Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Richard Wagner wants us to know (gasp) that there have been homosexual priests and religious throughout the Church's history
Richard Wagner, a confused soul who resides in Seattle, Washington, has a brief biography at the website for the "Center for Progressive Christianity" which may be found here. This lost soul says that he works to "heal" professionals including religious leaders and that he has facilitated "support groups for gay clergy of numerous denominations for many years." Mr. Wagner offers his advice at a website titled drdicksexadvice.com.
Why am I even writing about him? Because this lost soul who suffers from the psychopathology of homosexuality describes himself as a "gay priest." His website, which may be found here, and his Blog both offer the same old tired homosexual agitprop. At his Blog, he asserts that, "For centuries homosexuals have been villified and persecuted by the Catholic Church, but throughout all of its history the Church has had a very inconvenient secret."
And what is this great secret? That there have been clergy and religious men and women who were homosexual! Gosh, who would have thought? Saint Catherine of Siena, a great mystic and Doctor of the Church, fought for reform at a time when many clergy had succumbed to the vice of homosexuality. So this doesn't exactly come as a news flash, unless of course you have been ignorant of the Church's history. In her Dialogues, St. Catherine said that, "...these wretches not only do not bridle this fragility [of a weak nature], but do worse, committing that accursed sin against nature, and as blind as fools, with the light of their intellect darkened, they do not know the stench and misery in which they are."
Saint Peter Damian, another Doctor of the Church, a Cardinal and great reformer of the clergy, wrote an entire treatise entitled the Book of Gomorrah against the inroads made by homosexuality among the clergy. In his important work, St. Damian describes the iniquity of homosexuality as well as its psychological and, more importantly, its moral consequences:
"Truly, this vice is never to be compared with any other vice because it surpasses the enormity of all vices...It defiles everything, stains everything, pollutes everything. And as for itself, it permits nothing pure, nothing clean, nothing other than filth....The miserable flesh burns with the heat of lust; the cold mind trembles with the rancor of suspicion; and in the heart of the miserable man chaos boils like Tartarus [Hell]....In fact, after this most poisonous serpent once sinks its fangs into the unhappy soul, sense is snatched away, memory is borne off, the sharpness of the mind is obscured. It becomes unmindful of God and even forgetful of itself. This plague undermines the foundation of faith, weakens the strength of hope, destroys the bond of charity; it takes away justice, subverts fortitude, banishes temperance, blunts the keenness of prudence. And what more should I say since it expels the whole host of the virtues from the chamber of the human heart and introduces every barbarous vice as if the bolts of the doors were pulled out."
Because the soul en route to Hell has lost faith and is utterly miserable, it seeks company on its journey to final impenitence and, ultimately, eternal damnation. Which is why Mr. Wagner advances the now exhausted argument that anyone who stands with the Church's moral teaching and opposes homosexuality because of divine revelation and or the natural moral law is a "homophobe" who secretly pines for a homosexual encounter. He asserts that, "one's level of homophobia" is in direct proportion to one's own brutally closeted desire for homosexual sex." Wagner argues that "the more you wail against something" the more likely it is that you are attracted to that thing. Operating on this theory may we assume that those heroic souls who opposed National Socialism in general and the Nazi Party more specifically were closeted Nazis? Perhaps Simon Wiesenthal hunted Nazi butchers because he secretly admired their genocidal mentality? And what of those who railed against the Ku Klux Klan or Atheistic Humanism with its record of genocide and sheer brutality?
Wagner, as with many of his associates in the homosexual hate movement, employs this argument because he has nothing substantive to offer. It is nothing more than a cheap attempt at intimidation: "If you oppose homosexuality I'll tell evreyone that you are a closeted homosexual."
If Richard Wagner was really a Catholic priest at one time, I'd like to know how and why he was ordained. But if this mental midget believes that he's telling us something we don't already know when he says that there have been priests and religious throughout the Church's history who were homosexual, he is deluding himself.
What of it? Alexander VI was a notorious sinner too. Does that mean we should all join him?
Golly, I've been fighting against the homosexual agenda for years now. I guess that means I harbor a hidden desire to don a wig and some lipstick, move to the City by the Bay and take up floral arranging.
ReplyDeleteDumb.
That Mr (Fr?) Wagner has a theory. It is nothing but a theory. Believe me: I am an hetero man and when I get sexual temptations, certainly they are not those Wagner in his weak and twisted mind is imagining.
ReplyDeleteThe simple idea of having sex with another man makes me sick bcs I too easily visualize what that may be, ahem, the filth, the stench...
Don't feel obliged to publish my comment if it is too crude.
Tricis Wittmann-Todd is also from Seattle. I can't help but wonder if she gets her spiritual direction from "Father" Wagner.
ReplyDeleteWe know she's not formed by Church teaching.
St. Peter Damian says it so well Jac: "Tell us, you unmanly and effeminate man, what do you seek in another male that you do not find in yourself?...What difference in sex, what varied features of the body?...For it is the function of the natural appetite that each should seek outside himself what he cannot find in his own capacity. Therefore, if the touch of masculine flesh delights you, lay your hands upon yourself and be assured that whatever you do not find in yourself, you seek in vain in the body of another."
ReplyDeleteEllen, I was thinking the very same thing earlier today.
Strange days.
This is a most positive development since the LCWR has promoted dissent with regard to the Church's teaching on homosexuality as well as other issues such as women's ordination):
ReplyDeletehttp://www.catholicnews.com/
data/stories/cns/1201584.htm