On ten issues on which Gallup has measured public attitudes for years – since 2001, in most cases – the level of public approval hit a new high in early May.
The issues include birth control (91% approval), sex between an unmarried man and woman (69%), gay or lesbian relations (63%), pregnancy outside marriage (62%), and pornography (36%).
Even polygamy registered a new high, though admittedly still pretty low – just 17%.
To a great extent, the explanation for numbers like these lies in the tyrannical dynamic of unfettered sex. Today, though, it also has another, important source – a complementary, ideologically driven campaign of opposition to traditional sexual morality. Not surprisingly, the Catholic Church is a prime target for this effort.
Here is a case in point.
Lately there has been a rather lively discussion of a book by Father James Martin, a Jesuit priest and writer, that calls on the Catholic Church to show "respect, compassion, and sensitivity" to the LGBT community. I haven't read the book – Building a Bridge is its title – but I agree entirely that LGBT people do deserve respect, compassion, and sensitivity. For Catholics, of course, that shouldn't be at the expense of compromised fidelity to the teaching of the Church.