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Held in Your keeping my weakness is strength.


When our telephone conversation was interrupted yet another time, Vera laughed: "This is the evil one." It's true that my many attempts to contact the American foundress of the Courage Reparational Groups had often met mishap (language) MISHAP - An early system on the IBM 1130.

[Listed in CACM 2(5):16, May 1959].
. I persevered only because it seemed like a good idea, as the same-sex "marriage" debate rages on, to talk to someone who had the straight goods Straight Goods is a Canadian independent online news magazine, usually publishing about twenty new stories every week. Publisher Ish Theilheimer founded it in 1999, with the support of about thirty shareholders. Its first edition went online in January 2000.  on the subject or, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, someone who had been delivered from a life of lesbianism lesbianism: see homosexuality.
lesbianism
 also called sapphism or female homosexuality,

the quality or state of intense emotional and usually erotic attraction of a woman to another woman.
.

Vera, who doesn't wish her last name publicized because of her work as a pastoral counselor, hails from New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, and is candid about her former life only because the story of her subsequent conversion "gives glory to God "Glory to God" is a Christmas carol popular among American and Canadian Reformed churches that have Dutch roots. It is translated from the Dutch "Ere Zij God" and is one of the most beloved carols sung in the Protestant churches in the Netherlands. ." A "child of the sixties", she came of age when the hippie movement was gaining ascendancy, and while the hippies hippies

1960s “dropouts of American culture” usually identified with very long hair adorned with flowers. [Popular Culture: Misc.]

See : Hair
 got a few things right, their belief that "you have to have sex, or you won't be integrated psychologically" was directly opposed to God's order. As for Vera, things were a bit more complicated, she admitted: while she "experimented" with boys and "felt normal in every way, I felt this need for women.... I have homosexual leanings."

The Church teaches that "it's not a sin to have the condition.... Things happen in life to cause the homosexual condition," Vera explained, adding, "God's mercy is very great for that person; it is a suffering." She views the homosexual orientation as "an extreme form of codependency" and, in fact, refers to it as "a homo-emotional" disorder. "I felt the need for women more than men emotionally when I was a teenager.... When I'm attracted to another woman, it's an inadequacy I see in myself, [it's a] deeper need of my own to be female."

Thus a crisis developed for Vera when, at 24, a close woman friend started dating a man. Vera was devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
, feeling "very hurt in my psyche." To make matters worse, she lost her job. She was spiraling into a deep depression, when she agreed to accompany her aunt to a charismatic prayer meeting, where, as she was prayed over in front of the Blessed Sacrament, she felt healed and loved: "I just knew Jesus was there."

Vera's subsequent formation in the faith took place both within the lay community Anawim (Hebrew for "remnant") and within the support group Courage, formed by Fr. John Harvey in the early 80s, to assist Catholics with homosexual leanings to hold fast to teachings of the Church. Members are encouraged to form chaste chaste  
adj. chast·er, chast·est
1. Morally pure in thought or conduct; decent and modest.

2.
a. Not having experienced sexual intercourse; virginal.

b.
 friendships, and battle self-absorption by helping each other. They follow a 12-step program similar to that of Alcoholics Anonymous Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), worldwide organization dedicated to the treatment of alcoholics; founded 1935 by two alcoholics, one a New York broker, the other an Ohio physician. , and frankly, Vera says, "chastity Chastity
See also Modesty, Purity, Virginity.

Agnes, St.

virgin saint and martyr. [Christian Hagiog.: Brewster, 76]

Artemis

(Rom. Diana) moon goddess; virgin huntress. [Gk. Myth.
 is like sobriety.... We're not meant to be intoxicated in·tox·i·cate  
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates

v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.

2.
 in relationships."

Vera speaks about the "theology of weakness" and you have to think that any program based on AA, the grand-daddy of all self-help groups, could not but lead to such a theology. The first three steps are really a manual for the acquisition of humility: one, you admit that you are powerless (over whatever vice, addiction, disorder, or affliction holds you in thrall); two, you come to believe that a power greater than yourself can restore you to sanity; and three, you make a decision to turn your will and your life over to the care of God as you understand Him.

But her "theology of weakness" is also the fruit of Vera's own difficult earthly pilgrimage. She sought perfection but in yam: "I saw that that wasn't happening, even in my own embrace of the spiritual life." Who came to her aid was none other than St. Therese of Lisieux. "Her spirituality was an embrace of her weakness.... She had to deal with a lot of suffering in her emotions." St. Therese herself observed that "the problem lies not in the fact of our littleness and poverty, but that we don't accept it."

"God is not scandalized by our weakness," Vera said, "He loves us, no matter what we did." Whereas the surrounding culture tends to value power and autonomy, these concepts are incompatible with spiritual growth, the beginning of which is to humble yourself before God, admitting your complete dependence on Him. If you keep yourself "outside the radar of God" until you feel decent enough to come before him, "you're keeping grace at bay."

Vera had been involved with Courage for about ten years when she felt "a deeper vocational" call. She began the Courage Reparational Groups, an endeavour ultimately blessed by the late Cardinal John O'Connor John O'Connor can refer to a number of people:
  • Father John O'Connor (1870-1952), British priest
  • John J. O'Connor (1885-1960), former US Representative from New York
  • John Joseph O'Connor (1920-2000), American cardinal
  • John O'Connor, American football coach
 of New York. "God doesn't live in a vacuum," she said, "He wants to draw people into His life." The members of the Reparational group meet regularly to pray before the Blessed Sacrament, to "come before God in repentance, in dependency; we have this struggle, the homo-emotional struggle, we're uniting it with his Passion."

At the same time, members of the Courage Reparational groups have to be wary of becoming "self-righteous" she adds. "We're praying for our brothers and sisters who have the same condition that we have; we can't judge; nobody can judge." The struggle is ongoing. Vera can find herself, "attracted to someone, I'd be fooling around with it or playing with it in my head." To remain faithful in prayer requires diligence (she tries to make a holy hour every day). "You have to make an effort most days, you have to pull yourself into silence. God's language is silence."

She would answer those who insist that homosexual persons have the right to "marriage" with the truth that "God has an order", that "lust kills the soul," and that "real love is sacrificial, it's a giving, a losing of yourself," and ultimately a union with Christ himself on the cross. Or, as a priest once defined it, she laughed: "When you can scrub a floor without a bit of resentment, that's love That's Love was a British television sitcom about the domestic problems of a young married couple, lawyer Donald (Mulville) and designer Patsy (Hardcastle).

Over the series, Donald had an affair with Laurel (Liza Goddard).
."

Lianne Laurence writes from Burnaby, BC, and is the author of the fascinating book Borowski: A Canadian Paradox.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Catholic Insight
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Laurence, Liannne
Publication:Catholic Insight
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2005
Words:996
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