The Church “believes it necessary to state clearly that
the Church, while profoundly respecting the persons in question, cannot admit to the seminary or
to holy orders those who practice homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual
tendencies or support the so-called "gay culture"”
From the document: "Instruction Concerning
the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with
Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to
Holy Orders"
When I
entered the seminary I felt secure in my masculinity. I had those formative experiences in my life
that taught me about masculinity and manhood.
However, I knew that what I needed to work on now, as a man beginning my seminary journey, was how to
enter into authentic relationships with people. I knew enough to know that
being not just a man but a "man who can love as man loves" would be a vital part of becoming a
priest.
1) One of the first people I met from my
seminary class was a really outgoing guy. He was engaging, and we had good
conversations at meals and so forth. Very early on, as I was starting to grow
in friendship with him and other classmates as well, this guy stopped by my
room, and while I was typing a paper at my computer, he started to give me a
shoulder rub. When he moved down my back, I immediately stood up and acted like
I needed to do something. He left, and I sat in my room for about 10 minutes. “What
just happened” was a question I sat there asking myself. I finally decided to go down to his room and
confront him. He was from another culture originally, so I told him “I don’t
know if that’s what you all do in the culture you are from, but that doesn’t
fly here. Don’t ever do that again." At that time, I had only been a seminarian
for about a month, and so it didn’t cross my mind to report him because even
though I knew he was living with homosexuality and apparently also was choosing
to act on those attractions, I wanted to believe it WAS his culture of origin to
blame. About a year later, I found out that the same guy had harassed a fellow
seminarian to the point where the guy just left the seminary (“Goodbye Good
Men” as an aptly titled book on this topic puts it). The seminary kicked the harasser out of the seminary. Unfortunately, though, probably before the
seminary had any idea about this guy’s behaviors, he had really messed me up
and driven another guy out of the seminary.
2) So I’m still in this mode early on as
a seminarian trying to figure out what masculine intimacy and masculine
friendship looks like, and I met a religious brother who was around the
seminary. He would ask how things were going, and every now and then he’d stop
and ask if I could pray for him. I started to get uncomfortable as he was
starting to come by more often. And then
he got in some real trouble when he was reported for sexually harassing a male
waiter at a restaurant.
3) There was a priest at the seminary.
He was on staff. Again a very kind guy. He would check in on me and the other
seminarians and ask how things were going and so forth. Again I thought of this
person as a visible indicator that, “OK, I’m getting better at this
relationship thing. I’m getting better at this vulnerability and relationship
with other men thing." And then I found out that he was well known for having
homosexual paraphernalia and was essentially openly homosexual.
My point in all of this is that a
spiritually mature man is hard to develop. And part of the temptation for some
men to NOT grow and develop in masculine love is that they believe that
intimacy, relational loving, etc. are NOT masculine at all. It can be easy, as a man, to write off being
vulnerable and expressing intimacy for others as being “soft” because so often
the images presented to men in our culture today either skew toward the "Homer
Simpson drunk moron option" or the "feminized sensitive guy" option. There's very few examples out there of men heroically loving others AS men.
It is EXTREMELYHARD to learn how to
be a man who is also relational and loving in the midst of one’s masculinity.
Active or even passive homosexuality
in the seminary has a REALLY negative impact on the development of priests. Most guys in the seminary are trying to
figure out what in the hell an actual vulnerable and masculine friendship looks
like. So when you are trying to
establish and grow friendships in the midst of that environment, and you at
some point learn that a guy is pursuing friendship with you for VERY wrong
reasons, that will either
1) drive you completely away from the
seminary or
2) completely confuse and damage your
growth as you seek to develop masculine intimacy in your life.
My reaction to each of these
situations that I described earlier in this post was “Well, I’ll try and enter
into a relation with a guy again a couple of years from now.”
It seems like the admission of guys
to the seminary who experience homosexual attractions needs to be openly
discussed and analyzed. Surely some will accuse me of “gay bashing“ here but
I’m not doing that. The Catholic Church welcomes all. This film I put together
helps explain it well.
All are welcome in the Catholic
Church, but we do put all kinds of restrictions, hurdles, tests etc. in place
for who we allow into our seminaries. Suggesting that it is in the best
interest of the Church to not admit to the seminary those who are actually
wrestling with same-sex attraction is nothing like saying “those with same sex
attraction are not welcome in the Catholic Church.” We don’t
tell anyone what they need to do before stepping foot into a Catholic Church
but we DO tell people what they need to do before becoming seminarians. We DO
tell guys pursuing the priesthood that if they are wrestling with things they
need to sort those things out before going to the seminary.
I think we are right to tell guys
with same-sex attraction “you’ll need to seek some counseling and be at a spot
where those attractions have been worked through before we can admit you to the
seminary” because crucial and vital formation needs to be happening there, and
any type of homosexuality, whether active or passive, SEVERELY undermines the
very mission of the formation which is to help men become priests who have been
given every possible opportunity to develop an authentic masculine form of
intimacy and love so that they can be a priest of Jesus Christ, a man who chose
to love the world through his masculinity as well.
For further
theological delving into this topic, a favorite seminary prof of mine, Fr. Guy
Mansini OSB, now the chair of theology at Ave Maria University, contributed
this article for First Things magazine several years ago: https://www.firstthings.com/article/2006/04/in-conformity-to-christ
The Vatican
document on this topic is also concise and a helpful read: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ccatheduc/documents/rc_con_ccatheduc_doc_20051104_istruzione_en.html
"We DO tell guys pursuing the priesthood that if they are wrestling with things they need to sort those things [wrestling with homosexual attractions] out before going to the seminary." I hope candidates to the priesthood are told this at the gate, and those charged with priest formation do not undermine the guideline in practice.
ReplyDeleteDear Unknown, I appreciate your comment, and it brings me comfort as a mother of boys contemplating service to God. However, I'd encourage you to consider ANY difficulties with the 6th and 9th commandment need to be rooted out as a serious problem by the first year in, so really, questions about struggling with any sexual discipline is a point to be addressed. In the 1600's, it was in the canon such. It should be again. Of course, with our hyper-sexualized culture, we have to consider the young men may have been exposed and made mistakes, but must recognize they should be firmly resolved to root out the problems in their souls as a immediate concern early on in their formation.
DeleteYour post is EXCELLENT! First, I am so sorry for your experience and all the seminarians who have experienced this. We instruct our Catholic children, from Kindergarten thru 9th Grade (Called to Protect Youth CTPY). The ONLY way this is going to STOP is to BAN as seminarians and report every single act of inappropriate behavior and set a “hands off” boundary.
ReplyDeleteFirst and foremost,I apologize for problemed men who think they can enter the seminary and practice their faith and continue their homosexual relationships within the church. This is a warning sign that eventually they will be working with young boys and again be tempted to violate them because of their demented and psychological issues. There are hierarchy who continue to protect homosexual priests and allow them to violate children and fellow priests . Canon law or not, please evaluate, monitor, report, and use disciplinary action to berid these psychological abusers. Men with psychological issues should be sorted out of the church and sometimes remaining celibate can be taunting it MAY be the culprit. Same sex priest relationships are NOT permitted in the church. Sorry guys but you can do your "own thing" some where else but not in the church.
ReplyDeleteActually the Lord says repent and than enter the kingdom of heaven. No homosexual person should be allowed to become a priest or work in any ministry. This gives scandal. Also priest creating relationships seems force. Not everyone needs to out going. Your primary job is to save souls.
ReplyDeleteActually the Lord says repent and than enter the kingdom of heaven. No homosexual person should be allowed to become a priest or work in any ministry. This gives scandal. Also priest creating relationships seems force. Not everyone needs to out going. Your primary job is to save souls.
ReplyDeleteActually the Lord says repent and than enter the kingdom of heaven. No homosexual person should be allowed to become a priest or work in any ministry. This gives scandal. Also priest creating relationships seems force. Not everyone needs to out going. Your primary job is to save souls.
ReplyDeleteThere is a serious problem with our seminaries and I only wish I had the solution. I entrusted my 18 year old son to the diocese. He broke up with his girlfriend to enter the seminary. Now, nearly two decades later, I have just learned my son is an alcoholic and gay. I am heartbroken & struggling to figure out how this could have happened. The man I gave to the Church is gone, replaced by someone I don’t even know.
ReplyDeleteSimilar story has been my fate with a junior brother.
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