Repent
Le plus ca change....here is the church ensuring even less people in the pews...
"A Catholic diocese in Michigan has instructed its pastors to deny baptism, confirmation and other sacraments to transgender and nonbinary people unless they have “repented” — possibly the first diocese in the United States to issue such a sweeping policy about those who identify with a gender other than their sex assigned at birth.
The guidance issued by the Diocese of Marquette also
stipulates that transgender people may not receive Communion, which Catholics
believe is the literal body and blood of Jesus Christ. In most circumstances,
they cannot receive the anointing of the sick, which is meant to provide
physical or spiritual healing to those who are seriously ill. The guidance was
issued in July but only recently sparked a debate after a prominent priest and
advocate for LGBTQ Catholics shared it on Twitter.
“The experience of incongruence in one’s sexual identity is
not sinful if it does not arise from the person’s free will, nor would it stand
in the way of Christian Initiation,” reads the document. “However, deliberate,
freely chosen and manifest behaviors to redefine one’s sex do constitute such
an obstacle.”
A spokesperson for the diocese said no one was immediately
available for an interview.
Because the Catholic Church primarily baptizes infants, the
Diocese of Marquette’s policy is likely to primarily impact non-Catholic adults
seeking baptism in the Catholic Church, transgender teenagers preparing for
confirmation and children of Catholic migrants who were not baptized as infants
because their parents were frequently moving, among other possible reasons.
The backlash may portend a growing clash between the church,
which teaches that people should accept their sex assigned at birth, and a
younger generation more likely to identify as something other than cisgender
and less likely to believe that being transgender is morally wrong. One in 6
adults in Generation Z identifies as LGBTQ, according to survey data released
by Gallup in February.
1 in 6 Gen Z adults are LGBT. And this number could continue
to grow.
While other dioceses have released guidance on transgender
people, several experts said they believe Marquette is the first to deny access
to baptism and confirmation. That decision comes in an absence of significant
guidance from the Vatican or the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which
have said little about transgender individuals and the sacraments. The closest
piece of direction comes in the form of a 2019 document from the Vatican’s
Congregation for Catholic Education that says people should be treated as the
sex they were assigned at birth.
Some theologians and those who support LGBTQ Catholics said
the new rule may contradict canon law, the church’s set of internal regulations
— and speculated that few other dioceses are likely to follow suit. Jennifer
Haselberger, a former chancellor for canonical affairs in the Archdiocese of
Saint Paul and Minneapolis, said she was particularly puzzled by Marquette’s
rule about baptism.
“There’s nobody who approaches baptism from a state of
perfection,” she said. “The presumption is the opposite. You come to baptism as
a sinner, and original sin is forgiven you.”
The diocese’s policy may also counter a part of canon law that says any person who has not yet been baptized is eligible for that sacrament, Haselberger said. A transgender person denied baptism for that reason could appeal to the Vatican, but Haselberger said it is unlikely that someone would risk the publicity and emotional challenge of that process.
In some ways, the diocese’s policy on transgender
individuals mirrors how the church talks about same-sex couples, said Patrick
Hornbeck, author of “More than a Monologue: Sexual Diversity and the Catholic
Church.” The church teaches that being attracted to people of the same sex is
not sinful but that acting on that attraction is. Similarly, Hornbeck said, the
Diocese of Marquette seems to be suggesting that a person who thinks of their
gender identity as a problem to overcome would not be barred from the
sacraments.
Hornbeck, who is also a theology professor at Fordham
University, noted the policy comes at a time when many Catholic leaders have
taken to drawing lines beyond which they believe it’s not possible for a person
to be in good standing within the church. Recent debate among the U.S. bishops over
whether President Biden and other Catholic politicians who support abortion
rights can receive Communion exemplifies that trend, he said.
“The Diocese of Marquette seems to be adding fuel to that
particular fire by saying that beliefs about gender and gender transition also
fall into that category,” Hornbeck said.
Advocates for the LGBTQ community warned that the policy
could backfire.
Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry,
said it could lead to “decimation of the Catholic community,” creating a
division with faithful who will reject it and other bishops who will welcome
LGBTQ people as full members of the church. Few other dioceses are likely to
follow suit because the guidance would lack a theological basis and almost
certainly upset many Catholics, added DeBernardo, whose organization aims to
minister to LGBTQ Catholics.
At a time of increasing societal awareness of diverse gender
identities, DeBernardo said he assumes that many bishops are fielding questions
from priests about whether to administer sacraments to transgender or nonbinary
people.
“I think that when the marriage equality debates in the U.S. ended in 2015, for the most part, with the Supreme Court decision, that the new issue for the U.S. bishops became gender identity, more than anything else,” he said. “And I think with the new generation — that there’s new understanding of gender and more visibility for people who don’t identify with the gender binary — that this is going to come up.”
Dear Joanna,
ReplyDeleteWith extreme liberalism in the USA , the Holy Catholic Church with the newest movement in the USA and growing rapidly is now mobilized toward keeping the Church on the narrow road as the Gospel and Bible Demands and they are now mobilized against the Radical new Liberal Pope . As the Word teaches " We are Only Promised Food Shelter and Just Basic Clothing for covering ". We are warned to be pure and be devoted to the Trinity .
Thanks for your comment but I could not disagree more. As someone who grew up strict catholic and worried that being trans was somehow against my faith I now know this bias was something created by humans and not by any deity. I've had enough of society's bad faith on a whole host of issues over my lifetime and certainly being LGBT can be counted among the many errors that so called religious people have made in condemning something they don't understand. As far as this Pope goes I have always been a fan of the Jesuits and was educated by them. Their focus on education is part of what I attribute my current knowledge to. Being trans isn't a sin so there is nothing to repent for. Good luck to you and to the church if they intend to truly minister to everyone.
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