(A column I wrote for our church newsletter.)
No.
I will not. Don't bother asking. I will not do it. I know what the
rule book says. I know about tradition. I know all the Bible texts. I
know those who are urging me to do it speak from longstanding,
venerable conviction. I understand all that. But I will not do it. I
will not shut the door on my kids. I will not say to any of them,
“not my people.”
Over
the decades my parish has included adults who never left diapers,
never mastered language, and were never baptized. Still, they are my
children. If they go to hell, I'll go with them. If heaven has no
place for them, I have no interest in heaven. How could any place be
paradise if my children were excluded because they could not master
the required tasks, could not obtain the required credentials?
My
parish has included people who were abused beneath religious art
hanging on the wall and in the kitchens of people employed by the
church. The lingering effects of that abuse created barriers to the
kind of faith we rightly celebrate. These victims of abuse are not
“model Christians.” But surely you do not imagine that I would
add the final word of abuse: “not my people.” “Not welcome
here.”
I
have also known in the wide circle of the holy family called, church,
abusers. Men and women who grievously mistreated children, sexually
and otherwise. Some have rightly gone to prison. They break my heart,
these misshapen sons and daughters of God who damaged youngsters. I
sometimes wish I did not know them, had not seen their faces knowing
their deeds. You might imagine that I could justify disowning these
abusers because I know and love their victims, but I refuse. They are
all mine.
My
circle includes physicians who have lost their licenses and maybe
their minds and certainly the religion of their childhood. And would
you have me disown them now? Now, when they most need a home they
cannot lose? Now, when they need to be carried after decades of
carrying? They may not be safe for patients, so their licenses had to
go. I get that. But really, do you think I would add that last
damning word: You are not one of us? Don't ask me to say it. I
won't.
My
congregation includes biblical scholars, theologians, and scientists
who are compelled by their study to dissent from some point or
another of the Adventist creed. Their childhoods, educations,
grandparents and cousins, and core religious identities are all
Adventist. When I was younger these were first my teachers, then my
sisters and brothers. Now, increasingly, they are my children. Do you
think that I, with my own deep roots in this community, could add my
voice to the shrill denunciations? Can you imagine that I would join
the chorus of ostracism? You know I won't. I can't.
If
you've tracked with me this far, come a little farther. What about my
children who wrestle with questions of gender identity and sexual
orientation? I will speak of men because I know their stories better.
When one of my sons is born gay, would you have me pronounce the word
of excommunication or disfellowshipment: Not my people?
Have
you listened to his story? Have you heard of his relentless,
desperate search for a cure? Have you felt the pain of fasting and
visits to psychiatrists and Christian “change specialists?” Have
you felt their desperate hope after being anointed, surely this time,
finally, God will say yes to their lifelong prayer and make them like
other men? Have you sat with them in that moment of suspense, at the
apex of the arc of hope, afraid to wonder if it's up or down from
here? Cured? Then the crushing, withering realization. God said no.
Maybe hearing all the details of these stories, after you have cried
with them, you will still be able to summon the religious zeal to
pronounce the verdict of excommunication. I cannot. I won't.
The
official policy of our denomination requires us to welcome
homosexuals on the condition they pledge celibacy or come among us
only as visitors. The requirement of eternal celibacy is a
prescription almost as cruel as the now discredited prescriptions for
“change.” There are individuals for whom this is possible. There
are individuals, heterosexual and homosexual, for whom this is God's
calling. But the denominational policy was voted by groups of old men
who have been married for decades. They were voting to impose on
others a burden they would have never contemplated for even a minute
carrying themselves. For most of us a prescription of lifelong
celibacy is as realistic as running barefoot up Mt. Rainier in shorts
and a T-shirt. We won't deny that it's possible, just that the
possibility excludes us and all our friends and children.
So I
will not say it. I will not exclude from the welcome table of Jesus, my
children who are gay. I will not impose on them a burden that I would
never even consider carrying myself. I am personally committed to
warmly welcoming my gay children, requiring of them the same kind of
sexual continence we expect of one another—faithfulness.
I
invite the members of this congregation to come stand with me in
welcoming those whose sexual and gender identities are irregular.
We
celebrate the human ideal pictured in the Genesis creation stories: a
man and a woman forever together in a happy union that produces
children. In a perfect world this is how people would live. We also
join God in compassionate accommodation to the realities of this
world. Already in Genesis, not every union of man and woman is happy.
Not every union is monogamous. And so it is in our world. Not every
couple has children. Not every adult marries. We do not ostracize the
people who experience these departures from the ideal. We bend to
less-than-ideal practical solutions for the human problems. Some
relationships become so toxic divorce is better than marriage. In
ancient times, this kind of practicality was expressed in laws
regarding polygamy and levirite marriage as a way to make sure no
woman was left without support and protection.
In
our world, we even make allowances for single people—a category of
human existence that appears nowhere in the Bible story. Everyone in
the Bible was part of a household. Some of the households are crazily
dysfunctional. Jacob and his four women and twelve sons and one
daughter come to mind. But no one was single, not in the modern
sense. No one had an apartment by himself or herself. In Seattle
forty percent of households are comprised of a single person living
alone. And we welcome these single folk in the life of our church.
Still,
according to the denomination's rule book, if a man is not suited for
marriage in the traditional sense, we must say to that man, “pledge
eternal celibacy or hear our word of excommunication: Not our
people.”
I
cannot do it. I will not do it.
We
are an Adventist congregation. Congregations do not make doctrine,
the international denominational body does that. But we do made
decisions about membership. We can offer membership to our brothers
and sisters, our sons and daughters who are called by God to be part
of the Adventist Church without demanding they meet some theoretical
standard of model humanity.
We can learn and grow together.
I ask you
to stand with me and say to all of the children of God, “My people.
My brothers and sisters. My children. All of them.”