REASONS CLERGY GIVE FOR THEIR SILENCE AT THE PULPIT
ON NFP - Part 5 |
"The recent clergy sex scandals make it impossible
for me to talk about sex today. I have no credibility."
The false perception “You have no credibility” is very much
the intent of some forces in the secular society, which want
to muzzle the pulpits on matters of sexual morality. They
don’t want us to teach about God’s plan for human sexuality.
But there is no such thing as a moral vacuum. If good
morality is not being taught, then other varieties of sexual
ideology will be taught. We see it today in the push for
acceptance of single sex marriages, in advocating “safe” sex
for our young people, and in trivializing committed
relationships.
The clergy sex scandals call for greater, not less, emphasis
upon sexual morality. If there had been greater clarity on
these matters from the pulpit in the past, then everyone
would know the standards, which apply to everyone, and we
would have been spared much grief. Our young people would
not have been victimized. Dioceses would not be in danger of
bankruptcy. Respect for the clergy would not be at an all
time low. Bishops would not be faulted for their lack of
oversight. Scandals erupt when there is no clarity of moral
teaching coming from the pulpit. Our times call for more,
not less, moral teaching from the pulpit.
Both the clergy and the laity have to clean up their act.
The abuse of young people by 1-3% of the clergy is indeed a
scandal. The abuse of sexuality by 80% of Catholic couples
that are using birth control, or are sterilized, is also a
great scandal. Before one group can throw stones at the
other, they must first clean up their act. God is chastising
his people because of violations against His sexual code. He
chastises the clergy by not providing vocations to religious
life and the priesthood. He chastises the laity by weak
marriages, a 50% divorce rate, lots of unhappiness, and
children who bear the brunt of their parent’s selfishness.
So both the clergy and the laity need to hold the other
accountable. We are not beating up on each other; rather, we
are confronting the truth together.
The responsibility of the clergy and the religious is to
hand on the deposit of the Faith as preached by the
Apostles, which includes teaching moral truths. Their duty
is to explain why God’s plan is so good for us, and so
deserving of our efforts to comply with it. The
responsibility of the laity is to integrate good moral
principles into their lives and actions. Then they are to
take these values out into the broader society, and help
shape the culture with these Gospel values. This is part of
the new evangelization.
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
www.nfpoutreach.org
mhabiger@kansasmonks.org
- back to
Q & A --