Coming out - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Fri, 06 May 2022 00:24:02 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Coming out - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 I'm afraid to return to Mass. It's not because of Covid. https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/05/02/afraid-to-return-to-mass/ Mon, 02 May 2022 08:10:28 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=146307 afraid to return to Mass

For two years now, I have gone to Mass twice every Sunday, although I do so seated at my kitchen table. I can see the local Catholic church from my window, but I haven't been inside it since the brief window, mid-pandemic, of supposed normality in July 2021. From my small town in Oregon, I Read more

I'm afraid to return to Mass. It's not because of Covid.... Read more]]>
For two years now, I have gone to Mass twice every Sunday, although I do so seated at my kitchen table.

I can see the local Catholic church from my window, but I haven't been inside it since the brief window, mid-pandemic, of supposed normality in July 2021. From my small town in Oregon, I go to Mass first in Chicago and then in Los Angeles.

Perhaps I should say that I go to services in Chicago and Los Angeles, as no one has yet figured out how to go to Communion via Zoom.

I do miss receiving the Eucharist.

In years past, when I worked for a Catholic parish, I often went to daily Mass.

Back then, I couldn't have imagined going without the Body of Christ for months or years, as is the burden of some communities in remote areas of the world.

I always felt blessed to have the opportunity to go to Mass whenever I wanted.

But I was a different person back then.

I think of my Catholicism now as a fragile little bird that I keep sheltered in the nest of my heart.

My life changed when one of my children came out of the closet.

As the parent of a transgender person, I felt called to advocate publicly for civil rights and equal treatment for the L.G.B.T. community, which meant that I had to leave my paid position at the parish.

The sexual abuse scandal was also swirling around the Catholic Church at the time.

My husband, a cradle Catholic, opted out and became an Episcopalian.

The safe edifice of my Catholic family had crumbled.

Long story short: I fell from being a pillar of parish programs to sitting alone in a back pew.

I think of my Catholicism now as a fragile little bird that I keep sheltered in the nest of my heart.

I'm still here. Even as my trans child felt abandoned and reviled by the faith into which they were baptized, even as my husband was no longer at my side during Mass, I stayed.

I was a Catholic, by God.

I was not going to be driven out.

Rather than throwing up my hands and surrendering, I held on by a fingernail.

The personal criticism, the institutional blindness, the wear and tear of alienation, even the lurking guilt I had for not leaving the church to support my child would not win.

But there were many times I wanted to get up and make a dramatic exit during a homily that, for example, compared civil marriage equality to letting monkeys marry.

I would tell myself that one priest's unkindness did not represent Jesus.

In this age of "traditionalist" rhetoric spouted by some American Catholics in the public square—trashing the pope and pretty much ignoring Catholic social justice teaching—I knew that the call of Jesus was not what I was hearing from those sources.

But Lord, they were loud.

Even as my trans child felt abandoned and reviled by the faith into which they were baptized, even as my husband was no longer at my side during Mass, I stayed.

Then came the pandemic of 2020, when going to Mass in person was not a safe option; in some places it was not an option at all.

Catholics looked for Masses in parking lots or on TV.

Searching the internet brought me to two Zoom Masses far from my home.

One was streamed from a large and vibrant parish in a city. Another was broadcast by a friend, a retired priest who said Mass at his own kitchen table.

I felt protected from the virus by using these opportunities, and my little bird of faith felt protected, too, by the love and compassion that informed the homilies given by the priests and deacons at these Masses.

It's not that I felt safe from controversy, or placated in my own bubble of belief, because these homilies were thought-provoking and challenging.

I wasn't only hearing what I wanted to hear.

But I felt engaged.

I also felt focused.

Sitting alone at my table, nothing distracted me from the Scripture readings or the prayers of intercession.

Seeing the digital grid of fellow Catholics—living, breathing worshippers who were similarly isolated—somehow gave me a stronger sense of communion than I had felt in a church building in a long time.

Several of us sometimes stayed online after Mass ended to discuss the homily.

I was finally grasping the meaning of spiritual communion.

I didn't expect it to be enough, but it was.

To be honest, I'd expected to yearn for the Eucharist with a profound physical hunger.

After all, I'd thought it was exclusively the Eucharist that had kept me Catholic throughout the years of personal doubt and wavering.

When that sense of longing didn't come, it surprised me.

The Prayer of Spiritual Communion, however, has moved me deeply.

I've prayed it intensely: Never permit me to be separated from you.

Although I'm alone, I've felt more connected to God and to the Church than I have in years.

I'm afraid that some misguided homily is going to be the straw that breaks me, the last straw that finally makes me leave this church that I belong to, that I say I love.

Now my local parish offers three weekend Masses.

Now I am vaccinated.

Now the mask mandates are being relaxed as the Covid-19 infection numbers and hospitalizations recede.

We can gather.

From my window, I can hear the bells tolling the start of each Mass.

Every week I plan to go.

Every Sunday I do not go.

Why?

I should be running back to in-person Mass so I can embrace the real presence of the Eucharist.

Here is why: I'm afraid, but not of the virus.

Frankly, I'm afraid of what I will see, of what I will hear when I get there and step inside. Continue reading

I'm afraid to return to Mass. It's not because of Covid.]]>
146307
What my strict Catholic dad said I came out as a lesbian https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/07/22/came-out-lesbian/ Mon, 22 Jul 2019 08:12:09 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=119538

It can be hard to come out as LGBT when you belong to a religion which has strict rules against it. This was the case for Jackie Handy who came out to her strict Catholic parents when she was just 15. The public speaker from Hagley, believed that her family would cast her out for Read more

What my strict Catholic dad said I came out as a lesbian... Read more]]>
It can be hard to come out as LGBT when you belong to a religion which has strict rules against it. This was the case for Jackie Handy who came out to her strict Catholic parents when she was just 15.

The public speaker from Hagley, believed that her family would cast her out for her sexuality.

She struggled to tell her parents but when she finally did, their reaction was heart-warming.

Jackie said: "I came out to a few close friends when I was 14 but 15 was my official opening of that closet door to tell my parents.

"I didn't actually come out to them, I kind of had it dragged out of me - in a non-violent way.

"This time between the ages of 12 and 15 were the very formative years for this part of my life and around this time I started seeing my very first girlfriend.

"That was lovely and felt right of course but it was still really scary because now it was real.

"And, you know when you're a kid you think you can smoke out the bathroom window and they won't know, of course we know now as an adult that that's just not the case.

"It was the same with this really, I thought I was just acting as I always would but my parents noticed a change in my behaviour.

"They've never really told me what but they had clearly noticed that something wasn't 'right'.

"One evening, I was about to go out and meet this girl, I must have backchatted them or something and it brought everything to a head.

"They said 'you're not going out of this house until we know what's wrong with you.'

"I became defensive to begin with and then broke down in tears, as you do when you're a teenager, but I still wasn't saying anything.

"We kind of battled it out for the best part of an hour before eventually I said words that would have seemed quite hurtful to my mum but it was all I could do to protect myself.

"I said 'I can tell you dad but I can't tell you mum' and it still hurts me now that I said that but it's years later and they now understand the reasons why."

Jackie's father wasn't born into a Catholic family but converted to the religion in support of his wife.

Her mother was born into a strict religious family so that made coming out to her more difficult.

She continued: "So my dad took me to the garage to talk and I was still extremely scared.

"He started prompting me with questions, asking me if I was on drugs, being abused or pregnant.

"I said no and I cold see the confusion on his face because he now knew there was something going on but he couldn't work out what it was.

"So I said 'if I tell you dad, will you still love me? Will you throw me out the house?' Continue reading

  • Image: jackiehandy.com
What my strict Catholic dad said I came out as a lesbian]]>
119538