Posted on 04/22/2002 2:43:14 AM PDT by kattracks
Edward Cardinal Egan's stand-in at St. Patrick's Cathedral pointedly blamed the priest sex abuse scandal yesterday on homosexuality, a "sex-saturated" society and a constant assault on celibacy by liberals.In a 15-minute homily from the most prominent Roman Catholic pulpit in the city, Msgr. Eugene Clark labeled the United States "probably the most immoral country" in the Western hemisphere. He also called homosexuality "a disorder" and said gay men shouldn't be allowed to become priests.
Clark, 76, a longtime key player and conservative voice in the Archdiocese of New York, delivered his stinging homily as Egan and other U.S. cardinals left for Rome to meet with the Pope about priestly pedophilia.
After preaching about forgiveness, Clark detailed reasons he believes some priests victimized children. He appeared to place most of the blame on homosexuality, saying the theory that people are born gay "is not true."
"The tendency to homosexuality is a disorder, not a sin," he said. "But the practice of homosexuality is truly sinful."
Some parishioners in the packed pews shifted uneasily, others nodded in agreement and a few walked out. But Clark continued, arguing that it was a "grave mistake" to allow gays in the priesthood. He blamed American society for being "very protective" of homosexuality.
"Homosexuality became in the American exchange of views a protected area," he said. "And unfortunately ... homosexual students were allowed to pass through seminaries. Grave mistake. Not because homosexuals in anyway tend to criminality, but because it is a disorder."
'The Most Immoral Country'
Clark also criticized what he called "the campaign of liberal America against celibacy."
He theorized that priests who have a tendency toward sexually abusing children a group he pegged at 3% of the nation's clergy were affected by a barrage of sinful images in society.
"Liberated sex is offered to people all day long, all evening long," he said. "There is nothing quite like it."
"We know we won't mention it outside the cathedral we are probably the most immoral country certainly in the Western hemisphere and maybe the larger circle because of the entertainment we suffer and what it's done to our [country's] morals ...," Clark said.
Christine Schubert of St. Paul dashed out of the cathedral midway through the homily. "I left because I realized I have no desire to be connected with the institution of the Catholic Church," said Schubert, 27. "I thought, wouldn't it be great if the entire church walked out?"
But few did. Most parishioners stayed, and many applauded Clark after his sermon.
Marianne Duddy, executive director of Dignity/USA, the nation's largest organization of gay Catholics, called Clark's comments linking the sex scandal with homosexuality "incredibly horrifying and irresponsible."
"This is a poor attempt to deflect attention away from the church's culpability for the sexual abuse of minors by priests and its attempt to cover it up for decades," she added.
But Catholic League President William Donohue praised Clark. "He makes a great deal of sense and to have this said so articulately by one of the brighter priests in the New York area is very encouraging," Donohue said.
"The internal problem in the church is a lack of governance and due to diligence," he added. "But there is no question about it this is a societywide problem that goes way beyond the Catholic Church."
With Gretchen E. Weber
No, Roe V Wade was the purest form of judicial activism. The issue was whether or not the states should be allowed to regulate abortion, something which had been done for decades and decades, and which is their constitutional right under the tenth amendment. The foundation for the right to abortion, a nonexistent privacy right said to emanate from several amendments, was invented by the court.
And you should be careful about your insistence that being pro-life is a purely religious position. There are many of us who are not religious, but who nevertheless recognize the importance of protecting all humans from violent acts for the overall good of society. And while I cannot prove to you that an embryo is a human person, it most certainly is a growing organism that possesses human DNA, and that will become a conscious person ultimately. It should, therefore, be given the benefit of the doubt, since it possesses the potential of full personhood. That is the logical approach to take, and does not rely on religious belief at all.
Paternity test predated DNA testing by close to a hundred years. Polling results demonstrate that support for Roe v Wade is greater among men than women. If any men support abortion because they are 'deferring' to women's judgement, they have been tricked by the media into not knowing what women's judgement actually is.
So easy to read incorrectly apparently. How many denominations are we up to now? I lost count.
There was always a difference of opinion within the psychiatric community. No less than Freud thought homosexuality is normal, though later "Freudians" thought otherwise.
This has no bearing one way or the other on "gay rights", or priestly misbehavior.
Wow! Is THIS the guy?? I love to hear him teach. He is wonderful to listen to. Very composed, gentle man. We certainly need more like HIM.
well the possiblity is there that it could become a human...The taxonomical classification of the human being which is in the womb is based on its DNA, which remains the same from conception till death, and its vitality is based on the process of cell division. Thus, it is not merely possibly human or alive but truly so, and that which is being gestated is a living human being.
As you know, scientific polls hardly ever go into 'why' a person takes a position, but only record the position they take. The argument about why men feel this way is from Susan B. Anthony, as I said. Go argue with her about it.
Then why did she walk in there?
Cheer up. The homilist was an old fogey (sarcasm).
A person living in an iron lung, or with some other form of respirator is not "functioning on it's own", as is true of someone in a coma. I presume that they are 'different' too? How about mental defectives -- they do not truly function on their own. Neither do newborn infants. I mention all of these groups because various governments have approved killing all of them, at one time or another. Just wondering who is on your 'hit list'.
An unborn child is a human life that possesses the potential of becoming a thinking being, which is how many define personhood. The fact that a human embryo is biologically human is an established scientific fact. For that reason, it should be protected from violence -- because, if left to it's natural course, it will develop into what even you would consider a human person. There is the certainty, not the possibility, that this will happen, save accidents, miscarriages, malformations, or deliberate acts on the part of an abortionist.
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