It seems these days with all of the controversy going around with same-sex couples getting equal rights as the rest of the public, it makes all Christians seem very intolerant, but is that really the case? The supporters for these "legal discrimination" bills are always labeled as the 'religious right' of America. That makes it seem that if you're religious you are supporters of this type of legislation and thrown into a bad light with the real supporters. In a very simplistic but intriguing article Benedictine Sister Joan Chittister wrote an article for the National Catholic Reporter discussing the issues of homosexuality and their rights here in America. She does a great job using ethos, pathos, and logos to pull the reader in and keep them until the very end.
Sr. Chittister does a great job of grabbing the readers attention at the beginning by addressing what is wrong with religion, and what two kinds you are likely to run into. Using a little bit of humor she explains both kinds saying, "You never know which religion you are going to meet: the,'Do unto others as you would have others to do unto you' kind or the 'Get thee behind me, Satan' kind." (Chittister 28) She then starts laying out facts about the one who like to discriminate, giving historical examples of some of the segregation and deaths those led too, all while supposedly being done in the name of God. She talks about the bill in Arizona, criticizing the group that pushed for it, writing, "We have a new group developing, just as deadly, just as 'religious' as the ones that preceded it. This new group made their first great public move in Arizona in February, just after the country, in a great sweeping gesture of goodwill last fall, had voted against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation." (Chittister 28) Using facts and reason with emotion laced in the argument gives the piece such a compelling component.
Most of the authority that Sr. Chittister has goes along with her title. Having a nun write an article in a Catholic periodical allows the reader to have a sense of trust even before reading her work. Homosexuality is a huge topic in the Catholic community and a majority of Americans believe the Church casts out and distances itself from those who are openly gay. In reality it is the total opposite and Sr. Chittister does a great job showing how accepting that community can really be. "So now, the exclusionists whose 'religion' defies the very principles of the God who created the others as well as themselves are working again to sequester and silence those who are other and want services the rest of us take for granted in the public square." (28) Even Pope Francis talked about it this summer, "'If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?' Francis told reporters, speaking in Italian but using the English word 'gay'." (Donadio, Rachel) She makes it known that she has no selfish motives for writing this article and is also very well educated on the topic. She is what religion really should be about, excepting and loving our neighbors, with out judgment or segregation.
Works Cited
CHITTISTER, JOAN. "Don't get complacent, there are more." National Catholic Reporter 28 Mar. 2014: 28. Academic Search Premier. Web. 21 Oct. 2014.
Donadio, Rachel. "On Gay Priests, Pope Francis Asks, ‘Who Am I to Judge?’." The New York Times 29 July 2013. The New York Times Company. Web. 20 Oct. 2014. <http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/world/europe/pope-francis-gay-priests.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0>.








