and accept my right to a different belief from theirs in the acceptance of that creed - as I accept their right to believe differently. The “snarling nobodies” you speak of are the narrow minded bigots who are unable to accept that there are many ways to live a Christian life other than the one they wish to impose on everyone else. They snarl because they have to bully others to think as they do, as they cannot make a valid intellectual case based on Christ’s teaching for their bigotry. And they are nobodies because they lack humility in believing that theirs is the only way to believe. And their unhealthy obsession with the sexuality of others is probably rooted in uncertainty about their own."
Why have you not attempted to refute this?
Is it because you can't?
Ball in your court, Gene.
"That is why we stay in the church - to enable its ministry to become available to all who are willing to receive it, irrespective of any of their differences, be these political, emotional, social, intellectual or sexual."
ReplyDeleteNot so. You stay in the Church because outside it you are nobodies. Heretics know they should go - but they don't have the bottle to go it alone.
GENE
As I suspected: you cannot argue intelligently with the points I made so all you can do is dismiss them. You poor sad sod.
DeleteBy the way Detterling, yesterday morning (Friday) myself, Tony of the Big Saloon, Mary Winterbourne and Duckie Duckworth (on Zoom) had a meeting in Harris & Hoole in which we discussed your rapidly disappearing intellectual abilities. I shall be writing up an account of how our discussion went when I get a moment.
ReplyDeleteGENE
Ah, give it up, why don't you? All this means is that in a day or two you will post some laboured and purely fictional crap as spurious as the Turin shroud.
Delete"That is why we stay in the church - to enable its ministry to become available to all who are willing to receive it, irrespective of any of their differences, be these political, emotional, social, intellectual or sexual."
ReplyDeleteNot so. You stay in the Church because outside it you are nobodies. Heretics know they should go - but they don't have the bottle to go it alone.
I think of all the qualities that I despise in you, Gene, the one I despise the most is the one embodied in that paragraph.
You simply cannot allow that anyone can disagree with you on worked out, evidenced and conscientiously reasoned grounds. Nor do you have the intellectual capacity to mount a reasoned argument against such a point of view.
So you invent insulting, reductionist and ad hominem "arguments"; accusing people of losing their marbles, of being "heretics", and of being "nobodies" who strike "heretical" attitudes in order to attract attention.
As well as being pathetically feeble, it is also fundamentally dishonest, especially coming from a man who headlines his blog as being an "Educator, Novelist, Humanitarian and Humorist".
Given that you retired from teaching eight years ago, have never published a line of your own writing, let alone a novel, have the humanitarian instincts of Donald Trump, and have a sense of humour about as funny as an attack of diarrhoea, who is the nobody frantically bigging himself up to attract attention if it isn't you?
Gene Vincent, the floating turd that won't flush.