You don't have to be intentional to cause
damage. That's something I've learned in the past few years as I have journeyed
in the Seventh-day Adventist Church and witnessed so many attempts by pastors
and theologians to explain and defend the church's current position on
homosexuality.
Just sitting in the pews as an LGBT person can
be one of the most uncomfortable situations of our lives, as we're spoken about
in a theoretical and theological fashion, but seldom are we actually asked or
allowed to share our perspective. You see, we are people of faith too, but the
church has a de facto "don't ask, don't tell" approach (at best),
even in most of its educational institutions, so we often linger in the
shadows, in silence, hearing the most outrageous assumptions said about us by
learned and well-meaning people who want to "minister" to us.
This past weekend was one of the worst examples
of this "talk about" instead of "talk with" spaces, and it
happened in Portland, Ore., at a "Gays in
the Family" conference sponsored by the North Pacific Union
Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
The "Gays in the Family" conference
headlined pastors, a therapist and five ex-gay* and/or now-celibate (all older)
presenters handpicked by the North Pacific Union College to represent the
official stance of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. As in most denominations,
Seventh-day Adventists are beginning to realize that we have LGBT** people in
our homes, in our churches, in our schools. Our administration is beginning to
realize that we can no longer talk about homosexuality in a theoretical
fashion; we need to humanize the subject in order to connect with the
community. The realization is there, which I appreciate, but the execution is
failing.
To open the weekend, Cheri Corder, the director
of family ministries for the Oregon Conference, said, "Not every voice will
be heard this weekend." In other words, only handpicked voices that
present and justify the Adventist status quo are being promoted.
She was absolutely right. The weekend wasn't a
dialogue; it was a presentation. All five of the ex-gay/now-celibate speakers
had traumatic childhood experiences to which they attribute the cause of their
"same-sex attractions," most of them having been sexually abused or
even raped. One speaker stated that he had had up to three partners a day for
over 20 years. Lives of drug use, prostitution and promiscuity were presented
as the norm for LGBT people.
There was little diversity: All were in their
50s or 60s, all had had incredibly sad and traumatic childhoods, almost all had
lived very broken and destructive lives when they were accepting their gay
identities, and all now live the "ideal lifestyle" as a "person
redeemed from the homosexual lifestyle."
But none of these labels fits my life or the
lives of the hundreds of LGBT people I've met. It's like having a conference on
women's ordination (another current hot topic in our church) and having only
Caucasian men as speakers, or only selecting (the few) women who agree with not
ordaining women. Why weren't there voices of same-sex, healthy, monogamous
Christian individuals like those portrayed in Seventh-Gay
Adventists: A Film About Faith on the Margins? How are we supposed
to have a dialogue when only a select few are chosen to promote a very biased
presentation?
But one of the most disturbing parts of the whole weekend was the presentation by the licensed therapist, Dr. Lucille Ball (and no, she doesn't joke about her name). Her talk was one I was looking forward to, because it was titled, "The Myths About homosexuality." Sadly, it just perpetuated the worst myths out there, and from a "scientific" perspective, which made it all the more damaging. The premise of her presentation was that homosexuality comes after a traumatic experience in childhood, most likely sexual abuse. Dr. Ball said, "We are not born gay," alleging that there is a "negative environmental factor which leads the person to think, 'I am gay.'" She added:
The bad news about that is that when we have
that attitude that "I am born this way, and there is nothing I can do
about it," it become so fatalistic: "I might as well give in to it. I
might as well live the gay lifestyle, because there is nothing I can do about
it." And you know what's something I discovered? It's that gay activists
actually use that to get money from people, to fight for the gay agenda.
Dr. Ball continued her hour-long presentation
with a string of statements that are shocking to anyone who has read any real
research on homosexuality. She insisted that "67 percent of gay men were
sexually abused," and that once gay people are able to cope with whatever
traumatic experience they encountered in childhood, they would be
"healed" of their homosexuality. I couldn't believe my ears. It was
as if I had stepped back to the 1950s, when such propaganda was used to
institutionalize LGBT people.
During the Q-and-A portion of the event, my
question was selected and directed to Dr. Ball. I had asked, "What do you
say to the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of
Pediatrics and the rest of the legitimate scientific community, which believes
that same-sex relationships can be healthy, and that attempting to change
someone's sexual orientation is in fact damaging?"
She responded, "[The professional
organizations] receive much pressure to conform to the gay rights activists.
I'd tell them that I take the Bible above any man-made organization."
Setting aside the outrageous conspiracy theory
of the "gay agenda," I was speechless that a licensed physician was
outwardly stating that she had picked which facts from the scientific community
to agree with based on her own personal religious views. How are you
ministering to LGBT people when you're calling them sick and using misleading "science"
to back it up?
I have seen how damaging that narrative has been
in my life, my family members' lives and the lives of other LGBT people. Just
this past year I've had friends attempt suicide, kicked out of their homes,
disfellowshipped from their churches and been made second-class citizens at our
schools and churches, all due to the overwhelming narrative that we have
received from our churches. But none of these friends I'm referring to were
abused. None have been living as sex addicts or doing drugs. None come from
traumatic childhoods. Some of them even come from highly supportive homes. This
narrative of "we need to heal the homosexuals" is toxic, has been
proven to be damaging and does not contain an ounce of love. It's spiritual and
psychological malpractice.
This spiritual and psychological malpractice
does real damage. I recently read a moving letter from an older brother to his
younger gay brother, who attempted suicide just this last fall, overwhelmed by
what the church said about him. In the letter the older brother pleads,
"Please do not ever give up on your Jesus. You may have brothers who turn
against you, friends who cause you to bleed tears, and churches that can't
legally bar their doors but yet still bar their hearts against you. Please do
not let these people dictate the character of your Jesus."
My generation is not tolerating this idea that
LGBT people are sick, broken and second-class citizens. The image of the
"gay lifestyle" that is preached at our schools and from our pulpits
doesn't bear any resemblance to the real lives of LGBT people. What this does
is create negative stereotypes that force our young people to be damaged, not
from their sexuality but from the responses received from their Christian
brothers and sisters.
When the Christian community approaches the LGBT
community with an "accepting yet redeeming" model (what a pastor
advocated at the conference) instead of an "accepting and affirming"
model, we render the Holy Spirit useless. We actually don't have to have
theological unity about whether or not committed same-sex relationships are
biblical in order to lean into unconditional love. But we have to begin
listening to all the voices that need to be heard instead of hand-selecting a
few that fit neatly into our current worldview. We have to see each other as
equals at the foot of the cross.
In the comments section of a blog post
on "change ministries," the mom of a young lesbian woman talked about
what really needs to change. Her revelation? That she was the one
who needed to change:
There is no need for "Change
ministries". God says that with even the smallest faith, we can say to a
mountain to move.... and it will move if it is inside God's will. If God really
wanted gay people to change, a prayer made in faith.... should be all that it
takes. I have found that my crying and praying in earnest for God to change my
daughter led me to realize that it was ME that God wanted to change. I am the
one who needed to learn to love more. I was the one who needed to change. I
also think I have an obligation to NOT attempt to change LGBTQ people but to
love them and let them know that God loves them and wants them for his own.
We need to change our approach. If this is what
is going to be offered as a "conversation," then it's no wonder that
LGBT youth that come from rejecting families are 8.4 times
more likely to have attempted suicide than those who come from accepting homes.
A church like the Seventh-day Adventist Church is very much a home. It's a very
close-knit community, and it is incredibly damaging to kids to grow up thinking
that they are entirely unwanted unless they twist themselves into some sort of
heterosexual lifestyle or can imagine, at 17 or 18, living alone for their
entire lives.
Isn't that what we're promoting? "We love
and accept you as long as we visibly see you trying to change." This isn't
the love I read about in the Bible. This love comes with all types of
conditions, requirements and deadlines. We are loving LGBT people
straight to hell. There are thousands of LGBT Adventists who live
Christ-centered, healthy, monogamous lives. We're here, and we sit right next
to you in the pews. And we'd love to tell you our story. If you'd only open
your eyes and listen to our stories, you would see the damage you are causing
to people like me, however unintentionally.
*In Torn: Rescuing the Gospel From the Gay vs.
Christian Debate, author Justin Lee makes an interesting discovery on ex-gay
ministries: "In ex-gay circles, I learned, the word 'gay' didn't mean
'attracted to the same sex'. At ex-gay conferences, I often ran into ex-gay
leaders who publicly testified that they were 'no longer gay' even while
privately confessing that they still had same-sex attractions." I believe
this change of definition shows the focus of conservative Christian communities.
It has nothing to do with the sexuality and everything to do with "gay
sex."
** I'm using "LGBT," but this
conference hardly ever used that language. They didn't even acknowledge
bisexual or transgender individuals at all. The only actually gay and lesbian
people allowed to speak were described as "people redeemed from the
homosexual lifestyle."
2 comments:
Is this post not akin to the outcry that went out when the anti-gay comments were made on the Austrailian radio broadcast when, just because one officer expressed his anti-gay opinions, the gay community automatically thought that the SA in its entirety were anti gay and started the SA bashing campaign? This post makes it appear that the opinions expressed in this article reflect the entire SDA church. I'm sure you will find that not to be the case. I am also sure that you will find the same mixture of professional knowledge and deep ignorance on the LGBT subject in all denominations, not only the SDA and the SA.
Well said, and yes, a seemingly lone voice.
It was sent to us from a SDA member; former Salvationist.
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