Sunday, October 04, 2015

Vatican Fires Priest After He Comes Out as Gay


After going to great lengths to distance Pope Francis from batshit cray and uber modern day Pharisee, Kim Davis, and confirming that Francis met with a gay couple while in Washington, D.C., the Vatican has continued its schizophrenic approach to gays by immediately firing a priest at the Vatican after he came out as gay.   The take away?  In my view, the advise remains the same: walk away from the Church and work to convince as many friends and family members as possible to do the same. Let the Catholicism become an Africa centered religion that depends on ignorance to survive. The ultimate irony is at the biggest sin of Monsignor Krzysztof Charamsa, a Polish priest and theologian working in the Vatican, was that he was honest and truthful (his full interview is here), an unknown concept to the bitter old men in dresses who inhabit the Vatican.  Towleroad looks at this latest signal to gays and their families to walk away from the Church.  Here are highlights:
Monsignor Krzysztof Charamsa, a Polish priest and theologian working in the Vatican, was fired on Saturday after he came out as gay in an article in the Corriere Della Sera newspaper, an interview in which he urges the Catholic Church to change its stance on homosexuality. Charamsa’s interview came on the eve of the Synod, when the world’s bishops gather to discuss issues such as family, LGBT outreach, and Catholic tradition.

Reuters reports:

Monsignor Krzysztof Charamsa was removed from his position at the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican’s doctrinal arm where he had worked since 2003, a statement said.

Charamsa, 43, and a Polish theologian, announced he was gay and had a partner in a long interview with Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper on Saturday. He later held a news conference with his partner, a Spanish man, and gay activists at a Rome restaurant. They had planned a demonstration in front of the Vatican but changed the venue several hours before it was due to have started.

Charamsa told the paper that it was his duty to the LGBT community as a gay man to come out of the closet and speak truth, saying the Church is way behind in the way it handles gay issues:
“There comes a day when something inside you snaps, and you can’t go on. If I had been alone I would have lived the nightmare of a denied homosexuality, but God never leaves us alone. And I think He has helped me take this important existential step. It’s important because of its consequences, but it’s also the premise for living honestly, which should be natural for every homosexual.”
He adds:

“It seems to me that in the Church we are ignorant about homosexuality because we don’t really know any homosexuals. We have them all around us, of course, but we never look them in the eye, because they seldom say who they are. I hope that my personal experience will help stir the Church’s consciousness in some way. I will personally reveal my identity to the Holy Father in a letter. And I will tell the universities in Rome where I teach who I am; to my great sorrow I will probably no longer be allowed to work in Catholic education”.

The Vatican said that Charamsa’s interview was “grave and irresponsible” and would put unwanted media attention on the Holy See.

But Charamsa knew that would be the case and he didn’t care, adding, in the interview:
“If I failed to be open, if I didn’t accept myself, I couldn’t be a good priest in any case, because I couldn’t act as an intermediary for the joy of God. Humanity has made great progress in its understanding of these issues, but the Church is lagging behind. This is not the first time, of course, but when you are slow to understand astronomy the consequences are not as serious as when the delay regards people’s most intimate being. The Church needs to realise that it is failing to rise to the challenge of our times
I disagree with Charamsa on one point: his statement that the Vatican doesn't know gays.  In fact, it is full of gays, but they prefer to hang onto self-loathing that has been brainwashed into them and to pursue their quest for power and prestige within the club that is the Church hierarchy.  

1 comment:

EdA said...

It might be worth noting that this guy is a monsignor, which is the rank below a bishop. Also, although this might be splitting hairs, I wonder whether he was fired not as much for being gay but even more so for having someone to love and to be loved by.