If I were a young person seeking a church home for myself, why would I EVER want to consider a church in which
Showing posts with label prejudice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prejudice. Show all posts
Friday, November 1, 2019
Monday, October 14, 2019
Newman Canonized, and Talk of His Love for Ambrose St. John Rocks the World of Macho-Heterosexist Clerics: My Thoughts
1/ It has long been a tactic of homophobes to claim that one cannot identify people in the past as gay when they did not identify themselves that way, even when they spoke or wrote about same-sex relationships in their own lives. This tactic wants to invisibilize gay people.— πππππππ π». πππππ€ππͺ π (@wdlindsy) October 14, 2019
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Jeff Chu on Meeting the Woman Who Fired Him Because He Was Gay: Valuable Twitter Thread for #RiseUpOct8
The US Supreme Court will hear arguments this week on whether LGBTQ people are protected by existing anti-discrimination law. I've been thinking about this topic. On Saturday at #EvolvingFaith19, I came face-to-face with a woman who fired me from a freelance gig because I'm gay.— Jeff Chu (@jeffchu) October 7, 2019
The Twitter thread Jeff Chu shared yesterday, which begins with the tweet above, is very important to read today, as the Supreme Court hears more arguments about the "right" of people to appeal to religious belief as their basis for discriminating against LGBTQ citizens in the workplace, in schools, in public services, in housing, in the marketplace, etc.
Labels:
civil rights,
discrimination,
LGBTQ,
prejudice,
religion
Monday, September 30, 2019
Dominican Priest-Theologian James Alison Receives Affirming Phone Call from Pope: When Will the Call Come for the Rest of Us?
Pope Francis’ call and respect for Alison’s path rights a major injustice inflicted by the Vatican. It should give all Catholics encouragement to follow their consciences and do the work to which God calls them, even if church leaders condemn or exclude. https://t.co/RAMkMOmZiD— New Ways Ministry (@NewWaysMinistry) September 29, 2019
I am delighted for James Alison's sake. He's a first-rate theologian.
Labels:
cleric,
clericalism,
discrimination,
human rights,
Pope Francis,
prejudice,
theologian
Monday, September 16, 2019
Catholic Bishop of Diocese of Crookston, Minnesota, First to Be Investigated Under New Church Guidelines: A Selection of My Commentary on Crookston Diocese Over the Years
This could get interesting. https://t.co/zKizQX0SbR— Jennifer Haselberger (@jmhaselberger) September 11, 2019
The bishop of the Catholic diocese of Crookston, Minnesota, Michael Hoeppner, is now under canonical investigation for allegedly interfering with civil or canonical investigations of clerical sexual abuse of minors. As Jean Hopfensperger states in the report I have just linked, Hoeppner is the first sitting bishop to be investigated under new Vatican protocols for reviewing and disciplining bishops in such matters.
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Wendell Griffen, "Standing with Elaine"
With the permission of my friend Judge (and Reverend) Wendell Griffen, I'd like to share with you a statement he has made recently on his blog The Fierce Urgency of Prophetic Hope. A bit of background: as Wendell's posting notes, in October 1919, hundreds of black men, women, and children were murdered in an event in eastern Arkansas now known as the Elaine Massacre. There are some outstanding historical accounts of what occurred in this massacre — one of the largest race-based massacres in American history. These accounts provide a narrative of what happened to the extent to which historians can piece together what occurred, when so much evidence has been lost or suppressed.
Labels:
African American,
Arkansas,
discrimination,
prejudice,
race,
racism,
violence,
Wendell Griffen
Thursday, July 18, 2019
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Indianapolis Archbishop Claims Firing of Gay Employees Necessary to Address "Public Situations": My Response
![]() |
| Masha Gessen, "Coming Out, and Rising Up, in the Fifty Years After Stonewall," on the Supreme Court ruling in Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) |
Associated Press, "Indiana archbishop defends firing of teacher in gay marriage":
Archbishop Charles Thompson said during a news conference that he didn't seek out information about the marriages involving the teachers but had to respond to what he called a "public situation" of Catholic school employees not following church doctrine.
Labels:
Arkansas,
Catholic,
discrimination,
heterosexism,
homophobia,
prejudice
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Caleb Crain: Gay-Panic Defense Began to Be Challenged When Gay People Were Permitted to Write about Anti-Gay Crimes — Implications for the Catholic Media
A seed of change, however, was finally planted in the late nineteen-fifties, when the gay community began to write about such crimes themselves, making visible the complicity of the judicial system and the press in entrenching homophobia.
~ Caleb Crain, "The Theory That Justified Anti-Gay Crime"
Labels:
Catholic,
discrimination,
homophobia,
prejudice
Monday, June 24, 2019
"Indescribable Cruelty": Commentators on the Concentration Camps Now Being Operated by the United States Under Donald Trump
7/ For 10 years, not one migrant child died in U.S. government custody.— Alvaro Bedoya (@alvarombedoya) June 21, 2019
Since September, at least 6 kids have died in the custody of DHS or HHS.
How many more kids must die before we end this madness?
The firing of gay employees of Catholic institutions is hardly the most horrific thing happening in the world today. There's also this:
WaPo: Indianapolis Diocese Threatens "To Strip Away Catholic Identity" from Schools "That Employ People Who Are Not Heterosexual"
The statement I've underlined from this Washington Post article will be challenged. People will say this is not about punishing schools that hire employees who are not heterosexual. It's about going after gays who don't behave themselves and who publicly dissent from Catholic teaching, they'll maintain.
Labels:
Catholic,
discrimination,
homophobia,
prejudice
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
FrΓ©dΓ©ric Martel on the Tragedy That Is the Pastoral Career of Joseph Ratzinger — A Tragedy for the Entire Church
From FrΓ©dΓ©ric Martel, In the Closet of the Vatican, on the tragedy of Joseph Ratzinger's (Benedict XVI's) pastoral career:
Thursday, March 7, 2019
Connections: UMC Hardening vs. Queer People to Catholic School Barring Child of Gay Couple to Failure of Utah Bill Outlawing "Conversion" Therapy to "Pro-Life" Administration Caging Children
I offer you today these selections from items I have been reading lately, because — to my way of thinking, and I am hoping you'll agree — there's a common theme here. These stories interlink:
Friday, January 18, 2019
Celebrating Mary Oliver & Asking: Do We Want to Be the Kind of People Celebrating Mary Oliver, or the Kind Celebrating Karen Pence & John Finnis?
That's the big question, the one the world throws at you each morning, "Here you are, alive. Would you like to make a comment?"
~ Mary Oliver, Long Life (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo, 2004), p. xiv.
Labels:
Christianity,
discrimination,
homophobia,
John Finnis,
Karen Pence,
Mary Oliver,
prejudice
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Why Blaming Gay Priests for Catholic Abuse Situation Will Not Help Anything (Plus News about Cardinal Pell, Anti-Gay Hardliner)
As I posted my posting two days ago with an assortment of reports about the sexual abuse of vulnerable people in Christian churches, I had decided that I'd do a follow-up posting featuring some valuable commentary from Jamie Manson about Pope Francis' "worries" about gay priests. In my view, the critique/discussion of comments by top Catholic officials like the ones Francis has made to Father Fernando Prado about homosexuality and gay priests needs to go hand in hand with reports about abuse of vulnerable people in Christian churches. Where a plethora of reports from various churches, including the Catholic church, demonstrates plainly that the vulnerable people being abused by priests and pastors include females…. Demonstrating that the gays-are-the-problem analysis is a red herring if we really want to get to the root of sexual abuse of vulnerable people in faith communities….
Monday, December 3, 2018
"All" Francis Is Doing Is Calling Gay Priests to Keep Vows of Celibacy: A Rebuttal
People say Pope Francis' maliciously silly comments about gay priests are about underscoring that gay priests vowed to celibacy shouldn't be sexually active.— πππππππ π³. π»ππππππ’ (@wdlindsy) December 3, 2018
Fine. Priests both straight and gay who take vows of celibacy should not be sexually active, period. /1
Labels:
Catholic,
discrimination,
heterosexism,
homophobia,
Pope Francis,
prejudice
Headlines Keep Pouring Forth: "Pope Francis Goes Full Homophobic"; "Pope Tells Gay Clergy to Quit" — Some Mercy. Some Hope. Some Welcome!
![]() |
| Newshub (New Zealand) |
And the headlines just keep pouring out around the world: "Pope Francis goes full homophobic"; "Pope Francis doesn’t want homosexuals to join the priesthood"; "The Catholic Church is still homophobic"; "Pope Francis says gay life has become 'fashionable' and is hurting the Catholic Church"; "Pope tells gay clergy to quit"; "Gay people not welcome in clergy."
Labels:
Catholics,
discrimination,
gospel,
homophobia,
Pope Francis,
prejudice,
welcoming community
Sunday, December 2, 2018
I Have a Dream: As Pope Francis Announces that Gay Men Shouldn't Enter Priesthood, as Advent Begins — "Leave the LGBTQ Community the Hell Alone"
This is a meditation for the first Sunday of Advent. It has specific reference to what Pope Francis said (or is said to have said: let the Catholic games begin!) in a book released in Italy yesterday, which is being represented widely in headlines throughout the mainstream media like this one today from The Guardian in London: "Gay people should not join Catholic clergy, Pope Francis says." Given that we know that there already are gay men in the Catholic priesthood and hierarchy — galore — this statement will rightly strike people with functioning consciences and access to much information at all as downright silly. As malicious….
Labels:
Advent,
Catholics,
discrimination,
heterosexism,
homophobia,
Pope Francis,
prejudice
Monday, November 5, 2018
"People Who Are Most Likely to Appear in These Kinds of Stories Are the Least Likely to Have a Say in How Those Stories Are Told": Lessons for Catholic Media Reporting on LGBTQ Community
A diptych for you today — news commentary dancing two-by-two which, in my view deserves to be highlighted, and which illuminates, I think, themes I've discussed here in the recent past:
Labels:
Catholic,
homophobia,
media,
National Catholic Reporter,
prejudice
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)










