• "Progressive" HOMOSEXUALS were MENTALLY ILL for thousands of years.

    From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 01:14:22 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ih3b$llm$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2003_01_06/2003_04_11_Smith_JudgeFormer.htm

    MIDDLETOWN -- A Middlesex County judge ruled Wednesday that personnel files should be
    opened to the public in the civil case of a former priest in the Norwich Roman Catholic
    Diocese accused in the sexual abuse of a 14-year-old.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 01:34:25 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ih7h$mvg$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2011/11_12/2011_11_02_Sims_PreacherGuilty.htm

    But for one of the three women who the jury believed was sexually assaulted by the founder
    and leader of the now-disbanded Ambassador Baptist Church, there was some sense of relief.

    "It really helps to close a long part of my life that I'm glad to put behind me," said
    the 47 year old happily married woman who disclosed to the jury her secret sexual contact
    with her pastor.

    SHOOSH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 7 01:24:24 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ih5n$ma3$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Dishgushted of Tunbridge Vellsh <dishgushted@tunbridge.vellsh>
    wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2019/01_02/2019_02_23_Jamie_Guardian_Head_Catholic.htm

    The head of one of the country’s most powerful Catholic orders was made aware of sex abuse
    allegations dating back to the 1970s at one of its schools but did not alert the authorities --
    contrary to the recommendations of a church commission on which he sat.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:05:04 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <rp1p6gpl69j9t7qefqb7tjtsq0v1qf806a@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH?

    DO it, you stupid demented obsessed Grik cunt! <B<

    Manually butt not laboriously! <G<

    TO and FRO, TO and FRO! [sic][SIC!!! LOL] <GB<

    Report, BACK! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:25:41 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <on1p6gpg4cjbmanecdqsig94u588m4lou0@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <B<

    What's it, gonna BE anus? <G<

    DAY OFF or the usual skata anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:20:40 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ih6g$mhg$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2003_01_06/2003_06_12_Geigen_PriestsFondling.htm

    A London man described yesterday how a driving lesson on a country road near Dorchester
    ended with a Catholic priest fondling him. John Swales said the priest, Barry Glendinning,
    fondled him after sliding a hand into his pants.

    SHOOSH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:35:51 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <hn1p6g11lu5nklpqceougvkcaugv214en6@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh, WHY OIH anus? <B<

    You can't even, do what they ORDER you to do anus! <G<

    Seems, [sic][SIC!!! LOL] you're USELESS innit anus! <GB<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <VGB<

    Report, BACK anus! <EGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:42:33 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <52ro6g9p5e0psggq8m2amc5bf8qg511vr6@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HE'S waiting, anus! <G<

    DON'T keep, him waiting anus! <GB<

    You'll BOTH, enjoy it anus! <VGB<

    You sick pair of subhuman GBLTPQC+ fairies! <EGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:58:17 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <tt1p6gtt2rbtbcqo2puoul0t9negiqba66@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    How, COME anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Have you been, a good little Grik anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<
    <grab grubby grik neck<
    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 02:52:37 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <lt1p6gt1jqgrifesm0lkuu385m577618m2@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH?

    HOW, come anus? <B<

    CARE, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Report, BACK anus! <GB<

    Puttana, schifoza, vaffanculo! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 03:03:55 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <e5ro6gh4q4hb4hpk8dbfdop43e5hal3tk1@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Report, BACK anus! <GB<

    We're all, WAITING anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 03:08:58 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <eq1p6gd9p4r6ngqpggfk2rslkelf94qb9t@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH?

    A jew pwner like that, who needs?

    LOLOK
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 03:39:17 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <d0ro6gh5sqa90n3fqfso4jl9l6mrlkl42o@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh anus?

    Were you conceived rectally and delivered anally following sodomy
    between two Griks?

    LOMPO!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 03:44:19 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <35ro6g501kog48ibhh6v96nj6ml6ess0r4@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    HOW OH, was it anus? <B<

    DID, you use leftover diesel to lubricate your anus anus? <G<

    CARE, to EXPLAIN anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 03:54:22 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ft3u$qm9$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://media.cagle.com/80/2009/03/24/62609_600.jpg

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 03:19:01 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <dr1p6gljt7vc9u2779r0dt7qpjij5dr4oi@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH

    TO and FRO he GO!

    MANUALLY and LABORIOUSLY!

    Butt LOVINGLY!

    LOLOK!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 04:04:27 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <r1ro6ghmjfpeo03vijcl1qtlfrqfe4optq@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Something to do, with Griks and buggery anus? <B<

    WHAT OH, do they MEAN anus? <G<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    We're, WAITING anus! <EGB<

    <tsk<

    <grab grubby grik neck<
    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 04:14:30 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ft0h$peu$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    Zits only come on your face when you're 12!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Baron aka Barry of Mass on Wed Apr 7 04:14:31 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ft1d$pro$1@pcls7.std.com>
    BARRY ish jew wannabe sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej'
    Baron aka Barry of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://media.cagle.com/83/2010/03/26/76393_600.jpg

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 04:49:50 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <lq1p6g51apo1jbaiac3aslvl5tkuqup77o@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    You KNOW it should have been YOU anus! <G<

    Why oh, WHY OH, why oh, why oh, why oh, WHY oh, WHY OH WASN'T it you
    anus? <GB<

    Better, LUCK next time anus! <VGB<

    Insh'Allah it, WILL be you anus! <EGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 04:39:47 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4fsv4$p04$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:



    What do wine and altar boys have in common?

    Catholic priests like them aged eight years!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 04:54:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ft03$pbb$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    A homosexual, a Pedophile and a Priest walk into a bar. The bartender
    asked him what he would like to drink.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 06:55:14 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4fsvj$p51$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    Why do priests have sex with altar boys?
    Otherwise, they're getting nun.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 07:00:14 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ibku$p73$2@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2003_07_12/2003_10_23_Geigen_ChurchCalled.htm

    The Roman Catholic church was sinful in its handling of a sexual abuse case involving
    three London brothers and their family, a priest testified yesterday. Rev. Michael
    Prieur, who teaches moral theology at St. Peter's Seminary in London, was asked about
    the role of the church in the case of Rev. Barry Glendinning, a priest at the centre
    of a sexual abuse lawsuit.

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 07:30:53 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ibno$p73$5@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2019/01_02/2019_01_03_Wilhelm_WindsorPriests.htm

    The diocese revealed in September it had received "credible allegations" that Dwyer,
    who was the pastor of St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa's parishes, had "engaged in
    sexually abusive behaviour".


    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 07:25:52 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ibn2$p73$4@pcls7.std.com>
    jew kike SHEINIE is really sick old nazoid paedo Andrew
    'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2012/09_10/2012_09_02_Itv_EuropeanArrest.htm

    Police have obtained a European Arrest Warrant for a Catholic cleric accused of
    historic sex offences who has failed to answer bail.

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to 'Andrzej' Baron on Wed Apr 7 08:01:16 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ibm2$p73$3@pcls7.std.com>
    jew kike SHEINIE is really sick old nazoid paedo Andrew
    'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2003_01_06/2003_06_10_Geigen_PriestsAbuse.htm

    A London mother told yesterday how she went from total trust in a Roman Catholic priest
    to utter disbelief when told the man had been sexually abusing her children. Donna Swales
    was testifying during the first day of a civil trial in which her family and sons, John,
    Ed and Guy, are seeking 7 million in damages from the Roman Catholic Diocese of London

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 08:01:16 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ibk5$p73$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2018/01_02/2018_01_01_Harriet_Guardian_London_abuse.htm

    Man says 'you couldn't escape' violence at St Benedict's school where former headmaster has been jailed for sexually abusing boys

    A man who was abused as a child at a Catholic school in London has spoken of a "culture of violence" at the institution, where a former headmaster was jailed
    just before Christmas for rape and other sexual offences.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 09:14:49 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <q5ro6g14f0kviksuaii9iljb4s4j8rgqgv@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH? <G<

    What the FUCK is WRRRRRRRRRONG with you anus? <GB<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <VGB<

    Report, BACK anus! <EGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<

    <grab grubby Grik neck<
    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 09:42:27 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <g3ro6g96ogfrk9aikjl1j0ctbk522p7h4t@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh WHY OH anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Report, BACK anus! <GB<

    We all want, to HEAR anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 09:54:20 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <26ro6gtdsv0hfro343uih6o8oe0vl8hhmr@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh, anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Something, WRONG with you anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 09:20:36 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <j6ro6g59mg5kj56bl67p6jqltvsoemp2cv@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    WHAT, Place anus? <B<

    Why oh, WHY oh anus? <G<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 10:04:38 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <2cdj6ghdacbnr5cop74puv4ob2a75l2vim@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH? <G<

    What the FUCK is WRRRRRRRRRONG with you anus? <GB<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <VGB<

    Report, BACK anus! <EGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<

    <grab grubby Grik neck<
    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 10:49:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <r6ro6gl50ufo7suudp1e5j1oshsp7pqtas@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    KEEP, lamentationing [sic][SIC!!! LOL] in that archaic, stilted, non-colloquial pidgin English of yours innit anus!

    LOLOK
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 11:04:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <2adj6gdqms832ejhk062mhsd4s1qqvdum2@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    Why oh WHY OH anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Report, BACK anus! <GB<

    We all want, to HEAR anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Wed Apr 7 10:54:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <o3ro6g90c1bamb9vgpouinu7v5mr2lldlp@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    What fucking USE are you to your jew pwners if you can't follow, up on
    every g-ddam post of mine? <B<

    You've forced your jew pwner jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN to go
    apeshit in an effort to keep up! <G<

    Better get, your skata together around the PLACE innit anus! <GB<

    Or you'll find, yourself depwned by the jews innit anus! <VGB<

    LOLOK

    <tsk<

    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Wed Apr 7 14:54:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4ft34$qe8$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://media.cagle.com/40/2008/02/06/46959_600.jpg

    SHEESH!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 00:14:23 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <2pnr6gl59jtmno5ku4r7t67jt6624t90de@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    VOT happened to them jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN?

    ONE minute they vant to be POTUSH, the NEXT they disshapear into
    OBSHCURITY!

    LOMPOP!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 00:34:48 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <0rnr6g5gfjs8mfd58qmmna9hqhdo7i57ih@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    ARE, there jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN?

    Ve do VANT your FAME to SHPREAD don't ve?

    LISHT them here: -------->

    LOMPO!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 00:54:54 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <cvnr6g5hugccvn91kq5gmufj82k70t896m@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    VOT fucking GOOD is a Grik who can't even keep, UP with all my
    poshtsh?

    He'sh making YOU do all the VOIK!

    Fuck him, I shay!

    LOMPO!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 00:19:42 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <amnr6g196jen6vdciefqmgdacislps6c4r@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    You filthy cockshucking jew piece of shite!

    <TSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHK!>E
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 01:09:55 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <qknr6g9q6294moai7uep87171c2nnm37i6@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    THAT'SH the jew idea of VOIK???

    LOLOK
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Baron aka Barry of Mass on Thu Apr 8 06:30:39 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la0o$7p5$1@pcls7.std.com>
    BARRY ish jew wannabe sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej'
    Baron aka Barry of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/11740/more-priests-arrested-on-abuse-charges-in-us

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Thu Apr 8 06:45:43 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la8s$a2h$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.punterlink.co.uk/warsaw-polish-escorts

    SHOOSH!

    https://www.ft.com/content/b38f994c-8dc2-11e9-a24d-b42f641eca37

    TSSSK!

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Baron aka Barry of Mass on Thu Apr 8 07:11:58 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4lac0$bb3$1@pcls7.std.com>
    BARRY ish jew wannabe sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej'
    Baron aka Barry of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://time.com/5722221/roman-catholic-confession-child-abuse/

    In June 2019, the Catholic Church in Birmingham, U.K. was embroiled in scandal after the sex abuse inquiry found that the Archdiocese of Birmingham had protected priests accused of abuse by "repeatedly" failing to alert police
    to allegations. The inquiry examined 134 allegations of child sexual abuse made against 78 individuals - many of whom are no longer - since the mid 1930s.
    Thirteen individuals were convicted.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Baron aka Barry of Mass on Thu Apr 8 07:22:09 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4laaf$aoh$1@pcls7.std.com>
    STD.COM ish jew wannabe sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej'
    Baron aka Barry of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/813685/Catholic-priest-father-Eugene-Fitzpatrick-jailed-22-years-historic-sex-abuse-boys

    Former priest, Father Eugene Fitzpatrick, 68, from Canterbury was jailed for 22
    years at Blackfriars Crown Court, and placed on the sex offender register for life, after being found guilty of seven counts of indecent assault, four counts
    of indecency with a child and two counts of buggery.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Thu Apr 8 08:03:08 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4lack$bk8$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/dec/21/andrew-soper-priest-sexually-abused-boys-st-benedicts-school-jailed-18-years

    Andrew Soper had been convicted of 19 charges of rape and other sexual offences against 10 boys at St Benedict's school.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Thu Apr 8 07:27:15 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la9n$a9f$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:



    "Father Alexander Bede Walsh was sentenced to 22 years in prison in
    March 2012 for serious paedophile offenses against boys. Walsh used
    religion to control his young victims, telling one boy that drinking
    alcohol would get him to heaven and another believed that the abuse
    was the hand of God touching him for example."

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Thu Apr 8 07:58:07 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <s4la00$7j2$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    Such utter SCUM...

    https://www.theinquiry.ca/wordpress/rc-scandal/other-countries/u-k/14-convicted-abusers-remain-priests-in-u-k/

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 8 08:08:08 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4lab9$b4b$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Dishgushted of Tunbridge Vellsh <dishgushted@tunbridge.vellsh>
    wrote:


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kit_Cunningham

    During the 1960s, Cunningham was stationed at St Michael's Catholic Boarding School in
    Soni, Tanzania. While there he and other Rosminian priests perpetrated sexual abuse that
    made this school, according to one pupil, 'a loveless, violent and sad hellhole'. Other
    pupils recall being photographed naked, hauled out of bed at night to have their
    genitals fondled and other sexual abuse.[7][8]

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Thu Apr 8 08:43:11 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la2q$8fb$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-vaticans-dirty-money-problem

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Thu Apr 8 08:38:11 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la3a$8ka$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:


    https://www.timeslive.co.za/news/south-africa/2018-10-09-watch--limpopo-man-alleges-uk-priest-sexually-assaulted-and-raped-him-as-a-teen/

    A Limpopo man has come forward to allege sexual assault and rape by a UK Catholic
    priest, and the complicity of the church in blocking his demands for justice.

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 08:48:12 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <ndfr6g5ue3785r46mnbqu1ndtld1mup81g@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH?

    HOW, come anus? <B<

    CARE, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Report, BACK anus! <GB<

    Puttana, schifoza, vaffanculo! <VGB<

    <tsk<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 08:53:12 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <fdfr6gdglnm8ejel5kke5u3cbc0e1ku7lc@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    How, COME anus? <B<

    Care, to EXPLAIN anus? <G<

    Have you been, a good little Grik anus? <GB<

    Report, BACK anus! <VGB<

    <tsk<

    <pat<
    <pat<
    <pat<
    <grab grubby grik neck<
    <KICK<
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 09:03:15 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <6dfr6gljr5hkdn78ukqst0urohg5de8b98@4ax.com>
    STD.COM ish jew kike paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.c0m> wrote:

    HUH

    TO and FRO he GO!

    MANUALLY and LABORIOUSLY!

    Butt LOVINGLY!

    LOLOK!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to B'righton Mass on Thu Apr 8 14:04:55 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.support.chicken-fucking

    In article <grnr6glsk7g2n40usfifvasiaonsac734g@4ax.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish jew paedophile BARRY Z. SHEIN 700 Washington St
    B'righton Mass <inge23mueller@aol.con> wrote:

    HUH?

    You KNOW it makesh SHENSHE, jewboi!
    --

    "SHPAMMERSH ARE CROOKSH
    DON'T DO BUSINESSH VITH CROOKSH!"
    - jew paedophile shpammer Barry Z. Shein (world.std.com home page)

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to aka BARRY of Mass on Thu Apr 8 23:00:09 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la1v$88j$1@pcls7.std.com>
    The SHPAMMER ish sick old nazoid paedo Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron
    aka BARRY of Mass <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:



    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-36528501

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christine Pelosi@21:1/5 to Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron on Fri Apr 9 03:39:55 2021
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.liberalism XPost: alt.politics.obama

    In article <s4la1d$833$1@pcls7.std.com>
    Andrew 'Andrzej' Baron <fsturluogh5@gmail.com> wrote:



    TSSHK!

    https://cruxnow.com/church-in-uk-and-ireland/2019/03/retired-priest-in-uk-sentenced-to-9-1-2-years-for-sex-abuse/

    "Other victims - both male and female"

    WHAT!?

    U.S. Bishop: Homosexual Abuse of Youth is a 'Wickedness' That
    'Should Be Hated With a Perfect Hatred'

    Commenting on the recent revelations of sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church, specifically those of predator Archbishop
    Theodore McCarrick and the cases detailed in the Pennsylvania
    Grand Jury Report, several bishops and lay leaders have blamed a
    "homosexual subculture" in the hierachy of the Church and called
    for the removal of the priests, bishops, and cardinals involved
    in that subculture.

    Bishop Robert Morlino, head of the diocese of Madison, Wisc., in
    an Aug. 18 letter, stressed that the Church must stop excusing
    sin "in the name of a mistaken notion of mercy" and must express
    more "hatred" toward sin. "What the Church needs now is more
    hatred!" he said. "It is an act of love to hate sin and to call
    others to turn away from sin."

    "There must be no room left, no refuge for sin — either within
    our own lives, or within the lives of our communities," said the
    bishop. "To be a refuge for sinners (which we should be), the
    Church must be a place where sinners can turn to be reconciled.
    In this I speak of all sin. But to be clear, in the specific
    situations at hand, we are talking about deviant sexual — almost
    exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics."

    "We’re also talking about homosexual propositions and abuses
    against seminarians and young priests by powerful priests,
    bishops, and cardinals," said the bishop. "We are talking about
    acts and actions which are not only in violation of the sacred
    promises made by some, in short, sacrilege, but also are in
    violation of the natural moral law for all. To call it anything
    else would be deceitful and would only ignore the problem
    further."

    After remarking on the "disgraceful" and "well-documented"
    homosexual abuses committed by Archbishop McCarrick, Bishop
    Morlino commented on the problem overall.

    "It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture
    within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking
    great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord," he said. "The
    Church’s teaching is clear that the homosexual inclination is
    not in itself sinful, but it is intrinsically disordered in a
    way that renders any man stably afflicted by it unfit to be a
    priest. And the decision to act upon this disordered inclination
    is a sin so grave that it cries out to heaven for vengeance,
    especially when it involves preying upon the young or the
    vulnerable."

    "Such wickedness should be hated with a perfect hatred," said
    Bishop Morlino. "Christian charity itself demands that we
    should hate wickedness just as we love goodness. But while
    hating the sin, we must never hate the sinner, who is called to
    conversion, penance, and renewed communion with Christ and His
    Church, through His inexhaustible mercy."

    In his Aug. 22 "Testimony" letter, in which he calls for the
    resignation of Pope Francis, Archbishop Carlo Vigano says it is
    vital to remove the officials who covered for McCarrick but this
    will not solve the deeply entrenched problem in the Church.

    "The seriousness of homosexual behavior must be denounced,"
    writes Vigano. "The homosexual networks present in the Church
    must be eradicated, as Janet Smith, professor of Moral Theology
    at the Sacred Heart Major Seminary in Detroit, recently wrote."

    "'The problem of clergy abuse,' she wrote, 'cannot be resolved
    simply by the resignation of some bishops, and even less so by
    bureaucratic directives. The deeper problem lies in homosexual
    networks within the clergy which must be eradicated,'" says
    Vigano.

    "These homosexual networks, which are now widespread in many
    dioceses, seminaries, religious orders, etc., act under the
    concealment of secrecy and lies with the power of octopus
    tentacles, and strangle innocent victims and priestly vocations,
    and are strangling the entire Church," he writes.

    "I implore everyone, especially Bishops, to speak up in order to
    defeat this conspiracy of silence that is so widespread, and to
    report the cases of abuse they know about to the media and civil
    authorities," says Vigano, who served as the Apostolic Nuncio to
    the United States from 2011 to 2016.

    As documented in the John Jay Report on sexual abuse in the
    Catholic Church from 1950 to 2002, less than 5% of the predators
    were pedophiles. In fact, 81% of the victims were male and 78%
    were post-pubescent, "meaning that homosexuality -- not
    heterosexuality or pedophilia -- was in play," said Catholic
    League President Bill Donohue.

    Cardinal Raymond Burke, a member of the highest court at the
    Vatican and Patron of the Sovereign Miltary Order of Malta, said
    it is obvious there is a poisonous "homosexual culture" among
    some priests and bishops and that there "needs to be an open
    recognition that we have a very grave problem of a homosexual
    culture in the Church."

    "It was clear after the studies following the 2002 sexual abuse
    crisis that most of the acts of abuse were in fact homosexual
    acts committed with adolescent young men," said Cardinal Burke
    in an interview with Catholic Action for Faith and Family.
    "There was a studied attempt to either overlook or to deny this."

    "Now it seems clear in light of these recent terrible scandals
    that indeed there is a homosexual culture, not only among the
    clergy but even within the hierarchy," he said, "which needs to
    be purified at the root. It is, of course, a tendency that is
    disordered."

    Pope Francis himself directed back in May that homosexuals
    should be excluded from Catholic seminaries. "If there's even
    the slightest doubt, better to not accept them [homosexuals]"
    said the Pope, as reported in the New York Times.

    Quoted in the same article was Michael Hichborn, head of the
    Lepanto Institute. He said there must be a "complete and
    thorough removal of all homosexual clergymen from the Church.
    It's going to be difficult and will likely result in a very
    serious priest shortage, but it's definitely worth the effort."

    Columnist and best-selling author Pat Buchanan, a Catholic,
    said, "it needs be stated clearly: This is a homosexual scandal.
    Almost all of the predators and criminals are male, as are most
    of the victims: the boys, the teenagers, the young seminarians."

    "Applicants to the seminary should be vetted the way applicants
    to the National Security Council are," said Buchanan. "Those
    homosexually inclined should be told the priesthood of the
    Church is not for them, as it is not for women."

    The Catechism of the Catholic Church states, "Basing itself on
    Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of
    grave depravity, tradition has always declared that 'homosexual
    acts are intrinsically disordered.' They are contrary to the
    natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They
    do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual
    complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)