Showing posts with label gay priests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gay priests. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 August 2009

BOISVERT & GOSS: Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct: breaking the silence

Breaking the Silence

Explores the issue of homoeroticism in Catholic culture and the controversy surrounding clerical sexual misconduct.

This timely and compelling collection critically analyzes the official Roman Catholic hierarchy's attitude toward homosexual clergy. Inspired by Mark Jordan's controversial The Silence of Sodom: Homosexuality in Modern Catholicism, the essays-edited by Boisvert (dean of students, Concordia Univ.) and Goss (pastor, MCC Church) and written by leading scholars and religious practitioners-attempt to debunk the myth that gay priests are pedophiles and are responsible for the moral decline of modern Catholic values. In fact, this refreshingly positive assessment of gay American Catholic priests attempts to reverse the present atmosphere of suspicion and redirect the blame at hypocrisy while giving voice to victims. Hard-hitting, articulate, and characterized by a prophet's righteousness, these sound essays are essential reading for both clergy and laity trying to come to terms with the recent sex abuse scandals. A wonderfully enlightened read; recommended for academic and public libraries.-John-Leonard Berg, Univ. of Wisconsin Lib., Platteville


  1. Celibate Men, Ambivalent Saints, and Games of Desire Donald L. Boisvert
  2. Naming the Mechanisms of Self-Deception: A cAll to Liberation for Gay Roman Catholic Clergy David M. Mellott
  3. Speaking Loud or Shutting Up: The Homosexual -Type Problem Edward J.Ingebretsen
  4. Silencing Sodom Chuck Colbert
  5. Anglican Bodies: The Gift of Heretical Liminality and the Risk of relaxed Vigilance Jay Emerson Johnson
  6. Duplicity Writ Large Mary E. Hunt
  7. Always a Bride, Never a Groom Robert F Goss
  8. Pandora's Gauntlet: Curiosity Enough to Care and Hope Enough to Question Marie Cartier
  9. A Welcome Voice Breaks the Silence in an Exclusively Male Clerical Tradition Lorine M Getz
  10. Where Have all the Young Girls Gone? Mary Ann Tolbert
  11. Breaking the Silence in Public: A Case Study Michael Kelly
  12. Those Troubling Gay Priests Bernard Schlager
  13. Lessons from our Neighbours: An Appreciation and a Query to Mark Jordan Karen Lebacqz
  14. Neither do I: A Meditation on Scapegoating William Glenn
  15. Catholicism and a Crisis of Intimate Relations Edward J. Ingebretsen
  16. After Silence Mark D. Jordan

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

JORDAN: The Silence of Sodom


Jordan, Mark D.
The Silence of Sodom
Homosexuality in Modern Catholicism
University of Chicago Press, 2000

322 pages
Catholic, Catholic Church, homosexuality, gay male
This is one I immensely enjoyed reading. It is scholarly, but also immensely readable and indeed fun, even if it has a serious message. It is one I expect to re-read and dip into frequently, and have no hesitation in recommending.
QTC strong recommendation
From the back cover:
"The past decade has seen homosexual scandals in the Catholic Church becoming ever more visible as the Vatican's directives on homosexuality become ever more forceful, begging the question Mark D. Jordan tries to answer here: how can the Catholic Church be at once so homophobic and so homoerotic? His analysis is a keen and readable study of the tangled relationship between male homosexuality and modern Catholism."
"Jordan gives readers with open minds a better appreciation of the intrinsic homosexual fixation, as well as homoerotic imagination, of the Roman Catholic church. His scholarship deserves serious consideration by faithful Catholics in America."
- Chuck Colbert, National Catholic Reporter
"Jordan knows how to present a case, and with apparently effortless clarity he demonstrates the church's double bind and how it afffects Vatican rhetoric, the training of priests, and ecclesiastical protectiveness toward an array of closet cases......this book will interest readers of every faith."
- Daniel Blue, Lambda Book Report
(See also the Wild Reed, "Officially homophobic, intensely homoerotic".)
Reviews on-line:



Contents / Synopsis


Acknowledgements

The Pope
Converts: Imagination, Bureaucracy,
Silence.

In this introductory chapter the author imagines a scenario in which the Pope unexpectedly realises the wrong that has been done by the Church to homosexuals over centuries, and decides to correct this wrong. He (the Holy Father) then asks “What is required for the thorough correction of the teachings?” In the rest of the chapter, Jordan attempts to answer this question, and outlines the plan of the book.


CHURCH WORDS

In the first full section, Jordan examines “the church’s bureaucratic speech about sexual morality”. His thesis here is that there is little point in attempting to ‘argue’ about, or demonstrate the error of, Catholic sexual teaching.instad, we shuld analyse the rhetorical style. This is because that style is not about rational argument, but about a kind of rhetorical bullying – substituting repetition from assumed authority in place of reasoned debate.

Teaching by Threatening

Bureaucratic Morals


CHURCH LIVES

In his second section, Jordan looks beyond the words of the Church on male homosexuality, and looks instead at the actual practice of the Church – which presents a very different picture. In doing so, he finds that “in its institutional arrangements, in fragments of history, and in unspoken but widely known features of clerical culture” lies an “enormous churchly science of male homoeroticism, a long institutional experimentation with it.”

Living Inside

Memoirs of Priestly Sodomy

Reproducing “Father”

Clerical Camp


CHURCH DREAMS

In his final section, Jordan considers strategies for hope for gay Catholics in the Church now. What, he asks, are the real choices open to them while they wai for the Church “to begin articulating mature teachings about their lives?”

Reiteration, or the Pleasures of Obedience

Repentance, or Schools for New Speech

Notes

Works Cited

Index