Milestones in campaign to hold the doctrinal
line
By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
NCR Staff
The lifetime ban on pastoral work imposed upon Salvatorian Fr.
Robert Nugent and School Sister of Notre Dame Jeannine Gramick by Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger is the latest step in an effort by the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith to prevent evolution in church teaching toward acceptance
of homosexual conduct. A review of key moments:
May 1984: Ratzinger orders the imprimatur lifted from
Sexual Morality by Fr. Philip S. Keane, published in 1977 by Paulist
Press. Keane argues that homosexual conduct cannot be understood as
absolutely immoral.
September 1986: Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen in Seattle
announces that he has transferred final authority in five areas, including the
pastoral care of homosexuals, to Auxiliary Bishop Donald Wuerl in accord with
Vatican instructions. The action follows a written critique by Ratzinger,
citing, among other flaws, Hunthausens decision in 1983 to permit a Mass
for Dignity, a Catholic homosexual group, in his cathedral.
October 1986: Ratzinger publishes a document titled
On The Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons. The letter warns of
deceitful propaganda from pro-homosexual groups. It instructs
bishops not to accept groups that seek to undermine the teaching of the
church, which are ambiguous about it, or which neglect it entirely. The
letter refers to homosexual orientation as an intrinsic moral evil.
In the wake of the letter, many Catholic bishops bar Dignity from using church
facilities.
October 1986: Acting on instructions from Ratzinger, the
head of the Jesuit order informs Jesuit Fr. John McNeill that he must either
abandon pastoral ministry with homosexuals or be expelled from the order.
McNeill chooses not to give up his work. McNeill had been silenced by the
Vatican in 1977 for his book The Church and The Homosexual, which argued
that stable homosexual relationships should be judged by the same moral
criteria as heterosexual relationships. The book was originally published with
the permission of McNeills Jesuit superiors.
November 1986: Ratzinger directs Bishop Matthew Clark of
the Rochester, N.Y., diocese to remove the imprimatur from Parents Talk
Love: The Catholic Family Handbook About Sexuality, written by a priest and
a high school teacher. According to the priest, Ratzinger objects to the lack
of a clear condemnation of homosexual conduct.
January 1987: After prolonged debate, The Catholic
University of America fires Fr. Charles Curran, a moral theologian known for
his dissent from official church teaching on sexual ethics. On homosexuality,
Curran has written: Homosexual acts in the context of a loving
relationship that strives for permanency can in a certain sense be objectively
morally acceptable.
December 1988: Dominican Fr. Matthew Fox is silenced by
Ratzinger, citing his failure to condemn homosexuality, among a host of other
issues. Fox is expelled from the Dominican order in 1992.
February 1992: Canadian theologian Fr. Andrew Guindon is
notified that he is under investigation by the doctrinal congregation for his
book The Sexual Creators. Ratzinger demands that he clarify his views on
homosexuality, birth control and premarital sex. Ratzingers 13-page
critique is published in LOsservatore Romano, the official Vatican
newspaper.
July 1992: Ratzinger sends a letter to the U.S. bishops
supporting legal discrimination against homosexuals in certain areas: adoption
rights, the hiring of gays as teachers or coaches, and the prohibition of gays
in the military. In such situations, Ratzinger writes, it is not unjust
discrimination to take sexual orientation into account.
November 1992: The new Catechism of the Catholic
Church is published. Though the text acknowledges that homosexual persons
do not choose their homosexual condition; for most of them it is a
trial, and forbids any disrespect or failure of compassion for
homosexuals, the Catechism repeats the position that the homosexual
orientation is intrinsically disordered.
December 1996: Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone, secretary of
the doctrinal congregation, publishes an article in LOsservatore
Romano asserting that certain church teachings must be considered
infallible even in the absence of a formal declaration to that effect. The bans
on homosexuality and contraception are among the teachings mentioned by
Bertone.
February 1997: Following a warning to the Society of St.
Paul from Ratzinger, the Vatican imposes a new leader on the order. The
Paulines flagship publication, Famiglia Cristiana, published an
article in 1996 suggesting that parents should not force their moral views on a
gay child. Bishop Antonio Buoncristiani is appointed the societys
temporary leader and charged with ensuring that Pauline publications better
reflect church teaching.
July 1998: The Committee on Marriage and Family of the U.S.
bishops conference re-issues its letter to parents of homosexuals,
Always Our Children, after making several changes demanded by
Ratzinger. They include referring to homosexuality as a deep-seated
rather than fundamental dimension of personality; suggesting that
homosexual acts by adolescents may not indicate a homosexual orientation;
adding a footnote describing homosexuality as objectively
disordered; and deleting a passage that encourages use of terms such as
homosexual, gay and lesbian from the pulpit in order to
give people permission to discuss homosexuality.
September 1998: Clark removes Fr. James Callan from his
position as pastor of Rochesters Corpus Christi Parish. Callan asserts
that Clark is acting under pressure from Ratzinger. Among other things, Callan
is criticized for blessing same-sex unions.
December 1998: Ratzinger, other curial officials and a
group of Australian bishops put out a document citing problems in the
Australian church resulting from a worldwide crisis of faith. Among
other deviations, the document cites a moral view in which
heterosexuality and homosexuality come to be seen as simply two morally
equivalent variations.
National Catholic Reporter, July 30,
1999
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