Holy men - high on sexual sadism. |
Contributors
to Guardian Letters 25 Feb 19, and religious leaders, currently mass debating about Catholic paedophilia, might consider that demanding unnatural
sexual behavior, celibacy, as decided at the Second
Lateran Council 1139, denying God’s imperatives for normal humans (which
produces boils) is a gross heresy against Nature. On Judgement Day, how will
its advocates explain why they were right to stone fornicators to death -
and how they think God got the design and urges of humans, his Children of God, so very wrong? Noel HODSON - Author
Below are just two of the hundreds of contemporary complaints against clergymen and nuns, of sexual abuse and of sadistic treatment of orphans and single-mothers. All these offences are directly caused by the very weird, strange and insane imposition of celibacy on religious orders. Celibacy is undeniably an unnatural curb on normal, innocent, healthy, God-given powers and behavioral-characteristics of well-balanced humans. Such prohibitions are not confined to medieval Catholics; they infect most religions, which prefer to meditate on controlling their parishioners' sex lives rather than on charity and doing good acts. The alleged self-proclaimed "pure" clergy then define normal behavior as impure "SIN" - and set about punishing the sinners, physically or psychologically - satisfying their own perverted sexual pleasures via sadism. It is long past the time that stone-age and medieval religious misconceptions were consigned to the dustbin of extremely bad ideas. Let's start with the ridiculous philosophy of celibacy. We might learn from chimpanzees, who don't kill fornicators, or ritualistically cut-off parts of their children's sex-organs.
BBC - NEWS 25 FEB 19 : Cardinal George Pell has been found guilty of sexual offences in Australia, making him the highest-ranking Catholic figure to receive such a conviction.
Pell abused two choir boys in the rooms of a Melbourne cathedral in 1996, a jury found. He had pleaded not guilty.
The verdict was handed down in December, but it could not be reported until now due to legal reasons.
Pell is due to face sentencing hearings from Wednesday. He has lodged an appeal against his conviction.
As Vatican treasurer, the 77-year-old Australian was one of the Church's most powerful officials.
His trial was heard twice last year because a first jury failed to reach a verdict.
A second jury unanimously convicted him of one charge of sexually penetrating a child under 16, and four counts of committing an indecent act on a child under 16.
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