Moore: Catholic Church Should Focus on Charity, Not Firing Gays

Russell J. Moore GoLocal MINDSETTER™

Moore: Catholic Church Should Focus on Charity, Not Firing Gays

Bishop Tobin
“He that is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone”. John 8:7

When I was an undergrad at Providence College, believe it or not, I was an even bigger smart aleck than I am now. Fortunately, I had great teachers to constantly humble me.

When discussing theology one day during an English class, I asked a professor why anyone would want to bother attending church when there are so many hypocrites there. After all, there are folks who sit with their wives in one pew while lasciviously thinking about the woman in the pew two rows ahead. There are ladies trusted to count the offering money who, in turn, embezzle it. And I made the laziest argument of all; there are priests who had molested youngsters.  

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“We always have room for one more hypocrite,” he retorted.

Of course he was right. Nobody is perfect. And no one can consistently live up to the up the high standards Catholics, all Christians, had set for them a millennium ago by Jesus. It's illogical to judge millions of people by the actions of a few. And even if someone could somehow live a life free of sin, it would be incumbent on that person to attend church in order to set an example for everyone else.

Room For More

It was a lazy, nonsensical cop-out to say that since others fail to maintain their beliefs it made sense not to have them.

So with that line of thinking in my mind, along with the teachings of Jesus, which focused on helping others, I cannot fathom why Michael Templeton, the Music Director at the Church of St. Mary in Providence, who had been in the position for 5 years, was fired last Monday for being gay and married to another man.

The Church opposes gay marriage. I get that. The Catholic Church leadership believes that marriage can only be between a man and a woman since that’s what’s required to produce children.

But what’s troubling me is why the Church feels the need to fire someone for failing to live up to their standards. Since we’re all hypocrites, why is the Providence Diocese being so heavy handed here in this instance?

Bishop Tobin’s rationale, as released in a statement, was weak and confusing at best.

Peculiar Case of Templeton

"Any person who holds a ministerial position in the Church, as an employee or volunteer, is expected to live in a way that is fully consistent with the teachings and faith of the church. If an individual deliberately and knowingly enters in a relationship or engages in activity that contradicts the core teachings of the Church, that individual leaves the Church no choice to respond," said Tobin.

Nobody can live in a way that’s “fully consistent”. We all, almost every day, “engage in activity that contradicts the core teachings of the Church”. That doesn’t mean the Catholic Church should take punitive action.

There have been countless times throughout my life that I’ve been proud to be Catholic. And every example has stemmed from the seeing the great, selfless charitable work carried out by Catholics—most of them ground level “lay-people”.  They work in food pantries. They visit sick people and prisoners. They teach underprivileged and help them with their homework lessons. They’re inspiring.

Focus on Charity

And let me be clear: I know that the Providence Diocese is a wonderful entity in our community. They administer programs to help keep the heat on for low income people; to help shelter the homeless; to visit prisoners; to help refugees, and so many others. That’s the Church is at its best.

I cannot, for the life of me, figure out why the Church cannot simply focus on the true mission of Jesus—helping the poor, comforting the afflicted, visiting the imprisoned, etc. In other words, why cannot the Church just focus on doing things that make the world a better place instead of focusing on who we need to kick out? Why does the Catholic Church need to be so authoritarian all the time?

I would also venture to say that if the vast majority of the parishioners at the church wouldn’t agree with firing Templeton for marrying someone he loves—despite the fact that gay marriage is antithetical to church teachings. That’s because I’m sure most of them are familiar with the passage “let he who is without sin cast the first stone”.

I wish Bishop Tobin would remember it.

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in the Rhode Island media, both on political campaigns and for newspapers. Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713. 

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