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Hi; my name is Paul, I’m the eldest
of 9 children, I’m Catholic, I grew up in Willoughby, I live
in Newtown, I drive a Volkswagen, I have blue eyes, dark brown hair,
I love going to the movies, I keep fit by swimming, I’m gay,
my favourite colour is blue, my favourite food is Thai, my blood
is red .. and so on and so on….
I guess what I am trying to illustrate is that I am a pretty ordinary
sort of a guy. I might be your neighbour, we may have passed in
the street, I am a member of this parish community.
What makes me slightly different from most
of you here today is that I am gay. It is such a small part of who
I am, yet society and at times the Church, often makes a significant
deal out of it.
I have meet gay catholic people who are afraid
to step inside a catholic church let alone receive communion because
of the shame and guilt they feel have been imposed on them. I have
learnt to become more confident in myself when talking to my gay
friends that I enjoy going to Mass and that my catholic faith is
very important to me. The gay pubs in Sydney are full of catholic
people who have turned away from the church and maybe their faith
as well.
But why is this???
I guess sometimes it is easier to reject
the messenger when their message becomes confused or loses credibility.
That’s where I was 12 years ago. I’d
finally accepted that I was not sexually attracted to women after
spending all of my teens and the first half of my 20’s fighting
it. I did not just decide to be gay; it was a life long process,
full of confusion, denial, self hatred and isolation. Fortunately,
I had developed a deep sense of faith. My faith and trust in God
really comforted me and kept me going especially during the most
difficult times.
So here I was, finally accepting the person
that God had created for me. But there was a problem. Part of the
struggle of accepting myself as a gay person had to do with what
the Church said about me something like “intrinsically disordered
and evil”. So why didn’t I just go the way many gay
Catholics do and reject the church all together? There was no question
in my mind of walking away. This is my tradition. I was brought
up Catholic. Went to Catholic schools was heavily involved in Catholic
youth groups and my parish, I went to the Catholic University, I
couldn’t be more Catholic even if I tried!!
However it is still a choice that I remain
Catholic.
Many of my friends, gay and not gay, catholic
and not catholic, have asked me how I can still be catholic and
go to Mass when the Church often seems to be so critical and aggressive
towards homosexuality. For me it is quite simple, I listen to my
heart and I listen to God in my heart.
I believe that God has created me just the
way he wanted. It took me a long time to accept that though. Jesus’
message is about love. Loving your neighbour, loving God and loving
yourself.
I believe that God doesn’t want me
to lock myself away to a life of loneliness and unhappiness. Being
human is about being able to love and to let others love you in
return. And to me that love is towards a man.
The film version of Brokeback Mountain illustrated
this clearly. The lives of not just the two central characters were
tragically destroyed because of pressures to conform (or not to
conform for that matter).
I am grateful I am a young person living
in today’s society. The modern world has been transformed
in many ways over the past few decades. I am grateful to those who
have gone before me who have paved the way which allows me to hold
my partners hand as we walk down King St. I am grateful that when
we share private moments I won’t be arrested and thrown in
gaol. I am grateful for my loving family that welcomes my partner
into their home and to their dinner table.
Sadly, this is not the experience shared
by many gay and lesbian people. The reality is, once away from the
King St Safety Zone, you are back in a hostile society, waiting
for the verbal harassment in the street, expecting the fag joke
at the office, the condescending stereotype on TV, the fundamentalist
so called Christian misquoting scripture condemning homosexuals
to death, the church leader denying same sex attracted people the
right to be fully human to love the person God created them to be.
God is about love not hate. Sr Janine Grammick
who has worked for over 40 years in the US with gay and lesbian
people uses an analogy when talking about sexuality saying you don’t
give a bird wings and then tell it not to fly.
I guess it is safe to say that in my choosing
to identify as being Catholic means a certain level of rejection
of some Church doctrines. Maybe it is not a rejection, maybe I understand
the theology behind some of these, and I suppose if we lived in
a perfect world then it would be achievable.
The Church actually does accept that a certain
percentage of people do have a homosexual orientation. However it
continues that those same people cannot act on their natural feelings.
Giving a bird wings, not allowing it to fly …..
There are lots of things in this world we’d
like to change; John Howard saying sorry to the Stolen Generation
might be one, the Pope saying “maybe we’ll have a fresh
look at sexuality”, another? Id like the church to refresh
its thinking on same sex relationships. Because God’s message
is not about gender, its about love, and I think love transcends
gender.
The church has a long and strong history
of Social Justice. I think, however, it can do a lot better in its
ministry to gay and lesbian people.
Thank you for inviting me to speak
at you Mass today.
Paul May 2007
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