Bishops, gay marriage, and Scripture readings (31st Sunday of ordinary time).

I have been working towards an extended post on the US and Scottish bishops’ interventions on the moves towards civil marriage equality, but have been struggling to get several different strands of thought together into a coherent single post.  However, listening to the Scripture readings in Mass this morning, I thought that they all have a direct relevance. If these words from the Gospel of   are applicable to priests, how much more can we apply them to the bishops?

Jesus spoke to the crowds and to his disciples, saying,
“The scribes and the Pharisees
have taken their seat on the chair of Moses. 
Therefore, do and observe all things whatsoever they tell you,
but do not follow their example. 
For they preach but they do not practice. 
They tie up heavy burdens hard to carry
and lay them on people’s shoulders, 
but they will not lift a finger to move them. 
All their works are performed to be seen. 
They widen their phylacteries and lengthen their tassels. 
They love places of honor at banquets, seats of honor in synagogues,
greetings in marketplaces, and the salutation ‘Rabbi.’
As for you, do not be called ‘Rabbi.’
You have but one teacher, and you are all brothers. 
Call no one on earth your father;
you have but one Father in heaven.
Do not be called ‘Master’;
you have but one master, the Christ. 
The greatest among you must be your servant.
Whoever exalts himself will be humbled;
but whoever humbles himself will be exalted.”

Mt 23:1-12

What the bishops say about persons with same – sex attraction is that there should be no unjust discrimination, and that we should be treated with dignity, respect and understanding. What they do, is to wade into the political process to enshrine discrimination, often using offensive language and statements about us that show little dignity or respect, and no attempt at understanding at all.

Some of their representations on the subject amount to not simply a war on gay marriage, but a war on the Catholic people. Their claims to be defending religious freedom are the reverse – an assault on it. I will expand on this, and explain my reasoning later.  In the meantime, reflect also on the other two readings for today:

A great King am I, says the LORD of hosts,
and my name will be feared among the nations.
And now, O priests, this commandment is for you:
If you do not listen,
if you do not lay it to heart,
to give glory to my name, says the LORD of hosts,
I will send a curse upon you
and of your blessing I will make a curse.
You have turned aside from the way,
and have caused many to falter by your instruction;
you have made void the covenant of Levi,
says the LORD of hosts.
I, therefore, have made you contemptible
and base before all the people,
since you do not keep my ways,
but show partiality in your decisions.
Have we not all the one father?
Has not the one God created us?
Why then do we break faith with one another,
violating the covenant of our fathers?

Mal 1:14b-2:2b, 8-10

 

To counter the hostility, take comfort from the words of the Psalm:

R. In you, Lord, I have found my peace.
O LORD, my heart is not proud,
nor are my eyes haughty;
I busy not myself with great things,
nor with things too sublime for me.
R. In you, Lord, I have found my peace.
Nay rather, I have stilled and quieted
my soul like a weaned child.
Like a weaned child on its mother’s lap,
so is my soul within me.
R. In you, Lord, I have found my peace.
O Israel, hope in the LORD,
both now and forever.
R. In you, Lord, I have found my peace.

Ps 131:1, 2, 3

In the Lord we find peace (and justice), even if not at the hands of the self-appointed spokesmen for the Church

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Huffpost’s “15 Inspiring LGBT Religious Leaders”. Who’s Not on the List?

Huffington Post recently published a slide show of 15 “inspiring LGBT religious leaders”. They are :

  • Irshad Manji, Muslim and founder and director of the Moral Courage Project at New York University’s School of Public Service.
  • Bishop Gene Robinson, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire.
  • Rev. Ouyang Wen Feng, who founded a gay-friendly church outside Kuala Lumpur and is thought to be Malaysia’s only openly gay pastor.
  • Imam Daayiee Abdullah, the imam and religious director of Masjid An-Nur Al-Isslaah, and the co-director of Muslims for Progressive Values
  • Bishop Mary Douglas Glasspool serves as the Assistant Bishop of The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles.
  • Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum serves as the spiritual leader of Congregation Beit Simshat Torah, the largest LGBT synagogue in the world.
  • Rev. Troy Perry founded the LGBT denomination of Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC) in 1968.
  • Larry Yang is on the Spirit Rock Teachers’ Council and a core teacher at the new East Bay Meditation Center in Oakland, Calif.
  • Pastor Manny Santiago is the pastor of University Baptist Church in Seattle, Wa.
  • Rev. Scott Anderson is the first openly gay PCUSA minister ordained after the church voted to allow individual presbyteries to set their own ordination guidelines around sexual orientation.
  • The Rev. Pat Bumgardner is currently the Senior Pastor of Metropolitan Community Church of New York.
  • Rabbi Steven Greenberg, the first openly gay Orthodox rabbi, is Director of Orthodox Programs for Nehirim, the organization for GLBT Jewish culture and spirituality.
  • Bishop Yvette Flunder, founder of the United Church of Christ Church, City of Refuge and presiding Bishop of The Fellowship.
  • Archbishop Carl Bean founded the Unity Fellowship Church Movement, a primarily African American and LGBT denomination.
  • Rev. Malcolm Boyd is an Episcopalian Priest and author of “Are You Running With Me Jesus?”

They also ask their readers, “Who is not on the list?”. Perhaps in response to this, number 16 has been added:

  • Justin Lee is the founder and Executive Director of the Gay Christian Network.
So, who else is missing?  I find the selection somewhat idiosyncratic. Some (Gene Robinson, Troy Perry) are household names to LGBT Christians, and I approve the inclusion of people from other (non-Christian) faiths, but others  I have never heard of, and this is a topic I investigate constantly. Is this a reflection on my particular biases?  More troubling to me than these unexpected inclusions, are the omissions. There is not a single Catholic on the list, so I would like to propose some of my own.  Off the top of my head, I suggest the following (more could easily follow):

Fr John McNeill, theologian, therapist and priest, who was forced to leave the Jesuit order to continue writing the truth about sexuality and theology.  His pioneering books, and subsequent work as a therapist, have been an inspiration (and literal lifesaver) to countless gay and lesbian Catholics over nearly four decades.

Fr James Alison, openly gay priest and theologian, who writes not gay theology but theology from a gay perspective, is influencing not only gay Catholics, but also the wider Christian community – including such notable theologians as Archbishop Rowan Williams , primate of the Anglican Church.

Sr Jeanine Grammick, c0- founder of New Ways Ministry, who responded to the simple question “What is the Church doing for my gay brothers and sisters?” with the recognition that what “the church”  was failing to provide, she would attempt to do directly.  This she has continued to do, also over nearly four decades, in spite of direct opposition and hostility from the powerful elites in Rome.

Fr Bernard Lynch, now a London – based priest who was one of the first priests to respond with compassion and dedication to the plight of gay men in New York in the early days of the AIDS crisis, and found from the institutional church not support, but direct hostility and outright persecution. Since then, he has become not simply a gay priest, but one who openly acknowledges his marriage to husband Billy – and an inspiration to London gay Catholics for the wisdom he shares, in talks and in spiritual direction.

Mark D. Jordan, scholar and writer, whose books illuminate so much of the hypocrisy and paradoxes in the institutional Catholic Church, and its response to homoerotic relationships.
Arthur Sullivan, journalist and political conservative, whose fierce advocacy for gay marriage from a conservative perspective have done so much to win over to the cause of LGBT equality, people whose conservative values would not be seen as natural straight allies.

Those are my initial suggestions. Any more? ( I would particularly welcome nominations of more women. ).
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Catholic Sexual Abuse, UK: Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

In the UK, Catholic bishops for years have been congratulating themselves  on their strong policies to deal with problems of sexual abuse by clergy, policies which they believed were shielding the country from the worst excesses that have plagued the US, Ireland and other countries. That belief has been shattered this week, with reports that the Vatican has launched an investigation into allegations of abuse at Ealing Abbey, and the news that the church official who was supposed to be heading the church’s own internal investigation, has himself been convicted on charges of possessing thousands of images of child pornography.

The fundamental problem with the church’s attempts at self-regulation have been it’s attempts to place greater importance on canon law than on secular law, and the tendency of the regulators, guided by the regulations prepared by the CDF, to operate as a clerical old boys’ club, placing great emphasis on the rights of the accused to procedural fairness and sympathy, but little attention to the rights of the victims. This English case shows, as the examples of Ireland, Belgium, Philadelphia and Kansas City have all done before it, that the only really satisfactory investigations are conducted by outside authorities.

Church inquiry after official convicted of paedophilia

The Catholic Church is to launch a review of child protection across the South West of England after a religious official investigating child sex abuse allegations was convicted of paedophilia.

Christopher Jarvis, a former social worker, is due to be sentenced later today for the possession of 4,000 indecent images of children.

Jarvis, 49, worked as the child safeguarding officer for the Diocese of Plymouth, where he had been responsible for child protection matters at 120 churches and community groups for nine years.

Before his arrest, he was leading an investigation into allegations of historic sexual abuse at Buckfast Abbey in Devon.

The review has been ordered by the Rt Rev Christopher Budd, the Bishop of Plymouth, after concerns were raised over the church’s handling of clerical sex abuse allegations.

-full report at The Telegraph

(based on the orginial story at the Times, behind a paywall)

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Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam

Erasmus, born on the 27th October 1466, was a Dutch humanist and theologian,  who merits serious consideration by queer people of faith.
Born Gerrit Gerritszoon, he became far better known as Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam: Erasmus was his saint’s name, after St. Erasmus of Formiae. ; Rotterdam, for the place of his birth (although he never lived there after the first few years of early childhood; and “Desiderius” a name he gave himself – “the one who is desired”.

Erasmus, the “gay icon”?

Some LGBT activists have hailed Erasmus as a gay icon from history. Circa Club for instance has no doubt, using that precise term and including Erasmus in it’s collection of historical gay icons. The primary basis of the claim is a series of passionate love letters he wrote to  a young monk Servatius Roger, and  allegations of improper advances made to the young Thomas Grey, later Marquis of Dorset, while employed as his tutor.

Others are unconvinced, pointing out that the nature of friendship between men, and the form of expressions of affection between them, were very different in Erasmus’ day to ours. They also point out that there were never any direct allegations of physical relations with Grey, or with anyone else. This argument largely rests on the assumption that in a time of marked public opposition (and official persecution) of  ”sodomy”, any suggestion of homosexual intercourse would have provoked strong denunciation and even prosecution. I am not convinced by either side.

Erasmus was certainly not “gay” in any modern sense. The use of the term “gay icon” for any man of the Renaissance period, and particularly for a priest, is clearly anachronistic, and inappropriate. It is also true that expressions of “love” in the letters to Servatius may be no more than expressions of Platonic affection, expressed a little more effusively (but not much more so) than was customary at the time. We cannot say for certain that he was sexually active with men.

But the absence of proof also does not disprove the hypothesis. As a priest, Erasmus was expected to be celibate. There is also no evidence of sexual relations with women, but that does not disprove that he was heterosexual. The claims that the strong climate of opposition to sodomy “would have” resulted in public exposure are also invalid. Over several centuries, thousands of “sodomites” were tried and executed – but the meaning of the term was vague and variable, including everything from “unnatural” (i,e, anal or oral) intercourse between husband and wife, to witchcraft and heresy, to treason. In post-Reformation England, it was even sometimes used interchangeably with “popery”, as Catholicism was also viewed as treason against the English monarchy. In fact, many of those convicted may have been the victims simply of malice and grossly unfair criminal procedures, and completely innocent of sexual non-conformity – and very many more who were indeed engaging in homosexual activities were left entirely unhindered.

The matter of Erasmus’ sexual activities is at best undecided – and also irrelevant. To focus on “did he or didn’t he” is to make the mistake of the homophobes, who are convinced that homoerotic relationships are all about genital sex. It is enough for me to note that whatever the physical relationship may or may not have been, there was a definite, powerful and emotionally intimate relationship between Erasmus and Serviatus.

I also like this quotation, from his “In praise of marriage”:

I have no patience with those who say that sexual excitement is shameful and that venereal stimuli have their origin not in nature, but in sin. Nothing is so far from the truth. As if marriage, whose function cannot be fulfilled without these incitements, did not rise above blame. In other living creatures, where do these incitements come from? From nature or from sin? From nature, of course. It must be borne in mind that in the appetites of the body there is very little difference between man and other living creatures. Finally, we defile by our imagination what of its own nature is fair and holy. If we were willing to evaluate things not according to the opinion of the crowd, but according to nature itself, how is it less repulsive to eat, chew, digest, evacuate, and sleep after the fashion of dumb animals, than to enjoy lawful and permitted carnal relations?

- In Praise of Marriage (1519), in Erasmus on Women (1996) Erika Rummel

Erasmus, the scholarly reformer.

It is not his sexuality that most impresses me, but his legacy as a scholar and church reformer. His career spanned the years leading up to, and after, Luther’s break with the Catholic Church that became the Protestant Reformation. Prior to the split, Erasmus had himself been fiercely critical of the Church, arguing forcefully for reform of the many and manifold abuses. He had close relationships with Luther and many other leading members of the Reformation movement, which his ideas strongly influenced. However, when the break came, he chose to remain formally inside the church structures, and not outside of it.

LGBT Christians are often attacked by others for remaining inside a religion which is seen as inimical to gay interests, and so to be siding with the enemy of gay liberation, but this is simplistic. Erasmus’ response to the reformers was that it was the abuses that needed to be destroyed, not the church itself – an argument that applies equally strongly to the situation today, in respect of sexuality. The restricted, misguided view of sexuality promoted by some claiming the authority of religion, is not inherent in the Christian religion, but has been imposed on it to promote a particular heterosexual agenda. It is this abuse that we must oppose, not Christianity.

In doing so, we should also learn from Erasmus’ methods. Among his criticisms of the Church was its heavy dependence on medieval scholastic theology, with its elaborate structure of speculative philosophy. Instead, he went back to the sources, to build his theology on a sounder structure of evidence. Recognizing the inadequacies of the Latin Vulgate bible, he devoted himself to the study of Greek, and eventually published a more reliable Latin translation (which came to replace the Vulgate, with a parallel Greek text), He also wrote a series of treatises on several of the church fathers.

Queer theologians today are doing something similar. Instead of sitting back meekly and accepting the received ideas on the Bible’s supposed condemnation of homosexuality, they have gone back to the roots of Biblical scholarship, closely studying the texts in the original Hebrew and Greek, and paying close attention to the full literary analysis and contextual considerations. They have demonstrated the weaknesses of the traditional interpretations, and have earned the concurrence of many heterosexual colleagues. This reassessment of the Biblical evidence has been one of the important factors in the present moves to greater LGBT inclusion in church, as pastors or in rites for recognizing same-sex unions. Other theologians have resisted the received opposition by ignoring scholastic monolith, and going back to the source of the Christian religion – Christ himself, as revealed in the Scriptures. Others again, emphasise the importance of a personal relationship with God, through prayer, in place of unthinking deference to the human authority of clerical oligarchs.

Erasmus, the man in the middle.

In the build-up to the Reformation, Erasmus aimed to avoid taking sides in the split. His thinking was a definite influence on the reformist cause,  and was later accused of having “laid the egg that hatched the Reformation”. His response was that he had hoped it would lay a different bird. He worked hard to retain good relationships with both sides and to keep the peace between them, but in the end, his reward was to be viewed with some suspicion and resentment by both sides. By Catholics, for having fostered the reformist thinking in the first place, and by Reformists for having deserted them at the end.

Queer people of faith will sympathise. We too aim to straddle two camps – and are frequently attacked from both sides: by some traditionalists Christians for our supposed sexual sin, and by secular gay activists for siding with the enemy,

May the example of Desiderius Erasmus sustain us in our endeavour.

Catholic Petition on DOMA, Gay Marriage.

A reader, Tom Luce, has drawn my attention to a petition in response to Archbishop Timothy Dolan’s  plea to President Obama to “push the reset button on your Administration‟s approach to DOMA.”  We know that the majority of Catholics in the US (and elsewhere) in fact support gay marriage, and disagree with the CDF on homosexuality. In appealing for Obama to support  the discrimination which is inherent in DOMA, Archbishop Dolan and the other bishops who have waded into this debate, are out of step with the Catholic Church ( as represented by all the baptized, not just the oligarchy). The petition, which will be presented to both the President and Archbishop Dolan, calls  for Catholic support for the President and against DOMA.   I particularly like  the clause which reminds the bishops of canon law ( Canon 212 par. 3),  on the right and duty of Catholics, for the good of the church,  to draw the attention of their pastors to their opinions on actions which they disagree with.

I believe this petition is worth supporting.

I place here the full text of the petition. Go to the website,    DOMA: We Catholics Support President Obama to sign it – and share the link with your friends and associates.

 

DOMA: WE CATHOLICS SUPPORT PRES. OBAMA  (more…)

Gay / Lesbian Church Weddings for Denmark, 2012.

Denmark was the first country in the world to provide near-marriage for same-sex couples, in a system of registered partnerships that were widely described as “gay marriage”. The only surprise in the announcement that like their Scandinavian neighbours Sweden Norway and Iceland they are to extend this to full marriage is that it has taken them so long. (Finland also has plans for full marriage equality).

 The real interest here, is that this legislation explicitly includes gay church weddings, as there are already in Sweden and Iceland, with the approval of the dominant Lutheran Church in those countries.

Denmark is the latest European nation to announce plans to introduce gay marriage, with same-sex couples to be allowed to marry on Church of Denmark premises.

The Danish coalition Government’s church minister, Manu Sareen, told local newspaper Jyllands-Posten that gay men and women will soon be able to marry when legislation is introduced early next year.

“I look forward to the moment the first homosexual couple steps out of the church. I’ll be standing out there throwing rice,” he said.

“I have many friends who are homosexuals and can’t get married. They love their partners the same way heterosexuals do, but they don’t have the right to live it out in the same way. That’s really problematic.”

Denmark was the first country in the world to allow gay civil partnerships with legislation in 1989. Public polls suggest around 69-percent of the population supports same-sex marriage according, The Copenhagen Post reports.

The first same-sex weddings could take place as early as March, 2012 after the legislation is passed.

One of the people who participated in Denmark’s first near-marriage ceremonies was a minister of religion. For the most part, European Lutherans do not have a problem with partnered gay or lesbian clergy, and most Danes will take this in their stride. Still, there will be some opposition.

….marriage equality in Denmark isn’t welcome by all with some religious leaders opposing the plans fearing it will cause a spilt in the Church of Denmark. Henrik Hojlund, of the Evangelical Lutheran Network, said gay marriage would be “fatal” for the Church and told the same newspaper “The Church of Denmark is being secularised right up to the alter in a desperate and mistaken attempt to meet modern people halfway.”

ATV Today

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25 Years of LGBT Ministry in LA Diocese

Twenty five years ago this month, Cardinal Mahoney of the Diocese 0f Los Angeles initiated a formal ministry in outreach to the city’s lesbian and gay Catholics.  In the LA Times, Mitchell Landsberg has written of this anniversary, and its intervening years, asking if anything has changed for LGBT Catholics during the past quarter century?

Superficially, of course, the answer is no. As Landsberg points out, formal doctrine remains the same, and official teaching continues to describe homosexuality as intrinsically disordered, and homosexual acts as immoral. This however, is only the formal teaching. In a very real way, things have changed very substantially.

When Mahoney launched the LA ministry, this was in itself a remarkable event. Today, formal ministries to LGBT Catholics exist, in a variety of forms, in many parts of the world. Beyond the ranting of a lunatic fringe, their existence is hardly controversial. Twenty five years ago, most Catholics would have agreed with the formal teaching on homosexuality. Today, we know from formal research that most do not. The majority of Catholics do not believe that homosexuality is in itself a matter of morality, and by a large margin approve of legal recognition for committed same-sex partnerships, either in marriage or in civil unions. While there has been no change in the formal teaching, there has been a marked change in emphasis and tone from the Vatican and from the bishops, especially in the recent past, under Benedict’s papacy.

Catholics at LA Anniversary Mass

(more…)

Methodists to Offer Marriage Celebrations to Same-Sex Families :: EDGE New England

Nearly a thousand United Methodists are ready to defy their denomination and offer marriage ceremonies to same-sex couples in the name of love and family parity.

The membership of a Methodist group called the We Do! Methodists Living Marriage Equality issued a media release on Oct. 17 in which they declared their willingness to recognize and celebrate deep lifetime commitments between people of the same gender. The group includes members from New York and Connecticut, the release said. The marriage equality movement the group has committed itself to is called the We Do! Project.

“In an unprecedented move in any major religious denomination, We Do! is not only bypassing the formal rules of the church, but also reaching out directly to LGBT groups in New York and Connecticut to let them know about the new network,” the media release said.

“This morning the group published a list of all its members: Clergy members who will perform weddings for gay couples, lay members of the denomination who support them, and congregations who have adopted policies to formally make weddings available to all couples,” the release added.

via  EDGE New England.

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At this Nashville church, once-shunned gays fuel growth

Holy Trinity Community Church

There is a fascinating trend I believe is developing in the LGBT Christian community. Not only are the churches coming to reconsider their traditional hostility to same-sex relationships, much as they once rethought and rejected what they once claimed was a biblically required support for slavery, and so making explicit provision for LGBT inclusion in worship and ministry, but in some important respects, those who were previously rejected are inspiring and providing leadership in matters that go way beyond sexuality and gender.

“The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone”

That is a theme I want to elaborate on slowly, and much later. But there is another way in which queer people of faith are rejuvenating the church, and one which is more easily demonstrated – in sheer numerical growth. The Metropolitan Community Church is one of the fastest growing of all denominations globally. Locally, another example is provided by a community in Tennessee.

It’s standing room only at Holy Trinity Community Church as the Rev. Cynthia Andrews-Looper wraps up her sermon for the 10:15 a.m. service, one of three she’ll do this morning.

She strays from the pulpit, pacing in front of an architectural rendering of a planned multimillion-dollar expansion to the church.

“Let’s make God-sized goals,” says Andrews-Looper, a former standup comedian.

(more…)

Church of England women bishop plan passes key threshold

The proposal to approve women bishops for the Church of England has just passed a key threshold: of the 44 diocesan synods, 28 have already approved the proposal – comfortably more than the half of the total (i.e. 22) that were required, with 14 votes still to come.

While approval at this stage may well have been expected, there are two features that particularly interest me. One is the sheer scale of support, and the other the very clear rejection of a compromise motion, to assuage the male hardliners who simply cannot countenance serving under a woman.

 

The sheer scale of the support thus far is impressive: 28 synods have voted in favour, and just 2 against. In most of these, support has come from all three houses of bishops, clergy and laity, and frequently by huge margins. The dire warnings of a seriously divided church, and the probability of a serious schism, are unfounded. The dissenting voices are few. When they see the scale of their defeat, most will learn to adapt. Some no doubt will choose to leave, or seek allegiance to an alternative hierarchical  structure – but they will be few.

The compromise motion, recognizing the inevitable victory for the proposal, aimed to sugar the pill for conservative male clergy by providing for alternative structures whereby dissenting male clergy could avoid reporting to female bishops, by working instead with a parallel structure consisting exclusively of men. This is obviously insulting to women, and has been roundly rejected. Just 6 of the 30 votes so far have supported the compromise. That is, 24 have rejected it – already more than half. The compromise cannot reach the minimum of 22 required.

Although it is clearly supported by a majority of the dioceses, this was just one (important) landmark along the way. The proposal still has some way to go. Next, it will have to be approved by the full national synod, with parallel votes in favour required from each of the three houses – of bishops, clergy and laity. The scale of support at diocesan level, coming generally from all three houses, should make passage at this next level pretty  much a formality. Thereafter, it will have to go before the British parliament.

Legislation to introduce women bishops into the Church of England has moved a step closer, according to supporters.

So far 28 out of 30 of the Church’s regional councils, the diocesan synods, have voted to endorse the legislation.

Having been backed by most of the 44 diocesan synods, the measure will return to the General Synod next year.

A further motion with extra concessions for Anglicans who cannot accept women bishops has been supported by just six diocesan synods.

The Church’s national assembly, the General Synod, may vote finally on the legislation next July.

-BBC News 

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