Tuesday, I was overjoyed when I heard that the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) has voted to allow the ordination of openly gay and lesbian ministers.
So, you never know. Sometimes progressives take an unexpected giant step backwards and sometimes the church takes a long-overdue step forward. And sometimes it's hard to tell what exactly is going on.
This "controversy" about who is welcome in church and who isn't, and why, reminds me of something that happened at the first church I served. After one Sunday morning worship service, a woman came up to me, out of breath and excited (not in a good way), to report that there was a new couple in church that day. They were both men, young men, she said -- "a couple!" I was secretly excited to think that a same sex couple would come to our church! So I asked her how she knew that they were gay. "You can just tell," she said, sour-faced. She went on to describe how they sat close together, even had their arm around each other at one point, and talked to each other in a way that you "could tell" she insisted.
I still couldn't imagine this in 1994 in our American Baptist church. I mean, why would a young gay couple think we would be a cool enough church for them? At least that was my thought! So I asked her what they looked like. The woman then began to give a great description of my 17 year old son (whom she didn't recognize because he had shaved his head during that week) and his 19 year old cousin (who was a "stranger" in our midst with long curly hair at the time). They had grown up favorite cousins and didn't see each other often, so they were affectionate to the point of being labeled correctly a same sex couple, but not in the way that she assumed!
She was relieved.
Really? What had changed? The only thing that had changed was her own perception.
In the midst of my own disillusionment with Sojourners, and now in light of my delight with the PC-USA vote, my own perceptions are challenged by an inspiring blog post written by Katie Mulligan entitiled "Believe Out Loud and the Sojourners Kerfluffle." Katie's challenge is to go beyond disillusionment with Sojourners and, I would add, beyond celebration with PC-USA, to self examination and local action. Katie asks the very direct question: What about your church?
How would a queer person know they are welcome in your church? How would they know that they could come to the potluck and not have to endure another conversation on how the gay are ripping the fabric of America? How would they know they could come to Bible study and know that they could talk about the fullness of their life without people praying that they straighten out. How would they know that you won't look at them and their family as if you'd just eaten rotten fruit? Because it's not on your church websites, friends. I look, and it's not there. It's not on my church website either. We're all just pussyfooting around this whole welcome the gay thing--and golly, I'm a queer pastor!We have a ways to go! The church's welcome is still too often full of pre-conditions not limited to sexual orientation and gender identification. Progress seems too slow. My comfort: the great cloud of progressive and liberal Christians who are disillusioned right along with me, and also determined. Even when it's with baby steps and measured voices, we are still working for justice and full inclusion and the good news of God's love for all people.
7 comments:
Great post. I somehow missed the Sojourners mess, but did catch the news about PC-USA. Hurrah! What you write is well articulated and hits the nail on the head. Believe Out Loud, Indeed!
I never thought Sojourners was progressive, despite using that self-descriptor. But let's hope they reconsider now.
Great points about the local church.
@altar ego -- thank you! I just had to write something about all of this.
@Songbird -- I agree with you about Sojourners not being truly progressive. Unfortunately, Wallis is the go-to spokesperson by the media and he gets labeled as progressive as hard as he tries straddle some "reasoned" middle ground. I could tell stories . . .
thank you for the link :-)
I will never understand why our church welcomes only the baptized to partake of communion. Makes me want to scream...
And the priest wonders why are church isn't growing...
Augh.
Are? OUR!!!
Awesome. I love the story about your son.
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