Ronald G. Lee
Ronald G. Lee is a librarian in Houston, Texas, who was taken in by the so-called gay Christian movement for a long time but now considers it as relying on "a stratagem that is as daring as it is dishonest" and describes "gay rights" movement as "rotten to the core." He further asserts that although it might seem ironic, the Internet helped rescue him from homosexuality and now self-describes himself as "a refugee from the homosexual insane asylum". In his words, he is not proud of the life he has lived as "homosexual" and is profoundly ashamed of it. The last nails in the coffin of his 20-year life as a "gay" man who was not interested in one night stands was a letter of English ex-Dominican who had no good advice on R.G.L.'s personal experience and observation that there was a contradiction between public façade (straight-acting, monogamy-believing, and fidelity-practicing) and private lives (implicitly defending promiscuity) of so-called "gay" people. The same pattern that characterized all his "homosexual" relationships was that the friendship lasted only as long as the sexual heat. Once that cooled, his partner's interest in him as a person dissipated with it.[1][2]
Influences in youth
Lee describes himself during youth as a naïve and sexually conflicted young reader who was influenced by the now ex-Father John McNeill's 1976 "classic" The Church and the Homosexual. Over the years, he has attended various "gay" and "gay"-friendly church services. Now he portrays McNaill, who in his autobiography makes no bones about his experiences as a sexually active and promiscuous homosexual Catholic priest spending his time hunting for sex in bars, as gay Christian propagandist, a bad priest and a con man who is suggesting a radical revision of the traditional Catholic sexual ethic which is quite specific about the ends of human sexuality. Lee feels now too old to be taken in by "Father" McNeill and his abstractions anymore.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Ronald G. Lee (6 Jul 2008 (Originally Feb 2006)). The Truth About the Homosexual Rights Movement. OrthodoxyToday.org & New Oxford Review. Retrieved on 28 Nov 2016.
- ↑ Robert R. Reilly. Making Gay Okay: How Rationalizing Homosexual Behavior is Changing Everything. Ignatius Press, 4. ISBN 978-1-58617-833-8.