by Jonathan Ekene Ifeanyi
I read with
a keen interest Anthony Cardinal Okogie’s article entitled, Homosexuality: Nothing has Changed in the
Church, which was published on page 51 of the Guardian newspaper on the
12th of August, 2013. Cardinal Okogie wrote the article to defend Pope Francis’
statement that he, the Pope, would not judge homosexuals. The Pope’s statement,
says the Cardinal, “must be read and understood through the lenses of the
gospel of Jesus Christ, the concern of the Church for those on the fringes, and
the mercy, tenderness and forgiveness of a pastor who walks among his people”.
The Cardinal accuses the media of having “given their classic coverage of this
interview: sensationalism!” and tries to explain what the Pope meant by the
statement.
The subject
matter is the following: Pope Francis,
when asked by a journalist about the Vatican's alleged "gay lobby",
answered that while a lobby might be an issue, he does not have any problem
with the inclination to homosexuality itself: "If someone is gay and he
searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?"
It should
be noted that his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, signed a document in 2005
that said men with “deep-rooted homosexual tendencies” should not be priests.
Thus Francis, just as he recently contradicted Benedict XVI’s Summorum Pontificum—by banning some
priests from saying the Tridentine Mass—is here doing the same thing again.
But
Cardinal Okogie—himself also an anti-Benedict XVI’s Summorum Pontificum—does not share this view. To understand the
Pope’s reply above, states the Cardinal, “one must grasp adequately the context
in which the question was asked. As is often the case, contexts shape and
influence greatly our responses…” The context, according to the Cardinal, is
the following:
“On June
15, 2013 Pope Francis named Mons. Battista Ricca to one of the key posts in the
overall effort to reform the Curia; the Pope’s representative at the Vatican
bank, with the critical but sensitive task of overseeing every aspect of the
management and reform of the bank. This appointment led to the searchlight
being turned on the life of this prelate; as a result, unsavory details of a
gay past came to limelight, leading to the appointment being viewed in some
quarters as the result of “gay lobby mischief”. While others raised eyebrows on
the sincerity of the new pope’s proposed reformation of the curia.”
After
citing the above as the “context” which led to the Pope’s reply, the Cardinal
goes on to accuse the press of having “a habit of searching out the “sins of
youth” to discredit or condemn an individual. A classic biblical allusion would
be the case of the woman caught in adultery, while she had sinned against her
own body and God, the creator of that body, the crowd tried to exact justice on
an action that was not committed against them, it was the exclusive reserve of
God, and God chose to forgive this repentant sinner. “…I do not condemn you, go
and sin no more.”
First of
all, as the Cardinal himself confirms, there was a serious issue at stake: the
Pope appointed a man known to be a homosexual (or, if you like, call him a
former homosexual) to be his “representative at the Vatican bank, with the
critical but sensitive task of overseeing every aspect of the management and
reform of the bank.” This very action, on Catholic principle, is a scandal on
the part of the Pope and if the journalists had come to question him because of
this, as indeed they had done, then they were doing the work of God. Do you
agree, Your Eminence?
Aside this,
Your Eminence, I consider your “biblical allusion” above simply intolerable.
How can you liken the pope’s statement to our Lord’s saying in the Gospel that
He would not condemn the sinful woman?
As we saw
above, Cardinal Okogie states in his article that, to understand the pope’s
reply to the journalist one must grasp adequately the context in which the
question was asked—and he goes on to cite the case of Msgr. Battista Ricca.
Well, Your Eminence, to understand Jesus’ reply to the Jews on this woman’s
case, one must also grasp adequately the context in which that question was
asked. We notice that in the Gospel stories, when people came to Jesus with
questions, He, being God, would always first of all read the heart of the
person asking the question to know if he was asking with a good intention or
with a bad one. When people asked Him question with a good intention, he answered
them with all sincerity, but when they asked with a bad intention, most of the
times He would not answer. For instance, in the Gospel according to Luke, when
Jesus was sent to King Herod, we are told that Herod was glad to see Him,
simply because he “hoped to see some miracle done by Him” (Luke 23:8). Now when
Herod questioned Him, Jesus Christ, knowing his bad intention, answered him not
a word. As we read: “Then he questioned Him with many words, but He answered
him nothing.” (Luke 23:9).
Now, on the
case of the woman caught in adultery, we read the following:
“And the
scribes and Pharisees bring unto Him a woman taken in adultery: and they set
her in the midst, and said to Him: “Master, this woman was even now taken in
adultery. Now Moses in the law commanded us to stone such a one. But what
sayest thou? And this they said tempting
Him, that they might accuse Him.
But Jesus bowing Himself down, wrote with His finger on the ground. When
therefore they continued asking Him, He lifted up Himself, and said to them:
“He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her” (John 8:
3).
Thus, just
like the case of Herod cited above, when the Jews came to Jesus Christ to
complain about this woman, they did not come with the intention of learning
from Him but merely in order to tempt Him—these people had already conditioned
their minds against Jesus and were looking for one thing or the other to use
against Him. Hence Jesus did not care to talk about this woman’s sin, not
because He felt that her sin did not matter much—which is always the impression
given by modern preachers—but because He knew that those who were accusing her
were themselves sinners, in fact, perhaps even more splendid sinners than the
woman—men who cared less about the beams in their own eyes but more about the
motes in other people’s eyes (Matt. 7:3).
Your
Eminence, that was the “context” which led to Jesus’ “cold” reaction to the
Jews’ question. Our Lord felt there was no need to denounce the sinful woman
because really there was no need to do so. Yet, He detested her sin. When Jesus
said he would not condemn her, he meant that He would not support putting her
to death, not that He would not judge her as a sinner if she continued
sinning—hence He said to the woman, “Go and sin no more”.
Now, as I
said, it is intolerable to liken this incident to Pope Francis’ encounter with
the journalists. The Jews, as we have seen, asked their question in order to tempt Jesus. Did the
journalists ask the question in order to tempt Pope Francis? The honest answer
is NO! Also, the Jews expected Jesus to either support them to put the sinful
woman to death or be against that. Your Eminence, do you think that those
journalists, like the Jews, expected Pope Francis to declare that all
homosexuals should be put to death? Certainly not! On the contrary, they
expected him, as a moral teacher, to condemn the sin of homosexuality. He did
not do that at all; on the contrary, he said he would not judge the sinner!
Francis’ use of “judge” here is simply incompatible with Jesus’ use of
‘condemnation” in the Gospel. Jesus said to the woman, “Go and sin no more”.
Did Pope Francis say that homosexuals should stop sinning? Again, the honest
answer is NO!
Your
Eminence, your “context” principle, if applied here, renders your argument not
only baseless, but also useless.
Again, we consider the Cardinal’s assertion that the Pope’s statement “must be read and understood through the lenses of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the concern of the Church for those on the fringes, and the mercy, tenderness and forgiveness of a pastor who walks among his people”.
Again, we consider the Cardinal’s assertion that the Pope’s statement “must be read and understood through the lenses of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the concern of the Church for those on the fringes, and the mercy, tenderness and forgiveness of a pastor who walks among his people”.
Well, I
truly do not know which Gospel the Cardinal is talking about, neither do I know
the church he is referring to, therefore I will rather assume the Cardinal
meant to say: The Pope’s statement must be read and understood as “…the mercy,
tenderness and forgiveness of a pastor who walks among his people”.
Now, even
for the above statement, it is true that the pope is infallible, for, as Christ
promised him in Blessed Peter, ‘‘…I will give to thee the keys (τὰς κλεῖδας) of the kingdom of heaven.
And whatsoever you shall bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven; and
whatsoever you shall loose on earth, it shall be loosed also in heaven”
(Matt.16:19)—meaning that whatever Peter, who was the first Pope, binds or
looses on earth, his act will receive divine ratification. It is also true that
the Pope, as a high priest, was promised by Christ, “Whose sins you shall
forgive, they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are
retained” (John 20: 21-23; cf. Heb. 5:1-3), which means that the Pope has
authority to forgive sins—he can have mercy or compassion on a sinner. But this
authority is conditional and cannot just be exercised anyhow. The Pope cannot,
for instance, wake up one morning and declares: “Now is a time of mercy! All
abortionists in the United States, all homosexuals in England, and all
Boko-Haramites in Nigeria have been forgiven their sins!” He has no authority
from Christ to do that. On the contrary, he can only grant forgiveness to a
repentant sinner, to repentant sinners. Thus one of the strongest accusations
launched against the popes by Martin Luther and other enemies of Catholicism in
the sixteenth century—which were mere lies anyway—was that they were granting
indulgences to sinners who had not truly repented.
Now, on
Pope Francis and the homosexual, or rather, the “suspected homosexual”, Msgr.
Battista Ricca: did Francis say that Msgr. Battista Ricca truly repented and
has been forgiven by the Church? The honest answer is NO! On the contrary, he
confirms that the man, in fact, is still a sinner, is still a homosexual. In
his own words: "If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and
has good will, who am I to judge?"
Your
Eminence, what exactly then, are you talking about?
More
intolerable still, is the Cardinal’s saying that homosexuals should be
respected. As I will show below, Cardinal Okogie is here going against
Catholicism. He cites the following from the so-called Catechism of the
Catholic Church to support his liberal view:
“The number
of men and women who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not eligible
(sic.). This inclination, which is objectively disordered, constitutes for most
of them a trial. They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and
sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be
avoided. These persons are called to fulfill God’s will in their lives and, if
they are Christians, to unity (sic.) to the sacrifice of the Lord’s cross the
difficulties they may encounter from their condition.”
Well, Your
Eminence, your above quotation has errors and omissions and I hereby quote the
same passage from my own copy of the Catechism:
“The number
of men and women who have deep-seated homosexual tendencies is not negligible.
They do not choose their homosexual condition; for most of them it is a trial.
They must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of
unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. These persons are
called to fulfill God’s will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to
unite to the sacrifice of the Lord’s cross the difficulties they may encounter
from their condition.”(CCC. 2358).
Now it must
be noted that this Catechism is faulty on many issues, including our subject of
discussion. In fact, people must note very well that, since the Masonic Second
Vatican Council, held in the 1960s, all the documents coming from the so-called
magisterium of the Catholic Church have always been full of errors and not all
Catholics—including Priests, Bishops and Cardinals—believe in them. Notice for
instance, the above statement, “They do not choose their homosexual condition;
for most of them it is a trial”—as if the Church is now an advocate of
homosexuals! Now how did the writers of this “catechism” know that homosexuals
do not choose their homosexual condition? Who told them?
In fact,
the statement is just as absurd as saying that adulterers do not choose their
adulterous condition! The Cardinal himself must have observed this, hence he
omitted the statement in his quotation!
Now to say
that some men and women have “deep-seated homosexual tendencies” is not only an
error noticeable to all human beings, but in fact a blasphemy against human
nature. It is, put simply, a sin to utter such impious words, because it is a
subtle way of saying that God is ultimately responsible for the sin of
homosexuality: if some men and women have
such tendencies, it logically means they were born with such, and if so, then
who should be blamed? God!
Before we
go to the traditional teachings of the Catholic Church with respect to
homosexuality, let us first of all look at the Sacred Scripture. Contrary to
the liberal views of Bergoglio and Okogie, in the Old Testament, Scripture
refers to the vice of homosexuality with special severity:
“Thou shalt
not lie with mankind as with womankind, because it is an abomination” (Lev.
18:22). “If any one lie with a man as with a woman, both have committed an
abomination, let them be put to death: their blood be upon them” (Lev. 20:13).
Again, we
read: “And the Lord said: The cry of Sodom and Gomorrha is multiplied, and
their sin is become exceedingly grievous” (Gen. 18:20). The angels arrived at
Lot’s house, under the appearance of two handsome men. “But before they went to
bed, the men of the city beset the house both young and old, all the people
together. And they called Lot, and said to him: Where are the men that came in
to thee at night? Bring them out hither that we may know them. . . . And they
pressed very violently upon Lot; and they were even at the point of breaking
open the doors. And behold the men [angels] put out their hand, and drew in Lot
unto them, and shut the door. And them that were without, they struck with
blindness from the least to the greatest, so that they could not find the door”
(Gen. 19:4-11). “And they [the angels] said to Lot: Hast thou here any of
thine?...all that are thine bring them out of this city, for we will destroy
this place, because their cry [of their crimes] is grown loud before the Lord,
who hath sent us to destroy them” (Gen. 19:12-13). “And they brought him forth,
and set him without the city: and there they spoke to him, saying: Save thy
life; look not back, neither stay thou in all the country about, but save thyself
in the mountain, lest thou be also consumed” (Gen. 19:17). “And the Lord rained
upon Sodom and Gomorrha brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven. And he
destroyed these cities, and all the country about, all the inhabitants of the
cities, and all things that spring from the earth. And his wife looking behind
her, was turned into a statue of salt. And Abraham got up early in the morning,
and . . . looked towards Sodom and Gomorrha, and the whole land of that
country, and he saw the ashes rise up from the earth as the smoke of a furnace”
(Gen. 19:24-28).
My dear Cardinal, how can you say we should respect evil men whom the Creator Himself cursed and ordered to be put to death?
Again, on the punishment that God prepared for the Jews, we read: “And I will give children to be their princes, and the effeminate shall rule over them . . . the shew of their countenance hath answered them: and they have proclaimed abroad their sin as Sodom, and they have not hid it: woe to their souls, for evils are rendered to them. . . . The Lord standeth to judge the people” (Is. 3:4-13). Vague references to sodomites, without special interest for our exposition, are found in 1 Tim. 1:8-10. For other references to Sodom and Gomorrha, without express mention of the vice of homosexuality, see: Deut. 29:23; 32:32; Jer. 23:13-14; 49:18; 50:40; Ezech. 16:55-56; Matt. 10:15; Rom. 9:29; Apoc. 11:8.
My dear Cardinal, how can you say we should respect evil men whom the Creator Himself cursed and ordered to be put to death?
Again, on the punishment that God prepared for the Jews, we read: “And I will give children to be their princes, and the effeminate shall rule over them . . . the shew of their countenance hath answered them: and they have proclaimed abroad their sin as Sodom, and they have not hid it: woe to their souls, for evils are rendered to them. . . . The Lord standeth to judge the people” (Is. 3:4-13). Vague references to sodomites, without special interest for our exposition, are found in 1 Tim. 1:8-10. For other references to Sodom and Gomorrha, without express mention of the vice of homosexuality, see: Deut. 29:23; 32:32; Jer. 23:13-14; 49:18; 50:40; Ezech. 16:55-56; Matt. 10:15; Rom. 9:29; Apoc. 11:8.
How can one
not relate the fulfillment of these threats to the AIDS epidemic now ravaging
Sodomites?
In the New
Testament, Saint Paul indignantly castigates this vice against nature: “Do not
err: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor the effeminate,
nor liers with mankind [sodomites] . . . shall possess the kingdom of God” (1
Cor. 6:9-10). In the Epistle to the Romans, the Apostle of the Gentiles
threatens perverts with punishments even on this earth: “Wherefore God gave
them up to the desires of their heart, unto uncleanness, to dishonor their own
bodies among themselves. Who changed the truth of God into a lie; and
worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed for
ever. Amen. For this cause God delivered them up to shameful affections. For
their women have changed the natural use into that use which is against nature.
And, in like manner, the men also, leaving the natural use of the women, have
burned in their lusts one towards another, men with men working that which is
filthy, and receiving in themselves the recompense which was due to their
error” (Rom. 1:24-27).
Saint
Peter, the first Pope, stresses the infamy of the sin of sodomy and the
chastisement God reserves for it: “For if God . . . reducing the cities of the
Sodomites, and of the Gomorrhites, into ashes, condemned them to be overthrown,
making them an example to those that should after act wickedly, and delivered
just Lot, oppressed by the injustice and lewd conversation of the wicked . . .
[then] the Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly from temptation, but to
reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment to be tormented” (2 Peter 2:4-9).
Saint Jude
is no less severe: “As Sodom and Gomorrha, and the neighboring cities, in like
manner, having given themselves to fornication, and going after other flesh,
were made an example, suffering the punishment of eternal fire, in like manner
these men also defile the flesh, and despise dominion [of Christ], and
blaspheme majesty” (Jude 7-8).
Of course
the Bible, as any good historian knows, is a product of the Catholic Church.
From the above quotations therefore, one can see the Church’s severe stance on
the sin of homosexuality. The first statement of a Church council on homosexual
practices was issued by the Council of Elvira (305-306). The decree excludes
from communion, even in articulo mortis
(at the moment of death), the stupratores
puerorum (defilers of boys). The decree of the Council of Ancyra, held in
Asia Minor in 314, strongly influenced the Western Church, and it was often
cited as authoritative in later enactments against homosexual practices. Canon
17 speaks about those “who . . . commit [acts of] defilement with animals or
males.” The Council of Ancyra established for these crimes a series of
punishments according to the age and state of life of the infractors: “Those
who have committed such crimes before age twenty, after fifteen years of penance,
will be readmitted to the communion of prayer. Then, after remaining five years
in that communion, let them receive the sacraments of oblation. However, let
their lives be analyzed to establish how long a period of penance they should
sustain in order to obtain mercy. For if they unrestrainedly gave themselves
over to these crimes, let them devote more time to doing penance. However,
those aged twenty and over and married who fall into these crimes, let them do
penance for twenty-five years and [then] be received in the communion of
prayer; and, remaining in it for five years, let them finally receive the
sacraments of oblation. Moreover, if those who are married and over fifty years
of age commit these crimes, let them obtain the grace of communion only at the
end of their lives.”
Pope Saint
Siricius (384-399) issued norms for admission into the priestly state. They
apply indirectly to homosexuality: “We deem it advisable to establish that,
just as not everyone should be allowed to do a penance reserved for clerics, so
also a layman should never be allowed to ascend to clerical honor after penance
and reconciliation. Because although they have been purified of the contagion
of all sins, those who formerly indulged in a multitude of vices should not receive
the instruments to administer the Sacraments.”
In the
opening speech of the XVI Council of Toledo in 693, Egica, the Gothic King of
Spain, exhorts the clergy to fight against homosexual practices: “See that you
determine to extirpate that obscene crime committed by those who lie with
males, whose fearful conduct defiles the charm of honest living and provokes
from heaven the wrath of the Supreme Judge.”
The most
complete set of norms against homosexual practices in the medieval era is
contained in the canons approved at the Council of Naplouse, assembled on
January 23, 1120 under the direction of Garmund, Patriarch of Jerusalem, and
Baldwin, King of the same city. On that occasion, a sermon was preached about
the evils that had befallen the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Earthquakes, plagues, and
attacks by the Saracens were judged as a punishment from Heaven for the sins of
the people. As a consequence, the Council issued twenty-five canons against the
sins of the flesh, four of which related to homosexual practices. Death at the
stake was decreed for those convicted of those specific crimes.
The Third
Lateran Council (1179) establishes: “Anyone caught in the practice of the sin
against nature, on account of which the wrath of God was unleashed upon the
children of disobedience (Eph. 5:6), if he is a cleric, let him be demoted from
his state and kept in reclusion in a monastery to do penance; if he is a
layman, let him be excommunicated and kept rigorously distant from the
communion of the faithful.”
Such was
the horror that surrounded the sin against nature that, by the late twelfth
century, sodomy was a reserved sin for which absolution was reserved to the
Pope and, in some cases, to the Bishop.
Nevertheless,
with the Renaissance this vice surfaced again. Homosexuality was a matter of
grave concern to Saint Pius V. As the well-known historian von Pastor narrates,
“In the first year of his pontificate, the Pope had two preponderant concerns:
zeal for the Inquisition and the struggle against ‘this horrendous sin whereby
the justice of God caused the cities contaminated by it to be consumed in
flames.’ On April 1, 1566, he ordered that sodomites be turned over to the
secular arm. . . . The various imprisonments of sodomites . . . impressed Rome
and frightened especially well-established people, for it was known that the
Pope wanted his laws enforced even against the powerful. Indeed, to punish for
vices against nature, the torment of the stake was applied throughout the
pontificate of Saint Pius V. . . . An earlier papal Brief mandated that clerics
who were guilty of that crime be stripped of all their posts, dignities, and
income, and, after degradation, be handed over to the secular arm.” The Holy
Inquisitor promulgated two Constitutions in which he castigates and punishes
the sin against nature.
In the
Constitution Cum Primum of April 1,
1566, Saint Pius V solemnly established: “Having set our minds to remove
everything that may in some way offend the Divine Majesty, We resolve to
punish, above all and without indulgence, those things which, by the authority
of the Sacred Scriptures or by most grievous examples, are most repugnant to
God and elicit His wrath; that is, negligence in divine worship, ruinous
simony, the crime of blasphemy, and the execrable libidinous vice against
nature. For which faults peoples and nations are scourged by God, according to
His just condemnation, with catastrophes, wars, famine and plagues. . . . Let
the judges know that, if even after this Our Constitution, they are negligent in
punishing these crimes, they will be guilty of them at Divine Judgment and will
also incur Our indignation. . . . If someone commits that nefarious crime
against nature that caused divine wrath to be unleashed against the children of
iniquity, he will be given over to the secular arm for punishment; and if he is
a cleric, he will be subject to analogous punishment after having been stripped
of all his degrees [of ecclesiastical dignity].”
Saint Pius
V is no less rigorous in the Constitution Horrendum
Illud Scelus of August 30, 1568. He teaches: “That horrible crime, on
account of which corrupt and obscene cities were burned by virtue of divine
condemnation, causes Us most bitter sorrow and shocks Our mind, impelling it to
repress such a crime with the highest possible zeal.
Quite
opportunely the Fifth Lateran Council [1512-1517] decrees: “Let any member of
the clergy caught in that vice against nature . . . be removed from the
clerical order or forced to do penance in a monastery, so that the contagion of
such a grave offense may not advance with greater audacity, taking advantage of
impunity, which is the greatest incitement to sin, and so as to more severely
punish the clerics who are guilty of this nefarious crime and who are not
frightened by the death of their souls, We determine that they should be handed
over to the secular authority, which enforces civil law. Therefore, wishing to
pursue with the greatest rigor that which We have decreed since the beginning
of Our Pontificate, We establish that any priest or member of the clergy,
either secular or regular, who commits such an execrable crime, by force of the
present law be deprived of every clerical privilege, of every post, dignity and
ecclesiastical benefit, and having been degraded by an ecclesiastical judge, be
immediately delivered to the secular authority to be executed as mandated by
law, according to the appropriate punishment for laymen plunged in this abyss”
(chap. 4, X, V, 31).
The Code of
Canon Law undertaken at the initiative and encouragement of Saint Pius X, and
published in 1917 by his successor Pope Benedict XV, says this: “So far as
laymen are concerned, the sin of sodomy is punished ipso facto with the pain of infamy and other sanctions to be
applied according to the prudent judgment
of the Bishop depending on the gravity of each case (Can. 2357). As for
ecclesiastics and religious, if they are clerici
minoris [that is, of a degree lower than deacon], let them be punished with
various measures, proportional to the gravity of the fault, that can even
include dismissal from the clerical state (Can. 2358); if they are clerici maiores [that is, deacons,
priests or bishops], let them ‘be declared infamous and suspended from every
post, benefit, dignity, deprived of their eventual stipend and, in the gravest
cases, let them be deposed’ (Can. 2359, par. 2).”
So many
saints and doctors of the Church such as St Augustine, Saint Basil of Caesarea,
Saint John Chrysostom, Saint Peter Damian, Saint Albert the Great, Saint Thomas
Aquinas, Saint Bonaventure, Saint Catherine of Siena, Saint Bernardine of Siena
and Saint Peter Canisius have denounced the sin of homosexuality.
Prof.
Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, in an SBT interview about homosexuality in Brazil
(not broadcast) on October 29, 1992, stated: “The sexual act exists in the
natural order of things for the fecundity of the family and, through the
fecundity of the family, for the expansion of mankind. The precept of Our Lord
Jesus Christ to men . . . is ‘Multiply and fill the earth.’ It is necessary,
therefore, to do this and by all means to favour the fecundity of sexual
intercourse, which is legitimately exercised only in Matrimony. Now then, as
for homosexuality, there is no Matrimony, and, above all, there can be no
fecundity. . . . “For many centuries,” Prof. Corrêa de Oliveira continued,
“homosexuality was the object of real aversion on the part of successive
generations. And this was not because of a whim . . . but by virtue of the
doctrinal principles I have just enunciated, which are principles of the Roman
Catholic and Apostolic doctrine. . . . This rejection [of homosexuality] is a
preservation of society against that which of itself threatens it. Everything
that is alive rejects what destroys it. Thus, by a similar movement of the
instinct of self-preservation, human societies modeled upon Catholic doctrine .
. . have been profoundly anti-homosexual.”
Prof.
Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira was asked: “Why, in your view, are homosexuals
discriminated against in Brazilian society?”
Answer:
“Brazil is a son of Portugal, and Portugal and Spain were always very strong
bulwarks of the Catholic Church. We received from our Portuguese ancestors
rigidity and consistency in the Catholic Faith, which was the model for the
customs of colonial Brazil, the United Kingdom [of Brazil and Portugal], the
Brazilian Empire and the Brazilian Republic until some time ago. Hence Catholic
aversion for homosexuality impregnated our customs and constituted a
tradition.”
And I will
add that it is not just the Brazilians. The sin of homosexuality is, put
simply, anti-human, just as humans have been “profoundly anti-homosexual.”
The truth
is that, Cardinal Okogie is among the Church’s leaders with liberal views on
many issues, including our subject of discussion. Such also is the former
Cardinal Bergoglio, now Pope Francis. Shortly after he was elected Pope,
Marcelo González of Panorama Católico Internacional, a journalist who knows the Church of Argentina as well as the palm of his hand, described Cardinal Bergoglio as follows:
“Of all the
unthinkable candidates, Jorge Mario Bergoglio is perhaps the worst. Not because
he openly professes doctrines against the faith and morals, but because,
judging from his work as Archbishop of Buenos Aires, faith and moral seem to
have been irrelevant to him…A sworn enemy of the Traditional Mass, he has only
allowed imitations of it in the hands of declared enemies of the ancient
liturgy. He has persecuted
every single priest who made an effort to wear a cassock, preach with firmness,
or that was simply interested in Summorum
Pontificum…This election is incomprehensible: he is not a polyglot, he has
no Curial experience, he does not shine for his sanctity, he is loose in
doctrine and liturgy, he has not fought against abortion and only very weakly
against homosexual "marriage" [approved with
practically no opposition from the episcopate], he has no manners to honor the Pontifical
Throne. He has never fought for anything else than to remain in positions of
power…It really cannot be what Benedict wanted for the Church. And he does not
seem to have any of the conditions required to continue his work…May God help
His Church. One can never dismiss, as humanly hard as it may seem, the
possibility of a conversion... and, nonetheless, the future terrifies us.” (Rorate caeli.blogspot.com, 2013).
Certainly,
Cardinal Okogie has his good sides, but his flaws are numerous and simply
fatal. He shares many things in common with Bergoglio. As the former Archbishop
of Lagos, his episcopate was simply a disaster and “Christian” life in his
Cathedral was a scandal. Just like Bergoglio, Cardinal Okogie never ceased
persecuting the poor faithful who rejected the new Mass and wanted to go back
to the Catholic Tridentine Mass. These Catholics lived, under the Cardinal,
like the children of Israel under Pharaoh. He also persecuted priests who made
an effort to preach with firmness, or who were simply interested in the
Tridentine Mass which Benedict XVI’s Summorum
Pontificum aimed at restoring. Now on homosexuality, I am personally aware
of a member of his own parish who was a well known homosexual. The Cardinal
knew the man, who was even a communicant and one of the strongest pillars of
his cathedral. He knew the man, a well known homosexual, yet he did absolutely
nothing about that.
It is only
the truth, Jesus said, that will set us free.
Source: This piece was first published by eaglereporters.com in 2013.
Source: This piece was first published by eaglereporters.com in 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment