Moore: Catholic Church Should Focus on Charity, Not Firing Gays

Monday, September 26, 2016

 

View Larger +

Bishop Tobin

“He that is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone”. John 8:7

When I was an undergrad at Providence College, believe it or not, I was an even bigger smart aleck than I am now. Fortunately, I had great teachers to constantly humble me.

When discussing theology one day during an English class, I asked a professor why anyone would want to bother attending church when there are so many hypocrites there. After all, there are folks who sit with their wives in one pew while lasciviously thinking about the woman in the pew two rows ahead. There are ladies trusted to count the offering money who, in turn, embezzle it. And I made the laziest argument of all; there are priests who had molested youngsters.  

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

“We always have room for one more hypocrite,” he retorted.

Of course he was right. Nobody is perfect. And no one can consistently live up to the up the high standards Catholics, all Christians, had set for them a millennium ago by Jesus. It's illogical to judge millions of people by the actions of a few. And even if someone could somehow live a life free of sin, it would be incumbent on that person to attend church in order to set an example for everyone else.

Room For More

It was a lazy, nonsensical cop-out to say that since others fail to maintain their beliefs it made sense not to have them.

So with that line of thinking in my mind, along with the teachings of Jesus, which focused on helping others, I cannot fathom why Michael Templeton, the Music Director at the Church of St. Mary in Providence, who had been in the position for 5 years, was fired last Monday for being gay and married to another man.

The Church opposes gay marriage. I get that. The Catholic Church leadership believes that marriage can only be between a man and a woman since that’s what’s required to produce children.

But what’s troubling me is why the Church feels the need to fire someone for failing to live up to their standards. Since we’re all hypocrites, why is the Providence Diocese being so heavy handed here in this instance?

Bishop Tobin’s rationale, as released in a statement, was weak and confusing at best.

Peculiar Case of Templeton

"Any person who holds a ministerial position in the Church, as an employee or volunteer, is expected to live in a way that is fully consistent with the teachings and faith of the church. If an individual deliberately and knowingly enters in a relationship or engages in activity that contradicts the core teachings of the Church, that individual leaves the Church no choice to respond," said Tobin.

Nobody can live in a way that’s “fully consistent”. We all, almost every day, “engage in activity that contradicts the core teachings of the Church”. That doesn’t mean the Catholic Church should take punitive action.

There have been countless times throughout my life that I’ve been proud to be Catholic. And every example has stemmed from the seeing the great, selfless charitable work carried out by Catholics—most of them ground level “lay-people”.  They work in food pantries. They visit sick people and prisoners. They teach underprivileged and help them with their homework lessons. They’re inspiring.

Focus on Charity

And let me be clear: I know that the Providence Diocese is a wonderful entity in our community. They administer programs to help keep the heat on for low income people; to help shelter the homeless; to visit prisoners; to help refugees, and so many others. That’s the Church is at its best.

I cannot, for the life of me, figure out why the Church cannot simply focus on the true mission of Jesus—helping the poor, comforting the afflicted, visiting the imprisoned, etc. In other words, why cannot the Church just focus on doing things that make the world a better place instead of focusing on who we need to kick out? Why does the Catholic Church need to be so authoritarian all the time?

I would also venture to say that if the vast majority of the parishioners at the church wouldn’t agree with firing Templeton for marrying someone he loves—despite the fact that gay marriage is antithetical to church teachings. That’s because I’m sure most of them are familiar with the passage “let he who is without sin cast the first stone”.

I wish Bishop Tobin would remember it.

View Larger +

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in the Rhode Island media, both on political campaigns and for newspapers. Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713. 

 

Related Slideshow: Providence’s Dumbest Ordinances

The below slides list the top 30 dumbest, strangest, or most archaic ordinances. Each slide lists the ordinance by chapter, article, and section number. Information is based on the current code of ordinances maintained by the City of Providence. When available, direct links to ordinance sections are provided.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Unglued over Model Planes

Ordinance: 16-1-9

We understand that—as with other common household items—there’s a potential for it to be used as inhalant, but a city ordinance banning the sale or delivery of model airplane glue to anyone under the age of 21 seems to go a bit far. If we can trust 18-year-olds to vote and serve in the military, we can probably trust them with model airplane glue.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Ban on Spitting

Ordinance 16-1-15

It may be rude, but we’re not sure spitting in public should be against the law. But it has been in Providence since 1939, under an ordinance that bans spitting in most public places—sidewalks, churches, theaters, grocery stores, markets, or any other “building frequented by the public.” We’re not sure if Providence police ever enforced this back in the day, but it’s hard to image them handing out tickets for spitting today.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

No Racy Bathing Suits

Ordinance: 16-1-16

No doubt there are some people out there who think today’s bathing suits are a bit immodest. But we don’t think even the most socially conservative among us want police out in public pools inspecting bathing suits to determine whether those swimming are “properly clothed.” And the ordinance gives law enforcement authorities little guidance as to what is even considered proper. But we can be sure that what was considered proper back in 1914, when the ordinance was first passed, is probably a lot different than today.

Read the ordinance.  

View Larger +
Prev Next

Grass Isn’t for Walking

Ordinance: 18-1-13

Your grumpy neighbor may have every right to bark at you to get off his lawn, but we’re wondering what city lawmakers were possibly thinking when they passed an ordinance outlawing residents from standing, sitting, or walking on “any grass” on “any public land” that is considered a park. ­­

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Sweeping Rules

Ordinance: 23-1-12

We can all agree that city sidewalks should be clean. But does Providence really need an ordinance for that? Since 1944, it’s been illegal to sweep or throw dirt and sand on sidewalks during the day.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Throw Water on Sidewalk

Ordinance: 23-1-18

If you’re going to have an ordinance against throwing or sweeping sand and dirt on a sidewalk, shouldn’t you allow residents wishing to correct their error to pour water on sidewalks to wash all that grime away? Well, that’s illegal too. It’s not just pouring water that’s taboo. Placing, throwing, or spattering water is explicitly forbidden too. But hydromaniacs don’t panic: if you can’t resist that urge to make a mess with water, you can still do it as long as it’s after 7 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

No Time Off for Pregnancy

Ordinance: 17-3-107

No one is endorsing abuse of sick leave, but a city ordinance dating back to 1951 seems needlessly specific in listing “dissipation” and “immoral conduct” as unacceptable excuses for absences. And, if that doesn’t raise any red flags, the section against sick leave for any pregnancy-related illnesses should. We think a separate ordinance against false reports of illnesses does the job just fine.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

No Amusements Near School

Ordinance: 14-10-202.2

Kids in city schools have lots of bad influences these days. Drugs, gangs, guns, and underage drinking come to mind. “Amusement centers” or “mechanical amusement devices” don’t. But a city ordinance refuses the granting of licenses to any amusement center or business with a “mechanical amusement device” within 1,200 of school property if the owner plans to be fully open for business before 4 p.m. This sounds like a law dating back to a simpler time, but it’s listed as a 2013 addition to the code of ordinances.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Chair Mischief

Ordinance 18-1-14

We certainly don't condone vandalism of any kind, so if that’s what city lawmakers had in mind when they drafted an ordinance against overturning seats in parks, we get it. But why also make it illegal to sleep or lie upon park seats? Something tells us if you find someone asleep on a park bench at night, they don’t have many other options.

Read the ordinance.  

View Larger +
Prev Next

The Slippery Banana Rule

Ordinance: 23-1-22

As a society, we should celebrate healthy eating. But if you happen to be out on a sidewalk or street noshing on peach, you could be in trouble if there’s no trash bin nearby. It’s against the law in Providence to “cast, throw, place or deposit” on any sidewalk or street “any fruit or vegetable or other substances” which could cause someone to slip and fall. We wonder what was happening with fruit on city streets in 1914 to warrant such an ordinance. As for today, the city’s ordinance against littering should be enough. Otherwise, this sounds more like material for a Three Stooges skit rather than a matter for local law enforcement.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Horse Speed

Ordinance: 23-6-155

Today, “horse speed” means something quite different than it did in 1914 when the city passed an ordinance authorizing the director of public works to set speed limits for horses “or other animals” over any bridges in the city. The ordinance was updated in 1946, apparently to include cars, but the horses were left in. A bunch of similarly outdated ordinances in this section were scrapped in 2010, but local legislators missed this one.

Read the ordinance.  

View Larger +
Prev Next

No Pigs in Providence

Ordinance: 4-1-3

We don’t think many farmers are left in the city of Providence, but, for any that are, we wonder why it’s illegal to keep swine in city limits? It’s a blanket prohibition, which means that your pet pig is against the law too. This law seems like another from a bygone era, but it’s listed as a 2012 ordinance.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Pigs: Finders, Eaters

Ordinance: 4-1-2

If your pet pig escapes, consider yourself warned: all swine found wandering around in the city are “declared forfeited” and any person may seize them and “convert the same to his own use.” Given that city law already prohibits anyone from keeping swine, that leaves few options for any finders.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Keep Your Servants

Ordinance: 14-6-116

We doubt there are any more “intelligence offices” or “servants” left in Providence. But it’s still probably a good idea for city officials to take a second look at a 1946 ordinance banning any licensed keepers of intelligence offices from inducing or attempting to induce “any servant employed in any place to leave.”

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

For Whom the Bell Tolls

Ordinance: 14-1-9

Businesses need all the help they can get these days. We’re not sure ringing bells would attract more customers to your store or restaurant, but don’t try it: it’s currently against city law to ring bells, horns, or any other similar instruments to draw customers.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Licenses for Pool Halls

Ordinance: 14-10-202

Want to run a bar? Open a restaurant? We get why the city might want to license those businesses. But pool? Billiards? Other “mechanical amusement devices?” Unless you plan on installing a mechanical bull in your bar, we wonder why anyone would need a license for any of those things.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Poison Ivy

Ordinance: 12-1-17

No one likes having poison ivy on their properties. But, for obvious reasons, removing it can be a delicate task. As long as the ivy isn’t creeping around your mail box or front porch, most homeowners probably decide to leave it alone. Why there is a city ordinance allowing the superintendent of health to intervene and order the removal of poison ivy within five days is a head-scratcher for us.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Rude on RIPTA

Ordinance: 24-3-76

Legislating good manners might have made sense in 1920, but it doesn’t today. We’re all for politeness but a city ordinance allowing bus drivers to refuse service to anyone “using profane or obscene language”—even if not drunk or otherwise acting boisterous—seems to create more problems than it solves.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

A Bridge Too Far

Ordinance: 23-6-154

Weight limits on roads and bridges is pretty par for the course in modern regulations. But the city might want to double check the current weight limit on bridges, which is set at 30,000 pounds in an ordinance that was last updated in 1946. According to The Truckers Report, the legal weight for an 18-wheeler in the United States is 80,000 pounds.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Coal, Hair, and Oysters

Ordinance: 12-3-60

The city already has an ordinance against littering, so we’re not sure why there’s a separate ordinance that lists a grab bag of items not to be thrown out on the streets. We’re also not sure why anyone would want to throw coal, hair, oyster, clam, or lobster shells out on the street.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Warning Flag

Ordinance: 2-20-328

If a hurricane barrels down on Providence later this summer or fall, we certainly hope that city officials do more than follow Ordinance 2-20-238 in warning us about it. Under the ordinance, the city sergeant shall hoist the city “storm flag” on “stormy and windy days” instead of the national flag.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Sound Rules?

Ordinance: 24-6-102

It’s hard to think anyone would argue that the city shouldn’t have any noise ordinances, but who are city officials to say that only “music or human speech” will be allowed to be broadcast from “sound trucks” (a precursor, we presume, to today’s modern speakers). If a crowd wants to gather to hear recordings of chirping crickets or singing whales why stop them?

No direct link available to the ordinance. 

View Larger +
Prev Next

Spotless Septic Tanks

Ordinance: 12-4-96

We’re wondering exactly how this public health ordinance dating back to 1946 could be enforced today: “When any privy vault or any cesspool is cleaned, the entire contents thereof shall be removed.” We’re all for making sure the job is finished, but city health inspectors probably have more important things to do than check septic tank levels after a cleaning.

No direct link available to the ordinance. 

View Larger +
Prev Next

Deposit Checks

Ordinance: 12-1-16

Even if the city could enforce this ordinance, we’re not sure it would want to: “No person shall deposit, nor allow to be deposited, in any water closet, cesspool, privy vault, drain, waste pipe, or soil pipe, any ashes, swill, rubbish, or solid refuse matter other than fecal matter.”

Read the ordinance.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Foul-mouthed Bootblacks

Ordinance: 14-3-52

If there are actually still any bootblacks or news boys roaming around downtown Providence, it’s probably hard enough for them to make a living without worrying about losing their license of using “indecent or profane language,” as this ordinance stipulates. As for the city’s rule against committing any acts of a “dishonest nature,” that’s probably a matter for the Better Business Bureau.

No direct link available to the ordinance. 

View Larger +
Prev Next

Fashion Police

Ordinance: 14-1-6

Under this ordinance, anyone who runs a laundromat or dry-cleaning service has to submit reports to the public safety commissioner detailing “the type and style of laundry or dry-cleaning identification marks which are attached to or stamped on or written upon garments processed by such establishment when returned to the customer.” The reports must be “accompanied by actual samples of the identification markings used.” We’re not sure what issue compelled city legislators to add this to the code in 1954, but whatever it was, it was convincing enough to win over state lawmakers too, as it took a special act of the General Assembly to authorize the ordinance.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Burying Dead Animals

Ordinance: 4-1-6

Should you have a need to bury your dead horse, mule, ox, or bull, city law is strict about how deep the carcass must be: three feet below the ground. Just to be clear, that’s the “natural surface of the ground.” Other requirements set by the superintendent of health may apply.

Read the ordinance

View Larger +
Prev Next

Involuntary Firefighters

Ordinance: 9-1-2

Just how much power should firefighters have? It may be debatable whether a city ordinance authorizing them to “suppress any tumult or disorder” at the scene of a fire blurs the line between police officers and firefighters. But a provision that allows firefighters to “command from the inhabitants of the city all needful assistance in the suppression of fires”—and makes it illegal to refuse service—sounds like a recipe for disaster. 

Read the ordinance.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Boxing Bones

Ordinance: 12-3-76

Residents are not permitted to “carry or convey” any “bones, grease, animal or soap fats” in any street or park unless the material is in covered cans, tubs, or other containers that are properly marked. We’re not sure why anyone would carry a bunch of animal bones around in the first place, let alone why the city is asking them to advertise that fact.

No direct link available to the ordinance. 

View Larger +
Prev Next

Light Duty

Ordinance: 23-5-139

This ordinance, titled “Duty as to city lights found not burning,” directs the chief of police to “cause the daily report of city street lights found ‘out’ with the hour and location of such ‘outs,’ to be forwarded to the office of the public service engineer daily.” Forget for a moment that there’s no longer such a thing as a street lamp that has stopped burning. How did this chore land on the police chief’s desk in the first place? Why couldn’t the city’s public service engineer be bothered with it?

Read the ordinance

 
 

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

 
 

Sign Up for the Daily Eblast

I want to follow on Twitter

I want to Like on Facebook