|
Vatican
Surveys Find Catholics Reject Sex Rules
By Nicole Winfield Columbia Daily Tribune
February 8, 2014
http://www.columbiatribune.com/arts_life/spiritual_life/vatican-surveys-find-catholics-reject-sex-rules/article_41a42a2c-907b-11e3-86c7-10604b9ffe60.html
VATICAN CITY — New surveys commissioned by the Vatican
show the vast majority of Catholics in Germany and Switzerland
reject church teaching on contraception, sexual morality, gay
unions and divorce, findings remarkable both in their similarity
and in the fact they were even publicized.
The Vatican took the unusual step of commissioning the
surveys ahead of a major meeting of bishops that Pope Francis
has called for October to discuss family issues. The poll was
sent last year to every national conference of bishops with a
request to share it widely among Catholic institutions, parishes
and individuals.
This week, German and Swiss bishops reported the
results: The church's core teachings on sexual morals, birth
control, homosexuality, marriage and divorce were rejected as
unrealistic and outdated by the vast majority of Catholics, who
nevertheless said they were active in parish life and considered
their faith vitally important.
Also surprising was the eagerness with which the
bishops publicized the results. The German bishops' conference
released them simultaneously in German, Italian and English on
their website, and the Swiss held a news conference.
The German church has been at the forefront of
pushing boundaries on core church teachings concerning
divorced and remarried Catholics, an issue Francis has said
greatly pains him. It is expected to feature prominently in
the October meeting.
The German bishops' survey made clear: "The
church's statements on premarital sexual relations, on
homosexuality, on those divorced and remarried and on birth
control ... are virtually never accepted or are expressly
rejected in the vast majority of cases."
The Swiss bishops went further, saying the
church's very mission was being threatened by its insistence
on such directives. It's an issue Francis himself has
weighed in on, decrying the church's "obsession" with
small-minded rules.
By contrast, U.S. dioceses haven't reported the
results of their surveys in any detail. Baltimore
Archbishop William Lori wrote in a recent diocesan article
that more than 4,000 people had responded to his survey but
provided scant information on what they said. He wrote that
"the majority of Catholics who responded said they strive
to practice their faith but acknowledged the struggles and
confusion they face in doing so."
The Archdiocese of Philadelphia, meanwhile, said
it was following Vatican guidelines by not publishing the
findings at all.
But if independent studies are any indication,
American Catholics are likely to agree with their
European counterparts at least on the issue of
contraception. A 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center
found that three-quarters of U.S. Catholics think the
church should permit members to use birth control.
Church teaching holds that marriage is an
indissoluble union between a man and woman. The Vatican
opposes artificial contraception and considers
homosexual acts to be "intrinsically disordered."
The surveys found German and Swiss Catholics
rejected such teachings as out of step with their
personal lives. Gay marriage is increasingly accepted,
unmarried couples are increasingly the norm and the ban
on artificial contraception is deemed not only
unrealistic but "blatantly immoral" concerning the use
of condoms to fight HIV.
Church teaching also holds that Catholics
who don't have their first marriage annulled, or
declared null and void by a church tribunal, before
remarrying cannot receive Communion because they are
essentially living in sin and committing adultery.
Such annulments are often impossible to get or can
take years to process, a problem that has left
generations of Catholics feeling shunned.
Last year, the German Diocese of Freiburg
issued a set of guidelines explaining how such
remarried Catholics could get around the rule. It
said if certain criteria are met — if the spouses
were trying to live according to the faith and acted
with laudable motivation — they could receive
Communion and other sacraments of the church.
The Vatican immediately shot down the
initiative, with the Vatican's German doctrinal czar
insisting there is no way around the rule.
Despite the survey findings, moral
theologians warned that church doctrine isn't about
to change.
"The surveys indicate what Francis
already knew and the reason why he has chosen the
family for the focus of his reform," said the Rev.
Robert Gahl, a moral theologian at Rome's
Pontifical Holy Cross University.
He said the church relies on marriage
and strong families to raise children in the
faith. "The surveys show that the church must do
much more to foster appreciation for the fidelity
of such unconditional and life-giving love when
society sees personal relationships in the
fleeting terms of utility and gratification," he
said.
|