HERE'S THE CHURCH
And here are the people
The Star Tribune and archdiocese spokesman Dennis McGrath got it wrong when it was said that Catholic treasures were stolen from the archbishop's residence (front page, July 1).
Catholic treasures aren't crosses too big for rappers to wear and gaudy rings. Catholic treasures are folks like the faithful nuns at the Carondolet Center; the parishioners of St. Joan of Arc who welcome all to worship every Sunday; and the musicians, liturgists, receptionists, priests and volunteers who lead worship and grow the church every day.
BETH-ANN BLOOM, WOODBURY
GAY PRIDE AND ST. JOAN
Healthy self-respect
Pride is a tricky word, and it should not be used to twist a viewpoint about the gay community. Katherine Kersten ("The real story behind the gay pride issue at St. Joan," June 30) asserts that "Christianity views pride as a sin," and therefore "'gay pride' is out of place in church."
The word "pride" can mean a sense of being puffed up, an inordinate conceit. But it can also mean simply a sense of reasonable self-respect, the opposite of "shame." For so long, much of society has wagged the finger of shame at folks who discover themselves to be gay, that a term like "gay pride" has surfaced in order to reclaim that healthy sense of self-respect. It does not mean the sinful type of pride that Kersten so viciously attaches to it.
And regarding the tenets of the church, this Christian believes that the love that Jesus taught us to display is clothed in the full feeling of self-worth that each individual finds in an honest and loving relationship, with another human, and with God. If Kersten's interpretation of Christianity is limited to the sinful elements of humanity, then she has some other study to do as well.
GARY CLEMENTS, ST. PAUL
Leave or stay, but love The Catholic Church, like all religions, is a human institution inspired by human ideas about God and the nature of reality. Perhaps the protesters at St. Joan of Arc would better apply their energies to finding a church that espouses their own ideas about God and the nature of reality. Belonging to this church is not coerced, it is a choice.