
To become a member of DignityUSA Columbus Chapter, just join through our national organization, DignityUSA. To get started, visit their membership page.

To become a member of DignityUSA Columbus Chapter, just join through our national organization, DignityUSA. To get started, visit their membership page.

Official Catholic teaching requires that homosexual people abstain from sex. The Church also teaches that all moral decisions must be based on a well-formed conscience, taking into consideration official Church teachings. To do otherwise would be immoral.
It is our conviction that neither Scripture nor Tradition nor natural law theory nor human science nor personal experience convincingly supports official Catholic teaching about the immorality of homosexual acts. Accordingly, and after much soul-searching, we have formed consciences that respectfully differ from official Church teaching and believe our spiritual health depends upon the formation of intimate relationships. In this respect we are not unlike many married couples who do not accept the official teaching on contraception.

The Dignity retreat is Saturday, Oct. 4 at Shepherd's Corner. It ouwld start at 10am. Mass will be at 4pm. We would like everyone to bring a bible, if possible. Anyone who is at the Dignity liturgy this coming Sunday, Sept. 28, can RSVP verbally to Mike and me.

Homily given by Mike Tynan on July 27, 2008
The other night Norma and I went to see Mamma Mia, a light musical based on the music of ABBA (not to be confused with the Aramaic word for Daddy.) The plot revolves around a young girl trying to determine which of her mother’s three former boyfriends is her father. In what is probably the most serious moment of the show, the girl is confronted by her fiancé, who tells her that her identity does not depend upon who her father was, but rather, what is inside her. In other words, she is her own person and that is why he loves her. Now what does this have to do with our readings?
Thanks to the efforts of Julia Bingman, we have use of the Methodist Theological School in Ohio for our annual gathering on Sunday, August 17, at 5 p.m.
The DGSCA will hold a worship service and our potluck and sharing will follow

By: Andy Humm
Pope Benedict XVI, author of the Roman Catholic Church's hard line against homosexuality, will be met by some gay dissent during his trips to Washington, DC, April 15-17, and New York, April 18-20, but nowhere near the direct razzing he received in 1988 as Cardinal Josef Ratzinger. At that time, his visit to St. Peter's Church at Citicorp's Midtown headquarters building was so disrupted by gay and AIDS activists that his planned speech was cancelled.

By David Crary
NEW YORK (AP) - Pope Benedict XVI may not see them or hear them, but aggrieved Roman Catholic activists hope his U.S. visit this week will help them draw attention to issues ranging from the ordination of women and gay rights to sex abuse by priests and the Vatican ban on contraception.

The following is a talk written by Joseph Gentilini, given at the retreat on October 13, 2007.
Two Main Points:
When we sang a refrain from Psalm 139 and then read it a few minutes ago, did we see how clear it is that God knows us intimately - through and through - because God created us in love. I would like to suggest this morning that God invites us to know ourselves intimately, to accept and love ourselves AS WE ARE, and then to take the risk to share who we are with others and also with God.

Commentary by Chuck Colbert on the new "DignityUSA Letter on the Pastoral
Care of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) People 2007" can
be found at http://www.dignityusa.org/pastoral/colbert.html.
"Sowing Division in a Divided World," A Statement from Catholic Church Reform Groups,
can be viewed at http://www.dignityusa.org/news/2007/070720cor.html
Dignity/Columbus meets on the second and fourth Sundays of each month at 5:00 PM at First Congregational Church, 444 East Broad Street, adjacent to the Columbus Museum of Art in downtown Columbus.
Enter through the side door facing the museum. Parking in rear. Mass will be followed by refreshments, conversation and an occasional meeting.