
IntroductionNow that we have reviewed the background, it is at last possible to address and assess the present teaching of the Catholic Church. The first thing to be said is that, in the context of Scripture and Tradition the official teaching of the Church is not definitive, given that nothing has been "defined". On the other hand, any Catholic should be very wary of setting up his own private judgement against that of the Magisterium. An attitude of filial docility is much more in keeping with a healthy Catholic mentality. This is not because one should "turn off one's mind" if one is a Catholic! Nor is it because there is some virtue in "obedience" in itself. It is because one cannot expect to be an expert in everything, not even every aspect of theology and ethics. It is generally prudent to defer in such matters to the consensus of orthodox theologians and teachers of the Faith: the Bishops in Catholic Communion. It is generally imprudent (and in fact impudent and hubristic) to try to work such matters out for oneself, independently, from first principles. |
Prophetic AuthorityStill, on occasion, it is necessary and indeed a sacred duty to resist Ecclesiastical authority. St Paul stood up to St Peter, the first pope, and his hierarchical superior, over the matter of the equality of uncircumcised gentiles within the Church. St Catherine of Sienna told the Pope that he was wrong to stay at Avignon and should return to Rome.There is a prophetic dimension to authority within the Church as well as a hierarchical one. The hierarchy has the responsibility to judge the spirits but prophets have the responsibility to admonish the hierarchy when it deviates from its sole duty of preserving and promoting the Gospel Tradition. It is just as plausible for a lay person to be a prophet as for a cleric, for a woman as a man. The Magisterium and Infallibility What
exactly is the status and significance of the Dogma that we will be considering?
Official Church Teaching can sometimes be infallible. This means that it
is absolutely binding on every Catholic. Because it is binding, it is believed
to be devoid of error. It would be contrary to justice, indeed monstrous,
to demand unqualified assent to a proposition if there was thought to be
any possibility of that proposition being false.
That a proposition has been taught infallibly does not mean that it is utterly accurate, the last word on the subject or even that it is (in the slightest bit) helpful. It only means that it is not wrong. So infallible teaching to the effect that "There are three persons in the Godhead" does not of itself exclude the possibility that there are in fact seven! Moreover, the fact that a doctrine has been taught infallibly does not necessarily means that it is in any sense important. Conversely the fact that some doctrine hasn't yet been taught infallibly doesn't been mean that it is somehow unimportant. As far as I know, the Physical Resurrection of Christ (i.e. the historic fact that "The Tomb Was Empty") has never been taught infallibly, and I consider this proposition to be at the heart of the Faith! In fact, only a bare skeleton of the faith has been taught infallibly over the centuries, almost always in reaction to controversy. In a mathematical analogy, infallible teaching serves to establish "boundary conditions" that specify the set of valid solutions. To take a geographical metaphor, it is a set of warning signs saying "Danger! Unsafe and harmful delusions beyond this point". The protestant idea that Catholicism ties one down in an elaborate tangle of dogma is very far from the truth. Infallibility is not the same as "being right", or even "always being right". A book of carefully checked log tables (I show my age!) is not "infallible". The important thing about infallibility is that it is open-ended, on-call and recognizable. It is a grace given to the Church by Jesus for our benefit. It is a means of deciding crucial questions in a timely and clear manner, with the potential for a minimum of ambiguity. |
The Extra-Ordinary MagisteriumThe most clear form of infallible teaching is that of the "Extra-Ordinary Magisterium". This is the action of a Church Council (subsequently ratified by the Pope) or of the Pope himself (in communion with the Church-as-a-Whole) in his most solemn and formal pronouncements. Such acts of a Council or Pope are called definitions. Very few definitions have ever been promulgated just for the fun of it. The Church has been loath to presume on the protection of Holy Spirit, instinctively knowing that the charism of infallibility has a legitimate purpose and should not be demeaned by over-use. "Take not the Name of the Lord in Vain." Finally, and very significantly, almost all definitions are couched in negative terms. Take the Council of Trent. It produced many excellent decrees, of impeccable orthodoxy and moderate tone; but none of them are taken as infallible: though they are due the highest possible regard! It is the canons (lists) of anathematized propositions appended to the decrees that are understood to be infallible: because they state that anyone who believes exactly what they specify is to be excluded from the Church.The reason for this is clear. To say that a Catholic has to believe exactly something would be to excommunicate everyone! This is because no-one could ever be entirely sure that anyone believed exactly what was enjoined! This would be a total nonsense. To exclude from the Church those who believe exactly something as specified, by contrast, is quite harmless. This is because only those who insist on identifying with the proposition (which is bound to be ambiguous), in spite of it being condemned are excluded! They condemn themselves by insisting that they do believe exactly what is condemned. |
The Ordinary Magisterium While
true, the fact that "if all the Bishops agree and positively teach that
some proposition is a part of the Catholic Faith, then it is so" is of
limited
utility. This is because it can never be clear that in fact they have
done so. One must beware that a consensus may be no more than "shared conventional
ignorance", even on the part of the Catholic Episcopate. At present, there
are many propositions that will seem self evident to almost everyone that
in some distant future will be commonly known to be false. It is of no
importance that the Catholic Episcopate would respond unanimously if asked
about the truth of such a proposition. They might even think that (perhaps
because it was mentioned in passing in the Scriptures) that this proposition
was "part of the Gospel". If so, they would simply be wrong. Holy Spirit
will see to it that they never get round to formally defining it, and that's
all we need to be concerned about!
The obvious historic example here is "the Earth is stationary at the centre of the Universe, and the Sun orbits about it". This notion is clearly presumed in Scripture and was thought by the Medieval Church authorities, on mistaken Aristotelian grounds, to be of profound metaphysical (and so religious) importance. Even if the Catholic Bishops were unanimous in condemning the idea that the Earth orbited the Sun, that didn't make them right, or their teaching infallible! Similarly, regarding Usury and Slavery and Circumcision. Similarly, regarding the perfidy and malignity of the "Jewish Race" or the inevitable damnation of all non-Catholics! The Episcopate may well have thought that these teachings were part of the Faith and regularly implied so: but they never clearly taught that they were so. In particular, they never enjoined that anyone who held (for example) the doctrine that "Contemporary Jews are not guilty of deicide" (as we now believe!) was to be excluded from the Church. Hence, while it is true to say that the Ordinary Magisterium can be infallible; it seems to me that this proposition is, regrettably, of limited utility. Infallibility isn't just about being right, it is about being known to be right. This requires a distinctness and clarity of proposal. It is difficult enough for mere mortals to extract from the written decrees of Church Councils those doctrines that are infallible: remember, one generally falls back on "anathematized counter propositions". It is much more difficult to discern what might be infallibly true in the teaching of the Ordinary Magisterium. A priest friend wrote the following to me when he learnt of Rome's 2001 AD decision to recognize the validity of the Anaphora of Addai and Mari: "Several things disturb me about the Vatican decision, apart from the fact that I believe the conclusion to be wrong. As has happened more than once during the pontificates of Paulus VI and Johannes Paulus II, a decision has been made based chiefly upon ecumenical and pastoral reasons, throwing prudence, tradition and doctrinal integrity to the wind. A basic sacramental teaching has been compromised: 'The word is added to the element, and a sacrament comes to be.' [St. Augustine].One must be wary of making of the Ordinary Magisterium a stricter master than the Extra-Ordinary Magisterium could ever be! It is possible to become an "inverse Cafeteria Catholic", picking and choosing those undefined teachings that appeal to oneself and then inflict them upon ones fellows. One should avoid laying heavy burdens on others! |
Infallible Ethical teachingWhile the Church believes that She has the ability to define doctrine in the field of ethics; in fact She has never done so. I think that the closest She ever came to doing so was on the question of "Artificial Contraception" in the Papal Encyclical "Humanae Vitae" [HV (1968)], but there is no question of this being infallible teaching, though at the time of its promulgation many zealous people argued forcefully that it was.Nevertheless, it remains true that the teaching of "Humanae Vitae", as much else that I will be discussing in this paper, is of the highest authority possible within Catholicism, short of infallibility. I say this because the Church is dealing with important issues; and doing so in a considered manner via Her most exalted organs of State: the Pope; a Council of the Church and the "Holy Office" (of the Inquisition.) Every Catholic is therefore obliged (at the risk of sinning gravely against prudence) to presume strongly that it is true, unless they have compelling experiences and or reasons that force them to question it. Why do I resist?So what are my reasons for resisting? I believe that I have no choice. For years I accepted the Official Teaching of the Church, making as much sense of it as I was able and presuming for the rest that what difficulties I was aware of could be solved with enough effort. Subsequently, I was forced by circumstances to think and pray a great deal about these matters. I have seriously considered the possibility that I am a child of Satan and owe allegiance to the powers of darkness, as befits one whose nature is oriented towards sin. Thanks to God's grace and the help and advice of a few good friends, I am still a Catholic! I have come to know many good people who are personally affected by this teaching. It has become clear to me that the Magisterium is wrong, and also why it is wrong.If it were some minor technical matter, then it wouldn't really matter and there would be no point in pressing the issue. Regrettably, this is not a minor matter. Many millions of people are being condemned as "intrinsically disordered". Their sexuality, a core part of their humanity (see "Famularis Consortio", [FC(1981)#11]) is being described as essentially evil. This alienates these people from the Church and the "Good News of the Kingdom" and makes it almost impossible for them to be evangelized. Even were I somehow to escape condemnation myself, in justice I have no choice but to side with those who are condemned as "samaritans, publicans and sinners" even when they are not. I think I am in good company in doing so. The best! Moreover, as I have already attempted to demonstrate, there is a dearth of anything that might be taken as authoritative teaching prior to the era of the Second Vatican Council. This means that all contemporary teaching is open to the accusation that it is novel and outside the Tradition. For it to be sustainable, it has to be clearly founded on Scripture; the Natural Law, via Human Reason or the moral sense of the Catholic People in such a way as to be recognizably Apostolic (i.e. not just secular prejudice). In my judgement, the Official Teaching of the Contemporary Magisterium fails these tests. |
The Mind of the ChurchThe Church's contemporary Official Teaching is that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered", in that they conflict with God's intended purpose for sex. They are said to "lack an essential and indispensable finality". Sacred Scripture is said to condemn them as "a serious depravity" and "to present them as the sad consequence of rejecting God". Whilst a homosexual orientation is not condemned by the Church as of itself sinful, it is judged to be an "objective disorder" since it is not consistent with what is said to be "the psycho-sexual development intended by the Creator". Rather, it is "a tendency ordered towards an intrinsic moral evil". It is said that even those who are homosexual because of some unchosen intrinsic predisposition, cannot claim that this predisposition is God's intention for them.More widely, I think it fair to say that the contemporary Magisterium would have it that the Biblical teaching witnesses to the principle that sexual pleasure should be primarily ordered towards procreation. Strangely, as far as I am aware, this is never spelt out explicitly in any Church document - still less in Scripture! In stark contrast, Pius XI taught that:
[Pius XI: "Casti Connubii" #59] "This mutual moulding of husband and wife, this determined effort to perfect each other, can in a very real sense, as the Roman Catechism teaches, be said to be the chief reason and purpose of matrimony, provided matrimony be looked at not in the restricted sense as instituted for the proper conception and education of the child, but more widely as the blending of life as a whole and the mutual interchange and sharing thereof." [Pius XI: "Casti Connubii" #24] "First of all, nature itself by an instinct implanted in both sexes impels them to such companionship, and this is further encouraged by the hope of mutual assistance in bearing more easily the discomforts of life and the infirmities of old age." [Catechism of the Oecumenical Council of Trent: "On Marriage"]
The key concepts that emerge from even a cursory study of the relevant Church Documents are: Monogamy; Family; Sexual Complementarily; Altruism; Marriage; The Marriage Act; The Sexual Faculty; Procreation; The Natural Law; Finality and Love. I shall next discuss each of these briefly. It would be of great utility for my reader to have access to the various Twentieth Century Ecclesiastical Documents that I refer to in what follows. They are all available on the internet. Most are certainly available as "Vatican II, the Conciliar and Post Conciliar Documents" and "Vatican II, More Post Conciliar Documents" both edited by A. Flannery. "The Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons" [PC(1986)] is available as S392 from the CTS. "Veritatis Splendor" [VS(1993)] is available with a set of varied commentaries as "Understanding Veritatis Splendor", edited by J. Wilkins. |
MonogamyWe read in the Papal Exhortation "Familiaris Consortio" [FC(1981)#19] that Polygamy is contrary to the plan of God "as revealed from the beginning". This is apparently deduced (but by implication only) from the fact that Adam and Eve were a monogamous pair. The fact that they had ex hypothesis no opportunity for multiple partnerings, as there were no other humans to marry is ignored! Moreover, if it were to be said explicitly that God only created one wife for Adam to make clear that monogamy was right and polygamy wrong, then one would equally have to conclude that incest is part of the Divine Scheme of Things (who did the children of Adam and Eve marry, after all?)Moreover no comment is made on the facts that Scripture contains not a single negative comment on Polygamy, and that it was common during pre-exilic times! Why is there a need for an exclusive union? Abraham, Israel, David and Solomon did not find such to be necessary. How does monogamy promote the good of children and of society? Polygamy works well for some who live not so far from Salt Lake City (though it is illegal throughout the United States), and in many African countries after all! If one can have more than one friend, and more than one child then why not more than one spouse? Isn't this just a case of cultural imperialism? It is stated by the Holy Office in "Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons" [PC#5] that this style of argument is not "facile". However one describes it, it is certainly typical of many contemporary Vatican documents. They jump straight from either the naive quotation of isolated phrases from Scripture or the assertion of uncontentious premises via unjustified "therefores" to foregone conclusions [cf PC#4]. As a priest friend recently wrote to me: "I am having to read about current moral theology on sex at the moment. It is depressing work, full of non-sequiturs, unjustified assumptions and unwarranted inferences. I could the more easily criticize your views if I could as yet see that the other established theories were absolutely coherent and correct. As it is I fear the whole structure needs rebuilding."Or in the recently published words of the Catholic moral theologian, the late Gareth Moore OP: Asserting that there is "a solid foundation of Biblical testimony" [PC#5] on some topic (whether it be the excellence of Monogamy, or the depravity of Homosexuality) does not make it so. Moreover, "the interpretation of Scripture must be in substantial accord with .... Tradition" [PC#5]. If this does not exist, or has been suppressed over time by Church authority, then Scriptural interpretation is particularly difficult. Saying that "the Church's teaching today is in organic continuity with the Scriptural perspective and her own constant Tradition" [PC#8] in such matters is simply, it pains me to say, wishful thinking. Moreover, it is not correct to identify "The Church's living Tradition" [PC#5] with the latest document issued by the Holy Office, or even the documents of the latest Council of the Church. Quite the opposite! Such documents are not themselves Sacred Tradition, and rather have to be interpreted in the light of Sacred Tradition, as Cardinal Ratzinger (now pope Benedict XVI) himself well knows and often argues! |
Pope John-Paul II has identified the Family as the building block of Society
and the basis of the Church [FC#15]. Equally,
the Church is often (but not, to my recollection in the Scriptures) described
as the "Family of God".
The Pope allocates to the Family, as its fundamental task, the procreation
of children [FC#28]. He has suggested that
the value of a childless married relationship can be enhanced by the involvement
of the barren couple in the upbringing of children other than their own,
by adoption, fostering, teaching or charitable work with the sick or disabled
[FC#14].
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Sexual ComplementarilyTo suggest that the fact that Mankind was "Created Male and Female in the image of God" means that maleness and femaleness are reflections of God's own nature and implicitly that human reproductive life is an expression of the Life of the Trinity is at best heretical, if not downright pagan. The orthodox interpretation of the Genesis text is that Human male and female (in spite of their sexual differentiation) are both equally like God in participating in His authority over creation [FC #42]. The alternate interpretation, that sexual reproductive activity is a reflection of divine generative activity is Baalistic!
Thus, in a dramatic development of [or deviation from traditional -ed] Catholic thought, John Paul concludes that we image God not only as individuals, 'but also through the communion ... which man and woman form right from the beginning'. And, the Pope adds, 'On all of this, right from 'the beginning', there descended the blessing of fertility'[Nov 14, 1979].
We use spousal love only as an analogy to help us understand something of the divine mystery. God's "mystery remains transcendent in regard to this analogy as in regard to any other analogy" [Sep. 29, 1982]. At the same time, however, the Pope says thatThis is a simple reversal of a valid argument into an invalid one. God regularly uses all kinds of familiar and powerful images of common-place experience to communicate spiritual truths to us. He knows that we best understand and relate to those things with which we are most familiar. Hence He uses the image of Israel as His (oft erring) wife. The fact that God uses a fact of human existence to express some spiritual truth in no way even suggests that this aspect of human experience exits primarily in order to serve the purpose of manifesting this truth! So: the fact that Jesus says that God the Father is a gardener and the Church is a grape-vine cannot be taken to mean that God "wanted His great 'grape plan' to be so plain to us, so obvious to us that he impressed an image of it in our very gardens by making grape vines and calling us to get drunk on the wine that they produce".
"To choose someone of the same sex for one's sexual activity is to annul the rich symbolism and meaning, not to mention the goals, of the creator's sexual design. Homosexual activity is not a complementary union able to transmit life and so it thwarts the call to a life of that form of self-giving which the gospel says is the essence of Christian living. This does not mean that homosexual persons are not often generous and giving of themselves; but when they engage in homosexual activity they confirm within themselves a disordered sexual inclination which is essentially self-indulgent. As in every moral disorder, homosexual activity prevents one's own fulfilment and happiness by acting contrary to the creative wisdom of God. The Church, in rejecting erroneous opinions regarding homosexuality, does not limit but rather defends personal freedom and dignity realistically and authentically understood." [PC #7].The idea that man and woman are in some sense (other than the merely physiological) complementary [FC#19] is highly contentious. Some conservative Catholics go so far as to assert that the anatomical and physiological differences between the male and female result in a particular spiritual affinity: "By their very anatomic, physiological and psychological makeup, the sexes mutually attract each other spiritually and physically. This gives rise to a special form of the love of friendship called conjugal love, with its fecund and selfless plenitude that results in the begetting, protection and raising of children."This insinuates that the highest form of friendship is "conjugal love", "Let us first of all bring to mind the vast semantic range of the word 'love'; we speak of love of country, love of one's profession, love between friends, love of work, love between parents and children, love between family members, love of neighbour and love of God. Amid this multiplicity of meanings, however, one in particular stands out: love between man and woman, where body and soul are inseparably joined and human beings glimpse an apparently irresistible promise of happiness. This would seem to be the very epitome of love; all other kinds of love immediately seem to fade in comparison."which is in fact - on the explicit authority of Christ - untrue. "The conjugal act .... is the personal act of two subjects, husband and wife. In it they 'give' themselves to one another and 'receive' one another. They do so, however, in different and complementary ways, insofar as this act is possible only by reason of their sexual differences. The wife does not have the male sexual organ; therefore, in this act of conjugal union, she is not able to enter into the body, the person, of her husband, whereas he can and does personally enter into the body, the person, of his wife. He gives his very self to her, and in doing so receives her. On the other hand, his wife is uniquely capable of receiving her husband personally into her own body, her own person, and in doing gives her very self to him. The wife's giving of herself to her husband in this receiving sort of way is just as essential to the unique meaning of this act as is her husband's receiving of his wife in this giving sort of way. The husband cannot, in this act, give himself to his wife in this receiving sort of way unless she gives herself to him by receiving him, and she cannot receive him in this giving sort of way unless he gives himself to her in this receiving sort of way. As the philosopher Robert Joyce says, 'the man does not force himself upon the woman, but gives himself in a receiving manner. The woman does not simply submit herself to the man, but receives him in a giving manner.'
"The biblical account of creation speaks of the solitude of Adam, the first man, and God's decision to give him a helper.... So God forms woman from the rib of man. Now Adam finds the helper that he needed: 'This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh' [Gen 2:23]. Here one might detect hints of ideas that are also found, for example, in the myth mentioned by Plato, according to which man was originally spherical, because he was complete in himself and self-sufficient. But as a punishment for pride, he was split in two by Zeus, so that now he longs for his other half, striving with all his being to possess it and thus regain his integrity. While the biblical narrative does not speak of punishment, the idea is certainly present that man is somehow incomplete, driven by nature to seek in another the part that can make him whole, the idea that only in communion with the opposite sex can he become 'complete'."This is hilarious. Plato's myth suggests that the "best" type of original sphere was a double-male, which explains why some men are homosexual. I mean no offence to any females reading this. This is just the myth as Plato told it. Please be aware that generally, Plato held that men and women are equal down to the very root of their being. Moreover, the Bible says nothing of the kind. Hence the lack of a reference here. If this was true then Our Blessed Lord was not a "complete" man: which is an impious notion; and neither is any celibate - such as pope Benedict XVI! What a nonsensical and absurd idea. Plato taught that at least the best of men should expect to fall in love with another male. Either because this man perceives that the other will teach him wisdom (and so make him intimate with God), or because he sees that the other has a mind and soul that will benefit and is prepared to benefit from his influence. For Plato, love was characterized by fruitfulness. Heterosexual love was good, because it gave rise to physical offspring; but homosexual love was better, since it yielded fruit of the spirit and intellect. Plato also taught that Love does not of itself require sexual expression; and that the deepest and best love is beyond such matters. Jesus taught that after the Resurrection, humankind will be "like the angels" and marriage will not then be part of human society, let alone its foundation! He also taught that the greatest love was that of friendship, the relationship that existed between His Apostles and Himself.
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AltruismAs will have already been noted, the Magisterium tends to talk of romanto-erotic love as being "self-giving". Indeed, the Magisterium takes it as given that altruism is the basis and form of the authentic Christian life."In sum, conjugal love is a selfless or altruistic love of friendship, while also useful and pleasurable:Amusingly, this is in direct conflict with the basis of all love, as explained by St Thomas Aquinas. It should be noted in the above quotation that the words "selfless" and "altruistic" are prepended and appended to the quote from St Thomas and form no part of the Angelic Doctor's teaching. Proper love cannot exist without its object being somehow of benefit to the lover. In particular, a rational creature should love God because God is its hope for Eternal Life and fulfilment. Jesus teaches (in the parable of the Good Samaritan) that we should show benevolence to others because it is impossible to tell when one might be in sore need of another's benevolence. It is in one's own self-interest to popularize attitudes of kindness, compassion and justice by behaving in these ways so as to set an example to others and encourage them to behave similarly.'[Conjugal love] is useful insofar as it fulfils the needs of domestic life and gives pleasure in the act of procreation; and when the spouses are virtuous their friendship transcends these legitimate aspects, existing because of virtue.' [Thomas Aquinas: In Ethic., lib. 8, l. 12 n. 22]This spiritual dimension of marital love, fundamentally altruistic, gives solidity to marriage; when it falters, decays or withers, marriages often break up." On this basis, some "loves" are not properly so called. In particular, parental love is not based on the fact that the offspring is in any sense good for the parent. In fact, if a parent's love were offered on this basis only, then it would not be authentic! The reason that parents love their children is not, however spiritual or altruistic: it is rather instinctive and genetic. It is for the good of the species, and in particular for the propagation of their own genes; not for their own personal good that they love their children. This does not make parental love in any sense more noble than other loves - like the love of a creature for God - that are based on self advantage. If anythhing, the instinctive basis of parental love detracts from its character, because it is an irrational imperative. It is more like an appetite than an affection. In any romanto-erotic relationship, mutually advantageous friendship (not a "spiritual altruism") will eventually come to the fore. If the parties fail to perceive any mutual benefit apart from mere sexual gratification, the relationship will not last. Similarly, the child-parent relationship must evolve into friendship, if it is to survive adolescence. Nevertheless, the Magisterium argues that because Conjugal love (given its supposed tendency towards violence) is only really altruistic by virtue of its open-ness to procreation, homo-gender affectivity can be at best mutually exploitative and at worst pathological. "Therefore, love in its proper sense is a benevolent, altruistic sentiment guided by reason and the will. 'Homosexual love' is impossible because it seeks to transform the love of friendship between people of the same sex into conjugal love. 'Homosexual love' is only a sentimental attraction of a sexual nature or a psychological dependency due to a lack of emotional or sentimental self-control. It is, therefore, a neurotic sentimentality." |
Marriage is clearly promoted by
the Church as the only legitimate context for sexual activity. It is not
denied to those who cannot procreate but only to those incapable of sexual
intercourse. The inability for a man to establish an erection is the only
physiological bar to marriage. Sterility is no such bar. The Church seems
to say that penetrative sexual intercourse is an essential part of married
life, but reproduction is not.
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ProcreationProcreation is central to Catholic Dogma on sexuality. The conventional functionalist view of sexual activity can be traced back to Sts Augustine, John Chrysostom and Gregory the Great. For John, Gregory, Augustine and their followers, sex:
Recent Popes have watered down this teaching. They have clearly stated that sexual activity has two distinct but connected purposes, "unitive" and "procreative". This would have been anathema to Augustine, Gregory and John, who knew of only one! The best account I can give of the modern view is as follows. Given the biological need to reproduce; God chose to order it in the context of Love, as a reflection of the Generation of the Spirit in the Trinitarian Economy [PC#6, FC#11]. He made Man and Woman in such a way that the genders yearn for each other, with the purpose of encouraging them to reproduce and to see their personal fulfilment partly in terms of the engendering and upbringing of children [PC#7, FC#11]. Given the obvious importance of procreation, God has associated with it much that is of great value in human experience. Nevertheless, the prime and ultimate reason for the existence of sexual, romantic and erotic love, feelings and activity is procreation. The unitive role is secondary and exists only to support the procreative role by strengthening the reproductive pair bond. I find this very sad. To dismiss all feelings of intense affection as a means to the end of copulation cannot be right. Manifestly, love of ones children, parents, siblings or friends cannot be accounted for by such a prescription. Moreover, the Church insists that there is no obligation to consummate a Marriage: but rather proposes an unconsummated Marriage (that of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph) as an exemplar of spousal devotion. What purpose is served by rationalizing the love of one's life partner in such a manner? I think that very few people look for a life partner with engendering children as the prime consideration. Obviously gay-folk do not. I find it difficult to believe that many heterosexuals do either. I would expect that for most people it is more about loneliness, commitment, fun, happiness, security and so on. The Roman Catechism teaches: "First of all, nature itself by an instinct implanted in both sexes impels them to such companionship, and this is further encouraged by the hope of mutual assistance in bearing more easily the discomforts of life and the infirmities of old age." [Catechism of the Council of Trent: "On Marriage"]The Church claims to deduce from the uncontentious fact that the primary purpose of sexual activity is for the male to fertilize the female, the conclusion that all sexual activity not open to reproduction is intrinsically and gravely disordered [FC#30-32, HV#14]. On the other hand, Paul VI sensibly taught: "The sexual activity, in which husband and wife are intimately and chastely united with one another, through which human life is transmitted, is, as the recent Council recalled, "noble and worthy.'' It does not, moreover, cease to be legitimate even when, for reasons independent of their will, it is foreseen to be infertile. For its natural adaptation to the expression and strengthening of the union of husband and wife is not thereby suppressed. The fact is, as experience shows, that new life is not the result of each and every act of sexual intercourse." [Paul VI: "Humanae Vitae" #11]On this basis: strangely, and crucially, a single exception is made. This is heterosexual vaginal intercourse within marriage when either partner is unintentionally sterile. This is on the grounds that while this cannot fulfil its essential purpose (its finality is frustrated) this is unfortunate rather than sinful as there is then no question of a manipulation of nature to selfish ends. Of course, exactly the same could be said of homosexual intercourse. There is never a "contraceptive mentality" in same-gender lovemaking. Many same-gender couples might love their loving to give rise to offspring. They have no wish or intention to "manipulate nature to selfish ends". Their "sexual activity .... is .... for reasons independent of their will .... foreseen to be infertile". Strangely, the Church condemns any medical technique that might enable same gender couples to engender children between themselves! She would say that this was (like in-vitro fertilization) "contrary to the Natural Law"! The Church's support for and championing of "Natural Family Planning" is inconsistent. It is manifest that heterogender vaginal intercourse when the woman in her natural infertile period is no more open to procreation than when she is "on the pill". The action of the pill, and the intention of those using it, is no more than to prolong the natural infertile period.
"One is forced to ask: What rational distinction can be made, on the Church's own terms, between the position of sterile people and that of homosexual people with regard to sexual relations and sacred union? If there is nothing morally wrong, per se, with the homosexual condition or with homosexual love and self-giving, then homosexuals are indeed analogous to those who, by blameless fate, cannot reproduce. With the sterile couple, it could be argued, miracles might happen. But miracles, by definition, can happen to anyone. What the analogy to sterility suggests, of course, is that the injunction against homosexual union does not rest, at heart, on the arguments about openness to procreation, but on the Church's failure to fully absorb its own teachings about the dignity and worth of homosexual persons. It cannot yet see them as it sees sterile heterosexuals: people who, with respect to procreation, suffer from a clear, limiting condition, but who nevertheless have a potential for real emotional and |
How do we come to know God's creative plan and the proper finality and
ordering of human acts? The theory of natural law that underpins Catholic
ethical teaching, as illustrated in "Personae
Humanae" [(1975) PH#7], attempts to discover
the plan of God by looking at the nature and purpose of the sexual faculty.
Following the novel
teaching of Paul VI, this is asserted to exist for
two purposes:
procreation and the love union of male
and female. It is assumed that this twofold finality must be
respected in every sexual act and it is thus deduced that only in
the marital relationship can "the
use of the sexual faculty" be morally good. "Personae Humanae" applies
this analysis to various sexual questions: artificial contraception is
wrong - even when employed by spouses - because it frustrates the procreative
finality of the act, same-gender sexual activity is wrong because both
finalities are missing.
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Finality Whose
is the finality at issue here? It seems that
the options are "me", "nature" or "God". Clearly, the answer cannot be
the first, because if the finality of "the marriage act" was mine to determine,
by my own choice: as with everything else that I do, then there would be
nothing else to say. Nature won't do as an answer either, if this could
be made to mean anything specific. We do not condemn as immoral interference
with many natural processes which have clear evolutionary finalities. For
example, a gardener dead-heads plants in order to induce a second flowering
or to divert food storage to bulbs or tubers; yet this frustrates the finality
of flowering, which is without doubt the production of seed. For example,
oxygen is excluded when grape juice is fermented in wine making in order
to frustrate the natural metabolysis of ethanol to acetic acid. The list
is endless.
So we are left with the obvious answer, God. But one has to ask in what sense can God be said to wish, purpose, require or specify that every "use of the sexual faculty" should be open to procreation? What purpose (finality) would be served by such a specification? Clearly, in God's purpose, it is necessary that once every so often, human copulation should result in procreation. Just as clearly, achieving this is not a characteristic problem for humanity! As the Roman Catechism puts it: "Now that the human race is widely diffused, not only is there no law rendering marriage obligatory, but, on the contrary, virginity is highly exalted and strongly recommended in Scripture as superior to marriage, and as a state of greater perfection and holiness."Rather, mankind has to contend with "the serious problem of population growth in the form that it has taken in many parts of the world and its moral implications" [FC#31]. Do actions of themselves have necessary purposes? According to "Veritatis Splendor", yes. I think not. The insertion of a knife into another's belly may have the radically distinct purposes of either ending or prolonging life; and thence be either murder or surgery. It is not immoral to take a few breaths of (harmless) helium gas in order to amusingly demonstrate that the tone of one's voice is raised by so doing, even though this is to divorce the occasional act of breathing from its natural purpose (finality) of supplying oxygen to the body. Only if sexual activity is different from all others in having a single, necessary and inalienable purpose can it be wrong to ever separate it from that purpose. Quite to the contrary, it can easily be argued that the legitimate finality of many sexual acts is fun or recreation (like going to the theatre) rather than reproduction; that the "proximate end of the deliberate decision" [VS#78] to be physically intimate is to express tenderness and to share pleasure. As Pius XI puts it: "Nor are those considered as acting against nature who in the married state use their right in the proper manner although on account of natural reasons either of time or of certain defects, new life cannot be brought forth. For in matrimony as well as in the use of the matrimonial rights there are also secondary ends, such as mutual aid, the cultivating of mutual love, and the quieting of concupiscence which husband and wife are not forbidden to consider so long as they are subordinated to the primary end and so long as the intrinsic nature of the act is preserved." [Pius XI: "Casti Connubii" #59]There is nothing wrong in having fun or sharing pleasure, when no-one is harmed in the process! Jesus came that we might have "Abundant Life". God didn't create us to be miserable. He didn't place us in this world of wonders to be glum or feel guilty all the time. He made us to have fun! Responsible fun, yes; but fun all the same! |
The late Cardinal Hulme rightly complained
of society's obsession with sex, and confusion of sex with love:
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Recently, James
Alison has argued that the official teaching in this area is in practical
conflict with the doctrine of Original Sin as defined by the Oecumenical
Council of Trent. The following text is a much abbreviated extract from
a speech that he gave in Boston, Massachusetts on November 18th 2003.
If we were heirs of the Reformed tradition we could say "Homosexuality is what you would expect in a corrupt and depraved humanity. It is merely another wave of decadence and corruption. Anyone who is saved must obey the biblical commands, however little sense they may make. The Bible clearly teaches that homosexuality is sinful, so homosexuals should seek to become straight." Catholic official teaching on homosexuality is rapidly tending to the view that there are some people to whom the Traditional teaching on Original Sin does not apply: namely homosexuals. Instead, a Protestant understanding should be applied: but only in the case of homosexuals. In the old days, the discussion was entirely about
"acts", and you can condemn acts without saying anything at all about the
The Vatican has explicitly admitted that some people are identifiably homosexual, so the Magisterium now has a dilemma:
It is well known that the Magisterium has taken the second option. The Vatican has used the Church's teaching on marriage and procreation as a basis for determining anthropological truth, instead of turning to empirical evidence. A similar expedient did not serve the Church well in the Galileo controversy, and there is no reason to believe that it will do any better in this case. Anyone who lives with a homosexual inclination is taught that it is in itself not a sin, but that on the other hand, it can lead to nothing starting from itself. Homo-gender intimacy can only be judged to be intrinsically evil if there is no authentically human pattern of sexual desire other than the heterosexual. In which case, the homosexual inclination is a subsection of heterosexual concupiscence.
"[According to the present official teaching of the Magisterium] Homosexuality is a structural condition that restricts the human being, even if homosexual acts are renounced, to a less than fully realized life. In other words, the gay or lesbian person is deemed disordered at a far deeper level than the alcoholic: at the level of the human capacity to love and be loved by another human being, in a union based on fidelity and self-giving. Their renunciation of such love also is not guided toward some ulterior or greater goal - as the celibacy of the religious orders is designed to intensify their devotion to God. Rather, the loveless homosexual destiny is precisely toward nothing, a negation of human fulfilment, which is why the Church understands that such persons, even in the act of obedient self-renunciation, are called 'to enact the will of God in their life by joining whatever sufferings and difficulties they experience in virtue of their condition to the sacrifice of the Lord's cross.'"At the moment, it appears from official discourse that everything to do with being gay is somehow an exception to the Traditional teaching of the Church about grace. If Traditional Catholic teaching about grace is applied to the lives of gay folk it leads to expectations of:
In particular, the Vatican should be able to show in practice that the hidden true heterosexuality of the gay person can flourish. This could be done by documenting regular and sustained witnesses to heterosexual flourishing emerging without violence from the life stories of people who had identified as gay. This is not an unreasonable standard of proof. It should be remembered that there is a huge body of documentary evidence substantiating a regular and sustained witnesses to gay and lesbian flourishing emerging without violence from the life stories of people who had been taught that they were heterosexual. However until the Vatican comes up with such evidence
any ordinary Catholic should stick with the Traditional teaching of the
Church about grace and original sin, held uninterruptedly and reaffirmed
by the Oecumenical Council of
Trent, and learn to
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So what hope is there for the future? In the short term, I fear
none. The Church is so confused that it will take a good deal of agonized
reflection
to sort the mess out; and the Church is in no fit state to do this. It
seems to me that at present wholly artificial battle lines are being drawn
up between "liberal" and "conservative"
forces in the Church. The field to be fought on is liberty
and individualism vs authority and conformity.
Given that Jesus said "My burden is light",
"The
truth will set you free", and "If you love
me, you will obey my commandments; this is my commandment: that you love
one another", any such confrontation
is absurd. Nevertheless, because the area of sexual ethics is the only
one in which the hierarchy has taken a stand against popular sentiment,
to give ground here would be to yield up the last bastion to the enemy!
So even though the Pope is fighting the wrong battle, he cannot afford
(to be seen) to lose it!
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Appendix I : Comments on a critique of the work of Gareth Moore O.P.In a recent attack on the writing of the late Gareth Moore, Prof. Brian Johnstone CSsR, has proposed that the old official "natural law" arguments against homosexuality are at best inappropriate and at worst basically mistaken. He suggests replacing them with arguments "from symbolism"(!) and "from tradition".I will not respond to the former proposal beyond referring again to my own thoughts on the Trinity and the character of the symbolism that the orthodox doctrine employs. A new definition of traditionAs far as the latter argument goes, Prof. Johnstone re-interprets "Tradition" from its traditional meaning "the content of the Apostolic Message: the Gospel of Christ" (whatever that might be: we discover this by immersing ourselves in that Tradition) to mean "a historical goal-driven communication process based on a wholesome prejudice" (this is my own attempt to summarize Prof. Johnstone's meaning). The professor then asserts that the wholesome prejudice and goal that characterizes the Catholic Tradition is "self-giving is the basis of a good life in community as a reflection of the Self-Giving character of God" (again, this is my summary of Prof. Johnstone's words). This might be thought to be somewhat impertinent after having remarked, of the Tradition "how do we know which elements qualify as central, and why should a central part, or coherence with a central part, provide a criterion of truth?" (this time, I quote Prof. Johnstone exactly).Prof. Johnstone then seeks to establish that heterosexual coitus promotes the goal that he has uncritically identified with Tradition: altruism (though he does not use this word). He seems to do this on the basis that for the Church to have people to convince of the "goal of Tradition" they have first to be procreated (which seems to me to be a non-sequitor, but I may have misunderstood his superior scholarship). As the professor himself says: "the argument so far could give the impression the self-giving of the couple in marriage and the procreation of a child are being considered merely as ‘instrumental’ goods which serve the greater good of the continuation of the tradition. Obviously, this will not do."I emphatically agree with him on this point. He then seeks to rectify this defect by the following remarks: The case for gratuitous sex."The mutual self-giving of the couple, as a gratuitous self gift, is an instantiation of the good of the tradition, not simply a means to a further good. Similarly, the gift of life to a child, as a gratuitous gift, embodies the good of the tradition. Only if the gift of life is given to the child gratuitously, is it a genuine gift. If the child were sought only as a means to some end, such as keeping the family going, or even keeping the tradition going, this would not be a gratuitous giving and thus not fully in accord with the logic of the tradition. The tradition, as it has been understood here, will accept and commend procreation only when it is gratuitous; that is, acting so as to make possible the gift of life to another who is loved for her or his own sake."This passage is amazing on various grounds.
The case for non procreative sexProf. Johnstone then tries to show how use of "the safe period" is compatible with this theory, and has the degree of success that is to be expected. I refer interested readers to the original article, to read if they must! He then addresses the central problem for any conservative moralist, that of sterile heterosexual couples. He asserts without any obvious justification:"Even where the physical condition of the givers and receivers is such that procreation is not possible, the relationships have been recognized as maintaining the essential features of true giving and receiving, according to the purposes of the tradition, and so the marriage of such persons has been accepted. Where the physical and psychological expression of self-giving is still expressible in intercourse, and procreation is not excluded by an act of the will embodied in action to prevent this form of giving, living such a relationships represents a symbolic witness which is a reinforcement of the tradition and its goals.....He now seems to be reverting to the traditional use of the word tradition and arguing that this is legitimate because it has been traditionally accepted as being legitimate! Finally, Prof. Johnstone gets to the point that he has been preparing us for. After quoting the late Gareth Moore "So the fact that our sexual organs have a reproductive function has no tendency to show that non-reproductive, including homosexual uses of those organs, is in any way illegitimate." [Gareth Moore O.P., A Question of Truth: Christianity and Homosexuality (London: Continuum, 2003)] he argues: "This conclusion would follow if we were working with a juridic framework and were concerned only with negative prohibitions. From the proposition 'Human sexual organs are procreative', it does not follow that 'non-procreative use of these sexual organs is illegitimate'."This admission is, of course, most welcome. Unfortunately, Prof. Johnstone then continues: "But, according to the argument developed here, such 'other' uses of the sexual organs, in order to be accepted by the tradition, must be such as to positively promote the goals of the tradition. I have argued that physical, homosexual intercourse has not been demonstrated to have such a capacity. For this reason, it is not acceptable by the tradition."It seems to me that, on the contrary, Prof. Johnstone's arguments for the moral acceptability of the use of the "safe period" an |