The gay lobby should rejoice at the Pope’s argument that God makes us the way we are
So much (he might snort) for the feminist notion that a woman could ever acquire by training alone the nature of a priest; or the characteristics of one who happily puts career ahead of motherhood. She will be going against her own nature, militating against a God-given order of things. So much for the idea that two men can easily and naturally be two parents to the same child... in such ways the argument that we are not blank slates might seem, in Catholic hands, to tend.
If so, the gay lobby should have rejoiced, not fumed, at Pope Benedict’s Christmas message. At last! The endorsement we’ve all been waiting for: the Vatican’s assurance that we can’t help it. Away with aversion-therapy! Away with electric shock treatment! Away with trying harder to find girls sexually attractive! Away with praying to God to remove our sinful feelings! Away with repentance! Away with guilt! It’s just how we were born: it’s in our natures.
Space hardly permits me to anticipate, and reply to, the possible rejoinders from the camps of both Professor Pinker and the Pope. Pinker can reply that genes do not predetermine but only predispose, and that training and willpower can still make a difference. Up to a point, yes, but the language of predisposition severely destabilises the currency of censure. The Pope may reply that a gay man may not be able control his desires, but can control his behaviour. Up to a point, yes, but that’s to jettison the whole doctrine of interior change, as well as Jesus’s injunction that the thought is as sinful as the deed.
For myself, I confine myself to welcoming Pope Benedict in his first steps along the path to understanding that, well, as that dreadful song puts it: I am what I am.
More articles from: Matthew Parris | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
You can’t fight racism by ignoring facts
Was there a ‘racial’ or ‘cultural’ angle to the crimes…
Ancient and modern: The wrong ancient gods
The Royal Mint has just released some gold coins to…
The football fan theory of nationalism
Observing the fealties of football supporters, I’ve been struck by…
How I became a 24-carat goldbug
If you’re at all worried about the current global financial…
Status Anxiety: Parenting is a moral issue
When the government announced its new £5 million parenting project…
1 One man's terrorist... - Rod Liddle
2 10 Pretty Unpersuasive Reasons for Scottish Independence - Alex Massie
1,700 Unusual Christmas Presents Request Catalogue 01935 815 195 Quote SPEC10 for 10% discount www.presentfinder.co.uk
Pimilco based Florist with online ordering Web: www.olivebranch.net Tel: 020 7630 1868 Fax: 020 7233 8844
62 Shore Road, Warsash, Southampton, SO31 9FT Telephone: 01489 578867 Web site: www.ruffs.co.uk
Apollo Magazine | Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2012 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
David Lindsay
January 17th, 2009 4:24pm Report this commentUntil the very last sentence, you need hold no supernatural belief to accept that the story of the Wise Men happened exactly as recorded by Saint Matthew.
They first follow the natural world (the Star), which leads them to the Bible (the Prophets referred to by Herod’s advisors), which leads in turn to the Christ Child.
And so to the Pope. The gender theory lot are half right. Sex is not just what is between your legs. But nor is it just what is between your ears, either. Rather, it is written into every cell of the body. You can cut up the tissue any way you like. The chromosomes themselves cannot change.
People seeking this surgery obviously do need help. But that surgery itself cannot be the help that they really need. That is the Pope’s point. He is right. Most people know that he is right. They look at the world and see it: they follow the Star. Well, the Star leads to the Prophets, and the Prophets lead to the Christ Child.
And what of the Pope and homosexuality? What was he attacking? The idea that it is people, rather than acts, that are homosexual. That idea is not yet forty years old. It post-dates by several years our own humane and necessary decriminalisation of male homosexual acts between consenting adults in private. It is historically and cross-culturally illiterate, as well as totally unscientific.
And it was invented by and for pederasts (many also engaged in “transgender” activities) in a network of bars – such as the Stonewall Inn, a major centre of the abuse of boys – in the urban, coastal America of the early 1970s.
Weakened by the liberal hijacking of the name of Vatican II, we all know what happened next in the Catholic Church. She is only just beginning to recover. But the Pope has made it very obvious that She is recovering.
Deo gratias.
Edwin Tait
January 17th, 2009 6:42pm Report this commentJesus did not say that involuntary thoughts are as sinful as deeds. What he said was that "looking at a woman to lust after her" (which probably means with the deliberate intention of lusting) is the same as doing the deed. Even if you think I'm whitewashing what Jesus said, the fact is that this is how Christians have traditionally interpreted that particular saying. You are not responsible for your involuntary impulses and desires. You are responsible for the act of will by which you consent to such desires.
Furthermore, this article ignores the Christian doctrine of the Fall, which says that our nature has been affected by sin so that we do in fact have desires and predispositions that are not part of God's original creation. Thus, saying that gendered identity is part of the original order of creation does not commit one to saying the same thing about sexual orientation.
In short, Christian theology is a lot more complex than this article recognizes.
Nullius
January 20th, 2009 6:22pm Report this commentIt is clear that Mr Parris has not read Pinker's book - the whole point of which is that we are NOT "blank slates" (nor ghosts in the machine, nor pre-determined) - we are the result of a complex interaction between genes and environment.
Back to top