Joe Mannath SDB


Joe Mannath SDB



Sexuality, Celibacy and the Religious Quest

Keynote address delivered at the

Second National Gathering of Catholic Psychologists and Counsellors

New Delhi, September 29, 2001



“We are fired into life with a madness that comes from the gods and which would have us believe that we can have a great love, perpetuate our seed, and contemplate the divine.” It is with this paraphrase of one of Plato’s sayings that Ronald Rolheiser opens book on Christian spirituality. The contents of his very first chapter, entitled: “What Is Spirituality?” are not what most of us might expect. It is an analysis of desire. Spirituality, Rolheiser explains, is about our inner fire, our deepest longings. (Rolheiser, 3-5).

We are talking about two inner fires today—our sexuality, with all its myriad expressions and ambiguities, pushes us towards the other, and the Other Fire which religion is supposed to mediate—the push towards the Invisible Lover. Sexuality would be cheap (less than human) if it stops with sex, and religion would be emptied of its heart if it disregards the body and our sexual nature.

***

I am tempted to start from the end. If we were to have a look at the list of books and articles I have used in preparing this paper, we would get some idea of the topics and issues that are being discussed today in the areas of sexuality, celibacy and their interface with religion/spirituality. The issues are central, the publications many and gripping, the debates many-hued. You will, perhaps, have a look at the readings at the end.

This paper is not only or mostly on my readings. The concerns expressed here, as well as the contents, stem from my experience—my own search as a celibate religious and priest, the struggles and solutions close friends have shared with me, the touching breakthroughs I have witnessed in counseling and spiritual direction (including group therapy), the intense anger and discouragement generated by cases of child sexual abuse, the lack of satisfactory answers in many cases.

Let us take the three points of this paper in order, namely, sexuality, celibacy and the religious quest. We begin with the first.


1 I. SEXUALITY

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May be it is a good idea to start with a personal testimony, rather than with statistics and bibliographies. The following passages are from a letter I received from a religious sister after she took part in a seminar I gave for clergy and religious on “Psycho-Sexual Development.” She wrote:

“Most of the religious, especially sisters, are facing many problems in this area. But they just can’t speak about it. They suppress the questions, and, as a result, react in a very different way, and at times hurt others, too.

“All of us have feelings, desires and longings. We are not in touch with our feelings. We are afraid of sharing them, even with a close friend. We live an artificial life, by hiding our feelings and desires deep down. It will help us if we were to speak it out to someone we trust. We are so frightened to discuss our sexual problems. From my own experience I learned that, once we are liberated from these fears, we can build a wonderful community; we can live a joyful and peaceful spiritual life. More than all that, in our apostolate, we can do wonderful service. People (especially the poor) can experience warmth and love in us. We become fully alive, joyful and loving towards people. The Lord is leading me to this.”

Psycho-sexual maturity—whether as married persons or as celibates—is about becoming fully alive, joyful and loving men and women. In fact, it was defined in the American Catholic theological association’s study of human sexuality as becoming a person who is loving, joyful, free, responsible and life-giving. What are the issues involved in this type of human becoming? What is it we need to learn and to keep in mind?

Sexuality is one of the central, pervasive and powerful dimensions of our human nature, a core dimension which affects us in the way we are and in the way we think, feel, relate, make choices, see our social roles and pray. There is no moment or setting in which we can set our gender/sexuality aside. There is no neutral or a-sexual way of being human, or situations in which we can pretend to be sexless. In fact, if we want to look all the levels at which our gender/sexual nature affects us, we would have to analyze about a dozen areas, beginning with our chromosomes and going all the way to the legal and religious apsepcts of our life. (See: Francoeur, on what it means to realize our sexual identity; Kelsey, on the many levels at which sexuality affects us.)

Sexuality is also at the root some of the deepest and most beautiful realities in life—family, parenthood, tenderness, passion, falling in love, life-long fidelity, … It is also the fire behind much of our literature, paintings, sculpture, music, theatre and cinema. Take away the chemistry between women and men, and you amputate the best things of life. To begin with, each of us is the fruit of the sexual passion between our parents, and our deepest experiences in life are linked to our bodies and to emotions, coloured, in varying degrees, by gender-specific relationships.

There is much wisdom about sexuality in the world’s literature, art and religious lore. Exploration of human sexuality did not begin with Freud or contemporary psychology. Depending on the main assumptions and core values of a culture and the convictions (and constraints) of the writers, sexuality was presented as something beautiful, even divine, or as something degraded and degrading. These views depended, too, on a person’s or culture’s perceptions of the human body, and on how optimistic or pessimistic one’s general view of human nature was. Thus, within Christianity, for instance, we get a negative view of sex and marriage in Augustine, and a more positive view in Thomas Aquinas; such views depended also on a particular theologian’s view of original sin and justification. If a theological writer held that original sin corrupted human beings to the core, leaving no lovable traits unless redeemed by Christ, then one’s whole view of what is “natural” (including sexuality) would tend to be low, bad, tainted. One consequence of such theological anthropologies was this: in a male-dominated culture, women were presented as helpers or as dangerous temptresses. We get these contradictions in other religious traditions as well.

Cultural differences in this areas are vast and at times bewildering for the uninitiated. I remember the shock a young Indian seminarian experienced when he was asked for a favour by a young woman in the African parish where he was working. “What favour?” he wanted to know. “Give me a child,” was her request. Theirs is a culture that places a premium on fertility, not on virginity.

So, too, the meaning of modesty or even nudity has very different connotations in different cultures, say, India, Europe or Japan.

A symptom of the negative connotations of sexuality, and of how sexual faults came to dominate thinking, to the neglect of much more important issues (like justice, apartheid, slavery, etc), is the use of the term “immoral.” In the minds of many people, it refers to sexual misconduct. There was a time not long ago in the history of Catholic moral theology when the minutest failures in the area of chastity would be discussed in detail (as always grievous sins), to the neglect of far more horrendous crimes, such as ethnic cleansing, mass murder or bonded labour.

Sexuality and its expressions are deeply linked to other aspects of social living. It is closely associated, for instance, with money and production. A disproportionate number of the worlds’ poor are women; so much so, there is the current talk of the feminization of poverty. So, too, female infanticide and female feticide in India are linked to questions of dowry and the low status women have in our society. To give another example, the apocalyptically disastrous spread of AIDS in Africa is partly linked to the inability of the women to say No to sexual activity even if the male partner is infected.

Here is one more example of the nexus between sexuality and other factors. One of the reasons for the church’s preference for a celibate clergy was economic: church property would remain with the church if the priests and bishops were unmarried.

***

The contemporary scene is different in a number of ways. Changing social relationships (e.g., the role of women in society and their educational level), better medicines (which help more babies to survive and adults to live longer lives) and new technologies (e.g., contraceptives) have changed the way sexual relationships take place. People are more aware of their rights, and more sensitive to the abuse of human rights, especially by authority figures. Religious texts and leaders are not automatically the decisive voice in helping people make decisions. All this has changed the way we see human sexuality and choices connected with it, such as, celibacy, or choosing the single life as a lay person.


What are the issues receiving particular attention today? Let me list a few:

  1. Feminism and the Women’s Movement: The serious issues raised by thinking women and men about the situation of women, and the need to create a society of real equals, where relationships are based on mutuality, not on hierarchy or oppression. Feminism and the women’s movement are expected to be the most influential social movements of the twenty-first century. Most of us, even without thinking, tend to think in “hierarchical” (higher-lower) categories, largely unaware of the injustice in such a position. Both in civil society and in religious circles, men tend to make the rules, and expect to be treated as “higher.” As an Indian nurse working in the US told me: “Over here, I feel respected as a woman and as a professional. I did not get either in India.” (For a more thorough discussion of this point, see: Chittister, Conn, Carr, Schneiders.)

  2. Sex education: The need for right information in matters relating to sex, and helps in making right choices, given the wide range of choices available. There is much confusion in this area. People often doubt whether what they are experiencing or doing is normal. According to Eugene Kennedy, the most frequently asked question brought to counselors in the area of sexuality is: “Am I normal?” (For other questions, and their frequency, see: Sipe, Celibacy.)

  3. Children and sex: The protection of minors from sexual exploitation by adults. This refers to real life contacts and to mediated encounters, like those occurring on the Internet. You must be well aware of child pornography and the child prostitution, and of international gangs involved in pederasty. The Internet, that incredible source of information on almost any topic under the sun, is also a veritable snake pit for children, who are lured into sexual contacts by grown-ups.

  4. Violence against women: The violence committed against women in most societies, and the need of creating greater awareness in this area, and measures to counteract this ill-treatment. Visitors to India are appalled by the way women are treated in buses, trains and other settings. Family violence against women is commoner than admitted.

  5. Childhood Sexual Abuse: Since a high proportion of women—up to a third, or even more—seem to have been sexually abused as children, the urgent need to protect girls from such abuse, especially in family settings. The commonest form of abuse is that of girls by men; next, that of boys by men; the third, of girls by women; and the last (least common), of boys by women. In the countries where we have studies (mostly Western nations, and now India, too), the largest incidence of sexual abuse is in the home. The perpetrator is an adult known to the victim; in most cases, it is a family member. (There is much information available on sexual abuse. For India, see: Virani, and RAHI; for a whole book on Catholic priests involved in pedophilia, see: Berry; for the extent of the abuse by clergy, see: Greeley; for related topics: see: Cheston, Sperry, Loftus, Pinto.)

  6. Boundaries in the Helping Professions: Another area where awareness has led to action, including legislation, is “sex in the forbidden zone”—the sexual involvement of therapists, teachers, clergy and counselors with those who come to them for help. (See: Rutter, May). The recent exposure of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy that has rocked the American church and rendered a number of dioceses bankrupt is not just a gripping news item. It showed a multi-headed hydra with far-reaching consequences, affecting the victims for years and tarnishing the reputation of clergy and bishops. Though this quake has its epicenter in the US, it is a disaster we all need to learn from. Some Americans dioceses have distributed in parishes norms on right boundaries in pastoral practice. (Much information is available, both in print and on the Internet.)

  7. Treatment: Need of treatment for victims for sexual abuse. In India, our treatment facilities are totally inadequate. There is also the taboo against reporting the abuse, to safeguard the reputation of the girl and of her family. In a convent situation, a candidate or sister may not report the abuse, for fear of being sent away. (See: Cheston, Pinto, Bass & Davis, Covington)

  8. Celibacy: Higher? Given the greater understanding and appreciation of sexuality, the rethinking on the meaning and practice of celibacy. If sex is good and holy, and marriage a vocation to holiness, why opt for celibacy? Why promote it? If, as Vatican II taught us, all have the same vocation to holiness, why join religious orders, or opt for life-long celibacy? (Wittberg)

  9. Formation to celibacy: The need of more adequate training for celibacy. It is not enough to exhort people to celibacy, or quote the examples of saints (since saints are found in all walks of life). What do I need to live a happy and loving life as a celibate today? The older types of formation (based largely on avoiding contacts and “occasions of sin,” or controlling a person’s life through a series of minute permissions) are no longer adequate. (Sipe 3 & 4)


Let me end this section with a few questions:

  1. What is our view of human sexuality? How comfortable are we with our sexual nature? What images are we conveying to those in our care?

  2. Gender, like intelligence, laws, money or ethnicity, can be a source of power or a tool of oppression. What are the areas of gender-based oppression in our society and church? What steps do we need to take to create a society of mutuality?

  3. What do we need to do prevent the sexual exploitation of children?

  4. How widespread is the sexual abuse of girls in our society? What needs to be done to prevent it?

  5. How shall we provide treatment and support for victims of sexual abuse?

  6. What helps can be offered to treat the abuser?

  7. What is the responsibility of a religious or educational institution where sexual abuse has occurred?

  8. Do we have a code of conduct for staff in our institutions? Does it include necessary guidelines to prevent and remedy sexual harassment and abuse?

  9. Do we have (and need) a code of conduct for clergy, teachers, therapists, etc, regarding sexual boundaries?

  10. What do our institutions offer by way of sexual education to our students and trainees? Does it include also realistic instruction on diseases, such as AIDS?

  11. Are we persons in whom young persons have confidence in exploring their anxieties, questions and doubts?

  12. What about ministry among the most marginalized, such as prostitutes? (See the work of Genesis Center, Chicago, set up by Edwina Gateley.)

  13. India will soon have the dubious distinction of having the largest number of AIDS patients in the world. The country, having first denied the problem, is neither prepared, nor probably interested, in helping this group. Nor can most patients afford the very expensive medicines, that would at least alleviate the symptoms. What is the church’s responsibility here?



1.1 II. CELIBACY

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I will restrict my discussion to the Catholic scene.

Celibacy in the church has a colourful history. It does not belong the core of Jesus’ teaching, though later writers on celibacy took His life as a model. The apostles or the other leaders of the early church did not insist on celibacy. All this is too well known to need proof.

Things changed later. How? In the East, the Council of Trullo in 692 AD insisted on celibacy for Bishops, while priests, deacons and subdeacons were allowed to marry.

In the West, the development was different. Celibacy was prescribed in the fourth century, but did not come into general practice. More legislation followed in the fifth and sixth centuries, as well as in the Carolingian period. It was probably not before the twelfth century that the law could be imposed on a large scale. The Council of Trent insists on celibacy for the clergy.

What about religious? Celibacy as an option existed for Christians right from the beginning. Some chose to be virgins, even before the organization of religious orders. You find them in large numbers and in communities after the founding of religious congregations. The numbers embracing this state fluctuated. There have been periods of great expansion and times of profound cynicism and diminishment. To quote one striking example, many religious orders were suppressed and the houses sold during the French Revolution. But more religious congregations of women were founded in the one hundred and fifty years following the Revolution than in all the previous epochs of church history. (For details, see my two-part article, “The Cost of Discipleship” )

Why did men and women choose celibate religious life? The motivations vary. Together with what we can call “religious” or “spiritual” reasons, there were also understandable socio-economic factors, e.g., the chance for better education, status within the community, escape from the difficulties of family life. In the time of the immigrant Catholic church in the United States, for instance, the priest was often the most educated person in the community, enjoying privileges which only the wealthy had access to, such as, having a cook, a maid, etc.

Celibates wrote the books, made the rules, proposed ideals of spirituality and taught how to reach there. They also created a language of “superiority”—the superiority of celibacy/virginity compared to the married state. Marriage was presented as a concession to human weakness, or as the means for procreation and upbringing of children. In fact, there are attacks today on this “aura” celibates enjoyed; some feel this made lay people give undue deference to celibates, a situation which a number of celibates abused. The subheading of a recent article against celibacy by an American Catholic lay man goes thus: “By endowing priests with an aura of discipline and trust, celibacy fosters pedophilia and facilitates cover-ups.”(Willis)

A change in the “celibacy is superior” sort of thinking is a serious challenge to the celibate state. Patricia Wittberg, whose sociological studies on religious life are among the most respected, looks at about what happened in the recent decades, at least in the West. Analyzing articles in Review for Religious for years, , she finds that earlier articles put virginity above marriage. Things changed from that to the following type of view: “As the director of a psychological treatment center for members of religious orders puts it: ‘We find that many of the neuroses we treat are aggravated by styles of spirituality and community life that encourage religious…to try to be happy without giving and receiving genuine affection and warm love.’” (Wittberg, 250).

Wittberg goes on to add that the celibate life remains very much on the defensive today. Talk about its being an eschatological witness does not carry weight with most people. “It was not always clear how chastity witnessed to these concepts, and some authors vigorously denied that such were sufficient reasons to choose the lifestyle: ‘Frankly, I am not impressed by being told that I am an eschatological sign because I am a celibate. I really do not think that men and women who come into contact with me are going to experience a love that is redeeming simply by being aware that I can point to a way they will love one another in heaven.’” (Wittberg, 250-251).

Wittberg’s serious study leads her to the following conclusion, at least regarding the West today: “The evidence presented…strongly indicates that the future of most current religious orders is limited indeed. Their ideological frame has been destroyed far more thoroughly than during any of the previous decline periods and, more importantly, no commonly accepted alternative has been developed to take its place.” (Wittberg, 266).

As regards the practice of celibacy in the West, there are a number of studies, the most famous (and most controversial) being the one by Richard Sipe, a psychiatrist and former priest. According to Sipe, only about fifty per cent of the Catholic priests in the US live a celibate life. He believes in celibacy and has high regard for those who are faithful, but holds that the church does not provide a realistic and adequate formation for celibacy for its clergy. The data he presents are things we can all learn from. (Sipe: A Secret World)

Other Western studies take up questions like the exodus from the priesthood, or the thorny issue of homosexual priests. (Rice, Cozzens)

What is our situation in India?

I looked at this question in my address to the major superiors of religious in India two years ago (Mannath, “Cost of Discipleship”). India has, by and large, not faced a numerical crisis. This should not lull us into thinking that everything is fine. There are serious symptoms of disease. To quote just one, the study published in Jnana Deepa on the candidates joining seminaries and religious orders found that most candidates are second and third class students, who would not be able to get into a college on merit. Since a college degree is the minimum requirement for even a clerical post in India today, this means that our clergy and religious are (or soon will be) intellectually inferior to clerks, and far below the standard of a good number of lay people.

So, too, celibacy does not automatically make a person more God-centred or more committed in ministry. In fact, a recent Canadian study wanted to check whether these two traditional claims made by celibates are in fact. They compared the priests of a Catholic diocese and the married pastors of a Pentecostal church. On both the factors—time spent in prayer and time spent doing ministry—the celibates did not prove to be more committed than the married clergy. How far are our claims merely claims? What evidence is there that celibates are more service-oriented and more prayerful than married persons?

Since we do not have reliable data on the situation of Indian religious, let me go by impressions, based on personal experience and what I hear from formators and other friends among religious. Here are some of the issues celibates in India seem to be facing: 1

  1. The question of meaning. As a young priest told me: “The papers you all prepare, the chapter documents, the official announcements—that is not our reality. Many of us feel that this life is not worth pursuing. Had it not been for our parents, a number of us would leave.” I do not know how widespread such feelings are, but they do exist.

To quote another case, when a young member of a religious order left and married, some of his class mates told him, “At least you have found something worthwhile.” While we cannot generalize from such a case, we need to see how widespread such feelings are.

  1. The question of intimacy. Unlike young people in the West, most young men and women in India join religious life without any prior experience of heterosexual friendship, or even mixing. For most, the first chances for real contacts outside the religious community are after their final vows. Many feel both drawn to the joys of intimacy, and afraid of others’ disapproval. There is much confusion in this area, and much hiding. (Carroll and Dyckman, King, Mahoney, Whitehead)

  2. Awareness of one’s sexuality. For women religious, in particular, it is possible to go through the novitiate and the early years of formation without having serious struggles in the area of sexuality. The power of their sexual feelings hits many of them when they are in their 30s, that is, several years after their final vows. As one religious sister told me: “I told my younger sister, who is keen on joining a convent: ‘Don’t be in a hurry. Finish your college. I too was eager to join, like you. I was young, as you are now. I am thirty-five now, and I long for a man.’ We do not even have people to talk to, when we face these issues.” (Kraft, Clark)

  3. Healing for victims of sexual abuse. We have no fool-proof statistics, but the following impressionistic figure should make any of us sit up and take notice. In the two annual meetings of the Gathering of Catholic Psychologists of India, a number of sisters working with candidates to religious orders in India presented their assessment of the prevalence of sexual abuse. According to every one of them, the percentage of candidates to convents who were sexually abused before entering religious life is very high. All of them put it as more than fifty per cent. That is a shockingly high number! What is being done to help them? What needs to be done? (Bass & Davis, Covington)

  4. Helping those who want to leave. In our culture, it is difficult for a seminarian or religious who is unhappy and out of place to leave and start again. This is particularly difficult for women. Hence, it is more than likely that a number of persons stay in, not because of a choice of celibacy, or commitment to religious ideals, but out of a fear of leaving. What can be done to help such persons to make happy choices?

  5. Training for celibacy. Both the initial and the on-going formation to celibacy needs to be more realistic and much better thought out. For this, we also need to train formators in this area. How many of us have faced our own sexuality, our deep desires and needs? How many of us are comfortable accompanying another person in this area? Many so-called formators are persons with degrees in a theoretical subject, with little experience of personal growth themselves, and even less training in helping another on their personal journey. (Sipe, Mannath)

  6. Boundaries and professional ethics: As we know, a number of religious orders and dioceses in the West have been devastated (financially and in reputation), through the highly publicized cases of sexual abuse of children by clergy and religious. We need to learn from their bitter experience—to remedy existing evils, and to prevent further exploitation. (Berry, Greeley, Rutter)

  7. Clearer Links between celibacy and a simple life: A rich celibate, as Henri Nouwen would say, is like a fat sprinter—a contradiction in terms. Celibacy is not the same as being a bachelor or spinster. It cannot be reduced merely, or mostly, to abstaining from genital sex. Its heart is a great love that reaches out and builds loving community. It is totally illogical to claim that one enjoys total self-control in this one area of life, while allowing oneself all the enjoyments than money can buy, or that one can be a pleasure-seeking narcissist in every other area, and be committed lover in this one area. That does not gel.

Here is how a priest describes his earlier understanding of celibacy. “From what I was taught about celibacy, as well as from the example of those who taught me, this is what I understood about celibacy: that every pleasure is allowed me, except having sex. Now I see what an absurd concept this is. Celibacy does not make sense except within a way of life that is sufficiently ascetical.”

  1. Selection of candidates for the priesthood and religious life: The situation is far from healthy. After my address to the national assembly of major superiors of religious two years ago, in which I critiqued some of the methods used by religious congregations for “roping in” fresh recruits, I thought I would be under fire for my unflattering comments. Instead, several superiors came up to me and told me privately, “The actual situation is worse than what you said.”



III. THE RELIGIOUS/SPIRITUAL QUEST:

To be religious/spiritual, is “to dream the impossible dream, to fight the unbeatable foe, to reach the unreachable star…to follow that star, no matter how hopeless, no matter how far; to fight for the right, without question of pause, to be willing to march into hell for a heavenly cause.”

The fire that makes us go forward in this quest is sacred.

It is not a set of rules; it is a passion—a life-giving passion.

***

We are blessed (or cursed) with “an unquenchable fire, a restlessness, a longing, a disquiet, a hunger, a loneliness, a gnawing nostalgia, a wildness that cannot be tamed, a congenital all-embracing ache that lies at the center of human experience and is the ultimate force that drives everything else” (Rolheiser, 4).

No wonder the mystics choose sexual imagery as the best suited to convey their all-consuming hunger, thirst and love. These are two passions, distinct but deeply linked, each mirroring the other. No wonder a number of psalms sound like love songs; they are love songs, in the best sense of the term. “For you I long; for you my soul is thirsting; my body pines for you, like a dry, weary land without water” (psalm 63).

“Spirituality is about what we do with the fire inside of us, about how we channel or eros…It has to give us energy and fire, so that we do not lose our vitality, and all sense of the beauty and joy of living. Thus, the opposite of the spiritual person is not a person who rejects the idea of God…The opposite of being spiritual is to have no energy, is to have lost all zest for living.” (Rolheiser, 11).

How do we keep the fire burning and keep ourselves glued together, without falling apart?—these are the basic questions of religion and spirituality.


In James Fowler’s study on the stages of faith, the highest stage is that of universalizing faith. In it, a person’s sense of affiliation goes beyond one’s family, religious community, nation, etc. One truly has a universal heart. These “universal lovers” run a danger, though. Guess what? Martyrdom at the hands of their own people, who do not understand or accept this type of love. No wonder Jesus or Mahatma Gandhi was killed, and not by outsiders.2

Celibacy’s charm is this kind of universal love, seen in the man or woman who truly makes the people of one’s mission one’s own. Haven’t we all seen such celibates, people with a large heart, whose love is larger than walls, whom anyone can trust, who makes not such distinctions as “mine” and “not mine.” One need not, of course, be a celibate to reach this level of love. I remember Bhalwant Singh Dalwari, who recited this prayer at the World Conference of Religion: “When I have found Thee, there is no ‘mine’ and ‘not mine’; everybody is mine.” His prayer impressed me, not only or mainly for the beauty of the thought, but mainly because it reflected the speaker’s life choice. He resigned from the Indian Foreign Service and dedicated himself to the care of leprosy patients—not in his native Punjab, but in faraway Maharashtra; the patients are not members of his ethnic group.

We live in a culture and nation where religious symbols, activities and places abound, where “spirituality” is a much bandied about term. What we need to learn from it is its wisdom to look beyond mere appearances to what is really real; to pursue what is worth pursuing, to develop an inner freedom that comes from wisdom.

What we can contribute to our country is a valid and challenging understanding of religion and spirituality. Spirituality, if genuine, should go far beyond ritual and dogma, to a life that radiates the divine. The godliness of any person cannot be directly checked. The outcome of inner experiences can, and must, be visible.

A spirituality is realistic and true if it affects me positively at a personal, interpersonal and social level. If I am “spiritual” or “religious”, I will be a person of integrity, loving and forgiving in my relationships and committed to justice in my social dealings. God cannot guide me and ask me to be crooked, unloving or unjust.3

In the area we are discussing, namely, sexual wholeness, integrity will imply facing my sexual reality as it is, without pretense or false claims, or denying my woundedness. At the interpersonal level, it will imply a genuine concern for the other, whether this other be my intimate partner, or a friend, or a child. Human beings need to show love (and receive love) tangibly, much of it physically, and give and receive healing repeatedly. In all love, there are pain and hurts. No one is a perfect lover; all love involves pain. At the social level, a religious understanding of sexuality rejects any exploitation of human beings on the basis of sex or gender, neither reducing the other to a sex object, nor treating women as inferior, just because they are women.

The Catholic church has the largest body of full-time, life-long celibates, a veritable force for doing good, if love is the fuel behind our celibate commitment. Our structures, rules and routine can be used in the service of love, if we are men and women of inner freedom, who have found meaning and joy, who radiate enthusiasm and transparent goodness. If we were to live our lives with deep love and a clear vision, what an incredible power for good we religious and priests could be! On the other hand, in the hands of unloving or power-hungry (or sexually frustrated) men and women, these same structures and rules can become instruments of oppression. Celibates can be the most loving of people or the most cruel. History carries examples of both. If not “maintained” (like a good road) as a channel of God’s love, celibacy degenerates into a barren state of being merely unmarried. Then, our unhealthy drives will easily take over, undeterred by the balancing elements of family love and care of children. Power, jealousy, pleasure and superficiality can take the place of what love was meant to fill. These will not fill the heart, but they give the impression of slaking our thirst at least for a time.


IV. CONCLUSION

Sexuality is life, energy, a divine fire pulling us out of ourselves towards the other. Depending one where we are on our spiritual/human journey, we will use this fire in loving or unloving ways, give it tender or destructive expressions. Like most people, we will at times wonder whether the pulls we feel, the longings we experience, the experiences we have gone through, are “normal” and life-giving. We all need a loving heart and listening ear to whom to entrust our fears, our doubts and our longings. All longings are, ultimately, for the one great Love for which our hearts were made, but we do not reach this Love (or this Lover) directly. That Love places smaller, more tangible loves on our path, for us to learn from, to be healed by, to give ourselves to in trust. Sexuality, whether in marriage or celibacy, is about building loving communities, and in a personal and shared search for what truly matters. Human sexuality both roots us in our bodies, and points beyond sex to deeper and deeper longings. Celibates or married, men or women, we all carry this fire within us, a fire none of us ever masters fully. It makes us more alive, helps us to live life with passion and to relate in tenderness and compassion. Celibacy is one of its many valid expressions, an expression that is full of meaning if lived out in inner freedom and pursuit of a dream. It is more about who we become, rather than about what we do.

Once a very fine religious sister I know received letters from a number of young women with whom she had worked. These college students were not Catholics, and did not speak of celibacy or of religion. But they did say something that is very meaningful. Many of them wrote to her: “When I grow up, I want to be a woman like you.” This is what sexual maturity is all about—to be life-giving human being, whose life models what living and loving are about. This is also what spirituality is—to pursue what is worthwhile, and to live lovingly, wisely and responsibly in one’s concrete setting. Religions are meant to be channels for that wisdom. May we be honest women and men, in touch with our human reality, alive, loving and wise.

Poet Rumi provides us with an apt quotation to conclude this discussion on sexuality, celibacy and the religious quest—intertwined realities that must be captured with everything we have got: body, mind and heart:

“Wherever you may be, in whatever situation or circumstance you may find yourself, strive always to be a lover, and a passionate lover. Once you possess your heart in love, you will always be a lover, in the tomb, at the Resurrection, and in Paradise forever and ever.”4





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VIDEOS

Becoming a Celibate Lover.

Celibacy: Its Values and Challenges. An Interview with Father James Gill, S.J., M.D.

Men Vowed and Sexual: Conversations about Celibate Chastity. Featuring Religious Priests and Brothers Sharing Their Own Lived Experience. (The six tapes are on these topics: 1. Intimacy; 2. Men & Women in Relationship; 3. Falling in Love; 4. Homosexuality; 5. Male Midlife and Generativity; 6. Mystery of Celibate Chastity.)


Father Joe Mannath SDB is an associate professor at Madras University and an adjunct professor at Catholic Theological Union, Chicago. His experience includes university and college teaching and guiding research, as well as youth ministry, seminars for clergy, religious and educators, teaching in different countries, counseling and spiritual direction. For more information on him and his writings, see: www.joemannath.org



1 Two research studies, just begun, will hopefully throw much-needed light on the real situation of religious in India today. One is a research on family background and religious motivation, being undertaken under the auspices of the Salesian Psychological Association by Peter Lourdes SDB, Jose Parappully SDB, Cynthia Gonzalves FMM and Joe Mannath SDB. The other is a Ph. D. dissertation which Brother Pavul Raj (a Montfort Brother) is starting under my direction. It is going to be a psycho-social study on Indian religious, with special reference to Tamilnadu. Both he and I find that, when religious, or former religious or lay collaborators of religious hear about this research, they share many insights and experiences spontaneously with us. A sad and striking revelation: A large number of these outpourings are, to say the least, negative!

2 For a detailed discussion, see: James Fowler, Stages of Faith. For a quick outline, see: David Wulff, Psychology of Religious: Classic and Contemporary Views, pp……

3 Two of the best texts I have found on a realistic spirituality today are both by Donal Dorr, an Irish missionary working in Africa. The first, Spirituality and Justice, explains the meaning of spirituality and links it to the burning issues of justice. The second (Integral Spirituality) presents the different aspects of a balanced spirituality, with a series of group exercises for teaching spirituality.

4 Quoted in Andrew Harvey, The Direct Path (New York: Broadway Books, 2000), p. 137.

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Joe Mannath: Sexuality, Celibacy & the Religious Quest