Maltese political candidate excommunicates self over Pope's speech
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.- A Maltese professor and political candidate, citing his outrage at Pope Benedict XVI’s reported comments on the environment and homosexuality, has excommunicated himself from the Church.

Dr Ing. Patrick Attard, the first openly homosexual candidate for parliament in Malta, also criticized the Holy See’s opposition to a proposed U.N. resolution calling for the decriminalization of homosexual relationships, the Malta Independent reports.

On December 22, Pope Benedict delivered his Christmas address to the Curia. Throughout the course of several paragraphs, he said:

“When the Church speaks of the nature of the human being as man and woman and asks that this order of creation be respected, it is not the result of an outdated metaphysic.

“It is a question here of faith in the Creator and of listening to the language of creation, the devaluation of which leads to the self-destruction of man and therefore to the destruction of the same work of God.

“That which is often expressed and understood by the term ‘gender,’ results finally in the self-emancipation of man from creation and from the Creator.”

Though the Pope did not explicitly mention homosexuals or homosexuality, his remarks were seized upon and denounced as an attack on homosexuals, lesbians, and transgendered persons.

His address, more than 3,500 words long, only briefly touched on gender theory and the order of creation.

Following other secular media outlets, the Maltese Times characterized the Pope’s words as calling homosexuality “a destruction of God’s work” and claimed he said the world should be saved from homosexuality just as we should save the rainforests from destruction.

Dr. Attard claimed the Pope made “outrageous comments” that “can only spread intolerance and hatred towards the gay minority.”

“I do not want the government to assume I am part of this hate-preaching organization just because I was baptized… there is no choice but to excommunicate myself publicly from this power and money-hungry institution.”

“[E]xcommunicating myself doesn’t mean I am a Satanist or a selfish person,” he explained, according to the Maltese Times.

Dr. Attard, in remarks on his blog, called on homosexual priests to leave the Church, which he called a “homophobic institution.” He also denounced the “huge hypocrisy” of cohabiting couples being discouraged from receiving Communion in their local church but encouraged to receive in a far-away area.

Attard also protested the Maltese ban on homosexual men as blood donors and characterized his abandonment of the Church as activism against political parties who are “afraid to criticize the Church” because of Malta’s predominantly Catholic population.

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Subscriber comments:
Published by: Louis
Singapore 01/13/2009 09:35 PM EST
He can reject the Church and make himself an apostate, but "excommunication" does not exist as of yet.

He is truly a foolish man. His attention seeking and ignorance are going to bit him straight on his butt.
It is obvious that he didn't clearly read what the Pope had written and the Church's standpoint; hence, his contentions against the pope are without basis, or perhaps he just wishes to redefine natural law.
Published by: Snowdrift
NY 01/13/2009 07:56 PM EST
f Dr. Attard had read recent Vatican statements, he would know that the Pope does support the de-criminalization of homosexuality.

Really?

Interesting how the Catholic Bishops in Ethiopia collectively called for a constitutional amendment criminalizing homosexual acts in a country where it is already criminal. Yeah, sorry if I don't trust you guys. Your actions speak differently.
Published by: Neil
AUSTRALIA 01/13/2009 03:59 PM EST
So may it be.
Published by: REv. McLean Cummings
Rome, Italy 01/13/2009 02:37 PM EST
This article was badly written, because it reported the man's claims as if true: 1) his claim the cohabiting couples are encouraged to go to communion elsewhere (probably a mischaracterization of those married outside the church but living as brother and sister), and 2) his use of the meaningless phrase "excommunicating myself".
Published by: Raymond Peringer
Toronto, Canada 01/13/2009 01:40 PM EST
Dr. Attard knows that one cannot excommunicate oneself. This is low-grade publicity stunt bound to garner gay-press coverage world wide.

If Dr. Attard had read recent Vatican statements, he would know that the Pope does support the de-criminalization of homosexuality.

However, the document in question goes on to create vague new "gender rights". The Holy Father correctly wants to see these so-called rights defined.

That's the basis of his objection.
Published by: Sarah
Toronto, Canada 01/13/2009 12:14 AM EST
May God have mercy on his soul!
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