Card. O’Malley: Don’t Fire LGBT Employees
By: Margaret Galitzin
This year has seen a significant rise in Catholic Church employees who
have been punished in some way for LGBT related employment disputes.
Basically, this means they have been fired, resigned, refused to renew
restrictive contracts or had job offers rescinded because it was
discovered that they were homosexuals living in an open relationship
with a “partner” of the same sex. Reported cases since 2008 total
around 40; of these, 17 were reported this year.
I call this good news, because it reveals a reaction among the faithful
who do not want to tolerate homosexuals, lesbians and transvestites in
Catholic schools teaching their children or on parish boards since their
lifestyle openly defies Catholic teaching.
Unfortunately, there is also bad news to report. Instead of supporting
this healthy reaction in Catholic communities, one of our country’s top
Prelates recently came out in support of the homosexual and lesbian
employees.
Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley was one of a 6-member panel at an event
launching Boston Globe’s new website Crux, supposedly for “all
things Catholic.” The website advertises itself as being “free of
ideological bias that colors much religion reporting.” It is definitely
not that.
For example, its launch event was held at the Jesuit-run Boston College
and the first topic was the papacy of Francis, “A Pope for the 21st
Century.” All there praised Francis extravagantly, evidence of the
decidedly progressivist tone of the new website.
‘The situation needs to be rectified’
Responding to a “hot” question about the firing of Church employees because of LGBT issues, Cardinal O’Malley said:
Card. O’Malley takes the side of the homosexuals |
“I think the Holy Father’s notion of mercy and inclusion is going to
make a big difference in the way that the Church responds to and
ministers to people of homosexual orientation. The Holy Father is
talking about reaching out to the periphery and very often this is a
group that is on the periphery.
“It is not necessarily that the Church is going to change doctrine, but,
as somebody said, the Holy Father hasn’t changed the lyrics, but he’s
changed the melody. I think the context of love and mercy and community
is the context in which all of the Church’s teachings must be presented,
including the more difficult ones.
“The same could be said about abortion and so many others. It is only
when people realize that we love them that they will be open to hear the
truth we want to share with them.”
After the public event, Bob Shine, director of New Ways Ministry – one
of the most notorious American organizations pro homosexuals –
questioned directly Card. Sean O’Malley whether he will include or not
the LGBT community in Church parishes and communities. Parroting the
Francis line, the Cardinal told Shine that “we must first convince people we love them before talking about the Ten Commandments.”
When Shine responded that it has been hard to convince LGBT Catholics of this love when so many Church workers have had LGBT-related employment disputes with Catholic schools and parishes, Card. O’Malley said this trend was a situation that “needs to be rectified.”
The quote is being heralded by homosexuals and their allies as a good
sign of change coming in Catholic policy, especially in view of the high
position of O’Malley in the U.S. and at the Vatican, where he sits as
one of the Council of Eight, the advisors Francis set up to assist him
guide the Church.
Disturbing trends
Are there some similar cases in other Dioceses that should be “rectified”, according to Card. O’Malley? Let us look at a few.
Protestors object to the Catholic teachings
behind Barbara Webb's firing
One of the more recent and widely publicized worker firing cases is that
of Barbara Webb, a former chemistry teacher at the all-girls Marian
High School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. She claims she was fired
because she and her lesbian partner announced they were expecting a
baby. The school was unwilling to offer her any type of leave or grant
her the “rights’” that other teachers in normal marriages had.
behind Barbara Webb's firing
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