Senator Donna Nesselbush breaks silence on Catholic Church’s ‘flawed view’ of gay marriage


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2016-09-25 Safer Rhodes 008
Senator Donna Nesselbush

Rhode Island State Senator Donna Nesselbush released a statement in response to the recent firing of Michael Templeton, the Music Director at the Church of St. Mary in Providence due to his same-sex marriage. Nesselbush was instrumental in getting marriage equality passed in the Senate.

“Sponsoring the marriage equality legislation in the Senate will always be my most cherished accomplishment in the Rhode Island Senate. I grew up staunchly Catholic, attending eight years of Catholic school at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart. My father did not go to church every Sunday; he went every single day. Although Catholicism is in my bones and I will always be a Catholic at heart, I stopped going to church years ago after I realized I was gay. I never wanted to cause a problem, embarrass my family or the church and religion I love,” said Senator Nesselbush.

“The time, however, has come for me to speak out about the Catholic Church’s flawed view of gay marriage. The Church persists in placing ‘form over substance.’ I always say, we Christians should worry more about the quality of our love, rather than the gender of the person we love. I hear Pope Francis gently advancing this cause when he repeats the words of Jesus: ‘Who am I (the Pope) to judge,’ paraphrasing the well-known…’judge not lest we be judged.’ Interestingly, the parishioners at Saint Mary’s seem also to be upset, crying out for justice for their beloved music director, as I suspect most Catholics are. If the church stays true to the real teachings of Jesus, the answers are right there. Love is love, and love is all we need, not the Church’s rules and regulations that actually, ironically, belie Christianity,” added Senator Nesselbush.

In an excellent break-down of the story, Bob Shine of New Ways Ministry wrote, “The Diocese of Providence took over the administration of the parish from the Franciscan Friars two years ago. The administrative shift means the parish is now overseen more directly by Bishop Thomas Tobin, who has a very LGBT-negative record.”

This story will be updated if Tobin responds to a request for comment.

How will the US relate to Muslims?


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“Lord, do you want us to command
fire to come down from heaven
and consume [Samaritans]?”
James and John to Jesus

th-29As ‘lone wolf’ terrorism will likely rise, how will we relate to Muslims? Should we escalate wars in Muslim countries?

Samaritans, who share religious roots with Muslims, utterly rejected Jesus and his disciples. So the disciples proposed Holy War. Jesus rebuked them.

Samaritans and Jews detested each other: As to religion, Jews cursed Samaritans in their synagogues; as to race, Jews called Samaritans half-breeds; as to foreigners, Jews walked 40 additional miles when traveling north just to avoid Samaria.

Americans mimic this hatred by reviling Muslims: 56 percent recently polled stated Islam is not consistent with American values. This ignores three million Muslim-Americans, most born here, who cherish this nation.

Enter Donald Trump. He hysterically whips up fears of Muslims and Mexicans. He even retweets that whites are killed by blacks 81 percent of the time—with a black man’s image pointing a gun. The truth: Whites killed by blacks total 14 percent.

Though many differ, some prominent Republicans denounce Trump’s exclusion of Muslims as fascism, or declare he violates American values. RI Republican Party Chair Brandon Bell calls Trump’s proposal “un-Republican, un-American and unconstitutional.”

Sadly, I must also conclude Trump is a white supremacist. The evidence: Trump hates and fears people for their religion (Muslims) and their race (blacks) as well as foreigners (Mexicans).

Trump dismisses Jesus’ teaching to love people whose religion, race or nation is different. Jesus’ parable of The Good Samaritan—not The Good Israelite—was scandalous. Today, instead of The Good American, Jesus would scandalize Trump’s followers with the parable of The Good Muslim.

Actually, Christian extremists have killed and maimed far more Americans in recent years than Muslim extremists. Anti-abortion bombers and “Christian” mass shooters are terrorists. Indeed, the Southern Poverty Law Center identifies 142 neo-Nazi and 72 Ku Klux Klan groups. Christian identity and sovereign citizen groups have also increased.

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Still, can we imagine discriminating against Christians as Trump discriminates against 1.5 billion Muslims? Imagine a “total and complete shutdown” of Christians entering this country. Imagine registering our nation’s Christians. Imagine surveying and closing churches.

Hatred and fear of all Muslims is no more justified than for Christians.

The U.S. is not a theocracy. We are not a “Christian nation.” We cannot favor one religion, but must affirm America’s religious freedom for all.

Jesus taught we must take the log out of our own eye before removing the speck in our neighbor’s eye. So consider the 3,000 who died on 9/11 as well as the fourteen in San Bernardino. How horrendous these attacks were for our nation! Now consider the half million Iraqis who died. That’s 166 days of 9/11 attacks.

American deaths from 9/11 are one per 100,000; Iraqi deaths are one per 75. Four million Iraqis—one in ten—are refugees. Iraq is decimated.

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We rightly condemn jihad, a Holy War. But our politicians’ moral justifications for Iraq’s invasion begat a vastly more destructive Holy War than 9/11.

Jesus rebuked his disciples’ Holy War “solution” for enemies. Do we agree regarding our wars?

It’s not just Iraq. Many want to escalate war in Syria. Have we learned nothing from our failures? How many more years will we kill and be killed in the Middle East? How many more lone wolf attacks must we endure? Does our unceasing warfare risk another massive attack? Are we really surprised that inflicting great suffering brings retaliation?

The military cannot defeat terrorism. Bombs and bombastic rhetoric continually recruit ISIS fighters.

We must overcome our country’s fears and purge our national prejudices. Recall the aspiration of the Star Spangled Banner’s concluding verse. The opposite occurs, our nation becoming ‘the land of the cruel, and the home of the fearful,’ if we adopt Trump’s dogma instead of Jesus’ teachings.

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The Unemployed: Jesus, Socrates, Buddha, Gandhi


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Jesus, Socrates, Buddha and Gandhi all had long periods of unemployment. Sure these guys were once employed as a carpenter, soldier, prince and lawyer but they are best remembered for their years of wandering around and being unemployed.  In fact, their unemployment played a key role in the successes each had.

Would Jesus have had time to preach, perform miracles and gather a group of ‘misfits’ for followers if he spent his last 3 years building things? Would Socrates have become the father of modern philosophy had he stayed in the military? The same questions can be asked about Buddha doing Princely things (a questionable job) and Gandhi working a courtroom. Each of these great men did their best work without getting a paycheck.

How many folks today consider these guys bums or freeloaders? All too often the motives of those who are unemployed are misconstrued. Many jump to blame, stereotypes and prejudice when discussing the matter. While some of those without jobs might be unmotivated, others are ill, unskilled, laid off, with prison records, in a dying industry, a stay at home parent or sending out resumes without luck. Oh yeah – don’t forget issues with transportation and language barriers.

Having a good job means self esteem, heat and power for the winter, clothes for the kids, food and school supplies. For those lucky enough to have high-paying jobs that also means a nice house, a few cars, the big family vacation, college for the kids, health care and a few dinner and movie nights.

I guess the unemployed don’t want any of that stuff. They’d rather roll the dice on their health, tell the kids that college is on hold and come up with excuses when asked to go out for a bite to eat. Options change when one has means. There are those who screw the system through fraud and there are those who have habituated themselves to hopelessness – but, for the most part, a majority of unemployed folks are just trying to get by.

Unemployment takes many forms – from the executive who lost a job to the kid from an impoverished situation just looking for something. Some have to adjust attitudes, while others can only dream. Either way they are looked upon as less than.

Unemployment and its often partner of poverty have always been with us. It is a shame how those ‘without’ are often viewed. How often we forget that they are parents, friends, dreamers, thinkers. How often we forget that the warm house, family trip, car and good education are important to them as well.

So much of our identity is tied up in what we do for a living. That’s OK, but I am hoping that we are much more than our jobs. The legacies of Jesus, Socrates, Buddha, and Gandhi depend on it.