Coming Up Short: The Catholic Church’s Pastoral Response to the Transgender Crisis in America
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Preunderstanding: Magisterial Response to the TGD Crisis in America
3. What Is Going On: Sociological Data Characterizing TGD Hardships and Vulnerabilities
3.1. Threats to Dignity and Livelihood
3.2. Threats to Health and Well-Being
4. Why Is This Going On: Theories, Explanations, and Recommendations from the Arts and Sciences
4.1. Minority Stress Theory and Interpersonal Theory of Suicide
4.2. Conversion Culture and Gender Identity Change Efforts
4.3. Affirmative Care, Legal Protections, and Inclusive Policies
4.4. Vatican and USCCB Contributions
5. Coming Up Short: Discussing the Disconnect
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Cisgender | Within a binary system of sex and gender, cisgender is used to refer to those whose gender identities are aligned with the sex they were assigned at birth. |
Cisheterosexual (cishetero) | A person whose gender identity aligns with their male or female sex assigned at birth and who is physically, romantically, and/or emotionally attracted to members of the opposite sex. |
Cisheteronormativity and cisnormativity | Cisnormativity is the belief or assumption that cisgender is the preferred, superior, morally good, normal, or default mode of gendered being for humans. Cisheteronormativity extends the beliefs and assumptions associated with cisnormativity to include heterosexuality as the norm for sexual orientation. |
Cisheterosexism | Cissexism is a system of discrimination and exclusion that focuses on upholding the cisnormative gender binary and conventional expressions of masculinity and femininity tied to it, resulting in the oppression and/or erasure of transgender and gender diverse people. Heterosexism is a similar system of discrimination and exclusion that upholds heterosexuality and heterosexual relationships, resulting in the oppression and/or erasure of non-heterosexual people. Cisheterosexism is the intersection of cissexism and heterosexism. a |
Gender diverse | An umbrella term used to refer to individuals whose gender identities and/or expressions do not fit within strict binary categories of male/masculine and female/feminine. This includes, but is not limited to, people who identify or present as intersex, bigender, trigender, agender, nonbinary, genderfluid, genderqueer, gender-neutral, third gender, two spirit, or other-gender. |
Gender divergent or nonconforming | These terms refer to people whose gender expressions deviate from conventional expectations of masculinity tied to male sex and femininity tied to female sex in a binary system. Some but not all gender divergent or gender nonconforming people identify as transgender, and not all transgender and gender diverse people express their gender in ways that are considered divergent or nonconforming. b |
Gender expression | The way a person chooses to express or visibly manifest their gender. This can be through names, pronouns, clothing, hair style, behavior, voice, and/or body characteristics. Whether specific gender expressions are considered masculine or feminine, or normal or divergent varies from culture to culture and changes over time based on society’s definitions and interpretations of various gender cues. b |
Gender identity | A person’s internal, deeply held sense of their gender. This may or may not align with the sex assigned at birth or any binary system of sex and/or gender. b |
Transgender (trans) | Often used as an umbrella term for anyone whose gender identity differs from their sex assigned at birth. Some transgender people choose to modify their bodies with or without hormone therapy and/or surgery, so that their bodies and gender expressions are brought into alignment with their gender identity. Not all transgender people wish to change their physical appearance, and sexual orientation is not linked to transgender identity. b |
Sex | Sometimes referred to as biological sex or sex assigned at birth, this is the classification of a person as either male or female based upon an assessment of external genitals at birth. Sex is more fully characterized by a combination of chromosomes, hormones, internal and external reproductive organs, and secondary sex characteristics. b |
1 | Although the Magisterium is comprised of the Pope and all bishops in communion with him around the world, for the purposes of this article and the American (U.S.) context it responds to, the use of Magisterium and Magisterial will be limited to refer only to the Vatican (including the Pope and Roman Curia members and offices) and USCCB. Additionally, official Church will be used interchangeably with Magisterium. |
2 | See Appendix A for a table of terms and definitions. |
3 | This question and its answering argument are situated within feminist, queer, advocacy, liberation, and Jesuit/Ignatian-informed discourses which (1) hold human dignity and freedom from social oppression as necessary goods; (2) position the attainment of these goods as part of Christ’s ongoing work in this world, which Christians should prioritize in their mission of transforming the kingdom at hand (See See Graham 1996; Althaus-Reid 2010; and Rowniak and Ong-Flaherty 2015). |
4 | See United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, “‘Gender theory’/‘Gender ideology’—Select Teaching Resources”, (USCCB 2019a) for an overview of resources, comments, and teachings in the Catholic tradition that concern sex and gender in the context of LGBTQI+ people. |
5 | In Male and Female He Created Them (CCE 2019, nos. 9 and 22), the CCE bishops write that those who produced gender theory “were united in denying the existence of any original given element in the individual, which would precede and at the same time constitute our personal identity, forming the necessary basis of everything we do”, and that present support for gender theory stems from the cultural belief that “each individual can act arbitrarily as if there were no truths, values, and principles to provide guidance, and everything were possible and permissible”. Such a generalization is neither appropriate nor accurate. It ignores Christian feminist and queer theologians, TGD Christians, and LGBTQI+ allies who support theological anthropologies and Christian ethics that are not tied to Magisterial teaching on gender essentialism and complementarity (e.g., Althaus-Reid and Isherwood 2009; Ford 2018; Mollenkott 2007; and Herriot and Callaghan 2019). |
6 | Francis and the bishops who oppose gender ideology argue that it and TGD people threaten the traditional concepts of heterosexual marriage and family, characterized by procreative union and child-rearing, which Catholic social teaching holds to be the building blocks and foundation of society (see Ford 2018). |
7 | This document cites no sources from gender studies or feminist and queer theologies, yet it presents and responds to numerous beliefs, ideas, and definitions that it claims represent these fields and those who have contributed to or are inspired by them now. Ford (2018) discusses Francis and the Magisterium’s history of employing this argument strategy, whereby they set up a dichotomy between themselves and all who deviate from their teaching but then fail to give an accurate and substantive account of what their opposition actually believes. Poor logic, unsubstantiated assertions, and misrepresentation of what the opposition is arguing follow, resulting in intellectual distortions and straw-man fallacies. Male and Female He Created Them (CCE 2019) replicates this pattern. |
8 | The CCE bishops cite their own Magisterial teachings and beliefs as theological evidence and do not cite any scientific or medical sources. |
9 | Similar discrepancies over what constitutes human rights and justice have played out in the American political arena, notably in the debate over the legal recognition of same-sex marriages. In the 2013 landmark U.S. Supreme Court Case, U.S. v. Windsor, the federal government ultimately sided against the USCCB’s definition of rights and justice (USCCB 2009, pp. 23–24; USCCB 2013), when it ruled that it was unconstitutional to bar same-sex couples from accessing the 1138+ benefits, rights, and privileges made possible by marital status (Shah 2004). |
10 | Many of the sources utilized and referenced throughout this article include TGD autobiographical information depicting personal experiences of harm at the hands of Church, society, and individuals, as well as TGD desires for improved pastoral care and inclusion in Christian communities. Hunter et al. (2018) was prepared and composed by a transgender woman of color. For additional TGD narratives, see James et al. (2016); Grant et al. (2011); Althaus-Reid and Isherwood 2009; Whitehead and Whitehead 2014; and Mollenkott 2007. |
11 | It is worth noting that as of 2021, 75% of Americans and 75% of white American Catholics do not believe hospitals or medical providers should be allowed to refuse reproductive health services (including contraception or sterilization) to transgender people on the grounds of religious beliefs. Furthermore, 84% of Americans and 80% of white American Catholics do not believe licensed professionals such as doctors, lawyers, teachers, and social workers should be allowed to refuse to provide services to particular groups on the grounds of religious beliefs (PRRI 2021). |
12 | With the exception of public opinion polls published in 2020 and 2021, data and statistics throughout this section are taken from before 2020 and thus do not reflect the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on these numbers. |
13 | In Intersecting Injustice (2018) and Paying an Unfair Price (2015), Hunter et al. (2018) and CAP & MAP (2015) provide illuminating discussions of the criminalization of poverty and school-to-prison pipeline in LGBTQI+ communities. Hunter et al. (2018, pp. 21, 25) also offer two informative diagrams that illustrate how both the criminal justice and the poverty and homelessness systems of inequality intersect with transgenderism to the detriment of TGD people. |
14 | TGD gender expressions and identities are not classified as mental disorders, and not all TGD people experience or seek treatment for “gender dysphoria”. For those who experience distress as a direct result of gender dysphoria, there are medical and ethical protocols and affirming therapeutic intervention and treatments in place to guide behavioral and/or medical transitioning (APA 2021; American Psychiatric Association 2021). |
15 | Hipp et al. (2019) shine light on “the roles of Christian organizations promulgating ‘church hurt,’ structural violence, and gate-keeping to access affirmative care as forms of conversion” and GICE. TGD narratives and surveys frequently report priests, ministers, educators, and parents using the concepts of hell, sinfulness, and God’s disappointment to convert TGD people to cisheteronormative behaviors and beliefs (see see Althaus-Reid and Isherwood 2009; Benson et al. 2018; James et al. 2016; and Whitehead and Whitehead 2014). |
16 | It is interesting to note that despite the Vatican and USCCB’s desire to be understood and experienced as welcoming toward LGBTQI+ people, only 27% of Americans and 38% of American Catholics see the Catholic Church as friendly toward TGD people (Jones et al. 2014), and 79% of LGBTQI+ Americans and 66% of LGBTQI+ Catholics see the Church as unfriendly toward all LGBTQI+ people in general (Pew 2013). |
17 | Pope Francis, the CCE, and the USCCB have presented their battle against gender theory and gender diversity (i.e., “gender ideology”) as a holy war, where the Church and cisheterosexual people who support official Church teaching on sex and gender are rational, good, and right, and TGD people and those who support gender diversity are irrational, sinful, and wrong—harming children around the world and threatening the stability of social structures via ideological neocolonialism and juridical revolution (see USCCB 2019a; CCE 2019; and Ford 2018). |
18 | The Magisterium has argued that we should not be surprised to see “irrational and violent reactions” in response to LGBTQI+ behavior (CDF 1986, no. 10) and that “pervasive human suffering and unhappiness” are a natural result of LGBTQI+ people violating chastity as it has been defined by the Church (USCCB 2006, p. 8). They accuse TGD people of choosing a “status” that positions them as minorities suffering discrimination who then require society’s legal and material support to ameliorate the negative conditions that they brought upon themselves (USCCB 2006, no. 14). Further, they reduce TGD identities and beliefs to “nothing more than a confused concept of freedom in the realm of feelings and wants, or momentary desires provoked by emotional impulses and the will of the individual” (USCCB 2006, no. 19). The CDF, CCE, and USCCB present an incorrect sense of gender, reality, and human nature as TGD people’s problem and thus offer GICE and Christian anthropology as the only appropriate means of care and correction. |
19 | The USCCB (2006, p. 12) has written that its ministry to LGBTQI+ people is primarily aimed at “fostering the greatest possible friendship with God” through participation in the Church and the divine life of the Trinity. Interestingly, in a survey conducted on the rise of religious disaffiliation, PRRI found that 39% of the disaffiliated who were raised Catholic listed negative religious teachings or treatment of LGBTQI+ people as a major reason for leaving the Church and that disaffiliated Catholics were more likely than any other religious disaffiliates to include this as a reason for leaving. The same survey found that 58% of Americans, 70% of millennials, and 59% of millennial Catholics believed religious groups alienate young people by being too judgmental toward LGBTQI+ people (Jones et al. 2016). With only 6% of white LGBTQI+ Americans and 5% of Hispanic LGBTQI+ Americans identifying as Catholic, and 56% of LGBTQI+ young adults (age 18–29) religiously unaffiliated compared to 45% of the general LGBTQI+ population and 24% of the total American population (Jones and Cox 2016), it is possible that the Catholic Church has been more successful at driving LGBTQI+ people and their allies away from Catholicism than bringing them closer to God. |
20 | Even after 64 out of the 69 members that made up the Vatican’s own Pontifical Commission on Birth Control argued that artificial contraception could be morally permissible and that traditional teaching should be changed, Pope Paul VI rejected their findings and instead doubled down on the immorality of contraception in his encyclical, Humanae Vitae. This encyclical’s prohibition of artificial birth control is now largely ignored by Catholic laity and priests who focus instead on Catholic teaching related to the primacy of conscience (Rausch 2016, p. 245). |
21 | The authors of the Vatican and USCCB documents have set up a number of straw-man and slippery-slope arguments to justify their refusal to break with past teachings and beliefs related to sex and gender or adopt affirmative stances toward TGD people (Ford 2018). |
22 | Canales (2016) demonstrates how Renewing the Vision can be revised to include pedagogical and pastoral strategies that help improve Catholic youth ministry and create safe, open, and nonjudgmental environments for LGBTQI+ youth. Ford (2018) models a natural theology of exploration that could be utilized in Catholic education and theological settings to create space for TGD people to explore their sexual and gender identities both internally and communally, within a supportive network that encourages human flourishing, well-being, and healthy, loving relationships to self and God. Herriot and Callaghan (2019) offer a case study to demonstrate how parents can secure accommodations and welcome for their TGD children in Catholic schools, as well as how Catholic schools can create policies that balance their Christian faith and beliefs with the rights of TGD students. Last but not least, Rowniak and Ong-Flaherty (2015) and Geller and Mullin (2017) show how Catholic institutes of higher learning can promote TGD understanding, acceptance, and inclusion through policy and community events. |
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Roy-Steier, S. Coming Up Short: The Catholic Church’s Pastoral Response to the Transgender Crisis in America. Religions 2021, 12, 337. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12050337
Roy-Steier S. Coming Up Short: The Catholic Church’s Pastoral Response to the Transgender Crisis in America. Religions. 2021; 12(5):337. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12050337
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoy-Steier, Stephanie. 2021. "Coming Up Short: The Catholic Church’s Pastoral Response to the Transgender Crisis in America" Religions 12, no. 5: 337. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12050337
APA StyleRoy-Steier, S. (2021). Coming Up Short: The Catholic Church’s Pastoral Response to the Transgender Crisis in America. Religions, 12(5), 337. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12050337