Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Vatican: Gender care violates human dignity

- By Nicole Winfield

Doctrine office's 20-page “Infinite Dignity” document puts it on par with abortion and euthanasia.

VATICAN CITY >> The Vatican on Monday declared gender-affirming surgery and surrogacy as grave violations of human dignity, putting them on par with abortion and euthanasia as practices that it said reject God's plan for human life.

The Vatican's doctrine office issued “Infinite Dignity,” a 20-page declaratio­n that has been in the works for five years. After substantia­l revision in recent months, it was approved March 25 by Pope Francis, who ordered its publicatio­n.

From a pope who has made outreach to the LGBTQ+ community a hallmark of his papacy, the document was received as a setback, albeit predictabl­e, by trans Catholics. But its message was also consistent with the Argentine Jesuit's long-standing belief that while trans people should be welcomed in the church, so-called “gender ideologies” should not.

In its most eagerly anticipate­d section, the Vatican repeated its rejection of “gender theory,” or the idea that one's biological sex can change. It said God created man and woman as biological­ly different, separate beings, and said people must not tinker with that or try to “make oneself God.”

“It follows that any sexchange interventi­on, as a rule, risks threatenin­g the unique dignity the person has received from the moment of conception,” the document said.

It distinguis­hed between gender-affirming surgeries, which it rejected, and “genital abnormalit­ies” that are present at birth or that develop later. Those abnormalit­ies can be “resolved” with the help of health care profession­als, it said.

Advocates for LGBTQ+ Catholics immediatel­y criticized the document as outdated, harmful and contrary to the stated goal of recognizin­g the “infinite dignity” of all of God's children. They warned it could have real-world effects on trans people, fueling antitrans violence and discrimina­tion.

“While it lays out a wonderful rationale for why each human being, regardless of condition in life, must be respected, honored, and loved, it does not apply this principle to gender-diverse people,” said Francis DeBernardo of New Ways Ministry, which advocates for LGBTQ+ Catholics.

Nicolete Burbach, lead expert in social and environmen­tal justice at the London Jesuit Centre, said the document showed the Vatican continues to fail to engage with queer and feminist approaches to the body “which it simply dismisses as supposedly subjecting both the body and human dignity itself to human whims.”

“I think the main difficulty faced by the document is that it attempts to affirm the church's authentic commitment to human dignity in the face of a troubling history on the part of the church itself around attacks on that dignity,” said Burbach, a trans Catholic theologian who researches transness and the Catholic Church.

The document's existence, rumored since 2019, was confirmed in recent weeks by the new prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, Argentine Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, a close Francis confidant.

Fernández had cast the document as something of a nod to conservati­ves.

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