Praying for the elimination of inflexibility
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JOSEPH N. BELL
All of the Forum letters and Pilot editorial comment and news story
quotes I’ve seen have rightly taken strong issue with the 18 parents
who have demanded that Costa Mesa’s St. John the Baptist School
authorities kick out two kindergarten students because they are
adopted children of a gay couple whose lifestyle is a violation of
Catholic doctrine.
This demand is so clearly off-the-wall unfair to the children
involved -- a position Father Martin Benzoni, pastor of the Costa
Mesa church has taken -- that further comment seems almost
irrelevant. Yet, none of the critics of the complaining parents have
dealt with the root issue here: the inflexible position of the
Catholic Church in regarding homosexuality as a sin.
Both Benzoni and the complaining parents are caught between a rock
and a hard place. On the one hand, as an extension of its
condemnation of homosexuality, the church has outlawed both marriage
and adoption by same-sex couples. On the other hand, punishing the
children by denying them a Catholic education because of the alleged
sins of their loving and concerned adoptive parents would not, as
Benzoni said in a press statement, “show genuine care for the
salvation of all those involved.” In this dispute, the 18 complaining
parents have chosen to make Catholic doctrine their top priority.
And Benzoni has put showing “genuine care” for the children first.
Neither of them have questioned the bigger issue: whether the
Catholic Church, by denying entrance to their form of Christianity to
an entire segment of society based purely on sexual preference, is in
accord with the all-inclusive love of the ministry of Jesus.
I have two nieces, 5 and 8, the progeny of gay parents. I have
watched their arrival, growth and the sometimes discrimination
against their lesbian parents. They have no need for me to defend
them and their lifestyle. But when I project their two little girls
into the situation facing the children under dispute at St. John the
Baptist, it is hard to comprehend any church system or its followers
who would ignore their own un-Christian behavior while “casting
stones” at others whose lifestyles they fear.
It brings to mind another current local debate growing up around
the picture of a group of Newport Harbor High School football
players, apparently in a moment of prayer after a game, published
recently in the Pilot. Several strong letters questioning both the
propriety and legality of prayer at a public school function brought
robust rebuttals, and we were off and running.
What some of you may not have picked up on is a school prayer
dispute, now taking place at the University of Georgia, that has
escalated to the federal courts. There, a cheerleading coach named
Marilou Braswell was allegedly putting heavy pressure on students to
attend Bible study sessions at her home, conducted by her minister
husband. Braswell also led the group in prayer before they were about
to perform.
When an admittedly talented Jewish cheerleader named Jaclyn Steele
complained to Braswell about the pressure on her to participate in
the prayer sessions, she was busted down from the prestigious
football squad to the minor leagues of cheerleading. And when she
carried her complaints to school authorities, Braswell was ordered to
put Steele back on the varsity and to cut out religious activities in
connection with cheerleading. When Braswell then castigated both
Steele and the athletic department in a statement read to her team,
she was fired.
The federal judge who denied her appeal for reinstatement said
university professionals needed to be “very sensitive to the fact
that if they inject their religious beliefs into activities that
include students, that is going to be perceived as something that the
student participants would be expected to participate in.” Braswell
plans to sue the university.
I am not suggesting that this case parallels what happened at
Newport Harbor High. The prayer in the Pilot picture appeared to be
impulsive and shared willingly by the participants. But it also
pushed the edges of activities that don’t belong in the diverse
environment of public institutions and can lead to the sort of major
engagement now underway in Georgia.
I’m strongly partisan to individual prayer -- just you, whatever
God you turn to, and the environment in which you find yourself, be
it a battlefield, a football field, a hospital or a sylvan mountain
stream. That way, you can give the matter your full attention without
involving anyone else.
Group prayer, wherever it takes place, assumes that all the
participants are on the same page. That’s a much safer assumption at
home or in one’s church than it is at a public meeting or
institution. I was deeply involved in high school and college
athletics and don’t recall group prayer ever being a part of these
team activities. I think it would have startled most of the teammates
I remember.
If the situation at St. John the Baptist School inspires any
prayers, I would hope that they be directed toward the 18 complaining
parents. They need help a lot more than the kids they’re trying to
reject.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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