Monday, November 12, 2012

Behold, how they love one another

Justin Lee, founder and head of the Gay Christian Network (GCN) has just published a new book, TORN which addresses the unsuccessful (to date) conversation between the Church and GLBTQ people and the effect of that conversation on the gospel's impact in the world. I haven't read Justin's book yet, but I have heard him speak and have witnessed his courage and diplomacy in tackling the divide between the Church and GLBTQ people in other venues.

As part of the book's release, he has asked bloggers from whatever side of any fence (including those straddling said fence) to dedicate a post to the effort to bring the conversation to some level of sanity. His appeal and links to other bloggers' contributions are found here. This is my contribution.

It would be tempting here to rehearse demands for recognition and tolerance. But a demand is not a dialog. And demands would assume the ability of one party to represent a whole. Any true dialog must begin at a place where we can find common ground.

GLBTQ people in general and Christians in general already share a lot of common ground. First, and this should be obvious, we share a common humanity. We share a range of characteristics and experiences to which neither group can claim any more right of ownership than the other. Second, we claim a common environment - the world in which we live and its resources. Sharing the same world, we are neighbors in it. Third, we share the fact of the communities in which we live, even though we may live in multiple, different, overlapping and sometimes conflicting communities. Despite that, we share the fact of communal inclination. Being communal is a part of being human. But living in a communities is a different dimension than either specific humanity or non-personal environment. Both GLBTQ people and Christians live their lives in the context of communities.

Those basic areas will suffice for now to describe what Christians in general and GLBTQ people hold in common. I don't think that should engender any argument.

Christians who are GLBTQ have even more in common with other Christians than GLBTQ people in general do.

With respect to the previous list, GLBTQ Christians and other Christians share the notion that our humanity is in the image of God and that our person, our "self", is a gift from God. 'Gift' is a strange word. We use it often to mean a special favor, like a birthday gift: something obtained and gifted with our uniqueness in mind. We also think of a "gift" as a grace broadcast over all peoples. It is both and neither. What is significant is that GLBTQ Christians share, with other Christians, the idea that what makes for the human in general and the "I" in particular has been designed by God for reasons that are both loving and unknown. That view inspires a wonder and a worship of our Maker and Lover for the gift of our Selves.

Behind the "God made me the way I am" rhetoric is a real truth that it does us no good and brings God no glory to consider ourselves defective. Even original sin, while crippling, is not the result of a defect. It is the result of a free will, which is no defect. GLBTQ and other Christians can share that conviction. Our dialog can begin in the agreement that what God made is good, and that "it is he who has made us and not we ourselves", as the Hundredth Psalm puts it. That, at least, should be a starting point.

Christians who are GLBTQ and other Christians also share a view of their environment and resources that they, too, are ordered by God, magnifying that wonder and worship for a God who makes himself known in this world. It is not just a religious motivation that is important here - that is merely an aspect of humanity. What is important is the personal and universal witness of God's attention to and provision for our needs in giving us the gift of Life. Even for the sparrows.

And orphans.

And outcasts.

And strangers.

And who is my neighbor, anyway?

While GLBTQ people are not sparrows or orphans or otherwise incapacitated, they are strangers to the Church, at least for now. GLBTQ Christians are often strangers in their own churches. I don't think it would be hard to find agreement among any group of Christians that strangers should be made welcome and that the alien should find hospitality among God's people. Our dialog can continue in recognizing that celebrating God as the giver of Life means a respect for all life in this world and sharing our piece of the world and our resources with all. What has God provided us that we are prone to withhold from others?

Finally, GLBTQ Christians also share with other Christians in the communion of the Church. As the Nicene Creed asserts, there is one holy, catholic and apostolic church. It includes all who dare hope in Christ. Period. That statement does not draw out any controversy until we take it upon ourselves to attempt to identify who  "all" might mean. That is to say, until we take on a job we have not been asked or possess qualifications to perform.

Our communion is in the Body and Blood of Christ, not just in the physical act of "take and eat", but in the existential reality of being members of one Body and being the benefactors of a transcendent blood-sacrifice. There are mysteries which can neither be argued or explained. The dialog we pursue must validate "one holy, catholic and apostolic church. It must be a witness to "one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of us all". A dialog that begins in what we hold in common must lead to a unity and a love which bears witness to the world of our Lord. That is what is at stake.

The sanity, to return to Justin's plea, can only come when we celebrate our differences in unity. We the Church have learned to do this in other areas. It was hard. It took time. But few would return to the days of forced conversions, inquisitions, witch-scares, scarlet letters, segregation or the dismissal of women. Let it be said of the church, without condition, without discrimination, and by all who desire to come, "behold, how they love one another."


10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nicely written, enjoyed reading.

Anonymous said...

Nice read, thank you for sharing.

SavedByGrace said...

Very True!
Finding the common ground is the basis for dialogue and as you said, we all have a vast amount of ground in common.

God bless,
John

Sarah-Jane Melnychuk said...

I enjoyed reading through your blog.

I have always said that we will differ in our experiences, we will differ in our beliefs, but there is something we do share and that is we share in the commonality of our humanity.

I never really looked at any of us as flawed individuals, flawed because of original sin but living in the reality of consequences of original sin making possible a decay in what God originally purposed... none of us are born perfect and being able to see both good and evil is the reality of original sin... but no God created us with a free will for sure and when he created us he said it is very good. I also believe there are strengths and gifts within the body of Christ who are not fully recognized and the body of Christ is missing out because of it.

It is important to be integral with our convictions but we can be integral to our convictions and recognize our shared humanity... let us disagree respectfully, let us recognize and acknowledge each others journey, let us be invitational instead of placing conditions upon who's in and who's out... Really, in the end the one who does the separating is Jesus.

wk said...

ALthough we share common ground with the church, gay people are still in the fence because there are many misconceptions and stigma towards us.

I am not Catholic, but I belive what the Bible says, that Jesusu is the only Son of God and only through His grace and through faith we can be saved.

Sarah-Jane Melnychuk said...

My point is this ... the culture war isn't felt as intensely in Canada as it is in the southern states and in the US in general. So, my point is, a growing recognition that I might not have a context to understand fully the culture war that does exist in parts of the world.

Unknown said...

To Sarah-Jane's earlier, well-made point, this post of mine comments on who will do the choosing:
http://beethoven72.blogspot.com/2011/10/question.html

Anonymous said...

I really appreciated what you said about gay people needing to be affirmed in accepting themselves for who they are, rather than continuing to see themselves as "broken."

For years, I tried to repress the fact that I was gay. I thought my same-sex attraction was just a "temptation," and that if I worked hard enough I could eventually get myself to marry someone of the opposite sex.

It eventually occurred to me that same-sex attraction is not a "temptation" that straight people have. I had to face the painful reality that I'd been in denial. That was when I came to the conclusion that, no matter what theological position I ended up coming to, I wasn't going to help the church by lying to myself. Now, my prayer is that the church would being to see it that way too.

Unknown said...

I spent a lot of years in the same denial as acolbik described thinking I was serving others well by staying hidden.
Long story short: a lot of people hurt. The hard truth would have been better for all.

Sarah-Jane Melnychuk said...

For me it's about the de-labelling really ... part of the de-labelling is also seeing past one's sexuality and seeing the individual person, gifts, talents, even weaknesses and strengths.. to totality of an individual and ssa or osa being something secondary. When we see ssa and osa as secondary and not the primary source of identification our faith journey becomes less about our sexuality and more about our relationship with Jesus Christ. We're all broken, we're all living in the consequences of a fallen world... straight people can be just as broken and sometimes more broken. The fact remains is that this is our shared humanity .. none of us are the perfect creation ... I don't deny my experiences but I don't allow my experiences to define me. There is a huge difference between the two. None of us receive 100% of all the needs God created us to have. It can leave some of us emotionally bankrupt... perhaps experienced to different degrees regardless of sexuality.