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Catholic News

U.S. same-sex ministry group says criticism in Vatican report is 'false and unjust'

Courage International said the Holy See's synodal report constituted "calumny" against the 45-year-old Church apostolate.

An influential Catholic ministry that walks with those experiencing same-sex attraction said a Vatican report that criticized its work was guilty of a "false and unjust depiction" of the decades-old apostolate.

Courage International said in a May 8 press release that the Vatican's General Secretariat of the Synod was guilty of "calumny" against the group when it published an annex to a final report of a synodal study group on May 5.

That report, titled "Theological Criteria and Synodal Methodologies for Shared Discernment of Emerging Doctrinal, Pastoral, and Ethical Issues," included testimonies from two men in putative civil "marriages," one of whom attended Courage meetings in the past.

Since the early 1980s Courage has been offering ministry to men and women who experience attraction to the same sex. The testimony offered by the unnamed man in the synodal report alleged that the Courage meetings he attended were "secretive and hidden" while the people in it were "lonely, hopeless, and often depressed."

In its response on May 8, Courage said it considered the report "to be both calumny and detraction against the organization and its members."

The group said it disputed the implication that it engages in "reparative therapy" for homosexual attraction. It further said the synod was "unjust" in its presentation of Courage meetings.

The report "characterizes the meetings [the man] attended as 'secretive and hidden.' Courage members understand those meetings to be confidential and secure — precisely so that they can speak candidly and vulnerably without fear of someone reporting about them," the statement said.

The statement acknowledged that those experiencing same-sex attraction are indeed often "lonely, hopeless, and depressed," but it argued that Courage "bring[s] them together for support and insist[s] on the confidentiality that enables them to speak freely about their struggles."

"Courage has suffered calumny and detraction before, but usually from secular outlets," the group said. "It is a great sadness and an additional wound to our members to have this false and unjust depiction in a Vatican document."

The statement invited synod officials to meet with group leaders to learn more about the ministry.

The Connecticut-based organization traces its earliest roots to an effort started by New York archbishop Cardinal Terence Cooke, who in 1978 conceived of a same-sex attraction ministry and asked Father John Harvey, OSFS, to lead the effort.

Harvey, who died in 2010, authored the 1979 pamphlet "A Spiritual Plan to Redirect One's Life," offering a program for "homosexually-oriented persons" to "achieve a chaste, productive, and happy life."

The apostolate held its first official meeting the following year on Sept. 26 at the Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Manhattan.

Father Brian Gannon, the executive director of Courage, told EWTN News on the occasion of the group's 45th anniversary that its members "want to follow exactly what the Church is teaching."

"The secular world has a twisted view of sexuality," he said. "This is such a needed ministry. It helps people find peace."

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