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New Vatican Document on Homosexuality and the Priesthood Coming Before Fall 2005
LifeSite ^ | December 13, 2004

Posted on 12/14/2004 3:09:01 AM PST by NYer

VATICAN CITY, December 13, 2004 (LifeSiteNews.com) - John Thavis, the Vatican correspondent for the Catholic News Service, an agency of the US Bishops Conference, reports that the Vatican will soon publish a document concerning homosexuality and the priesthood. The report notes that Vatican officials are preparing an inspection (or visitation) of US seminaries to commence in the Fall of 2005 and the document is expected prior to the visitation.

Bishop John C. Nienstedt of New Ulm, Minn., chairman of the U.S. bishops' Committee on Priestly Formation, said in an interview in Rome, "I think they intend to have it out by the time the visitation begins."

The Vatican has confirmed several times that men with homosexual sexual orientations should not be ordained. The December 2002 bulletin of the Vatican's Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments contained a letter signed by Cardinal Jorge Medina Estevez, who has since retired as the head of the Congregation, which said ordaining such men would be imprudent and "very risky."

A prominent Vatican document dealing with the issue was released as early as 1961. The 1961 document from the Sacred Congregation for Religious prohibits the admission of homosexuals to the diocesan priesthood and religious orders. The document states: "Those affected by the perverse inclination to homosexuality or pederasty should be excluded from religious vows and ordination," because priestly ministry would place such persons in "grave danger".

The document is being prepared by the Congregation for Catholic Education in consultation with several other Vatican agencies, including the doctrinal congregation. In a report earlier this year, the education congregation described it as an "instruction on the criteria and norms for the discernment in questions regarding homosexuality in view of the admission of candidates to the seminary and to sacred orders."

Commenting on the coming document which has been more than five years in the making, Bishop Nienstedt said, ""I think it's going to be a balanced document, because the whole question of homosexuality not only has psychological dimensions but also has varying degrees of a person acting out or not acting out." He added, "So the whole question has to be nuanced considerably: 'What is homosexuality?' 'What are the homosexual attractions?' and that sort of thing. I think this document will be helpful because it is going to address those questions."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: homosexuality; priesthood; vatican
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To: Slyfox
Shouldn't be made bishop either.

or cardinals. Are you referring to Vicki Gene Robinson? He was ordained into the Anglican Church, not the Catholic Church.

61 posted on 12/14/2004 6:52:05 AM PST by NYer ("Blessed be He who by His love has given life to all." - final prayer of St. Charbel)
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To: murphE

Funny thing... when I read these Vatican documents, in light of Tradition, they seem thoroughly orthodox. Then I run into some raving modernist nutter, who reads them in a spirit of looking for excuses, and she manages to twist them into all manner of heretical distortions. They're written in a bureaucratic gobbledygook style that gives too much room for misinterpretation, to those inclined to misinterpret.


62 posted on 12/14/2004 7:06:00 AM PST by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilisation is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: MadAnthony1776

Maybe it's harder--but there are no such things as "new" marital problems; nor are there problems in marriage which cannot be resolved with clear analysis guided by unchanging principles, something which all men of the cloth should have in their bag of tricks.


63 posted on 12/14/2004 7:06:29 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: ArrogantBustard

Do you think the ambiguity is purposeful? I do.


64 posted on 12/14/2004 7:09:12 AM PST by murphE ("I ain't no physicist, but I know what matters." - Popeye)
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To: California Brown Girl
Also, married people sexually abuse children

IIRC, the stats tell us that the single largest class of child-abusers is "boyfriends."

Step-parents are not as dangerous as a class, and the cases of natural parent-abusers are almost nil.

65 posted on 12/14/2004 7:09:52 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: murphE

The documents are written clearly for those who are obedient. It is unfortunate that many simply are NOT obedient, nor do they wish to be so.

Ask me about church music some day...


66 posted on 12/14/2004 7:16:52 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: ninenot

I am always amazed at the ability of people to twist clearly written things to fit their personal agenda...


67 posted on 12/14/2004 7:18:44 AM PST by Knitting A Conundrum (Act Justly, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly With God Micah 6:8)
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To: NYer

I was referring to all the bishops who are turning out to be homosexual. No wonder they've just been shuffling their friends around.


68 posted on 12/14/2004 7:21:32 AM PST by Slyfox
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To: ninenot
It is unfortunate that many simply are NOT obedient, nor do they wish to be so.

Knowing that to be the case, and some might argue the rule rather than the exception, isn't it all the more reason for the documents to be clearly unambiguous and unequivocal?

What should I ask you about Church music?

69 posted on 12/14/2004 7:34:13 AM PST by murphE ("I ain't no physicist, but I know what matters." - Popeye)
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To: murphE; royalcello; thor76; Desdemona

DON'T ask about Church music.

But if you must, then you should start with the concept that it should be ART, which both glorifies God and raises the minds and hearts of the Faithful to God, while edifying and sanctifying the faithful.

Which eliminates about 95% of what's used these days.


70 posted on 12/14/2004 7:46:25 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: tiamat
i tell you true, it hurts me to see Catholic people in South America starving when there is gold on the altar in a nice parish elsewhere

What hurts me to see is evangelical, fundamentalist, and certain "cult-like" self proclaimed christian groups wasting millions of dollars building new churches when Christ's Church is already there among the people serving them.

That antique gold on the altar, placed there decades or centuries ago, pales in comparison with the money wasted by independant preachers builting temples to themselves in the same neighborhood as the Catholic Churches, for their very own cult of personality.

71 posted on 12/14/2004 7:49:50 AM PST by St. Johann Tetzel (A fool [esp. a bigoted Christianophobic fool] can ask more questions than a wise man can answer.)
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To: ninenot
that it (Church music) should be ART, which both glorifies God and raises the minds and hearts of the Faithful to God, while edifying and sanctifying the faithful.

No argument there. The straw that broke the camel's back for me at my former parish was the "Gloria (clap clap) Gloria (clap clap)" nonsense.

72 posted on 12/14/2004 7:51:55 AM PST by murphE ("I ain't no physicist, but I know what matters." - Popeye)
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To: NYer
Ultimately, the Catholic priesthood is modeled on the example set by our Lord, Jesus Christ. Jesus did not marry; He led a celibate life.

In addition, violating those vows is not a new thing, and coddling those who do violate those vows is not a modern innovation. What is new is some people making excuses for those behaviors as being natural. The simple solution isn't to understand the reasoning but to excuse and dumb-down the standard.

If being natural were the moral criterion, we could point out that animals don't marry, and that we should mate with anyone who comes along, and it is only natural for people to beat each other to distribute the resources that are naturally scarce.

Perhaps we can model the behavior of animals at a watering hole, and permit only those who can elbow out others access to the benefits of modern living. That is natural.

Man and the experience of Faith causes us to rise above what is natural, and aspire to the "super"-natural. I don't mean we are fortune tellers, but I mean we go beyond the existence we understand now, and strive for something bigger and better. We understand that part of God's plan is that we live for the next world, because we understand our reward doesn't come from the feeling of satiation in the physical, but, by striving for the rewards of Heaven. A person who trades his heavenly reward for fleeting pleasure, sexual or otherwise, doesn't understand this fundamental reality.
73 posted on 12/14/2004 8:01:33 AM PST by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: murphE

A very nice fellow named Mongignor Hayburn published a book entitled "Papal Legislation on Sacred Music."

The book consists of Papal documents on SM, from roughly 600AD through 1962.

If you want to be bored, read the book. It's the same thing, over and over and over again.

Even in the Dark Ages, Bishops ignored Rome. The book is a testament to the fact that disobedience (or, at the very best, ignorance) is timeless and permanent.


74 posted on 12/14/2004 8:17:14 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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To: tiamat
"I hope that what you are sayining is true and that the old inheritance rules have changed, and I am glad."

My best friend's brother is a monsignor and the house plus the money he inherited from his mother (he is an only child) is willed equally to his cousins. His choice whether it goes to the Church or to his relatives.

75 posted on 12/14/2004 9:13:22 AM PST by american colleen
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To: murphE
"Knowing that to be the case, and some might argue the rule rather than the exception, isn't it all the more reason for the documents to be clearly unambiguous and unequivocal?"

I think anything can be made ambiguous and equivical if one wants to make it that way. I am reading "A Generation Betrayed" by Eamonn Keane (highly recommended) and he details how more than a few ordained theologians dissented from Humanae Vitae (detailed in one of the chapters, it's not the subject of the whole book) when Pope John Paul II reiterated:

"The Church has always taught the intrinsic evil of contraception, that is, every marital act intentionally rendered unfruitful. This teaching is to be held as definitive and irreformable. Contraception is gravely opposed to marital chastity; it is contrary to the good of the transmission of life, (the procreative aspect of matrimony), and to the reciprocal self-giving of the spouses (the unitive aspect of matrimony); it harms true love and denies the sovereign role of God in the transmission of human life."

I don't know how one can 'get around' those words but lots of theologians do, and they do it in 'good' conscience.

76 posted on 12/14/2004 9:29:48 AM PST by american colleen
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To: newsgatherer; ninenot; GirlShortstop; saradippity; ArrogantBustard; bornacatholic; Sean O L; ...
Newsgatherer: This being the third time on this thread alone in which you have seen fit to stick your impertinent and irrelevant nose into a matter strictly Catholic and therefore not of your persuasion and presumed to don the mantle of the papacy to instruct us Catholics as to the meaning of Scripture (else why listen to you at all?), some Catholic response is certainly in order.

Your opinions as to the meaning of Scripture are just that: opinions!

The answer to your question as to why apostates from Catholicism are found in the pews of "Full Gospel", non-"denominational" Christian churches is that it is a human failing to adhere to simplicity and to easy and self-satisfying ways. It is easier for each Tom, Dick and Harriet to find what they want to find in misinterpreting Scripture than to adhere to an objective moral code that is the product of Scripture and the best in Christian thinking over nearly 2,000 years. The liberal/leftist type of AmChurch pseudoCatholic bishops have failed to adequately catechize many Catholics who then find themselves attracted to theatrical whoopdedoo from the pulpits (if any) of the "non-denominational" churches, including speaking in tongues and whatever. Your churches of that sort aren't skimming much in the way of adequately catechized folks off the Roman Catholic Church despite its evident administrative challenges.

These "Full Gospel" churches are not even "Full Gospel" in that they deny the sacraments that, for the most part, they lack the apostolic succession to convey, cannot provide the Mass, deny the Real Presence of Jesus Christ, Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity, in the Eucharist, etc. No Catholic who IS a Catholic will EVER trade such things for superficially satisfying sermons and Bible studies. As to former liberals who convert to such churches, one is tempted to say that they have already proven, as former liberals, that they will believe anything. Are you an apostate from Catholicism like so many who post such things as you have???

Your God and mine gave us free will. Many exercise it by belonging to the Roman Catholic Church founded by Jesus Christ upon Peter and permanently guaranteed by Him as the trendy insight congregation of last week's Bible study is not. Others find their way to evangelical and penteccostal denominations or "non-denominational" churches and, I will concede, that those churches are better than none and often lead their congregants to a substantial compliance with SOME of God's will.

Despite all the fire and fury between Roman Catholics and other Christians such as you, we agree on much and disagree on little. The disagreements are important but so are the agreements. In a society as degenerate as our own, we have a long way to go to earn the right to dispute one another in the public square for the entertainment of our mutual enemies and His.

77 posted on 12/14/2004 11:14:07 AM PST by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: BlackElk
Now that you have that out of your system. Feel better?

Now, tell me something, How in the world am I, or anyone for that matter, to know that this thread is strickly for Roman Catholics?

78 posted on 12/14/2004 11:33:03 AM PST by newsgatherer
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To: newsgatherer
In Pauls letter to Timothy are the job qualifications to be a minister of God, amongst them: "A man married to one wife."

Nobody who seriously thinks about this verse thinks that it means that only married men can enter the presbyterate. Jesus was not married. You do not mean to claim that Jesus was not fit to be priest or bishop, do you? (He's in fact the priest extraordinaire.) St. John was not married, but we know from church history that he served as bishop of Ephesus.

79 posted on 12/14/2004 11:37:16 AM PST by Campion
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To: newsgatherer

Hint: read the title of the thread.

When it says "Vatican" and "priests" in the same line, it's a pretty good indicator that it will be a Catholic-oriented thread.

As BE so eloquently stated, we have MUCH in common and only a few things not so. It's more helpful to concentrate on the things in common.


80 posted on 12/14/2004 11:38:35 AM PST by ninenot (Minister of Membership, TomasTorquemadaGentlemen'sClub)
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