‘Gay’ priest calls Cardinal Burke a clown,
accuses him of violence against homosexuals
A Catholic priest in the Archdiocese of Ottawa, Canada’s southeastern capital, who
openly proclaims he is ‘gay’ has used public radio and social media to smear
Cardinal Raymond Burke for his outspoken defense of Catholic teaching, calling
the high profile Church leader who visited Ottawa last week a “clown” and a
“drag queen,” and now saying that the cardinal's statements on homosexuality
are "violent”, reports LifeSiteNews.com
“As a gay [man] and as a priest of the Archdiocese
of Ottawa, I am upset at the visit of this person,” stated Fr. Andre Samson, who is a Faculty
of Education professor at the University of Ottawa. Samson first criticized the
cardinal in an email submitted in French to CBC’s Radio-Canada program and read
on air June 1. A translation of Samson’s various statements have been made
available at Big
Blue Wave.
“I particularly blame those who invited him, the
CCO Movement [LifeSiteNews note: it was actually NET Canada], Catholic
Christian Outreach —who seek to provoke and to distance themselves from the
current pope. The resistance towards Pope Francis has regrouped themselves
around this operetta cardinal who likes to disguise himself as a drag queen. I
know well today’s youth because I’ve taught at the University of Ottawa for the
last sixteen years. I can affirm that Burke will have more success at Mado [a
drag queen bar] than with the university students that CCO looks to convert.”
During his keynote address at NET Canada’s 20th
anniversary gala on Thursday, Cardinal Burke addressed the crisis Western
culture is facing, saying it is founded in a failure to recognize and live out
the meaning and purpose of the conjugal union.
Burke, recognized by pro-life-and-family leaders
worldwide as one of the Church’s foremost defenders of truth, morality, and
authentic Christianity, laid out a number of the “most grievous moral evils”
that constitute what he called the “disordered moral state in which our culture
finds itself.”
Topping the list was what he called the “ever
advancing agenda of those who want to redefine marriage and family life to
include the unnatural sexual activity of two persons of the same sex […] as if
there were a true form of human sexuality other than that intended by God, our
Creator and Redeemer, as he has written it in our body and soul.”
Fr. Samson took to Twitter June 4 and 5 to call
Burke a “clown” and once more a “drag queen.”
But Fr. Samson did not stop there. In an interview
with Radio Ville-Marie on Friday he went as far as calling Cardinal Burke’s
statements defending Catholic sexual morality “violent” against homosexuals.
"What he says against homosexuality, I find
that violent,” he said in the article that originally
appeared in French and was translated by Big Blue Wave. Radio Ville-Marie
quoted Fr. Samson saying that Cardinal Burke’s so-called “violence” not only
targets homosexuals in the general population, but is also directed against
homosexual priests and bishops.
"He is just as violent towards gay priests and
gay bishops, and I find that sad," he said.
Big Blue Wave blogger Suzanne Fortin commented that
Fr. Samson has “a lot of nerve to be a Catholic priest condemning another
Catholic priest for teaching Catholic doctrine.”
It was two years ago that Fr. Samson declared on
the popular TVA television show hosted by Denis Lévesque that he was “gay,” telling Ottawa Citizen last year that he
pursued being a Catholic priest as a way to hide his same-sex attraction.
Fr. Samson, ordained in 1984, has a history of
courting controversy. Before coming to the Archdiocese of Ottawa, Samson was
stationed in the Archdiocese of Montreal where he had a position at St.
Joseph’s Oratory. In 2013 he was not only relieved of his duties but removed
from the diocese.
While the oratory’s administration refused at that
time to comment on the priest’s expulsion, Fr. Samson himself told the Toronto Star in 2013 that he had
a habit of refusing to place Holy Communion on the tongue of recipients and
that he misspoke the words of absolution during confession. He also admitted to
what appears to be an instance of breaking the seal of confession — the sacred
duty of a priest to maintain absolute secrecy about anything the penitent
confesses — in sharing with his fellow priests during lunch the confession of a
young man who told him about suffering sexual abuse by a priest.
Journalists reached out to Fr. Samson for comment,
asking him if his criticism of Burke would not be more aptly directed towards
the Catholic Church, from which Burke directly acquires the content of his
preaching.
Fr. Samson responded via email: “Are you objective?
Are you really interested in knowing my opinion? I feel that you have already judged
me and you will not hesitate to call me a bad priest.”
They also reached out to the Archdiocese of Ottawa,
asking if Fr. Samson remained in good standing with the archdiocese, but did
not receive a response.
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