Thursday, November 25, 2010

Priest clarifies pope’s remarks on condom

The head of the Archdiocese of Manila’s Commission on Family Life debunked the media reports claiming that Pope Benedict has changed Church’s teachings on condoms.

Fr. Joel Jason, SThL, currently the Dean of Studies at San Carlos Seminary and professor of Moral Theology, Sexuality and Integrity and Bioethics has issued some clarifications on the controversy generated by the pope’s remarks on the use of condoms.

The pontiff’s words were clearly taken out of context, he said, pointing out that the media took only excerpts of the pope’s answer to the question asked of him, thus leaving out the essential meaning of the text.

Citing the principle in Biblical interpretation, Jason said the message or the text must be taken in its integral context or risk to lose its real meaning.

“Taken in isolation, a text in the Bible can be reduced to a pretext, i.e., a half-truth or at worst, a misleading misinterpretation,” the priest said.

The controversy stemmed from an interview the pope has granted to journalist Peter Seewald in a book released on Nov. 23, titled “Light of the World: The Pope, the Church and the Signs of the Times.”

In the interview, the pope gave a lengthy answer to Seewald’s question on the Vatican’s policy on AIDs.

An excerpt of the pope’s response mentioned the case of some individuals who may have basis in using a condom.

 “There may be a basis in the case of some individuals, as perhaps when a male prostitute uses a condom, where this can be a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility…”

Jason pointed out that the media took out in isolation the above excerpt without considering the sentence in its entirety.

Those who interpreted the pope’s remarks did not even finish the sentence, the priest said.

Media reports claimed the pope has changed the Church’s teaching on contraception.

Supporters of RH bill in the country are riding the issue and calling the Catholic bishops to follow the stance of the pope.  

But Jason said the pope’s remarks in the interview should not be taken as official teachings or pronouncements.

If the pope wants to issue a new teaching in his capacity as the Successor of Peter and the Supreme Teacher of the Catholic faith, he will not do it through an interview, Jason pointed out.

“Everyone who knows basic Catechism understands this, much more the Pope. And so headlines claiming, ‘Pope changes teaching on Condoms, Contraception and HIV’, or ‘Pope: Condoms OK in fight Against AIDS” are totally way out of line,’ the priest said.

Jason explained that “nowhere in the text of the Pope Benedict’s response can we find summary justification of condom use.”

The pope instead stressed that much must be done to solve the problem of AIDs, not by distributing condoms.

“This means that the sheer fixation on the condom implies a banalization of sexuality, which, after all, is precisely the dangerous source of the attitude of no longer seeing sexuality as the expression of love, but only a sort of drug that people administer to themselves,” the pope said.

The pope’s response, Jason furthered, “was not even a direct commentary on the possible moral justification of condom use, clearly not for contraception. He was making a moral speculation on what may be going on in the heart of one (a male prostitute) who uses the condom in a homosexual or heterosexual sex act.”

Jason said “what the Pope stressed was not that condom use is OK in the case of a male prostitute engaged in heterosexual or homosexual acts. He merely said that ‘this can be a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility’…”

The country’s prelates have also called on government officials and supporters of RH bill not to use the words of the pope as a justification to push their own agenda.

Church leaders in other parts of the world have likewise issued their individual statements defending what the pope said in the book.

Seewald, during the launching of the book on November 23 at the Vatican, complained of what he called “crisis of journalism”, referring on how the media twisted the words of the pope out of context.

He said the pope discusses wide ranging topics in the book, “…the pope appeals to humanity—our world is in the process of collapse, and half the journalists are only interested in the issue of condoms.” 

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