Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

A scandal that brings shame to the Baltimore Archdiocese: dividing Catholic from Catholic


A brief reflection, prompted by the appearance in the on-line Catholic Review of an announcement of the opinion of a prominent Catholic athlete - he opposes the expansion of civil marriage to gay and lesbian Catholics.


A century ago many bishops of the Roman Catholic Church in the US were united on the subject of civil rights for Catholics. The bishops were especially sensitive about the mistreatment of Italian and Irish Catholics, who suffered discrimination in many areas of public and community life in America.
Today, the hierarchy of the church is of a different mind. Today, the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church is campaigning actively in the Civil realm, to deprive many Catholics of Civil Rights enjoyed by others Catholics.
Today, to its greater shame, the hierarchy is even willing to encourage individual lay Catholics to denounce the efforts of other Catholics to seek the protection of the civil law for their children and for themselves.
Today, Maryland Catholics are treated to the spectacle of a prominent athlete, a Roman Catholic, given visibility in an official, Catholic media outlet, so that he might give his personal opinion; which is that gay and lesbian Catholics be denied the right to go to the courthouse and get a marriage license - a right which the prominent athlete enjoys but which is to be denied to other Catholics in Maryland.
America, for 150 years, has progressively expanded civil rights. America does not contract such rights; on the contrary, broader participation in public life is a powerful trend in our civil society. The expansion of civil liberties, the inclusion of more and more citizens in the circle of civic participation often is not easy. Civil rights campaigns are well described as civil rights struggles. Such struggles have cost people their liberty and their lives.
In truth, and in the interest of justice, there can be only one side for the Roman Catholic Church in the struggle for civil rights in America. The church simply must be on the side of justice. The church - to be true to its own justice traditions - simply must be on the side of the expansion of civil liberties. The church must not become an advocate in a campaign to deny civil liberties to Catholic and other citizens of the United States. Tragically, this has already occurred.
A campaign to deny civil rights inherently involves demagoguery, appeals to fear, encouragement of division and hatred. We see all of this today in Maryland, as the opponents of civil rights for gay and lesbian Marylanders exploit these themes.
Sadly, to it's shame, the current leadership of the Archdiocese of Baltimore is campaigning actively with the demagogues, the dividers, the haters. Scandalously, the leadership is coldly, cruelly and with calculation setting Catholic against Catholic.
We leave to future developments, the answer to the as yet unanswered question: why?

Friday, October 19, 2012

"Government deals with marriage as a civil status . . . "


Opponents of the civil rights of gay Marylanders often argue from Scripture that marriage is about one man and one woman. So says the Knights of Columbus through a spokesman: "We are one with the church on the subject of preserving traditional man-and-woman marriage."

Marriage is man-and-woman marriage. And that's it.

But that is not it. Not everyone in Maryland reads Scripture. 

Not everyone in Maryland reads Scripture in just the same way.

In the United States we do not call in the prosecutor to enforce religious beliefs.

Judge Dennis Jacobs, a conservative federal circuit judge, yesterday (Oct 18 2012) made this clear

Civil rights in the United States are not regulated by any one religion. 

Judge Jacobs issued a decision in the three judge decision in the Windsor case stated:

". . . law (federal or state) is not concerned with holy matrimony. Government deals with marriage as a civil status . . . A state may enforce and dissolve a couple’s marriage, but it cannot sanctify or bless it. For that, the pair must go next door [to the Church]."

In Maryland, this year, civil marriage equality is on the ballot. 

The question we are asked to decide on Nov. 6 is whether all the citizens of Maryland enjoy the same civil right to marry the one you love.

In our society, there can be only one fair answer to this question: 

Everyone who believes in equal protection under law should vote FOR Question Six on November 6.

Source: 

Judge Jacobs strikes down DOMA section 3 | Maryland for All Families

DOMA Ruled Unconstitutional by Federal Appeals Court


A federal appeals court on Thursday ruled that gay Americans are a class of people who deserve the same kinds of constitutional protections as many other victims of discrimination. - NY Times



Sunday, February 20, 2011

GOD'S MANY MISTAKES? ARCHBISHOP O'BRIEN PROCLAIMS A GOSPEL OF EXCLUSION

In an editorial in the Archdiocesan newspaper, The Catholic Review (Feb 17, 2011), Archbishop Edwin F. O'Brien made an appeal to Maryland Catholics to "speak out" as the General Assembly considers a bill, which would extend the right to marry, without regard to gender.

I am happy to "speak out" and do so in support of the bill, S.B. 116, which the Archbishop opposes.

Archbishop O'Brien wishes to exclude a category of citizens from the benefits of civil law - people who love each other.

The Archbishops's targets, victims, actually are people, who desire publicly to bond themselves to one another in a civil - not a church - union, and thereby undertake all of the privileges and responsibilities which a civil marriage entails.

All this comes as the Roman Catholic Church continues to have to apologize for failing to shield children and vulnerable adults from sexual predators in the ranks of the clergy and church employees.

Apologies are good, but the best way to deal with victims is not to create them in the first place.

Just as the backward look of today requires an apology to children abused by pedophile priests, the Catholic Church of the future will apologize for its official assault on the civil rights of gay and lesbian citizens.

After Archbishop O'Brien is gone, a successor will tell us that the church was simply following "legal advice" - which is what Cardinal Keeler said, on his way out the door, about the winking and nodding this Archdiocese did when criminal pedophiles were discovered but promoted or transferred, when these predators ought to have been prosecuted and removed from ministry.

But . . . back to the immediate issue, the attempt to deny civil rights to a category of citizens.

Literally o one is suggesting that the Roman Catholic Church be required to conduct, to sanction or to recognize gay marriages as a sacrament or as a religious rite.

The Church is free to follow its own rules in this regard. Unfortunately, this is not enough for the hierarchy of the Church. Unwilling to impose strict rules of behavior upon its own caste of ordinands, the hierarchy proposes to impose exclusionary rules upon the citizenry, Catholic or no.

It provokes sadness to hear the Archbishop, titular head of a most diverse community of believers, to advocate a Gospel of Exclusion.

No one in a position of respect and high regard ought to be caught advocating the denial of civil rights to some citizens - rights which are enjoyed by others.

This is a peculiar posture for the Archbishop to adopt because few other Catholics seems to agree with the Archbishop. Where are the clergy? Where are the Religious Orders? Where is the laity? Do we read of daily Catholic denunciations of the homosexual and lesbian "disorder" in our midst?

Of course not. Why not? Such denunciations correctly would be considered unseemly, prejudiced, hypocritical.

Nor do we (often) hear of gay persons denied a place of service in a local parish. Or told not to put something in the collection plate.

No one but a disconnected, isolated hierarchy would advocate such a cruel, biased, self-defeating public policy as the denial of civil rights to anyone.

MISREMEMBERING THE PAST

On what basis does the Archbishop make the case that some citizens be denied rights that others enjoy? Archbishop O'Brien relies on a misreading of societal and also church practice, history, tradition and science.

Forgetting that the Roman Catholic Church has, in the past, authorized and benefitted materially from human slavery, Archbishop O'Brien appeals very broadly to past practice, which he now declares, exhibited an unwavering sanction of marriage as between one man and one woman.

Forgetting that the Roman Catholic Church, my church, segregated itself in the South, after the Civil War, the Archbishop appeals to a fictional, all-embracing, welcoming tradition. The welcoming tradition has been hard fought. Surely, Archbishop O'Brien knows this.

Forgetting that polygamy was practiced by Hebrew Patriarchs and sanctioned in the New Testament as an instrument of God (Gal 4:22-25), the Archbishop writes that "the union of one man and one woman" has been "bestowed" . . . by societies throughout human history."

Forgetting that the civil doctrine of adoption, to say nothing of science, is able to bring children to childless couples through a variety of means, Archbishop O'Brien writes that marriage "originates in a simple biological fact. The union of one man and one woman is the only relationship capable of creating children and nurturing them together as father and mother."

Archbishop O'Brien writes that "marriage is a joining of man and woman, involving the gift of offspring, has been the cherished standard of Western culture, time immemorial."

This is nonsense. "A joining of man and woman" has not always and forever been the standard, not even in Maryland. And not of the Roman Catholic Church.

In the provincial era, "the joining of man and woman" was criminalized - if the man happened to be Black. In that case, by Act of the General Assembly, an indentured woman, who had a child with a male slave indeed, would be united - in perpetual slavery. This "one man and one woman" would be consigned together to a lifetime of servitude to the White men who made the rules - as would the couple's offspring.

I have discovered no occasion when a presiding Catholic prelate in Maryland Province raised the slightest objection to the enslavement of English women, who consorted with male slaves, or proclaimed church doctrine to require freedom for the male slaves themselves.

I ask the Archbishop, quick to proclaim perpetual social and religious truths in the interests of secular legislation he prefers, to produce such statements and also to certify that no Pope and none of Archbishop O'Brien's predecessors in the archdiocese of Maryland owned slaves, or ordered Catholic clergy to conduct wedding cerimonies between slaves or between slaves and freed persons - all this being, we are now told "the cherished standard of Western culture, time immemorial."

Such assurances cannot be made in the face of the shameful historical record.

Catholic laity, priests, bishops, popes and religious orders, all have owned slaves. Papel bulls (Dum Diversas, Romanus Pontifex) sanctioned human slavery, justified the enslavement of native populations and the taking of their property.

So much for the lately proclaimed Roman Catholic embrace of the sanctity of human life.

The predecessors of Archbishop O'Brien preached neither an end to slavery nor the unvarying freedom of one man and one woman to marry - the doctrine the Archbishop proposes, now, has ever been the standard of both society and the Church.

The head of the Church in Maryland ought to exercise caution in editorializing about the novelty he now proposes as having always been taught and practiced by the Church. This is especially the case when the Archbishop sets about to exclude some citizens, rather than to include all, in the protections of the civil law.

MISSREADING THE PRESENT

The Archbishop is correct when he states, "In the view of the American Catholic bishops, marriage between one man and one woman, with a view toward family, is a basic human and social institution."

True. This is the expressed view of the American Bishops, relying in their turn on bad doctrine, bad history, bad science and proclaiming, in their turn, a Gospel of Exclusion.

Wishing to invoke the powers of the state to enforce the Church's doctrine of exclusion, the Archbishop writes that, "Marriage, whose nature and purpose are established by God, can only be the union of a man and woman. The law should not have it otherwise."

Do we really want our legislature to adopt legislation because it is endorsed by God?

Laws ought to be considered and then adopted or rejected by application of reasoned, stated policies, which every citizen can understand and consider, irrespective of the policies and the practices of any particular church.

Quite regularly, civil society adopts new standards of inclusion, which the churches subsequently adopt. One of these innovations was the recognition that civil marriage may not be barred to anyone based on race. This was not church doctrine in Maryland or in America until after it was already the law of the land.

Doubtless, the churches, including the Catholic Church, will once again follow the innovations of civil law and acknowledge marriage between people who wish to entwine their lives, withiout being subjected to demeaning and selective inquiry into gender.

The Catholic hierarchy ought to lead on this one, just as it ought to have led the fight against human slavery in America, but did not. Just as the hierarchy ought to have led the marches against segregation, burt failed to do so.

As was the case with the end of slavery and the end of segregation, the Catholic hierarchy will be dragged along, belatedly recognizing the civil rights of all citizens, making yet one more awkward, embarrassingly tardy, accommodation to "modernity" - a word that has become a four-letter word to far too many prelates in our day.

The Archbishop's rhetoric of exclusion is not strengthened by the groundless assertion that heterosexual married couples are in some way penalized if civil marriage is extended to all. Where is the penalty? Where are the voices of all those couples, who feel threatened for their own marriages, if gay couples marry?

Nor is the Archbishop's case against gay marriage strengthened by an appeal to Pope Benedict, who has announced that homosexuality is "a disorder," and who probably has done more damage to the repute of the Roman Catholic Church, since the days when Popes struck medals for Catholic kings, who slaughtered religious dissenters.

Nor does science support the hierarchy's harsh and unreasoned rejection of human beings.

Here, as in other matters, such as the manipulation of canon law to deny children protection from pedophile priests, Pope Benedict is wrong, and the Archbishop with him.

Expanding civil marriage rights and privileges to all does not strip marriage "of its unique connection to parenthood," as the Archbishop asserts. People who want to marry to have children can still do that.

But that is not the point Archbishop makes. He argues that having kids is the soul legitimate reason for getting hitched.

If having children were the gold standard for marriage, than both the church and the state would bar older couples or infertile adults from marriage. Neither the state nor the Roman Catholic Church maintains such an absurd and blatantly hostile prohibition.

The Church's embrace of the marriage of older couples completely refutes the Archbishop's desire to exclude gay couples from the benefits of the civil law, on the ground that they cannot give birth to children.

Nor does the proposed law of inclusion erase "the right of a child to a mother and father," as Archbishop O'Brien argues.

Just as many children suffer in homes where contention and abuse exist and where the couple are heterosexual, many children already are growing up in the loving homes of gay men and gay women. There is no evidence that such kids are being harmed or made to suffer the slightest limitations.

These kids benefit from "healthy marriages" including the benefits the Archbishop listed in his editorial and implied are limited to heterosexual couples:

• More likely to succeed academically;

• Physically and emotionally healthier.

• Higher rates of physically and emotionally healthy citizens; and

• Higher rates of educated citizens.

Theere is no evidence at all that these benefits are automatically extended to children, whose parents are heterosexual and automatically deprived from children whose parents are gay.

The Archbishop laments the depiction of any who opposes extending marriage to all as "a religious zealot or, worse, a bigot."

But the counter position, advocated by Archbishop O'Brien, would exclude a civil benefit - the right to be married - to individuals, whom the Archbishop would characterize as 'disordered' and unfit to be parents, whether by adoption or other means.

This is bigotry. No better word for it.

The adamant position which Archbishop O'Brien is advocating has more to do with what lies ahead: institutions and agencies affiliated with the Church will not be able to discriminate in hiring and in spousal benefits enjoyed by employees or clients. Nor will Catholic schools be able to bar children whose parents are gay.

A few months ago, a child attending a parochial school in Boulder, Colorado, was banished from school because her parents are a lesbian couple. ("Sacred Heart of Jesus Rejects Kindergartener" http://rbc-in-md4.blogspot.com/search/label/Catholic%20doctrine)

Do we want to see such discrimination occur in Maryland? Of course not.

When a child can be barred from a classroom in a Catholic school because her parents are gay, then statements about the "dignity" of gay persons ring hollow indeed, as do the Archbishop's concluding remarks in his editorial.

Let us practice inclusion even if the head of the Roman Catholic Church - my church - preaches exclusion.

I am hoping that enough Catholic voices can be raised in support of inclusion and against exclusion, to keep the hierarchy from pulling the whole Church further down into an intolerable, narrow, rhetorical ditch, from which she cannot extricate herself.

Already, there are too many hate groups in society. The Roman Catholic Church must not become one.