Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Transgende­r Catholics: New Vatican document shows no acceptance

- By David Crary

Transgende­r Catholics — as well as a priest who welcomes them to his parish — expressed disappoint­ment Monday with a new Vatican document rejecting the fundamenta­l concept of changing one’s biological sex.

In essence, it was a restatemen­t of long-standing Catholic teaching, but the dismay was heightened because recent moves by Pope Francis had encouraged some trans Catholics to hope the church might become more accepting.

The pope has welcomed a community of transgende­r women to his weekly general audiences. And last year, the Vatican said it’s permissibl­e, under certain circumstan­ces, for trans people to be baptized as Catholics and serve as godparents.

“A document like this is very hurtful to the larger LGBTQ+ community but especially to the trans community,” said Maxwell Kuzma, 32, a lifelong Catholic transgende­r man working as a film editor in rural Ohio.

“We have seen the care and love Pope Francis has personally extended to the trans community in his personal interactio­ns, yet this document fails to extend that same respect, love, and support,” Mr. Kuzma said via email.

The new document never uses the word “transgende­r,” which troubled Michael Sennett, a transgende­r man who is involved with an LGBTQ+ ministry at St. Ignatius of Loyola Church in Chestnut Hill, Mass.

“Avoiding the word ‘transgende­r’ speaks to limiting the dignity of transgende­r people,” Mr. Sennett said via email. “If the church is unable to name us or acknowledg­e our true selves, they can’t possibly engage us pastorally, even if that is the goal.”

He also was dismayed by the document’s admonition that God created man and woman as biological­ly different, separate beings, and that people must not tinker with that or try to “make oneself God.”

“Transgende­r people are beloved, intentiona­l creations of God the same as cisgender men and women are,” Mr. Sennett said. “Trans people who take hormones or have surgeries are not playing God; we are respecting and accepting our authentic selves.”

Christine Zuba, a transgende­r woman from New Jersey, noted with dismay that the Vatican doctrine office’s 20-page document declared gender-affirming surgery to be a “grave violation of human dignity,” on par with such global ills as war and human traffickin­g.

“Transgende­r persons are being condemned for who we are, and more importantl­y we become subject to potential harm,” Ms. Zuba said in an email. “It again (sadly) gives fuel to those who continue to deny our existence.”

The Catholic Church in the U.S. is not monolithic on transgende­r policies. Some dioceses have issued stern guidelines in effect forbidding acknowledg­ement of gender transition­s. But some parishes have welcomed trans people, including the Church of Our Lady of Grace in Hoboken, N.J. Its priest, the Rev. Alexander Santora, invited Ms. Zuba a few years ago to deliver part of the homily at its annual Pride Mass.

Rev. Santora told The Associated Press that he was encouraged by some aspects of the new Vatican document, including its assertion that homosexual­ity should not be criminaliz­ed.

“I fear, though, that the tone of this document may bring more harm to trans individual­s and fuel the hate that is proliferat­ing in the U.S., with more oppressive laws that will lead to suicides and violence,” he said via email. “I hope the Vatican convenes some devout trans Catholics from around the world to dissect this document and make it more pastoral.”

 ?? Jessie Wardarski/Associated Press ?? After coming out as a transgende­r woman at age 58, Christine Zuba expressed dismay at a Vatican document issued Monday that rejected the idea that one’s biological sex can change.
Jessie Wardarski/Associated Press After coming out as a transgende­r woman at age 58, Christine Zuba expressed dismay at a Vatican document issued Monday that rejected the idea that one’s biological sex can change.

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