From http://www.newoxfordreview.org/reviews.jsp?did=1113-gardiner
Book of Gomorrah: An Eleventh-Century Treatise Against Clerical Homosexual Practices.
By St. Peter Damian. Translated and edited by Pierre Payer.
Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
108 pages.
$38.95.
By the time he published the Book of Gomorrah
around A.D. 1049, St. Peter Damian had been preaching for some time
against homosexuality. He told Pope St. Leo IX, to whom he directed this
work, that he needed his support against those who despised him for
this preaching. While others in authority remained silent, he lamented,
homosexuality kept spreading: “Vice against nature creeps in like a
cancer and even touches the order of consecrated men.”
That homosexuality was indeed a problem at that time may be inferred
from the fact that the vice was addressed at the Council of Rheims
(A.D. 1049) in the canon de sodomitico vitio. Also, Damian
received, in reply to his treatise, what he had requested from Leo IX,
“a decretal writing as to which of those guilty of these vices ought to
be deposed irrevocably from ecclesiastical orders; and to whom, truly
taking the view of discretion, this office can be mercifully granted.”
In the Book of Gomorrah Damian says he has preached against
this sin “with a whole fountain of tears” because the sinner he
addresses sheds none at all: “O miserable soul, I weep for you with so
many lamentations because I do not see you weeping. I prostrate myself
on the ground for you because I see you maliciously standing up after
such a grave fall, even to the point of trying for the pinnacle of an
ecclesiastical order.” Damian weeps from “fraternal compassion” because
he sees a “noble soul made in the image and likeness of God and joined
with the most precious blood of Christ” cast down from a great height of
dignity and glory. Any Christian who commits sodomy, he explains,
surpasses in sin the men of Sodom, for he “defies the very commands of
evangelical grace.”
Damian reports that he has endured persecution for preaching against
this sin, and he begs the Pope to use his sacred authority to quiet
“the complaint of perverse men” who reason that “a statement brought
forward by one person…is rejected by others as prejudice.” At one point
he addresses the dissenters as men “who are angry with me and who hate
to listen to this writer.” He tells the Pope that some of them “accuse
me of being a traitor and an informer on the crime of a brother,” while
others think it “valid to attack me who am on the attack” and to “accuse
me of presumptuous prattle.” They also denounce him for not being
“afraid of picking on Christians.”
No surprise, Damian observes, that he is not believed and that his
“admonition is rejected,” since God’s own command is “taken lightly by
the puffed-up heart of the reprobate.” His opponents even ignore the
scriptural verses that condemn homosexuality because “the rashness of
the complainers [does not] give in to divine testimony.” Still, he hopes
that when the Pope speaks out, “the sick Church” will rise once again
to her “rightful vigor.”
In his reply, Leo IX gives Damian his full support and warns those
who would dare to criticize or question his papal decree concerning
sodomy that they will be putting themselves in danger of being deposed
from their rank. He agrees with Damian that severity against this sin is
needed, that he who does not attack it encourages it, and that silence
about it is rightly thought to incur guilt.
In this remarkable treatise, Damian condemns priests in authority
who have been too indulgent with these sinners. As a result of their
laxity, priests who have “fallen into this wickedness with eight or even
ten other equally sordid men” have remained in their ranks. And so the
sin has come “to be committed freely” without its practitioners fearing
the loss of their priestly faculties. Damian calls this negligence
rather than love because it allows a wound to spread in a neighbor’s
heart, a wound “from which, I have no doubt, he dies cruelly.”
Therefore, Damian himself will not “neglect to cure” that wound with the
“surgery of words,” for if he remains silent, he too will deserve
punishment. Rather than “fear the hatred of the depraved or the tongues
of detractors,” Damian fears God, who warns him through the mouth of the
prophet Ezekiel, “If you see your brother doing evil and you do not
correct him, I will require his blood from your hand” (3:20). Damian
will not be silenced, no matter how many tell him to put the sword of
his tongue in the sheath of silence: “Who am I to see such a harmful
outrage growing up among the sacred orders and, as a murderer of
another’s soul, preserve the stricture of silence, and to dare to await
the reckoning of divine severity? Do I not begin to be responsible for a
guilt whose author I never was?”
Citing St. Paul’s condemnation not only of those who commit sodomy
but also of those who “approve” it in others (Rom. 1:32), Damian
observes that his adversaries’ silence can be interpreted as consent:
Anyone who would “censure me when I dispute against mortal vice,” he
says, should consider that Damian is trying to “promote fraternal
salvation, lest while he persecute the reprover he might seem to favor
the delinquent.” Although maligned and threatened for accusing his
brothers, Damian refuses to be intimidated: “I would rather be cast
innocent into the cistern with Joseph, who accused his brothers to his
father for a terrible crime, than to be punished by the vengeance of
divine fury with Eli, who saw the evils of his sons and was silent.” He
even summons others to join him in his all-out battle to reform the
clergy: “Whoever sees himself as a soldier of Christ should fervently
gird himself to confound this vice, and not hesitate to wipe it out with
all his strength. He should pierce it with the sharpest verbal arrows
wherever it is found and try to slay it.” He will thus free the captive
from “bonds by which he is held in slavery.”
Although it is “clearer than light” that homosexuals should not
serve as priests, Damian says, some might plead “imminent necessity” and
argue that there is “no one to perform a sacred function in a church.”
In reply, he says that making shepherds of such “carnal men” will
“result in the destitution of a whole people.” Their “burning ambition”
to be priests is sure to “ensnare the people of God” in their own ruin.
Although they may seem useful for their learning, they will lead the
flock astray: “If the right order of ecclesiastical discipline is
confused in a learned man, it is a wonder it is kept by the ignorant.”
By the example of their presumption, these sinners lead the simple onto
the “path of error” on which they walk with the “swollen foot of pride.”
What fruitfulness can be expected from men engulfed by “thick, dark
blindness”? They have lost their “interior eyes” and cannot see the
gravity of what they have done. Like the men of Sodom who tried to break
into Lot’s house and seize the angels whom they mistook for young men,
these carnal men “try to break in violently on the angels” by
approaching God “through the offices of sacred orders.” Damian warns
them: Take care lest you “provoke more sharply by your very prayers the
one you offend openly by acting evilly.”
At one point in his treatise, Damian refers to the ancient Council
of Ancyra (A.D. 314), which dealt with homosexuality in two canons. In
canon 16 the Church Fathers declared that laymen who had committed
sodomy before the age of 20 were not to receive communion for 20 years;
and those who had committed it after the age of 20, for 30 years. Damian
comments that if laymen in the early Church had to wait decades before
receiving communion again, how can a priest who commits the same sin in
his own day “be judged worthy not only to receive but even to offer and
to consecrate the sacred mysteries themselves?”
In canon 17 of the same Council, the Fathers ordered those who had
committed this sin to pray among the “demoniacs.” Damian comments: “When
a male rushes to a male to commit impurity, this is not the natural
impulse of the flesh, but only the goad of diabolical impulse. This is
why the holy fathers carefully established that sodomists pray together
with the deranged since they did not doubt that the sodomists were
possessed.” Lamenting that this sin “evicts the Holy Spirit from the
temple of the human heart,” the saint warns that it also “gnaws the
conscience as though with worms” and “sears the flesh as though with
fire.”
Even so, like a good pastor, Damian encourages these sinners to hope
in God’s mercy through repentance. He rallies them to take a bold stand
“against the importunate madness of lust. If the flame of lust burns to
the bones, the memory of perpetual fire should extinguish it
immediately.” He urges them not to let the “present satisfaction of one
organ” cause them to be cast body and soul into everlasting fire.
Calling them his brothers, he summons them to conversion: “If you were
unable to spend time with Abraham far from the Sodomites, it is
permitted to migrate with Lot, urged on by the destructive burning which
is near at hand.”
The Book of Gomorrah demonstrates that it was no easier a
thousand years ago than it is today to speak out against this vice and
to bring active homosexuals to repentance, to an acknowledgement of the
natural law, and to the practice of purity. In his little treatise, St.
Peter Damian warns us against keeping silence in the face of such a
growing evil and thus becoming complicit. He offers us a needed model of
how to speak out fearlessly against the corruptions of our age.
St. Peter Damian, pray for us!
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