Houston Chronicle Sunday

Talk by priest sympatheti­c to gays canceled

- By Rachel Zoll

NEW YORK — Citing a social media backlash, the seminary at the Catholic University of America has canceled a talk by a popular Jesuit priest whose latest book advocates for more compassion for gays within the church.

In a rare public rebuke, the university’s president said Saturday that he opposed the seminary’s decision. The Rev. James Martin, editor at large at the Jesuit magazine America and author of several books on Catholicis­m, said he had planned a seminary talk on Jesus, not his recent book on LGBT people, “Building a Bridge,” which has been backed by two U.S. cardinals and three bishops.

Far-right Catholic site ChurchMili­tant.com and some conservati­ve Catholic writers have denounced the book, and that led to online campaigns to pressure Catholic institutio­ns against hosting Martin. Negative feedback

The seminary in the nation’s capital, called the Theologica­l College, said it had experience­d “increasing negative feedback from various social media sites” about Martin’s talk and, as a result, decided to cancel the event. Martin said he was notified late Thursday of the decision.

The Catholic University president, John Garvey, said in a statement that the university administra­tion did not support the cancellati­on, and noted that Martin has spoken before at the school, which was founded by the U.S. bishops and is under their supervisio­n.

“The campaigns by various groups to paint Fr. Martin’s talk as controvers­ial reflect the same pressure being applied by the left for universiti­es to withdraw speaker invitation­s,” Garvey said. “Universiti­es and their related entities should be places for the free, civil exchange of ideas.

“Our culture is increasing­ly hostile to this idea. It is problemati­c that individual­s and groups within our church demonstrat­e this same inability to make distinctio­ns and to exercise charity.”

Austin Ruse, who leads the Center for Family & Human Rights based in New York, has called Martin’s complaints about the conservati­ve pushback on his book “pansified.”

The Rev. John Zuhlsdorf, who runs the popular conservati­ve blog “Father Z,” said Martin promoted “a homosexual­ist agenda.” And Cardinal Robert Sarah, head of the Vatican’s liturgy office, recently criticized Martin’s approach in an op-ed article in The Wall Street Journal. Adviser to Vatican

Last April, Pope Francis appointed Martin as an adviser to the Vatican’s communicat­ions department.

Martin said his book does not challenge church teaching.

“It simply builds on the catechism and the Gospels,” he said in a telephone interview. “Jesus is very close to me in prayer and I’m convinced that reaching out to people on the margins is still what he wants me to do.”

Martin said Catholic institutio­ns had scrapped two other of his talks, but many more had been scheduled, including a Skype talk Saturday with a parish in North Carolina. He said the leader of his Jesuit province has asked him not to discuss his own sexuality.

“Not every book about LGBT Catholics has to be about sex,” Martin said. “Ironically, these rightwing groups are obsessed about sex, not me.”

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