The U.S. bishops have said that a new booklet advocating “marriage
equality” for same-sex couples by a self-identified Catholic group
strongly contradicts Church teaching.
In “no manner is this organization authorized to speak on behalf of
the Catholic Church,” Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C. said
March 11.
The cardinal was specifically referring to a new pamphlet
released by the controversial New Ways Ministry – an organization that
claims Catholic support for homosexual “marriage.”
The booklet titled “Marriage Equality: a positive Catholic approach”
was authored and released this month by New Ways Ministry’s executive
director Francis DeBernardo.
DeBernardo argued that the “full” Catholic position on same-sex
“marriage” is not represented solely by bishops within the Church.
“When dealing with lesbian and gay issues, a relatively new area of Church discussion on which there is so much debate,” DeBernardo wrote, “the bishops may not yet be able to discern what the Catholic community believes.”
The booklet also claimed that “Catholic tradition” allows for laity
and theologians within the Church – some of whom support allowing
marriage for same-sex couples – to have equal say and authority on the
issue.
Cardinal Wuerl, who heads the Committee on Doctrine for the U.S
bishops' conference, reacted to the pamphlet by stating that New Ways
Ministry is not “in conformity” with Catholic teaching and that the
group should refrain from even identifying itself as Catholic.
Cardinal Wuerl also reiterated his support for the position of the
previous U.S. bishops’ conference president Cardinal Francis George, who
stated in February of 2010 that the organization is not Catholic and
does not speak for the Church.
New Ways Ministry, based in Mount Rainier, Maryland, describes itself
as a “gay-positive ministry of advocacy and justice.”
Cardinal George
noted in his Feb. 12 statement last year that since its founding in
1977, “serious questions” have been raised about the group's adherence
to Catholic teaching on homosexuality.
In 1984, New Way's founders – Sr. Jeannine Gramick, SSND, and Fr.
Robert Nugent – were barred from continuing their activities in the
Archdiocese of Washington.
That same year, their superiors ordered them to separate themselves
from the organization.
The two resigned from leadership posts but
continued their involvement until 1999, when the Vatican's Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith said that because of “errors and
ambiguities” in their approach, Sr. Gramick and Fr. Nugent are
permanently prohibited from any pastoral work involving homosexual
individuals
Cardinal George said New Ways Ministry’s “lack of adherence” to
Church teaching on the morality of homosexual acts was the “central
issue” in the censure of its founders and continues to be its “crucial
defect.”