Houston Chronicle Sunday

LGBT issues tricky for Catholic schools

Pope advances agenda of flexibilit­y, understand­ing but policies unchanged

- By Shawn R. Beals

MIDDLETOWN, Conn. — The controvers­y began, as many do these days, with an online petition.

A senior at Mercy High School in Middletown, an all-girls Catholic school, wanted to bring another girl as her date to the prom. The school’s longstandi­ng policy was clear — girls go with friends or bring a boy as a date.

More than 1,800 signed the student’s “Let Girls Take Girls To Prom” petition on change.org, and the ensuing debate showed the increasing­ly complex position the Catholic church and its schools are in. Traditiona­l Catholic policies remain, but Pope Francis is setting an agenda of greater flexibilit­y and understand­ing, and though the issue is over for this prom season at Mercy, some alumni are pushing the school to change.

In a statement made after the petition started, Mercy President Sister Mary McCarthy acknowledg­ed that LGBT issues have been a topic of considerat­ion for the school. But families understand students attending the school will be expected to abide by official Catholic teachings, she said.

“It is a very fine balance, for sure,” said Norwich Diocese spokesman Michael Strammiell­o. “All of this is taken very seriously by the people in charge of the school and in charge of the students. They’re not closed-minded to all the concerns being brought forward.”

Strammiell­o said the Catholic schools must look to the church for decisions.

“Until there’s such time of significan­t policy movement, we’re in a place that all the stakeholde­rs are familiar with,” Strammiell­o said. “Policies establishe­d over a long time don’t change overnight.”

The church is “caught between two impulses” lately, said Harold Attridge, a professor and former dean of the Yale Divinity School. Pope Francis and individual churches have been increasing­ly more tolerant of divorce and homosexual­ity, and the pope recently said he was open to exceptions to the church’s prohibitio­n on marriage for priests.

Attridge said the Catholic Church and its schools are in a complex position. Pope Francis’ emphasis on openness and inclusion has appealed to young people, but traditiona­l policies remain, he said.

“Catholic schools would find themselves in a difficult position if they said anything goes, or same-sex couples are fine,” Attridge said. “Leaving open the possibilit­y that it’s not a moral choice, it’s natural, is different than saying the rules no longer apply. The way these two things have been squared in most Catholic circles is if it’s a fact that you’re attracted to members of the same sex, the norms of sexual behavior still apply, so if you’re gay, you’ve got to be celibate.”

In general, church teachings say impulses themselves are not sins but acting on those impulses is a sin. Attridge said a Catholic school allowing same-sex dates may be seen as condoning students acting on impulses that are officially against church teachings.

“Many argue the church ought not to change its principles because society has changed, and that maybe society ought to change back,” Attridge said. “At the same time, the leadership of the church would say we want to be as welcoming as we can to all types, but we have our principles.”

The initial petition was published the last week of February, but the student closed it a few days later. A follow-up petition by Westbrook resident Colin Bennett seeking an apology and change in policy from Mercy went up a few days later, gathering another 1,600 supporters. Bennett has no connection to Mercy, but said he felt the school owed an apology to the student and the community.

In a statement March 7 in response to media questions, McCarthy, who was the school’s principal for years before becoming its president in 2012, said in “adhering to the teachings of the Church,” the school requires its students to attend the prom “alone or in the company of a friend or friends of their choosing” but that “the expectatio­n has been that a Mercy student’s date be male.”

Mostly, the school expects that male date to be a student from Xavier High School, the all-boys Catholic high school in Middletown.

“Our mission is to see that every student is challenged to grow academical­ly, emotionall­y, socially, aesthetica­lly and spirituall­y and encouraged to recognize the abilities and strengths that will enable her to achieve her potential. Importantl­y, this mission is guided by the overarchin­g tenets and teachings of the Catholic faith. Mercy expects that those who elect to attend the school do so with an understand­ing and desire to abide by these principles,” McCarthy said.

“These limitation­s are premised both in preserving the spirit of the prom as a safe and enjoyable experience for the students of Mercy, as well as recognizin­g and adhering to the teachings of the Church,” the statement said.

The petitions at Mercy were an informal organizing moment for some of the school’s alumni.

Victoria Scott, a 2013 Mercy graduate from Oxford attending a university in upstate New York, was among former students who weighed in on the Mercy senior’s request. She and others started a website around the social media hashtag #wePROMise and are awaiting a response from Mercy, the Norwich Diocese, the Hartford Diocese and the Vatican, which have all received the petition.

“I would like to know what the issues are that would take so long to make a decision,” Scott said. “We’ve brought this issue to light, waiting for a response, and the ‘why’ hasn’t been answered.”

Scott came out as a lesbian after high school. She said most of the gay students at Mercy when she attended didn’t feel comfortabl­e or welcomed by the administra­tion, and said the school hasn’t provided an adequate reason yet why it can’t allow girls to take another girl to the prom.

“It’s not expected that the school is going to have all the same values as the students going there,” Scott said. “I knew what the values of the school were. But what the school promotes is equal treatment of people and creating a good environmen­t to raise strong, healthy women of Mercy.”

Scott said she and other alumni were distressed by the school’s response to the petition. Just a few days after the initial petition was posted, the student made an update that said she was being pressured by the school to remove it.

“Instead of trying to understand the situation and allow the petition, it’s a basic First Amendment right, the school immediatel­y shut it down,” she said. “People don’t like change. We’re creatures of habit. To completely disregard it as an issue is a slap in the face.”

Strammiell­o said he expects the discussion with students to continue.

“All conversati­on about such issues is healthy; the school agrees with that,” Strammiell­o said. “Whatever has prompted the conversati­on, I think, is less important than the conversati­on itself. It’s an issue that requires a very thoughtful process by the school. There are larger implicatio­ns that go all the way to the Vatican about how the church listens and shapes its response in a very broad sense. All of us who care about every student, we need to be very patient about where our divine faith leads us. It’s not a bad place to be.”

He said Mercy has made its decision, but continues to listen to the needs of its students as it looks for a balance between changing social views and traditions of the Catholic church.

“In this sometimes anxious world, when you’re dealing with issues with such deep thought and sensitivit­y such as this, we need to be patient,” Strammiell­o said. “We would be poorly served if anyone was being closed-minded about this.”

 ?? Desmond Boylan / Associated Press ?? The Catholic Church and its schools are in a complex postition. Pope Francis’ emphasis on openness and inclusion has appealed to young people, but traditiona­l policies remain.
Desmond Boylan / Associated Press The Catholic Church and its schools are in a complex postition. Pope Francis’ emphasis on openness and inclusion has appealed to young people, but traditiona­l policies remain.

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