The pressure brought to bear on perhaps half the Catholic priesthood just intensified some more. Their tactics will not be conventional and their violation of basic privacy will now be routine. (My deep dive on gay priests is here.) The well-financed Catholic right is sending a clear signal: that if the hierarchy does not purge the church of sexually active gay priests, they will. But the high-tech outing is still a troubling sign that the church’s attempt to both retain gay priests and not police their sex lives is unraveling. Andrew Sullivan is upset about it:īurrill does indeed appear to have broken his vows systematically. Grindr is for hookups, without having to go through the boring formalities like “What’s your name?” or “What do you do when the sun is up?”Ī lot of people are still piling on The Pillar for its reporting using data. Tinder is where you can post vacation photos with maybe a family member or best girlfriend to make it look like you’re a fun and functional human being. There’s no degree of separation for a vetting process, it’s just a bunch of thirsty dudes in geographic cesspools hunting one another.īecause it’s not like Tinder, you shouldn’t be modeling your Grindr profile like one. Anyone can send you unsolicited nudes as their icebreaker. If you picture Tinder’s interface like a filtration system, imagine Grindr like wading through a swamp with no shoes on.
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What is Grindr? According to the website VICE’s guide to using the gay hook-up app, it’s not like a gay version of the hetero dating app Tinder: Without compelling public interest regarding individual priests serving in archdiocesan ministries, The Pillar did not undertake to de-anonymize data about parish rectory app usage.Īccording to the story, Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark refused a request for a face to face, off the record meeting with The Pillar to discuss this information. While it does not identify the names, addresses, or telephone numbers of particular users, data collected, commodified, and sold by hookup apps with the consent of users can include the usage location of particular devices at particular times. The analysis of commercially available signal data obtained by The Pillar, which was legally obtained and whose authenticity The Pillar confirmed, shows evidence that both homosexual and heterosexual hookup apps were used in parish rectories or other clerical residences with a frequency suggesting, in several cases, residence in those locations. There are 212 parishes in the Newark archdiocese. The Pillar contacted the Newark archdiocese after a review of commercially available app signal data showed patterns of location-based hookup app use at more than 10 archdiocesan rectories and clerical residences during 2018, 2019, and 2020. While a spokesperson told The Pillar it is “not acceptable” to use apps “inconsistent with Church teaching,” the archdiocese has also expressed concerns about the “morally suspect” collection of app signal data. The Archdiocese of Newark says it will investigate the possibility of clerical sexual misconduct, in response to questions from The Pillar about the use of location-based hookup apps at several parish rectories in the archdiocese. The latest from the independent Catholic news site The Pillar: