The Sorrows of the Sacred Heart | Gabriel Blanchard – Patheos

Posted: June 5, 2022 at 3:04 am

Love Thy Neighbor

Full disclosure: this post is not an in-depth look at the sorrows of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Those are a subject I dont know a lot about, except in very general termsand bad things make Jesus sad, while true, isnt something I can write a worthwhile essay about. I dont think.

But, June is Pride Month. Which means Catholic Twitter is swarming with people talking about how un-Christian pride celebrations are, pride is a sin, etc., and saying we need to reclaim June as the month of the Sacred Heart. (The Solemnity of the Sacred Heart nearly always falls in June; its always on the third Friday after Pentecost, which typically falls in May or early June, this year on June 5th.)

This is, of course, terribly funny: the notion of any creature proposing to defend Omnipotence usually is. So Catholic Twitter is also swarming with people in this set of peoples replies, jeering at them. Ive done it several years running, and this year is no exception. Of course, when I actually refer to it as jeering, I suddenly find myself a little bit less comfortable with it; not because attempts to defend Omnipotence deserve respect (they dont), but because my neighbor deserves respect. Or, if deserves is felt to be too much, I am at any rate under orders to respect my neighborthat being how the Golden Rule works.

I do celebrate Pride myself, in a few different ways (and most of them are ways I dont even have to go to Confession over). I toyed with dropping the celebration a few years ago, as I was tiring somewhat of LGBT activism and the whole business of being, so to speak, a Public Gay; that year, as it happened, was 2016. After June 12 of that year rolled around I definitely discarded any idea of not celebrating Pride.

Most of the Christian objections to Pride that Ive come across have been obviously bad-faith pretenses at not seeing the difference between pride as a sin and pride as a sense of self-worth and human dignity. (Oddly enough, Ive come across these objections more often than Ive come across objections to the public lewdness that does often form a part of Pride celebrationsthough that may reflect the circles I travel in more than how common either objection is.) I dont propose to waste my time on people who raise bad-faith objections, but there are a handful of people who raise this objection in good faith, and Id like to speak to them.

Pride celebrations started after the Stonewall riots, which started the modern gay rights movement. They mean a lot of different things, and include a lot of different events. Some of these events are, shall we say, adult, but most arent; it is quite true that most Christians will probably feel the need to avoid those Pride events, but in my experience these are very much the exception, and (especially since LGBTQ adoption became common) a lot of Pride celebrations are designed to be as family-friendly as any other city summer festival.

Because at its coreand Im going to say something here thats a little controversial within the LGBTQ community, but I think its truePride isnt about sex.1 Its about the fact that we have human dignity, just like heterosexual, cisgender people do. That we dont deserve to be thrown out of our homes, or turned away from public institutions, or brutalized by the police; all of which were issues that plagued gay people in 1970, back when Pride celebrations started, and most of which continue to be problems for us in some regions and contexts. I said above that bad things make Jesus sad isnt a slogan I can do much with; but I do believe these injustices and cruelties wound his Heart, because he cares about us. Were human: thats all it takes to be loved by God.

How any person or group celebrates Pride is doubtless open to critique (though, do note: you probably arent being asked for your critiques, so think twice before offering them). But celebrating Pride in and of itself is, in my opinion, completely open to Catholics,2 and Pride can be important and special to LGBTQ Catholics like me.

If youve come here doubting whether Pride is legitimate at all, Im guessing you dont feel ready to attend any festivities. Thats fine; even people like me pick and choose what to go to. For instance, I dont generally attend Pride parades, not out of any moral objection but because I find parades skull-crushingly boring.

But if youre willing to take a word of advicenot that Ive been shy with it up to now!whatever else you do, dont get worked up about it. It isnt worth it. Culture war stuff is pretty much never worth your time, and, nine hundred and ninety-nine times out of a thousand, it makes it harder to love people, not easier. Because when youre waging a war for a culture, what that means in practice is training yourself to see other people, people who arent on Your Side, as the enemy. And that isnt what the New Testament teaches us to do. There is an enemy to be found in its pages; but that enemy isnt other people. Neighborfriendfellow citizenbrotherthese are the words the New Testament harps on when speaking about other people, especially within the Church, but even outside it.

And the brute fact is, youre sharing the Church with LGBTQ people. A lot of us have been baptized; statistically, at least some of us are going to be following you into heaven, or waiting for you when you get there. Might as well get cozy.

1For LGBTQ readers who may chafe at this take (since de-sexualizing oneself is often a respectability tactic for gaining acceptance), I dont mean our sexuality is irrelevant to Pride; thats obviously false. What I mean is, Pride is for every sexual and gender minority, and that includes people whowhether due to private convictions, an asexual orientation, or just preferencedont engage in any kind of sex.

2To take a partly parallel example, a lot of Mardi Gras or St. Patricks Day festivities involve plenty of things Catholicism considers sinful or excessive, especially regarding alcohol. But Ive never heard any Catholic say that we should avoid these celebrations in and of themselves: only that we should choose what to go to judiciously (or maybe substitute our own events) and mind our own behavior.

View post:

The Sorrows of the Sacred Heart | Gabriel Blanchard - Patheos

Related Posts