1st Edition

Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct Breaking the Silence

By John Dececco, Phd, Robert Goss Copyright 2005
    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    “Why did it take 30 years for American bishops to listen to the victims of Catholic clerical abuse?” Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct: Breaking the Silence is a compelling indictment of Roman Catholic teachings on homosexuality and sexuality. Inspired by The Silence of Sodom: Homosexuality in Modern Catholicism, Mark Jordan’s controversial examination of homoeroticism in American Catholic culture, this groundbreaking book examines how the current crisis of clerical abuse affects and stigmatizes gay priests living in a climate of hysteria and condemnation. The book’s contributors, an eclectic mix of scholars and clerics, question whether the church can survive centuries of secrets and scandals.

    In the wake of very real concerns about a possible inquisition launched by the Catholic Church against its gay members, Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct continues the efforts of the Gay Men’s Issues in Religion Group of the American Academy of Religion to honor the work of Mark Jordan, who contributes his thoughts on the issues raised by the book. A panel of former Jesuits, a former seminarian with the Congregation of the Blessed Sacrament, a Dominican, a Franciscan, and several feminist authors present different perspectives on gay priests, clerical/ecclesial misogyny, games of power and abuse, and religious scapegoating, writing with eloquence and pain, a great deal of pride, and a touch of justifiable divine righteousness.

    Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct includes:“Celibate Men, Ambivalent Saints, and Games of Desire”, “A Call to Liberation of Gay Catholic Clergy”, “Speaking Loud or Shutting Up: The Homosexual-type Problem”, “Those Troubling Gay Priests”, “Catholicism and a Crisis of Intimate Relations” and much more! Gay Catholic Priests and Clerical Sexual Misconduct: Breaking the Silence is an invaluable resource for academics, members of the clergy, seminarians, chaplains and counselors, and anyone interested in homosexuality and religion.

    • About the Editors
    • Contributors
    • Introduction
    • PART I: SPEAKING IN NEW AND DIFFERENT TONGUES
    • Chapter 1. Celibate Men, Ambivalent Saints, and Games of Desire (Donald L. Boisvert)
    • Chapter 2. Naming the Mechanisms of Self-Deception: A Call to Liberation for Gay Roman Catholic Clergy (David M. Mellott)
    • Chapter 3. Speaking Loud or Shutting Up: The Homosexual-Type Problem (Edward J. Ingebretsen)
    • Chapter 4. Silencing Sodom (Chuck Colbert)
    • Chapter 5. Anglican Bodies: The Gift of Heretical Liminality and the Risk of Relaxed Vigilance (Jay Emerson Johnson)
    • PART II: ECCLESIAL MISOGYNY
    • Chapter 6. Duplicity Writ Large (Mary E. Hunt)
    • Chapter 7. Always a Bride, Never a Groom (Robert E. Goss)
    • Chapter 8. Pandora’s Gauntlet: Curiosity Enough to Care and Hope Enough to Question (Marie Cartier)
    • Chapter 9. A Welcome Voice Breaks the Silence in an Exclusively Male Clerical Tradition (Lorine M. Getz)
    • Chapter 10. Where Have All the Young Girls Gone? (Mary Ann Tolbert)
    • PART III: POWER GAMES AND CALLING NAMES
    • Chapter 11. Breaking the Silence in Public: A Case Study (Michael Kelly)
    • Chapter 12. Those Troubling Gay Priests (Bernard Schlager)
    • Chapter 13. Lessons from Our Neighbors: An Appreciation and a Query to Mark Jordan (Karen Lebacqz)
    • Chapter 14. Neither Do I: A Meditation on Scapegoating (William Glenn)
    • Chapter 15. Scandal Work: Catholicism and a Crisis of Intimate Relations (Edward J. Ingebretsen)
    • PART IV: A RESPONSE FROM MARK JORDAN
    • Chapter 16. After Silence (Mark Jordan)
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Donald Boisvert (Author), Robert Goss (Author)