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Presentations and Publications
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Articles and Publications Gay comments concern bishops: In interviews yesterday, the bishop of Massachusetts, M. Thomas Shaw, the top Episcopal bishop in the state and head of the nation's largest Episcopal diocese, said he was particularly upset by a report from Rome last week that a Vatican cardinal, Jorge Arturo Medina Estevez, said "a homosexual person ... is not suitable to receive the sacrament of holy orders." Shaw said some Episcopal clergy have been urging the bishops to speak
out all year, ever since the pope's spokesman was quoted saying that
gay men should not be ordained. He said the Episcopal bishops have read
with alarm news reports that Vatican officials are preparing a document
that is expected to urge the banning of gays from seminaries. Shaw said that he is only aware of two instances of priests of his diocese sexually abusing minors in recent history and that both were heterosexuals. The bishops announced their concern about the Vatican discussion of gay priests in an opinion article in today's Boston Globe. "Suggestions that gays molest children lead to homophobia and create a dangerous atmosphere in which hate crimes flourish," Shaw and Cederholm wrote. "They are irresponsible." An organization representing gay Catholics welcomed the Episcopal bishops' comments. "We have long said that this focus on gay priests as a cause for the sexual abuse scandal is nothing more than a smokescreen to deflect attention away from the complicity of the hierarchy in creating this scandal," said Marianne Duddy, executive director of Dignity USA. "I applaud the Episcopal bishops for speaking out on a matter of justice that is important to the vital ministry of any Christian Church." But Deal Hudson, the editor of Crisis magazine, a conservative Catholic journal, said, "There is credible research that suggests the homosexuals are three times more likely to be pedophiles than the general population. And given that organizations like NAMBLA have openly advocated sex with boys, the lines between homosexuality and pedophilia are not as clean cut as the bishops would like to make them." A leader of Forward in Faith, a conservative Episcopal organization "The best advice I could give to the Episcopal bishops is to look
at their own house before we begin to criticize our Roman Catholic brothers
and sisters," said Rev. William H. Ilgenfritz, an Episcopal priest
in Pennsylvania who serves as vice president of Forward in Faith. "The
fact that a person may have a homosexual orientation doesn't disqualify
a person from orientation to the priesthood in my view, but the practice
of homosexuality is contrary to the witness of Scripture for all Christians,
including priests." Cederholm said the bishops had been reluctant to speak out because However, he said, "this particular issue affects people outside their church, and therefore we feel that we have a place to add our voice." "We don't believe any person should make a connection between homosexuality and pedophilia, the way the Catholic Church has, because it increases hatred and violence," Cederholm said. Michael Paulson can be reached by e-mail at mpaulson@globe.com.
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