Posted on 04/07/2014 8:02:36 PM PDT by Morgana
CHARLOTTE, NC, April 7, 2014 (LifeSiteNews.com) The bishop of Charlotte is backing a Dominican nun who has been at the center of a fiery controversy since last month when she gave a speech promoting Catholic teaching on sexuality to students at Charlotte Catholic High School.
After a public meeting with diocesan and school officials turned ugly, with parents and students alike shouting at administrators over what they perceived as hateful remarks criticizing homosexual behavior, divorce and extra-marital sex, a spokesman for the diocese told LifeSiteNews that the nun in question, Sr. Jane Dominic Laurel, did nothing wrong and will be welcome to speak on the issue again if she chooses. Sr. Jane Dominic Laurel
Nothing in Sisters talk opposed Church teaching, Diocese of Charlotte Communications Director David Hains told LifeSiteNews in an email. Sister would be welcomed to speak in the diocese in the future.
Hains said Bishop Peter Jugis is expected to make further public comment on the situation soon.
Sr. Laurels critics have complained about a section of her talk in which she discussed scientific findings related to the causes of homosexuality. According to the Charlotte Observer, she was accused of using suspect anecdotes, antiquated data and broad generalizations to demonize gays and lesbians as well as divorced and single parents.
But one Catholic scientist says he recently heard the sister give the exact same speech she delivered to the students, and in his opinion, there is nothing in it to which a practicing Catholic could possibly object.
I was in attendance at the same presentation when given on Long Island, NY a few months ago, Dr. Gerard Nadal told LifeSiteNews. In that meeting, Sister Jane gave medical and scientific data that came from reputable sources and were presented as examples of the consequences for human behavior that contravenes the moral magisterium of the Church. As a Ph.D. in medical science, and as a Catholic schooled extensively in my faith, I saw no contradictions, but rather a seamless presentation.
Still, in light of all the controversy, Aquinas College announced in a press release Friday that Sr. Laurel has asked to take a sabbatical from her teaching and speaking duties for an indefinite amount of time.
After the sisters speech at a school assembly last month, students at the school launched an internet petition drive demanding an apology from everyone involved with arranging the speech, which quickly garnered thousands of signatures. Some parents also initiated a letter-writing campaign to the schools chaplain, the bishop and even the Vatican, to complain.
Last week, school and diocesan officials held a public meeting to address the issue. The meeting attracted nearly 1,000 people, most of them offended by the nuns remarks.
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The Diocese of Charlottes newspaper, the Catholic News-Herald, reported that the meeting was acrimonious, with those who dared to speak out in support of Sr. Laurel or the Church being shouted down by an angry mob. The papers sources called the atmosphere disrespectful and hate-filled.
Where was the trust? Where was the communication? one parent said to school chaplain Fr. Matthew Kauth, who arranged to bring Sr. Laurel to the school. It is trust. It is respect. It is confidence. I have lost confidence. I do not trust your judgment and I do not respect you.
Another said, You have divided parents, you have divided students, and weve lost respect for you."
You dont know best for our children, said another. What are you planning on doing for the healing? We want our children to remain Catholic, but we are being pushed away by the climate of what is going on here.
The Catholic News-Herald reported that the angry remarks were met with thunderous applause.
Fr. Kauth said he brought Sr. Laurel to the school because he felt students at Charlotte Catholic had been poorly catechized and were suffering from spiritual darkness, particularly around the issue of sexuality.
When I came here, I experienced to an increasing degree the suffering that comes to our children and the blackness they feel inside, Kauth told the meeting. They are taught by nearly every form of media that Christs teachings in His Church are restrictive bars, medieval torture chambers to keep them from happiness. When they have broken free I get to see their agony.
I desire with a fathers heart to protect them [from] harm and the false notions of freedom to be able to live in the true freedom which chastity brings - free to love as we were made to love. This is where Sister comes in, Fr. Kauth explained. I heard Sister speak in the fall at St Patricks. While I had given so many talks on this topic in so many different ways I found her approach just different enough - a new voice and the added perspective coming from a woman. I decided to bring her here.
Sister and I are both quite aware of the biblical admonition from our Lord about what happens if one leads a little one astray and I am not fond of the mixture of millstone and water, Kauth said. The intent is and has only been to shine so as to set them free. However to hide Christs saving teaching is also a means to lead them astray by allowing them to be led away by another- and as you know as parents, there are many who would take your children where you do not want them to go.
Christ is light and in Him there is no darkness. His light sets us free to love as we were made to love-in the full dignity and beauty of the sons and daughters of God. His light also exposes and that can be painful. But that same light radiates the beauty of what we were made to be and can be if we would but receive it and assist each other in love to receive it. That is why it is Good News.
Darkness has fallen upon us with all of the attendant confusion which it brings, Kauth continued. Our Lord can speak to this darkness just as He did in the beginning and say, let there be light.
To read Fr. Kauths full statement regarding Sr. Laurels presentation click here.
Contact:
Diocese of Charlotte Phone: (704) 370-6299 chancery@charlottediocese.org
There's no Biblically sanctioned lukewarm middle ground, no matter what the Nancy Pelosis of the world might believe and want everyone to live by.
This area is mostly Protestant.
This is a young Diocese with Catholics making up about 3% of the population.
I'd bet the vast majority of the complainers aren't Catholic at all, but Protestants trying to force the Church to buy into their menagerie of viewpoints on this issue.
"I'd bet the vast majority of the complainers aren't Catholic at all . . ."
You make a good point. I'd be very surprised if even the majority of the teachers were Catholic much less the students. Jugis is a solid Bishop who seems like he's nobody's fool. I figure he'll blindside the smug "Professional Catholics" at some point.
I suspect there will be a consolidation of the schools in Charlotte with a commensurate reduction in the number of teachers and administrators.
I live in the South too, in an area where there weren’t very many Catholics during the late 19th and most of the 20th century, until the influx from the Northeast and the (less than orthodox) Midwest.There was a lot of intermarriage but of course, in earlier decades, Protestants had to promise to bring up the children as Catholic. And Catholic teaching was orthodox.
Unfortunately, as the Church stopped insisting on this doctrine and permitted mixed marriages without any requirement to bring up the children as Catholic, you had a lot of people who either wandered off to the Baptists because it was easier in their environment, or simply developed a kind of hybrid allegiance. And of course you had the people who Vatican II drove away, many of whom became Evangelicals.
So I don’t think there is any malice aforethought in the Protestant parents participating, and I don’t think they were necessarily the source of the problems. I read that there was some sort of gay advocacy group in Charlotte that seems to have spearheaded all of this with the assistance of a couple of parents and students and a lot of agitators. I don’t think the meeting was very well-controlled and I’m not sure that they checked to see who was entering.
Thank goodness.
You are being pushed away by Satan. Maybe you should turn off the TV and pick up a Catechism. The Magisterium of the Catholic Church may be more complicated than "if it feels good, do it," but in the long run it makes more sense.
Exactly. And I think they are calling their bluff. Pray they have the courage to see it through.
Apparently Sister’s sabbatical was voluntary. I personally think she’s shocked she would receive such a backlash after speaking at a Catholic school. She probably needs a break and she deserves it IMO especially since she’s given the same talk across the country. Pray for her too.
I am wondering if they are parents or outside agitators.
You see unless 125% of the parents of all twelve grades attended the meeting, it means that not all those ‘2000 parents” actually were parents of students.
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