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The Christian struggle with homosexuality

Martin Reynolds

Published 16 October 2007

The Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement's Martin Reynolds on a TV sting to 'out' a prominent Vatican priest

The outing of Vatican highflier Monsignor Tommaso Stenico in a secretly filmed TV sting where he tells a young man he saw nothing sinful in having gay sex and then asks the young man if he “likes” him ... offers a real insight into the struggle the Roman Catholic Church is having in its home country over homosexuality.

Not so long ago the idea of exposing a Catholic priest’s peccadilloes would have been an anathema to most Italian media outlets. The fact that the Vatican has its fair share of gay priests, bishops, Cardinals and Popes was universally known and privately acknowledged but rarely if ever reported there.

This cosy relationship fractured when countries began introducing legislation recognising the civil rights of homosexuals and giving their partnerships the status of family. The Vatican has been a violent opponent of this process and opposed Civil Partnerships and gay marriage across the world and lately in Italy where the conflict between Church and liberal reformers has been heated.

An attempt earlier this year to bring civil partnerships to Italy foundered in part due to the massive lobbying from the Vatican and attitudes in Italian society hardened on both sides. Fr Tommaso is just the latest victim in this battle and he will not be the last.

The issue of homosexuality has taken an unexpected leap in relative importance among Christians of all shades in recent years. A matter seen in the past to be of minor ethical “third order” importance – now seems to be for many Christians a “first order truth” demanding absolute obedience.

The Anglican family of Churches is tottering on its foundations over the place of lesbian and gay people in its hierarchy, divided between those who see homosexuality as an acceptable deviation and no bar to office and those who privately might still enjoy a bonfire or two with gay people as both passive and active participants.

For let’s be clear gay Christians have not just been the fuel for these bonfires. Homosexual priests, bishops, cardinals and Popes have been amongst the most enthusiastic to set the fires and throw on the victims as an attempt both to disguise and deny their own sexuality. Fr Tommaso’s defence that he met the young gay man "to better understand this mysterious and faraway world which, by the fault of a few people — among them some priests — is doing so much harm to the Church” may be a painful reminder to all of us of this.

People of the same gender having sex together were certainly something some Biblical writers were uncomfortable with. There are a few passages that clearly see that type of sex as abominable, yet scholars are divided as to whether these verses can apply when we understand human sexuality so differently today.

We no longer put insolent children to death, nor execute women who wear trousers – we lend and borrow money, deplore slavery and embrace women’s equality while recognising that the Bible is not diminished by a faith that witnesses to the spirit rather than the letter of its teaching.

Many Roman Catholics do not accept the teaching of their Church on homosexuality – the day will come when their voice will be heard and justice, reason and good sense will prevail and God’s Church will come closer to the truth it claims to guard.

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5 comments from readers

post888
16 October 2007 at 17:37

I like the article, but please proofread next time. You make a lot of great points, but if your spelling and grammar look like that of a third grader, your point is less likely to make an impression.

I'm a GLBT rights activist- I'm bi myself, so I appreciate your work. Just next time, please use the spell check.

Admin
16 October 2007 at 17:58

Hi Post888 would you mind pointing out the errors you refer to?

Thanks,

Ben Davies

Editor, newstatesman.com

Cybertiger
17 October 2007 at 21:08

The Catholic Church purports to be a force for good in the world: the reality, however, is different. With celibacy, condoms and its absurd stance on homosexuality, the Church is simply anti-human. In my humble opinion, there are too many people on this planet, and far too many Americans: too many people, of course, breeds violence in perpetuity. The world needs more condoms, voluntary celibacy and homosexuals aplenty – and many, many fewer Americans – as an antidote to violence, collateral, perpetual, or otherwise. The world needs more Catholics like a hole in the head.


22 October 2007 at 19:54

Re. Cybertiger's comment, you can say reasonably that you disagree with some of the practical outworkings of the Catholic faith, without saying that Catholics are anti-human or that there are too many Americans in the world. Such comments are as intolerant and uneducated as the ones you want to attack.

Cybertiger
24 October 2007 at 14:17

"Such comments are as intolerant and uneducated as the ones you want to attack."

Precisely! May I thank the anonymous commentator for their perspicacious comment.

However, I remain a devoutly catholic skeptic who faithfully believes that the world's problems are due to too many people, particularly Americans. And I have always regarded myself as a liberal secular fundamentalist, violently intolerant of hypocrisy, double standards and fundamentally faithful religionists of any persuasion - but particularly Catholics.

PS. I understand the current Pope is considered an enlightened individual, heading a well educated Catholic elite: shame about the Americans.

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About the writer

The Revd Martin Reynolds is director of communications for the Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement, originally trained as a journalist he has for 30 years been a priest of the Church in Wales. He lives in Newport with his civil partner Chris and their son Andrew and his mother Jane. Chris and Martin have been together for 26 years and are about to adopt two more children.

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