by James Ewens
jimewe@me.com
Printed with permission of the author May 5,
2014
First published in CORPUS, May/June
2014
Some years ago, when I was a Jesuit -- and a superior -- I
was attending one of our twice annual "superiors" meetings. There were thirty of
us, representing some of the large (high school and college) communities in the
Wisconsin province as well as the mixture of 3-6-10 people communities that I
was from.
Midway through the weekend we were divided into smaller groups
and asked to role play a situation that, to me, was very awkward: a group of
scholastics (Jesuits in training) had gone out to a gay bar for some drinks. A
dispute had arisen with others at the bar and some of the Jesuits had been
arrested. The police had called you as their superior. How do you handle it --
with the police, the scholastics themselves, and the likely calls for comment
from the media?
It was, for me, awkward because, one, it was the first
superiors meeting I had attended; and, two, because it was the first time I had
been in a public meeting with Jesuits where the reality of there being gay
Jesuits was "out in the open," albeit obliquely, indirectly.
What puzzled
me most was "Why are we doing this, is this really something to worry about as a
superior, and, finally, who among us is gay -- and what difference does it make?
That last question, really, was what lay underneath my discomfort because it
was, at heart, the discussion that the role play was meant to lead into.
Unfortunately, that discussion never happened.
I write this now because I
am increasingly puzzled over the silence within the church, especially within
the clerical culture, about the "rightness or wrongness" of being gay, being
equal, able to identify, publicly, as gay, and, finally, gays now having the
legal right to marry in 16 states and 16 countries, as reported by the Pew
Research on Dec. 13, 2013.
Noteworthy on this issue is the current
standoff in the Seattle diocese over the firing of Mark Zmuda at Eastside
Catholic High School in Sammamish, WA --because he publicly announced his
recent marriage. Hundreds of students, parents, others in the community
(including Ed Murray, the mayor-elect of Seattle, who is also Catholic and gay)
have demonstrated on behalf of Zmuda.
The president of the school and the
head of the Board both resigned over the issue. 32,000 people have signed a
petition protesting the church's action.
Zmuda has recently filed a lawsuit
against the school, saying they have reneged on their stated policy not to
discriminate on the basis of race, religion, or gender. This is one of a half
dozen of similar incidents that have occurred in recent years at Catholic
schools across the country. They are likely to increase in future years as more
states approve same sex marriage.
The issue has, recently, taken on
international focus due to the current split among groups of African bishops
about laws being passed to criminalize homosexuals. (David Gibson, Religion News
Service, "In Rare Public Split, Catholic Bishops Differ Sharply on Anti-Gay
Laws" Feb. 13, 2014). In Nigeria, Archbishop Ignatius Kaigama praised Nigerian
President Goodluck Jonathan for his "courageous and wise decision" in signing a
harsh law that mandates a 10 year sentence for people supporting gay clubs and
meetings -- and a 14 year sentence for entering into a gay marriage.
However, a few days later, a strongly worded editorial in the Southern Cross, a
newspaper run jointly by the bishops of South Africa, Botswana, and Swaziland,
took aim at the new law, calling on the Catholic church in Africa "to stand with
the powerless" and "sound the alarm at the advance throughout Africa of
draconian legislation aimed at criminalizing homosexuals. "
The editorial
decried the "deep-seated sense of homophobia" in Africa and said the church had
too often been "silent, in some cases evenly quietly complicit" in the face of
the new anti-gay measures. Thomas Reese, S.J. is quoted in Gibson's article as
stating that Church leaders who support anti-gay laws often come from countries
with large Muslim populations that also tend to support measures against
homosexuality: "I think they're afraid of the Muslim reaction, and I think
they're afraid of the reaction of many of their own people."
When
psychologists, spiritual directors, and seminary heads are asked to estimate how
many in the clergy are gay, the estimates range from 20 percent on up. For
example, Donald Cozzens in his 2000 book "The Changing Face of Priesthood"quotes
estimates of 23-58 percent of priests are gay -- with higher percentages for
younger priests. Richard Sipe, a psychologist, says in his May 20, 2010 talk
"The Pope Has A Sex Problem" that "Conservative estimates range from 30-50
percent. " Those figures are considerably higher than the estimated number of
gays in the general population. However, despite these estimates, one rarely
hears mention of public disagreement by gay clergy when actions against gays are
taken by dioceses, seminary officials, or the Vatican.
In 2005, after a
ten year study by the Congregation of Catholic Education, a wonderfully titled
document was released by the Vatican: "Concerning the Criteria for the
Discernment of Vocations with Regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in
View of the Admission t o the Seminary and to Holy Orders." (Once the Document
was released, the policy it recommended was given a much briefer -- and more
familiar -- description: "Don't ask, don't tell.")
The document states
that "The church, while profoundly respecting the person in question, cannot
admit to the seminary or the priesthood those who practice homosexuality,
present deep-seated homosexual tendencies, or support the so-called 'gay
culture'."
(It should be noted that this document is an update from a
1961 Roman document entitled "Careful Selection and Training of Candidates for
the States of Perfection and Holy Orders." This earlier document stated clearly
that "Homosexuals should not be ordained." However, the enforcement of this
probation was left to individual bishops and, in effect, was not carried
out.)
I am of the firm belief that significant changes -- in attitudes,
laws, and in society at large -- only occur when people are honest, about
themselves, about their families, about their deepest hopes and fears. The
impact of this personal honesty can be verified in recent public discussions
regarding mental illness, abortion, being raped (as a child, a college student,
or a member of the military) as well as having drug and alcohol
addictions.
I myself have experienced how the tone and tenor of a
discussion about change can occur when I say, "I recently attended the marriage
of a nephew of mine who is gay" or, "There are several people in my family who
have significant mental illness."
One can only imagine the impact if, at
a meeting in a Vatican Congregation that was discussing the pending 2005
statement about seminarians, a theologian or cardinal had said, "I myself am gay
-- and I am aware that this is also true for some of you on this committee.
After much prayer, reflection, and discussion with others who are gay, I am
convinced that this is the way that God loves me, and made me. In addition, I
st rongly disagree that my 'deeply rooted homosexual tendencies' are either
disordered or immoral -- any more than those of you with 'deeply rooted
heterosexual tendencies' are disordered or immoral."
It may, perhaps, be
true that only through this type of personal honesty, by clerics who are
courageous enough to risk censure, career advancement, etc., that a shift can
begin in the stance taken by the Vatican in regard to what it means, in essence,
to be gay -- and why, in fact, gay sex and gay marriage is neither immoral nor
disordered for laity that do not have a vow of celibacy.
Pope Francis'
most quoted statement from these first ten months of his papacy has been "Who am
I to judge?" in regard to gay priests. But judge he does, both morally and
theologically, when he upholds the church's stance on the "rightness or
wrongness" of the 2005 Document that, in effect, tells seminarians "Don't ask,
don't tell" -- not to mention the upholding by the Vatican of the intrinsic evil
of gay sex and gay marriage.
The growing public consensus across the
world is that gays are full and equal members of society, worthy of all
protections and benefits that accrue to those who are heterosexually orientated.
And the day that individual and groups of clerics speak out on this topic is the
day the Vatican statements and prohibitions may begin to weaken and, in time,
change altogether.
In mentioning this, I do not wish to underestimate how
difficult and delicate such "speaking out" might be, and the types of
repercussions it may well result in. A statement made by a psychotherapist,
Charles Martel, in response to an article by James Martin, S.J. about gay
priests (America, 11-04-2007) emphasizes this point: "As long as church teaching
remains that homosexuality is an 'objective disorder,' homosexual priests will
find themselves experiencing a sense of defectiveness, or they will recognize
that they can no longer defend something that they themselves do not believe to
be the truth."
I can only imagine the anguish that Archbishop Rembert
Weakland faced here in Milwaukee in 1994: to resist the demand for payment of
$400,000 by a former gay friend, or accept the public reaction to himself and
his career that would occur if he stated "Yes, I am gay and, yes, I did have a
close relationship with Paul Marcoux, a man who was a graduate student in his
thirties when I first met him."
This type of public disclosure is very
challenging to make, at any age, for any reason. But, still and all, as I say
to Jesuit colleagues in their 60s and 70s, regarding their public support of
another hot button issue: the ordination of women, "If not now -- when? At your
82nd -- or 95th -- birthday?"
Secrets rigidly held within institutions
ultimately lead to the publication of books such as The Pentagon Papers by
Daniel Ellsberg, and to Betty Metsger's recent text "The Burglary" that exposes
the F.B.I.'s fifty year history of illegal surveillance of American citizens.
The illegal exploits of N.S.A. have resulted in immense disclosures of data by
whistleblower Edward Snowden. The decades long cover-up of the clergy sexual
abuse by bishops has produced a website entitled "bishop accountability.org"
and a courageous witness such as Tom Doyle, O.P., a canon lawyer who has been
defending victims of clergy sexual abuse in courts across the country for the
past thirty years.
One might ask "Is Francis' papacy playing a part in
this issue?" Thomas Reese thinks its a positive sign that the African bishops
are facing criticism from within their own ranks -- a benefit of the more
free-wheeling style that Francis has brought to the papacy: "This is progress.
In the old days bishops wouldn't criticize each other. Now we have the bishops
talking to each other and some are saying, 'No, this isn't the direction the
church ought to go.'"
In conclusion, I remain puzzled and disheartened
by what seems to be a massive disconnect between the reality of a high
proportion of clerics who are gay and the public, demeaning, negative policies
and actions regarding gays within the Catholic church. What kind of pressures
and controls can help explain this resounding silence among the clergy on an
issue that strikes so close to home -- and what will it take to overcome this
stance in the future?
One can only surmise whether the positive
statements made by bishops about gays in the Gibson article are, in fact, due to
input by clerics who are gay. Whatever the case, it is a very hopeful sign for
the church at large. Because once a bishop agrees that "God accepts and loves
gays," it is a modest additional step to add "as they are." From there, all else
is possible. Let the conversation continue.
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