The London
church that refused to admit Oscar Wilde after he was charged with
sodomy and gross indecency is welcoming LGBT Catholics, after the
announcement that the Soho masses would come to an end.
Sunday night marks the last ever 'Soho mass' for lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgendered Catholics at its central London church. LGBT
Catholics will be offered 'pastoral support' instead of a full religious
service.
In January, The Archbishop of Westminster Vincent Nichols, who leads
the Catholic Church in England and Wales, announced that masses
throughout Soho in central London aimed specifically at LGBT people,
were to end.
He said the services held at Our Lady of the Assumption Church in
Soho, central London, were out of line with the church's main teaching
on sexuality.
"The moral teaching of the church is that the proper use of our
sexual faculty is within a marriage, between a man and a woman, open to
the procreation and nurturing of new human life," stated Archbishop
Nichols.
The Church of the Immaculate Conception, in Farm Street, Mayfair,
which refused a request for a six-month retreat from gay writer Oscar
Wilde almost 116 years ago, is to provide mass for those who used to
attend at Soho.
One organiser of the Soho masses, Mark Dowd, a British Catholic journalist, defended Archbishop Nichols.
"You could say this is dreadful, you're giving this church to these
very right-wing, traditional ex-Anglicans and kicking the gays out...
But poor old archbishops have always got to play these games where
they've got a certain number of chess pieces to move round," he told the
Pink News.
Commenting on the change of heart by the Jesuit Church since Oscar
Wilde's time, Dowd said: "Oscar Wilde was turned away; they didn't want
to be associated with him," he said. "Now the Jesuits are saying: 'It's
OK, it's fine.'"
The mass at Farm Street will first be attended by the LGBT
worshippers on 3 March 2013, where they will be joined by Archbishop
Nichols.
Dowd also claims a "culture of secrecy" has led to the current crisis
in the Vatican over the alleged misconduct of its senior clerics.
The journalist said that Pope Benedict XVI's decision to stand down
was partly due to concerns of abuse within the Catholic Church.
In an interview with CNN, Dowd said: "When you have this culture of
secrecy and guilt and repression... you have conditions which foster the
potential for blackmail and for manipulation."
"About half," he said, "if not more, of all the people attracted into seminaries in the priesthood are gay themselves."
Dowd said the basis for his claim was conversations with members of the Catholic Church, as well as personal experience.
He also reiterated claims that Pope Benedict XVI's decision to stand down was partly over his concerns regarding clerical abuse.
Dowd recounted an interview he conducted several years ago with Pope Benedict XVI's brother, Georg Ratzinger.
"He said [Pope Benedict XVI] was basically lying awake at night
sweating and worrying about it," the journalist said. "And that actually
in terms of his own emotional health it taken a great toll on him."