Pope Francis Derangement Syndrome XVIII. Wherein LGBT groups lament the pope’s “dangerous ignorance” on gender identity.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • August 6, 2016 • LGBT Issues; Pope Francis Derangement Syndrome

John Lis­ton Byam Shaw, “The Woman, the Man, and the Ser­pent” (1911)
O

n August 2, Pope Fran­cis said a few words about gen­der identity—words that are not at all new with him. In a meet­ing with bish­ops that day, he observed:

In Europe, Amer­i­ca, Latin Amer­i­ca, Africa, and in some coun­tries of Asia, there are gen­uine forms of ide­o­log­i­cal col­o­niza­tion tak­ing place. And one of these—I will call it clear­ly by its name—is [the ide­ol­o­gy of] “gen­der.”

(Which is, in fact, an arti­fi­cial con­struct. The aca­d­e­mics and ide­o­logues have co-opt­ed a word that, in its nor­ma­tive mean­ing, refers to gram­mar. I find I always need to point that out.)

Today children—children!—are taught in school that every­one can choose his or her sex. Why are they teach­ing this? Because the books are pro­vid­ed by the per­sons and insti­tu­tions that give you mon­ey. These forms of ide­o­log­i­cal col­o­niza­tion are also sup­port­ed by influ­en­tial coun­tries. And this ter­ri­ble!

[The pope is not win­ning friends on the left by say­ing any of this.]

In a con­ver­sa­tion with Pope Bene­dict, who is in good health and very per­cep­tive, he said to me: “Holi­ness, this is the age of sin against God the Cre­ator.”[That is, peo­ple are in rebel­lion against the design of human cre­ation, man and woman.] He is very per­cep­tive. God cre­at­ed man and woman; God cre­at­ed the world in a cer­tain way … and we are doing the exact oppo­site.

[Note how Pope Fran­cis announces his con­sis­ten­cy with, not his depar­ture from, Pope Bene­dict XVI.]

Should Have Seen Just What Was There

Now, the pope has said this kind of thing so often in the past that I mar­vel that peo­ple mar­vel. Dear heav­ens, the pope is Catholic. What ever shall I do? How can this be? How can I go on? I have, dear read­er, doc­u­ment­ed such papal state­ments on this wery blog.

  • I doc­u­ment­ed it here, on Feb­ru­ary 23, 2015, when the pope said the same thing in a papal inter­view in flight from Mani­la to Rome. (All any­one talked about was breed­ing like rab­bits.)

Ide­o­log­i­cal col­o­niza­tion: I’ll give just one exam­ple that I saw myself. Twen­ty years ago, in 1995, a min­is­ter of edu­ca­tion asked for a large loan to build schools for the poor. They gave it to her on the con­di­tion that in the schools there would be a book for the chil­dren of a cer­tain lev­el. It was a school book, a book pre­pared well, didac­ti­cal­ly, in which gen­der the­o­ry was taught.

This woman need­ed the mon­ey, but that was the con­di­tion. Clever woman, she said yes and did it again and again, and it went ahead, and that’s how it was achieved. This is ide­o­log­i­cal col­o­niza­tion. They intro­duce to the peo­ple an idea that has noth­ing to do with the nation; yes, with groups of peo­ple, but not with the nation. And they col­o­nize the peo­ple with an idea that changes, or wants to change, a men­tal­i­ty or a struc­ture.

Dur­ing the syn­od, the African bish­ops com­plained about this, which was the same sto­ry, cer­tain loans in exchange for cer­tain con­di­tions. I say only these things that I have seen.

Why do I say ide­o­log­i­cal col­o­niza­tion? Because they take, they real­ly take the need of a peo­ple to seize an oppor­tu­ni­ty to enter and grow strong—with the chil­dren. But it is not new. The same was done by the dic­ta­tor­ships of the last cen­tu­ry. They entered with their own doc­trine. … Think of the Hitler Youth.

Oh, the left­ists did not like that Hitler Youth com­par­i­son! At the Dai­ly Screech, Dr. Can­di­da Moss was shocked that the pope did not agree with lib­er­al aca­d­e­mics like Dr. Moss! The pope was “recy­cling cen­turies of misog­y­ny” and “diss­ing women”!

  • I doc­u­ment­ed it again, here, on June 25, 2015, when the pope said the same thing in Lauda­to Si 155. (All any­one talked about was the pope’s belief in glob­al warm­ing and his cas­ti­ga­tion of air con­di­tion­ers.)

It is enough to rec­og­nize that our body itself estab­lish­es us in a direct rela­tion­ship with the envi­ron­ment and with oth­er liv­ing beings. The accep­tance of our bod­ies as God’s gift is vital for wel­com­ing and accept­ing the entire world as a gift from the Father and our com­mon home, where­as think­ing that we enjoy absolute pow­er over our own bod­ies turns, often sub­tly, into think­ing that we enjoy absolute pow­er over cre­ation. Learn­ing to accept our body, to care for it and to respect its fullest mean­ing, is an essen­tial ele­ment of any gen­uine human ecol­o­gy. Also, valu­ing one’s own body in its fem­i­nin­i­ty or mas­culin­i­ty is nec­es­sary if I am going to be able to rec­og­nize myself in an encounter with some­one who is dif­fer­ent. … It is not a healthy atti­tude which would seek “to can­cel out sex­u­al dif­fer­ence because it no longer knows how to con­front it.

The Wash­ing­ton Post did not miss any of that. Sarah Pul­liam Bai­ley doc­u­ment­ed it all and pre­dict­ed that such pas­sages would be “read close­ly.”

  • And I doc­u­ment­ed it here, on April 11, 2016, when the pope said the same thing in Amor­is Laeti­tia 56 & 285. (All any­one talked about was com­mu­nion for the divorced and remar­ried.)

56. Yet anoth­er chal­lenge is posed by the var­i­ous forms of an ide­ol­o­gy of gen­der that “denies the dif­fer­ence and reci­procity in nature of a man and a woman and envis­ages a soci­ety with­out sex­u­al dif­fer­ences, there­by elim­i­nat­ing the anthro­po­log­i­cal basis of the fam­i­ly. This ide­ol­o­gy leads to edu­ca­tion­al pro­grammes and leg­isla­tive enact­ments that pro­mote a per­son­al iden­ti­ty and emo­tion­al inti­ma­cy rad­i­cal­ly sep­a­rat­ed from the bio­log­i­cal dif­fer­ence between male and female. Con­se­quent­ly, human iden­ti­ty becomes the choice of the indi­vid­ual, one which can also change over time.

285. Beyond the under­stand­able dif­fi­cul­ties which indi­vid­u­als may expe­ri­ence, the young need to be helped to accept their own body as it was cre­at­ed, for “think­ing that we enjoy absolute pow­er over our own bod­ies turns, often sub­tly, into think­ing that we enjoy absolute pow­er over cre­ation… An appre­ci­a­tion of our body as male or female is also nec­es­sary for our own self-aware­ness in an encounter with oth­ers dif­fer­ent from our­selves.

A site called “Dig­ni­ty USA” found “no joy” in any of that. “We had hoped for much more,” it lament­ed bale­ful­ly. “Fran­cis sim­ply reit­er­ates the long-stand­ing teach­ings of the Church. There is no flex­i­bil­i­ty.”

Pope upholds teach­ings of the Church. When will these hor­rors end?

You Couldn’t Be That Man I Adored

And yet in spite of all that papal consistency—documented here on this wery blog—the New York Times reports that “lead­ers of les­bian, gay, bisex­u­al and trans­gen­der groups expressed dis­may” at the pope’s words.

They did? Why? What had they expect­ed? Why do they con­tin­ue to delude them­selves? They’ve not­ed this very kind of thing before. They have no excuse to claim shock or dashed hopes. But they do; again and again, every time, they do.

“It is very trou­bling that the pope would say this,” cried Mar­i­anne Dud­dy-Burke. She is the exec­u­tive direc­tor of Dig­ni­ty USA—the wery same Dig­ni­ty USA that had no joy last April. Do they have amne­sia? Whence this expec­ta­tion of some immi­nent depar­ture? Sure­ly it can not come from the actu­al record of his­to­ry, avail­able to any­one with a com­put­er and a search engine and access to the Vat­i­can and Catholic pub­li­ca­tions. (Or to the few, few­er every day, that lack an ax and a grind­stone.) Dig­ni­ty USA could have looked through its wery own archives, and the pre­vi­ous shocked words of Ms. Dud­dy-Burke her­self.

But accord­ing to the trou­bled Ms. Dud­dy-Burke, the pope’s state­ment “also shows that he doesn’t under­stand the dan­ger that his words can mean for gen­der-non­con­form­ing peo­ple, par­tic­u­lar­ly those who live in coun­tries with laws or cul­tur­al pres­sures that put these peo­ple at risk for vio­lence.”

That is, I am afraid to say, inco­her­ent. Does Ms. Dud­dy-Burke real­ly think that the pope is advo­cat­ing vio­lence? Does she real­ly think that there are peo­ple sit­ting around wait­ing for the pope to say some­thing about gen­der iden­ti­ty that they can then use as an excuse to go on a ram­page in clubs or bath­rooms? That, if only the pope would make a bold depar­ture on these points, such peo­ple would sud­den­ly expe­ri­ence a wave of broth­er­ly love, hold hands, and sing Jack­ie DeShan­non? LGBT indi­vid­u­als will not be safe unless the pope changes Church teach­ing? Is that what Ms. Dud­dy-Burke is ask­ing me to believe? This is strange.

“Fran­cis, who is Argen­tine,” the Times goes on, “also did not offer exam­ples of class­rooms using such a cur­ricu­lum.”

What does him being Argen­tine have to do with any of this? And the Times wants exam­ples? They doubt this? Well, the pope in fact gave one dur­ing his flight from Mani­la to Rome, if any­one had been pay­ing atten­tion to more than just bun­ny rab­bits. But here’s anoth­er: Fair­fax Coun­ty Pub­lic Schools in Vir­ginia. Accord­ing to a plan for updat­ing the schools’ sev­enth- through twelfth-grade manda­to­ry health cur­ricu­lum:

Empha­sis will be placed on an under­stand­ing that there is a broad­er, bound­less, and flu­id spec­trum of sex­u­al­i­ty that is devel­oped through­out a life­time. Sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion and gen­der iden­ti­ty terms will be dis­cussed with focus on appre­ci­a­tion for indi­vid­ual dif­fer­ences.

I mean, Google’s a handy, handy thing. Per­haps the pope means for us to use it. Per­haps he expects the media to have access to such things right at their wery fin­ger­tips. I know Dig­ni­ty USA lost its archives and suf­fered trag­ic mem­o­ry loss. But has the New York Times been robbed of all its resources for fact-check­ing? It must demand that the pope’s audi­ences come com­plete with cita­tions and a bib­li­og­ra­phy?

“But church ana­lysts,” the Times con­tin­ues, “say [the pope] has long har­bored resent­ment over so-called ide­o­log­i­cal colo­nial­ism, the notion that inter­na­tion­al groups offer aid to devel­op­ing nations con­tin­gent upon the adop­tion of West­ern val­ues.”

This is true, but I would hard­ly call gen­der ide­ol­o­gy “West­ern val­ues.” In fact, it is opposed to “West­ern val­ues.” If I be wrong about this, can I ask the Times to explain for us where the notion of gen­der flu­id­i­ty has its ori­gin in West­ern cul­ture and thought? The last I checked, it is a nov­el­ty. Call me crazy.

“It’s not all that clear who he’s mad at and what’s upset­ting him,” said the Rev. Thomas J. Reese, a Jesuit priest and senior ana­lyst for The Nation­al Catholic Reporter. [Fr. Reese is him­self a touch mys­ti­fied by all this odd and unex­pect­ed con­sis­ten­cy from the pope. Noth­ing like this has ever been.] “But there’s some­thing under­ly­ing there. And I think it’s pri­mar­i­ly that he feels that this kind of stuff is being pushed down their throats.”

Well, yes, some peo­ple do have a strange objec­tion to being told what they must think, par­tic­u­lar­ly on con­tentious issues like this one. It’s not like teach­ing peo­ple their times tables.

Illusion Never Changed Into Something Real

“The pon­tif­f’s lat­est remarks,” the Times con­tin­ues, “rep­re­sent­ed a let­down for gay rights groups that were encour­aged by the pope’s con­cil­ia­to­ry remarks in June after the mas­sacre of gay patrons at a night­club in Orlan­do, Fla. Fran­cis said at the time that gays were owed an apol­o­gy for past mis­treat­ment by Chris­tians.”

Sure; I don’t doubt that there’s been a “let­down.” But there are two sep­a­rate issues going on here. Of course no one should gun down those who are LGBT. We should love them and treat them well. Chris­tians should repent and apol­o­gize every time they fail in this regard.

But that is not at all the same as say­ing that their behav­ior, or their think­ing, is good and cor­rect.

That the Times, and LGBT lead­ers, can con­fuse the two, helps to explain their mud­dled think­ing, and their ten­den­cy to indulge in illu­sion with regard to Pope Fran­cis.

One nat­u­ral­ly won­ders, how­ev­er, why such wild hopes were nev­er placed in Pope Bene­dict XVI, who as Car­di­nal Ratzinger wrote these words in his let­ter to bish­ops “On the Pas­toral Care of Homo­sex­u­al Per­sons”.

It is deplorable that homo­sex­u­al per­sons have been and are the object of vio­lent mal­ice in speech or in action. Such treat­ment deserves con­dem­na­tion from the Church’s pas­tors wher­ev­er it occurs. It reveals a kind of dis­re­gard for oth­ers which endan­gers the most fun­da­men­tal prin­ci­ples of a healthy soci­ety. The intrin­sic dig­ni­ty of each per­son must always be respect­ed in word, in action and in law.

And in the very next para­graph, Ratzinger added:

But the prop­er reac­tion to crimes com­mit­ted against homo­sex­u­al per­sons should not be to claim that the homo­sex­u­al con­di­tion is not dis­or­dered. When such a claim is made and when homo­sex­u­al activ­i­ty is con­se­quent­ly con­doned, or when civ­il leg­is­la­tion is intro­duced to pro­tect behav­ior to which no one has any con­ceiv­able right, nei­ther the Church nor soci­ety at large should be sur­prised when oth­er dis­tort­ed notions and prac­tices gain ground.” [That would include gen­der ide­ol­o­gy.]

That Pope Fran­cis can say both, just as Ratzinger said both, is a mark of coher­ence and con­sis­ten­cy with his pre­de­ces­sor in the Chair of Peter. Where the illu­sion of immi­nent depar­ture comes from, in the spe­cif­ic case of Pope Fran­cis, I con­fess I have no idea.

And like­wise, the Cat­e­chism of the Catholic Church says of homo­sex­u­al per­sons, “They must be accept­ed with respect, com­pas­sion, and sen­si­tiv­i­ty. Every sign of unjust dis­crim­i­na­tion in their regard should be avoid­ed.” And that wery same para­graph (2358) also describes same-sex attrac­tion as “objec­tive­ly dis­or­dered.”

But for some rea­son, every time Pope Fran­cis says the one, the sec­u­lar media and cer­tain advo­ca­cy groups get all hot and both­ered that he is about to deny the oth­er. The Times arti­cle includes an exam­ple of this:

Sarah McBride, a spokes­woman for the Human Rights Cam­paign, said the words sent a rip­ple of hope through the LGBT com­mu­ni­ty that the Vat­i­can might be embrac­ing a broad­er stance on inclu­sion.

She added, how­ev­er, “I think what’s clear in this last state­ment is that maybe those sen­ti­ments weren’t uni­ver­sal­ly applied—that for trans­gen­der peo­ple, the pon­tiff is apply­ing a dif­fer­ent stan­dard.

Well, no, Ms. McBride, there is no “dif­fer­ent stan­dard” for homo­sex­u­al peo­ple than for trans­gen­der peo­ple. The very same prin­ci­ple applies to both: Treat them with dig­ni­ty and respect, and love them. Say you are sor­ry when you are cru­el or dis­mis­sive of them. But none of that implies accep­tance of every­thing they think or every­thing they do. That’s a sep­a­rate mat­ter.

But “LGBT lead­ers,” accord­ing to the Times, “said Wednes­day that the pope had failed to grasp that one’s gen­der iden­ti­ty is dis­cov­ered, often at a very young age, not cho­sen.”

In fact, it’s not so much that the pope does not “grasp” this—if by “grasp” you mean under­stand the argument—it’s that the pope does not agree with it. It is a con­tentious argu­ment, not one that has been in any way proven. But one would think that, by deny­ing this, the pope is deny­ing that the sun ris­es in the east, or that Hal­ley’s Comet comes once every 76 years.

“There have been times,” Ms. McBride con­clud­ed, “where [the pope has] demon­strat­ed com­pas­sion. Then there have been oth­er times where his words have been not only hurt­ful, and frankly harm­ful, but real­ly demon­strat­ing a mis­un­der­stand­ing of what it means to be trans­gen­der.”

A larg­er prob­lem here is not the pope’s under­stand­ing “of what it means to be trans­gen­der” (or lack there­of), but Ms. McBride’s under­stand­ing of what it means to have com­pas­sion. That com­pas­sion, for her, seems to mean both “don’t kill peo­ple,” “be kind to peo­ple,” and “accept every false and wreck­less and destruc­tive idea and lifestyle that occurs to them” helps to explain why Pope Fran­cis is the cause of repeat­ed dashed hopes on the left.

Peo­ple like Ms. McBride work them­selves up into a pitch of ner­vous excite­ment, and then wail in a jilt­ed rage when real­i­ty sets in. Only to do it all over again next month.

This is Pope Fran­cis Derange­ment Syn­drome of the left.


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