|
The Truth in Love
BY The Editors
November 8-14, 2009 Issue |
Posted 11/1/09 at 10:59 PM
A hate crime, as defined by the National Crime Victim Survey in 1999, is “a criminal
offense … committed on the basis of a person’s race, color, religion or
national origin when engaging in a federally protected activity.”
On Oct. 28, President Barack Obama
signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr.
Hate Crimes Prevention Act into law. We can now add sexual orientation and
gender identity to race, color, religion or national origin to the list of
offenses.
Catholics know all about hate crimes
and discrimination, of course. In fact, if you were a Catholic in the late 19th
and early 20th century in the United States, you were the principal target of
the hate-filled violence and discrimination wielded by powerful organizations
like the Know-Nothing Party and the Ku Klux Klan. It was in that climate that
Father Michael McGivney was inspired to found the Knights
of Columbus.
The Church has always preached love
and charity. St. John urged in his First Letter, “Children, let us love not in
word or speech but in deed and truth” (3:18), and wrote, “Whoever is without
love does not know God, for God is love” (4:8).
So it comes as no surprise that,
even as the Church continues to repeat that “homosexual acts are intrinsically
disordered. They are contrary to the natural law. They close the sexual act to
the gift of life” (Catechism, No. 2357), it tells us in the same breath that
homosexual persons “must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity.
Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided” (No.
2358).
Most Americans seem to agree. A 2009
poll conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life showed that
Americans oppose same-sex “marriage” by 54% to 34%, although they support
same-sex civil unions. Another poll, published by the Kaiser Family Foundation
in 2001, showed that Americans favor laws to protect homosexual persons
specifically, from job discrimination (76%), housing discrimination (74%) and
inheritance rights (70%).
In signing the latest civil-rights legislation into law, Obama has officially
extended civil rights to include a group of
persons based not on the color of their skin or national origin, but on
behavior.
The legislation is named for Matthew
Shepard, a homosexual man who was beaten to death by two men in 1998 because he
was homosexual, and for James Byrd Jr., a black man who was brutally murdered
in 1998 by three white supremacists because he
was black. We should all be outraged over these hideous crimes.
But let’s look at where the law is
likely to lead.
Will Shepard/Byrd be wielded to
silence the Orthodox Jewish rabbi who condemns homosexual relations by quoting
Leviticus?
Will it be used in prosecuting those
Christians who protest outside pornography businesses that deal in same-sex
smut?
Will it be used to jail a Catholic
bishop who quotes Pope John Paul II’s theology of the body in extolling the
gifts of traditional marriage because homosexual-rights activists claim they
feel threatened by it?
Are we going the way of Canada,
where journalist Mark Steyn was prosecuted for writing an article critical of
Islam, and where a Knights of Columbus chapter was prosecuted for refusing to
allow its facilities to be used for a same-sex “marriage” ceremony?
That’s
why Shepard/Byrd died in committee the first four times it was proposed in
Congress, beginning in 2001: The fine print is unsettling.
Back
in May, Bill Donohue of the Catholic League said that the legislation would
have a “chilling effect on religious speech.”
In
an open letter to bill sponsors Sens. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Patrick
Leahy, D-N.H., Donohue wrote, “To be specific, the bill would criminalize
religious speech that was critical of homosexuality if it were linked to a
crime against a gay person. How do I know this? Because when the bill was
considered in the House, that is exactly what Rep. Louie Gohmert [R-Texas] was
told when he raised this issue. … The prospect of criminalizing religious
speech that proscribes certain sexual practices is beyond worrisome — it is
downright dangerous.”
And as Archbishop Charles Chaput of
Denver told the Register’s Joan Frawley Desmond in May, “Violence against any
group of people simply because they’re different is evil. So in an immediate
sense, this probably shouldn’t worry Catholics.”
“But I do think the legislation
should make Christians very alert,” he added. “This is a clear example of the
law being used not merely to require or proscribe certain behaviors, but to
‘teach’ the special gravity of certain kinds of crime.”
It remains to be seen what direction
events in the United States will take, but this legislation represents another
disturbing sign of the current administration’s persistent effort to redefine
moral norms, giving more weight to feelings, thoughts and sexual impulse than
values, ethics and truth — the “dictatorship of relativism” Pope Benedict XVI
so forcefully warns us against.
So no one rejoices more than the
Church on seeing No. 2358 from the Catechism enacted into federal law. But she
knows well that the entire country will suffer if that same provision is used
as a club to beat into submission those who uphold No. 2357.
The Church isn’t guilty of “hate
crimes” when she teaches that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered. She
is “guilty” of true authentic love: loving God’s children so much that she
tirelessly preaches the truth about the human condition, time and time again,
no matter what direction the prevailing winds may blow.
Catholics must remain vigilant to
protect our constitutionally protected right to preach the truth in love.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|