CNA Staff, Aug 7, 2020 / 15:34 pm
Christ draws close with love and compassion, as well as a challenge, for people who experience discord between their gender identity and their biological sex, Archbishop Robert Carlson of Saint Louis said in a reflection dated June 1.
"If you're uncomfortable with your biological sex, or if you consider yourself as having a gender identity at odds with your biological sex, here's the first thing I want you to know: God loves you. He loves you right where you are. He has a plan for you," Carlson said.
"We are beloved sons and daughters of God in our best and worst moments. And when Jesus comes to us with a word of compassion, he always comes with a word of challenge too," he added. "Yes, he loves us where we are; that doesn't mean he simply affirms or celebrates where we are."
The 12-page reflection notes that people who experience gender dysphoria are "uniquely vulnerable" and must be treated with care and compassion. The archbishop also notes that the Church has a duty to teach and affirm a Christian anthropology, which sees the unity of gender identity and biological sex as the path to human flourishing and, ultimately, to heaven.
"God made us male and female. God also made us as a union of body and soul. God has a purpose and a plan in giving us the male or female body we have," the archbishop noted.
Carlson said he was inspired to write this reflection after a January 2020 visit with Pope Francis and the bishops of his region. During the visit, Pope Francis encouraged the bishops to address the issue of transgender theory, or gender ideology, with the Catholics in their dioceses.
Carlson is one of a small but increasing number of Catholic bishops and Catholic leaders in the U.S. who have issued statements on gender ideology, as well as guidelines for people with gender dysphoria who are participants in diocesan institutions or events. The Vatican has also recently issued recent documents on the subject, including a book released in June by the Pontifical Council for Promoting the New Evangelization, as well as the 2019 document Male and Female He Created Them, issued by the Congregation for Catholic Education.
Carlson stated that his reflection did not offer a "comprehensive treatment" of the problem, but rather an addressing of a few of its "principal aspects."
The archbishop said he wanted his reflection to begin and end with thoughts of compassion and care for people who experience transgender dysphoria, which he noted is a condition that puts people "at risk for a whole series of poor health outcomes. They experience higher rates of anxiety, depression, and substance abuse, and have a much higher rate of suicide attempts than the general population. They are uniquely vulnerable."
People with gender dysphoria are experiencing hurt, the bishop said. And whether people who believe their gender does not match their biological sex are making the choice freely or feel that it is a condition they experience not of their free will, Christ draws close to those experiencing hurt, he noted.
Some examples of Christ drawing close to hurting people from the Gospels which Carlson pointed to included Zaccheus the tax collector, who is visited by Christ in his home, and the woman with a haemorrhage, who was healed by Christ with a touch of his cloak because of her faith.
"Whether we're talking about sins we have freely chosen or conditions we have not the Gospels make it very clear: whatever our hurt is, Jesus came for the hurt. He doesn't draw away there, he draws closer."
But Christ also challenges people to live according to God's plan, Carlson noted.
"When the Rich Young Man came to ask about eternal life Jesus both welcomed him and challenged him. He does so repeatedly with various people he encounters in the Gospels. We have to expect him to do the same with us. The welcome and the challenge are both expressions of his love," Carlson said.
In this Gospel story, a rich young man approaches Christ and asks what he must to do to have eternal life. Christ tells him to follow the commandments, to sell all that he has to the poor, and to follow him. The rich young man "went away sad, for he had many possessions".
"Do you ever wonder if he came back? I think part of the reason we never hear is that the ultimate point of the story isn't what happened to him. The point is: I am the Rich Young Man, Jesus asks something of me, and I have to decide how to respond. I can walk away sad, or I can embrace his challenge," the archbishop said.
The challenge for people with gender dysphoria, then, is to live according to God's plan for sexuality, which does not separate gender from sex, Carlson noted.
"Based on the unity of the human person, the basic challenge on this matter is articulated by the Catechism of the Catholic Church when it says: 'Everyone, man and woman, should acknowledge and accept his sexual identity.' Long before gender ideology was a cultural topic, the Catechism had already named the central issue: this is a question of reconciling ourselves to the physical facts of sexual identity, not trying to change the facts according to how we think and feel," he said.
This does not mean that one must live according to rigid stereotypes, he noted.