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[USA] Transgendered Roman Catholic Woman Decries Episcopal Actions at General Convention
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Stephanie Stevens  
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 More options Jul 25 2012, 8:35 am
From: Stephanie Stevens <stephaniekaystev...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2012 08:35:02 -0400
Local: Wed, Jul 25 2012 8:35 am
Subject: [News/Religion] [USA] Transgendered Roman Catholic Woman Decries Episcopal Actions at General Convention
Virtue Online, USA

Transgendered Roman Catholic Woman Decries Episcopal Actions at
General Convention

“Transgenderism should not be celebrated. Transsexuals should not seek
ordination”

By David W. Virtue
www.virtueonline.org

July 23, 2012

Three years ago, I interviewed a transgendered woman (formerly a man),
an Anglo-Catholic who has since converted to Roman Catholicism. See
interview here http://tinyurl.com/boj9jye

She has been following the decisions of the recent General Convention
allowing the first Christian denomination in history to officially
affirm transgender sexuality and allow people who have had
sex-changes, or "gender reassignment surgery," to apply to be clergy.

She wrote the following to VOL:

“I'm not surprised to see that ECUSA has gone 'all the way' to
celebration of gay marriage, and also embraced transgender individuals
as one more discriminated minority that requires inclusion. It’s a
natural follow-on from the emphasis on equality of result, and just
one more way station on the way to the acceptance of other, even more
exotic behaviors such as polyamory which are sure to come,” she wrote
to VOL.

“The fact that I am myself a transsexual as well as a catholic refugee
from ECUSA gives me an interesting position from which to view all of
this.

“On the one hand, I do not believe that transgenderism is something to
be celebrated, any more than I would celebrate any other abnormal
medical condition. It’s an ongoing hardship, no matter what treatment
protocol is followed. I continue to read the scientific literature,
and the studies continue to indicate that transsexualism, at least, is
a very real and very physical (and not a psychological) medical
condition. It exists, objectively, in the structure of the brain and
should be acknowledged and treated as such.”

People like (Johns Hopkins psychiatrist) Paul McHugh, who believe
otherwise, hold their beliefs in spite of the medical studies, not
because of them, she noted. See VOL’s story here:
http://preview.tinyurl.com/cfu8u8q

“On the other hand, being a transsexual does not give one license to
live however one would. God requires us all to live honorable lives,
even while we seek healing and wholeness. So the rules God set out
Christian service, for ordination, for sex and marriage, apply to all
of us.

“Personally, I do not believe transsexual individuals should seek
ordination. This has little to do with the individuals as such - they
may be very devout and sincere. But the mere existence of the
condition causes a stumbling block to other Christians. Therefore in
the interests of Christian Charity, well-meaning transsexuals, as with
homosexuals, should seek other ways to serve the Lord.

“I sincerely wish that people would stop conflating these issues -
medical condition versus theology versus behavior. It confuses the
entire discussion, generates a great amount of heat and very little
light, and makes it much more difficult for all of us to live in
charity with each other.”

Here is the original interview: Guess Who's Coming To Lunch? I meet
and interview a transgendered Anglican lady. You will be stunned at
what I learned. You can read the story of my interview done in August
2009 here:

http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1...

The story has had over 15,000 hits and continues to be read worldwide.

Copyright © 2006. All rights reserved.

http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=1...


 
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