MSNBC ~ Newsweek
. John's
Seminary in Camarillo, Calif., is one of the most respected training
grounds for Catholic priests in the nation
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Gays and The Seminary
The schools that train U.S. priests require
students to be chaste, but most allow them to be gay. A Vatican probe may change
all that
By David
France
NEWSWEEK
May 20 issue — There will never be a gay students’ group—or gay film series or gay
dance—at St. John’s Seminary, one of the most respected training grounds for
Catholic priests in the nation.
YET THE 64-YEAR-OLD institution, nestled in the hills of
Camarillo, Calif., may be one of the country’s gayest facilities for higher
education. Depending on whom you ask, gay and bisexual men make up anywhere from
30 percent to 70 percent of the student body at the college and graduate levels.
“I don’t want people to think that in a negative way,” says a 28-year-old gay
alumnus, who believes all seminarians there are chaste, regardless of
orientation. “It isn’t like Christopher Street or West Hollywood. But some
seminarians are gay, openly gay, and very loud about it.”
Though they
constitute just over 5 percent of the population, gay men may make up half the
student body at the 76 high-school, college and graduate-level seminaries across
the country, according to broad estimates. For decades Roman Catholic Church
leaders have quietly reckoned with this surprising truth about seminary life.
There is no rule against celibate gays as seminarians, theologians say. But for
a church where priests preach that homosexuality is an “intrinsic evil,” it is
at the least incongruous that so many would-be priests are gay.
American
church leaders are now wrestling with these demographic realities, in part
because some of them are blaming gays for the growing crisis. Last week, while
Cardinal Bernard Law was ordered to say what he knew about abusive Boston
priests and the Rev. Paul Shanley and another cleric were arrested and charged
with raping young boys, dioceses across the country were preparing for a lengthy
evaluation, or “apostolic visitation,” of U.S. seminary cultures and admissions
policies to see if more gays should be screened out. The Vatican had agreed to
conduct this study, which will begin immediately, at last month’s summit with
American cardinals.YET THE 64-YEAR-OLD institution, nestled in the hills of
Camarillo, Calif., may be one of the country’s gayest facilities for higher
education. Depending on whom you ask, gay and bisexual men make up anywhere from
30 percent to 70 percent of the student body at the college and graduate levels.
“I don’t want people to think that in a negative way,” says a 28-year-old gay
alumnus, who believes all seminarians there are chaste, regardless of
orientation. “It isn’t like Christopher Street or West Hollywood. But some
seminarians are gay, openly gay, and very loud about it.”
Though they
constitute just over 5 percent of the population, gay men may make up half the
student body at the 76 high-school, college and graduate-level seminaries across
the country, according to broad estimates. For decades Roman Catholic Church
leaders have quietly reckoned with this surprising truth about seminary life.
There is no rule against celibate gays as seminarians, theologians say. But for
a church where priests preach that homosexuality is an “intrinsic evil,” it is
at the least incongruous that so many would-be priests are gay.
American
church leaders are now wrestling with these demographic realities, in part
because some of them are blaming gays for the growing crisis. Last week, while
Cardinal Bernard Law was ordered to say what he knew about abusive Boston
priests and the Rev. Paul Shanley and another cleric were arrested and charged
with raping young boys, dioceses across the country were preparing for a lengthy
evaluation, or “apostolic visitation,” of U.S. seminary cultures and admissions
policies to see if more gays should be screened out. The Vatican had agreed to
conduct this study, which will begin immediately, at last month’s summit with
American cardinals.
Rome’s sentiments on this subject are well known. Though
the pope has not addressed the issue of gay seminarians publicly, last year the
Most Rev. Tarcisio Ber-tone, secretary of the Vatican’s Doctrinal Congregation,
declared, “Persons with a homosexual inclination should not be admitted to the
seminary.” A small number of American church leaders are now echoing that
thought. They consider the widening scandal to be a “homosexual-type problem,”
as Detroit Cardinal Adam Maida has said, despite the near plurality among
psychologists, sociologists and theologians—even abuse victims —who say that is
not case. “It’s not a homosexual issue,” says the Rev. Jim Walsh, of the
National Catholic Educational Association. “The issue is identifying the sick
members that need help and need to be removed.”
Details of
the imminent evaluation are not yet known. The Rev. Edward Burns, the United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops officer in charge of vocations who will
likely be the Vatican’s U.S. point man, says gay admissions, psychological
screening tests and enforcement of celibacy rules will all be examined.
Among the concerns of American prelates are reports that
an aggressive gay ethos has arisen on campus, manifesting in unwelcoming cliques
and ecclesiastic flamboyance—a tendency to embrace the stagier elements of the
liturgy, for instance. Witnessing this, some may conclude that the men are
freely breaking their vows, but there is no evidence of this. Regardless, books
on the subject argue that heterosexual seminarians feel so uncomfortable in this
culture that they question their vocations. “People I know quite well have left
the seminary either in disgust because people are not keeping vows, or in
alienation because they’re not gay. In some cases it’s a serious problem,” says
R. Scott Appleby, a history professor at Notre Dame. The Most Rev. Wilton
Gregory, who heads the bishops’ group, has come to a similar conclusion.
”[T]here does exist a homosexual atmosphere or dynamic that makes heterosexual
men think twice,” he said last month. Such complaints irritate gay clergymen and
their defenders. “I think straight priests and seminarians shouldn’t be
whining,” says the Rev. Charles Bouchard, president of the Aquinas Institute of
Theology in St. Louis. “I just don’t think it’s a big deal.”
Right now, gays are admitted to seminaries as long as they
meet the same rigorous standards as straights. They must pass written
psychological exams including the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory,
which can detect a broad list of traits, though not sexual orientation. In
addition, applicants undergo in-depth and extremely personal inter-views.
According to admissions officers, it is common to inquire into an applicant’s
sexual orientation point-blank.
St. Charles
Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia is believed to be the only one in America that
bans gays outright, seminary officials say. Most others, like St. Patrick’s
Seminary near San Francisco, have no restrictions. “Shouldn’t you consider a
homosexual as equally fit? I would think yes,” says the Rev. Gerald Coleman, the
rector there. However, a growing number of administrators are adopting specific
requirements for flagging gays with notorious histories. At St. Mary seminary in
Mundelein, Ill., men who have HIV are excluded, according to the provost, the
Rev. Thomas Baima, while Conception Seminary College in Missouri is considering
a criminal-background check of applicants.
Modern
seminary practice nonetheless encourages all students to reflect on their own
sexuality without fear of reprisal, says the Rt. Rev. Jeremiah McCarthy,
director of accreditation for the Association of Theological Schools. This
represents a major sea change. Decades ago celibacy training at the seminaries
was conducted entirely in euphemisms—even the human-sexuality chapters of
moral-theology textbooks were written in Latin, as if in code. Pope John Paul II
changed that in a 1992 call for one-on-one “priestly formation,” in which a
faculty member helps mentor seminarians through all aspects of their spiritual
growth, including psychological and psychosexual development. These checks and
balances have resulted in a sharp reduction in charges of sexual abuse, experts
say.
News of the
Vatican’s probe has drawn mixed reactions. Dr. Jon Fuller, a priest and
physician at Boston Medical Center who specializes in treating priests afflicted
with AIDS, calls the effort to screen out gays “unfortunate.” Not only will it
further reduce the number of seminarians, which has plunged from 49,000 in 1965
to fewer than 4,000 today, but it may also reintroduce a code of secrecy among
those gay men who enter the seminary anyway—or discover they’re gay only after
enrolling. “If we now say you can only be approved if you’re straight or appear
to be straight, we really are creating a very dysfunctional situation that from
a psychological perspective is tempting disaster,” he says. “It brings us back
to a very unhealthy time.”
At St.
John’s, officials welcome the study. “I think we do a good job recruiting solid
candidates, and welcome the opportunity to do better,” says the Rt. Rev. Helmut
Hefner, the school’s rector. He accepts that his gay enrollment may be as high
as 50 percent, but that hasn’t caused any discomfort to heterosexuals, much less
an epidemic of straight flight, he says. Jim Bevacqua, the student-body
president, agrees. “I can speak firsthand, as a heterosexual seminarian. I have
a lot of friends here who are heterosexual, I know they are, and this has never
been an issue here at our seminary. To be honest, people don’t talk about it
much.” With the upcoming Vatican investigation, that will likely change.Right
now, gays are admitted to seminaries as long as they meet the same rigorous
standards as straights. They must pass written psychological exams including the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, which can detect a broad list of
traits, though not sexual orientation. In addition, applicants undergo in-depth
and extremely personal inter-views. According to admissions officers, it is
common to inquire into an applicant’s sexual orientation
point-blank.
St. Charles
Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia is believed to be the only one in America that
bans gays outright, seminary officials say. Most others, like St. Patrick’s
Seminary near San Francisco, have no restrictions. “Shouldn’t you consider a
homosexual as equally fit? I would think yes,” says the Rev. Gerald Coleman, the
rector there. However, a growing number of administrators are adopting specific
requirements for flagging gays with notorious histories. At St. Mary seminary in
Mundelein, Ill., men who have HIV are excluded, according to the provost, the
Rev. Thomas Baima, while Conception Seminary College in Missouri is considering
a criminal-background check of applicants.
Modern
seminary practice nonetheless encourages all students to reflect on their own
sexuality without fear of reprisal, says the Rt. Rev. Jeremiah McCarthy,
director of accreditation for the Association of Theological Schools. This
represents a major sea change. Decades ago celibacy training at the seminaries
was conducted entirely in euphemisms—even the human-sexuality chapters of
moral-theology textbooks were written in Latin, as if in code. Pope John Paul II
changed that in a 1992 call for one-on-one “priestly formation,” in which a
faculty member helps mentor seminarians through all aspects of their spiritual
growth, including psychological and psychosexual development. These checks and
balances have resulted in a sharp reduction in charges of sexual abuse, experts
say.
News of the
Vatican’s probe has drawn mixed reactions. Dr. Jon Fuller, a priest and
physician at Boston Medical Center who specializes in treating priests afflicted
with AIDS, calls the effort to screen out gays “unfortunate.” Not only will it
further reduce the number of seminarians, which has plunged from 49,000 in 1965
to fewer than 4,000 today, but it may also reintroduce a code of secrecy among
those gay men who enter the seminary anyway—or discover they’re gay only after
enrolling. “If we now say you can only be approved if you’re straight or appear
to be straight, we really are creating a very dysfunctional situation that from
a psychological perspective is tempting disaster,” he says. “It brings us back
to a very unhealthy time.”
At St.
John’s, officials welcome the study. “I think we do a good job recruiting solid
candidates, and welcome the opportunity to do better,” says the Rt. Rev. Helmut
Hefner, the school’s rector. He accepts that his gay enrollment may be as high
as 50 percent, but that hasn’t caused any discomfort to heterosexuals, much less
an epidemic of straight flight, he says. Jim Bevacqua, the student-body
president, agrees. “I can speak firsthand, as a heterosexual seminarian. I have
a lot of friends here who are heterosexual, I know they are, and this has never
been an issue here at our seminary. To be honest, people don’t talk about it
much.” With the upcoming Vatican investigation, that will likely change.Right
now, gays are admitted to seminaries as long as they meet the same rigorous
standards as straights. They must pass written psychological exams including the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, which can detect a broad list of
traits, though not sexual orientation. In addition, applicants undergo in-depth
and extremely personal inter-views. According to admissions officers, it is
common to inquire into an applicant’s sexual orientation
point-blank.
St. Charles
Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia is believed to be the only one in America that
bans gays outright, seminary officials say. Most others, like St. Patrick’s
Seminary near San Francisco, have no restrictions. “Shouldn’t you consider a
homosexual as equally fit? I would think yes,” says the Rev. Gerald Coleman, the
rector there. However, a growing number of administrators are adopting specific
requirements for flagging gays with notorious histories. At St. Mary seminary in
Mundelein, Ill., men who have HIV are excluded, according to the provost, the
Rev. Thomas Baima, while Conception Seminary College in Missouri is considering
a criminal-background check of applicants.
Modern
seminary practice nonetheless encourages all students to reflect on their own
sexuality without fear of reprisal, says the Rt. Rev. Jeremiah McCarthy,
director of accreditation for the Association of Theological Schools. This
represents a major sea change. Decades ago celibacy training at the seminaries
was conducted entirely in euphemisms—even the human-sexuality chapters of
moral-theology textbooks were written in Latin, as if in code. Pope John Paul II
changed that in a 1992 call for one-on-one “priestly formation,” in which a
faculty member helps mentor seminarians through all aspects of their spiritual
growth, including psychological and psychosexual development. These checks and
balances have resulted in a sharp reduction in charges of sexual abuse, experts
say.
News of the
Vatican’s probe has drawn mixed reactions. Dr. Jon Fuller, a priest and
physician at Boston Medical Center who specializes in treating priests afflicted
with AIDS, calls the effort to screen out gays “unfortunate.” Not only will it
further reduce the number of seminarians, which has plunged from 49,000 in 1965
to fewer than 4,000 today, but it may also reintroduce a code of secrecy among
those gay men who enter the seminary anyway—or discover they’re gay only after
enrolling. “If we now say you can only be approved if you’re straight or appear
to be straight, we really are creating a very dysfunctional situation that from
a psychological perspective is tempting disaster,” he says. “It brings us back
to a very unhealthy time.”
At St.
John’s, officials welcome the study. “I think we do a good job recruiting solid
candidates, and welcome the opportunity to do better,” says the Rt. Rev. Helmut
Hefner, the school’s rector. He accepts that his gay enrollment may be as high
as 50 percent, but that hasn’t caused any discomfort to heterosexuals, much less
an epidemic of straight flight, he says. Jim Bevacqua, the student-body
president, agrees. “I can speak firsthand, as a heterosexual seminarian. I have
a lot of friends here who are heterosexual, I know they are, and this has never
been an issue here at our seminary. To be honest, people don’t talk about it
much.” With the upcoming Vatican investigation, that will likely
change.
With Sarah Downey in Chicago
© 2002 Newsweek, Inc.
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