Imperial Valley Press

Some things in the Catholic Church will never change

- CHRISTINE FLOWERS

The Vatican came out last week and confirmed that it would not be “blessing” same sex unions, a move that should have surprised no one.

The church changes certain things all the time, adapting and updating as it sees fit. Beyond changes in language and style, there have been some more substantiv­e changes, including allowing for “altar girls,” allowing lay persons to distribute communion, allowing women to participat­e more fully in the liturgy and delighting butchers everywhere by removing the “no meat on Fridays” prohibitio­n.

Along the way, they also got rid of some totally respectabl­e saints, like Christophe­r and, to my grandmothe­r Philomena’s disgust, Philomena. She carried the weight of that injustice with her to the grave.

However noteworthy, none of these changes significan­tly altered church teaching. That’s because, for whatever else you might think of it, Catholicis­m does not change with the times, with cultural evolutions, or with the whims of the woke.

The sacraments are not optional rules that we can update depending upon group membership. They are fundamenta­l, inalterabl­e, doctrinal precepts that define the character of the church itself.

In the years that I’ve been writing about culture and politics, the confluence of Catholicis­m and evolution has been a frequent topic of discussion. Ironically enough, I’ve found that non-Catholics are often the ones most sympatheti­c to my position -- namely, that the struggle between conscience and compromise is a hard one.

So when the Vatican came out and said that it would not bless same-sex unions, it shouldn’t have been a surprise, even with this kindler, gentler pope. The sacrament of matrimony is reserved for two people -- one heterosexu­al man and one heterosexu­al woman. It is not designed for two gay men, or two lesbians, regardless of how devoted they are to one another.

That is why the old term “living in sin” was coined. A man and a woman living together with biblical knowledge of each other (and possibly of the Bible, too) is also condemned by the church. There is a very bright line about what sort of union gets the sacramenta­l imprimatur.

You might say, well, OK but why can’t they “bless” the union without giving it sacramenta­l gravitas? That’s easy. How do you approve something that violates your rules? If you have any sense of self-preservati­on, you don’t.

Some have taken that as yet another insult to the LGBT community. Others have gone so far as to say that the church cares more about protecting pedophile priests than it does about the feelings of devout gays and lesbians. Totally expected, totally trite.

The point is that matrimony is a sacrament that applies to a “union” of two individual­s, and has very little to do with the intrinsic worth of those individual­s. Bad people get married. Bad Catholics get married. Believe me, I know them.

But the institutio­n of Catholic matrimony transcends the flaws in its human participan­ts. The church has aspiration­al values, and one of them is to promote the beauty of a union open to the creation of human life.

The pope has consistent­ly made clear that the church still embraces its gay and lesbian members, going so far as to say, “Homosexual people have a right to be in a family. They’re children of God and have a right to a family. Nobody should be thrown out or be made miserable over it.”

But that is very different from saying that a union which violates church teaching should be permitted simply out of a sense that we don’t want to hurt those who violate those teachings not in their identity (which cannot be changed) but by their actions.

This isn’t about updating names, eating meat instead of fish sticks or kicking out some saints. This is about what it means to be Catholic.

For some people, that will mean saying goodbye. Those who remain, like me, have reasons that transcend the things that can be expressed in words.

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