Cardinal Robert Sarah, prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, has said that the Church cannot back down on its teaching on chastity when dealing with the gay community.
In an article for the Wall Street Journal, the cardinal criticised the Jesuit Fr James Martin’s book Building a Bridge, which calls for “dialogue” with the LGBT community while accusing Church figures of showing double standards on the issue of chastity.
Cardinal Sarah described Fr Martin as “one of the most outspoken critics of the Church’s message with regard to sexuality”, and argued that while Fr Martin is right to say there should be no double standards regarding the call to chastity, members of the LGBT community must be made aware of the fullness of Church teaching.
Cardinal Sarah said that while this may seem a high standard, especially in the modern world, it would be “contrary to the wisdom and goodness of Christ to require something that cannot be achieved”. He added: “As a mother, the Church seeks to protect her children from the harm of sin, as an expression of her pastoral charity.”
Fr Martin responded by telling America magazine, of which he is editor-at-large, that the cardinal “misses a few important points”, including “the immense suffering that LGBT Catholics have felt at the hands of their Church”.
“Building a Bridge is not a book of moral theology nor a book on the sexual morality of LGBT people,” Fr Martin said. It is an invitation to dialogue and to prayer, and I’m sure that Cardinal Sarah would agree on the importance of both.”
In his article, the cardinal paid tribute to Catholics who experience same-sex attraction but strive to live according to Church teaching. He gave the example of Daniel Mattson, who describes himself as “same-sex attracted, and whose recent book Why I Don’t Call Myself Gay, contains a foreword written by Cardinal Sarah.
“These men and women testify to the power of grace, the nobility and resilience of the human heart, and the truth of the Church’s teaching on homosexuality,” the cardinal wrote.
Sisters lose case against pipeline
The adorers of the Blood of Christ and other landowners in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, have lost their court case to keep a natural gas pipeline from being built on their property.
The ruling discounted the freedom of religion argument posed by the order. The Sisters had not shown how the building of the pipeline would impede their religious practice, it said.
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