“…Tom Inglis, in his important study on the overwhelming influence of the Catholic Church in modern Ireland, argued that Irish priests, by virtue of their close association with Irish mothers, were able to exercise a determining role as civilizing agents and moral arbiters in Irish society (Inglis, 1998), and they were often mistrusted by other men. The role of the Catholic Church and its clergy (both priests and brothers) in Québec society was really not that markedly different from the Irish context, as is confirmed by Québécois scholarship (Gauvreau, 2009;Gossage, 2014). Though clergy may have held a great deal of moral suasion, their ambivalent sexuality-a sexuality freely given up, and therefore subject to a great deal of suspicion-kept them in a subordinate, even decidedly inferior, position vis-à-vis other married heterosexual men, especially those with children.…”