Showing posts with label Lent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lent. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Highlights from the Queer Epistle of Paul to the ex-queers and "side b" gay Christians

What follows is a queered reading of highlights from Galatians.  It is written as if by Paul, who is, in this queer reading, ex-antigay crusader.  It is written to those being seduced and persuaded by the "ex-gay" and "side b" (queer, but celibate because to act on it would be sinful) Christian communities.  It stands on its own, but might be read alongside Paul's Epistle to the Galatians to see the parallels.  It is also important to note that I believe the Spirit of Scripture is still speaking and moving in us today.  Because of that, scripture needs more than to be queered.  It needs to be retold from a womanist perspective, reclaimed as the book of oppressed people of color, told again as the narrative of immigrants and the poor.  My rendering will fail to do all of that, so I encourage you to edit, in the comments if you wish!




CHAPTER 1

Paul, an evangelist-not sent by some political organization or by human authorities in religion, but through Jesus Christ and God the Mother, who vindicated Christ and did not leave Christ dead-and all of the members of God's family who are with me, 

To Christians in the "ex-gay" and "side b" communities:

Grace to you and peace from God and from Jesus Christ, who gave himself over to this broken world to set us free from the present oppressive age, according to the will of our God and Mother, to whom be the glory for ever and ever. Amen.

I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you in the queer-affirming grace of Christ and are turning to a different "gospel"-not that any of what they are telling you is good news of any sort, but there are some who are confusing you and want to pervert the good news of Christ.  

You have heard, no doubt, of my earlier life in anti-queer crusading. I was violently persecuting queer children of God and was trying to destroy their self-worth. I advanced in that movement beyond many among my people of the same age, for I was far more radical in my views of homosexuality and gender roles. But when God was pleased to reveal real Incarnate Love in Christ to me, so that I might proclaim it to the queer community, I did not need the approval of any "respected" church leaders, nor did I wait for churches and denominations to finish their long drawn out "holy conversations" about human sexuality, but I went away at once into gay bars and to pride parades and eventually returned to the churches to preach this.

Later I visited gay bars in some smaller cities, but the queer community in larger cities, all they knew of me was "The guy who was leading the anti-gay wing of a huge Christian organization is now out there promoting queer-affirming Christianity that he once tried to destroy."  And they knew God was up to something.

Chapter 2

Then, fourteen years later, I went to a major denominational meeting with Barnabas, and Titus came along.  I went up because I knew that's where God wanted me to go and speak.  Then I told them (though it was only in a private meeting with the appropriate committee leaders) the gospel message I had proclaimed to the queer community, because I wanted to know that I had not been doing all of this work just to have the church ignore it or table the discussion!  But there were still plenty of the ex-gay/anti-gay/"confront them in love"/"love the sinner hate the sin" people, who slipped in to try to find out how we were living in love and freedom in Christ Jesus, so that they could enslave us again in the church-we did not flinch in the face of this or back down, because we knew the truth of this message was too important for you!

It should have been quite clear that the same God who had called us to openly affirm women in ministry and emphatically denounce racism and sexism and all the other oppresive isms, had called me to preach this gospel to the queer community.  
But when Cephas came to San Fransisco, I opposed him to his face, because he was clearly out of line; for until certain people came from the "love won out" group, he was happy to hang out with queer members and same-sex couples.  But after those people showed up, he started avoiding queer friends because he was afraid of what the "ex gay" and "gays should be celibate to be holy" crowd would say. And the other straight church members joined him in the hypocrisy. I said to Cephas in front of all of them, "If you, as a straight cisgender man and a Christian, live your life being comfortable with who you are, loving who you love and marrying and having sex and raising a family with your wife, how are you going to tell gays, lesbians, bisexual, transgender and queer believers that in order for them to be a good Christian they have to NOT do all of that?!"  

I used to be in one of those narrow "us four and no more" churches and it killed me, so that I could finally live in the expansive and inclusive community of God. The same oppressive religion that crucified Jesus, crucified me with Christ.  Anti-gay Paul is dead.  Now it is the inclusive Love of Christ that lives in me.  And the life I am living now is that kind of inclusive, expansive, affirming love that God gave me.  How could I ever go back to the way I was?  If God's love that included me cannot include my queer sisters and brothers, then Jesus' message and death is meaningless.

CHAPTER 3

You foolish Christians! Who has bewitched you? You have seen before your very eyes how that kind of religion killed Jesus!  The only thing I want to know is this: if God wants gay people to be straight so much, why does God keep calling and using queer people?  Starting with that understanding of the love and call of God, are you now going to end by trying to be straight or rejecting your feelings and identity?  Were all of those moments with God just an elaborate joke God was playing on you from birth?

Do you think God was not present until you decided to work really hard to be straight? Those who are relying on being straight-acting enough, masculine enough, feminine enough, are going to be disappointed; because those expectations are not even realistic to begin with.  So it is evident that no one is going to get right with God by being straight. 

Before we grew into living this life of Spirit writing on our hearts, words of ancient scriptures still hinted that this is what it was all really about.  And now that we understand the message Christ taught about God, the world, and ourselves, we are not subject to some ancient code that was just hinting at this reality.  Just like what God said at Jesus' baptism, YOU are all the beloved child of God in whom She is well-pleased. There is no straight or gay, there is no male or female, there is no "acting on it gay" or "being celibate gay"-for you are all one in Christ Jesus.  And if you are marked as beloved, then you are Sarah's children, heirs of the promise that God was going to bring life where everyone said it could not be birthed.


CHAPTER 4

Now I hear you are back to doing all the same stuff the church that kicked you out did.  I am afraid that all my work for this message will be wasted on you if you just go back to that small god with rules that make no sense.  Friends, I beg you, listen to what God is saying through me, because I have listened to what God is saying through you.  Am I now your enemy for still telling the truth?  Those anti-queer people tell you how great and brave you are so long as you are obedient to their myopic view of following Jesus, but they have an agenda; they want you to get their approval and blessing so they can feel important.  

Friends, we are not the heirs of a faith that was meant to make the circle smaller, but of one that was meant to draw it wider.


CHAPTER 5

You have been set free to live free.  Stand firm, then, and do not let someone make you a slave again.  Listen to me!  I, Paul, am telling you that if you let them convince you that you need to be heteronormative or celibate, do not think there will be liberation or freedom in that.  If you accept what they say about you as a queer, then you will have to believe what they say about everyone else and God and the Bible too.  In the process of trying to be someone other than who you are, you will cut yourself off from Christ who loves the true you.  The Spirit is working in you, telling you that you are worthy of all of the fullness of life that others enjoy.  For in Christ Jesus, neither sexual or asexual or straight or queer counts for anything; the only thing that will bring real whole-iness is the love of God working in the authentic you.

You were doing so well; who stole your self-worth from you?  That kind of persuasion does not come from the One who calls you.  And, for those who believe it is ok to be queer as long as you do not "act on it," you have become a thief too-a little yeast leavens the whole batch of dough.  Those who are trying to confuse you about your worth as a queer person living out your queer life, will have to answer for the carnage they are leaving behind.

Listen, you are free to live your life now.  Do not waste this opportunity to use your freedom to liberate others.  All of the various verses of the Bible everyone wants to throw around all come together to say one thing: "You shall love your neighbor as yourself."  But if you use your life-giving inclusion to turn around and find someone else to exclude, you will just end up abusing people the way you were abused.

If you are led by the Spirit, you do not have to try to live up to the expectations of a oppressive system.  The signs of that system are obvious: bigotry, white supremacy, misogyny, erasure, justifications, excuses, self-righteousness, inequality, repression, fear, closets and condemnation and the like.  I am warning you; if this dominant system is where you are building your house, you are not building in God's city.

By contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, justice, equality, and upsetting the cisheteropatriarchy. These things are never wrong. If we are here because the Spirit brought us this far, then let the Spirit guide us all the way.


CHAPTER 6

My friends, if you see someone straying off the path of full inclusion and liberation, you who are led by the Spirit should guide that person back.  Be careful that you do not ignore your own privilege when you are doing it.  You will fulfill the law of Christ when you side with the marginalized and the poor and the excluded.

Those who receive the gospel of inclusion and liberation must work for the inclusion and liberation of all people.  God is not mocked, if it is not good news for everyone, then it is not good news.

Do not grow weary in talking about queer liberation and working for it, because it will make a difference if we do not give up.  Every chance we get, we ought to stand up for queer people, especially at church.

I am going to stop here and write by hand.  Listen, those people telling you that you are broken or sick or disobedient are just projecting.  They want you to be "exgay" or "side b" so they can show everyone how righteous they are, because they know they really aren't.  They want to parade you around as a proof that they are right.  I hope I never parade anyone around except for Jesus who died rather than to listen to the lies of religious leaders or the bigotry of society.  Being straight or queer does not mean a thing; but being authentic and WHOLE means everything.  And if that is what you are doing, gay-straight-trans-cis-bi-lesbian or anything else, you are the true representatives of what God wants for all people.

May the broad and expansive grace of Jesus Christ be with your spirit, my beloved family.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Lent Made Easy


How to Make Lent an Easy Journey in 3 Easy Steps!

A Sermon based on Luke 4:1-13

Lent is that journey that lasts for 40 days, reminding us of the 40 days Jesus spent in the wilderness in preparation (according to the gospel writers) for his earthly ministry.  At the end of those 40 days of solitude and fasting, he faced temptation to fulfill his ministry in various ways--to satisfy his own human desire for food/stuff, power, and comfort.  He made the hard choice...the one that ended in crucifixion, mind you, but Lent doesn't have to be that hard for you.  As you face these same temptations today, here's how to make Lent an easy journey in three easy steps.




1.  Give up candy or something as a pious religious act instead of really contemplating what it means to be hungry and seeing the physical and spiritual hunger of those around you and sitting in the dirt with those who suffer and grieve and hunger.  Use your religious beliefs as an excuse to feed yourself on the hope of a better world some day and ignore the hope of a better world today.  Lent is an easy journey when you make it all about what you can get out of your religion.

2.  Make Lent all about you being in control of your life instead of giving up any kind of advantage you might have in order to serve others.  Worry more about what other people think about you and live in a way that will put on a good face for the world.  Give your life as an offering at all the right temples the world has to offer...make your life one big Facebook timeline that you control the status updates for so that people never have to know the you that struggles, that slips and falls, that grieves, that loses...that way, you'll never have to stop your pursuit of power and fame in order to help someone else.  Unfriend sinners in the Easy-Lent-Facebook of life--surround yourself with people that make you look like the person you want everyone to think you are.  Don't check in at the hospital when you're sick, at the rehab center when you are in recovery, at the thrift shop when you are poor, at the soup kitchen when you are hungry.  You worship control, advantage, and influence now...don't let down your guard this Lent to acknowledge that you don't have it all together.  If you do that, you might find yourself surrounded with other people who don't have it all together either--and you might have to hug someone who isn't very loveable, feed someone who isn't very nice looking, share your story of redemption with someone who desperately needs redemption too.  Lent is an easy journey when you just make it all about how your religion can help you put on a good face for others.

3.  Avoid the cross.  There's an easier path.  The temptation of Jesus to fling himself down from the pinnacle of the temple was an invitation that was echoed again when people at the foot of the cross mocked him saying "he saved others, let him save himself!"  Make your Lent devoid of all of the harsh realities of life...don't let doubt, questions, hardship, or sacrifice be a part of your Lenten journey.  Take the easy answers and insist that everyone else around you do it too.  We don't ask the hard questions.  Dismiss the idea that you might have to endure pain or suffering in this life...do everything you can to avoid it...if you always try to do what is right, loving, humble, and just, you may have to pay a price for it.  If you try to REALLY follow Jesus and really be a disciple, you might say or do things that will make your end like his.  If you insist on the way of peace, you will face violence.  If you eat at the table with Samaritans and lepers and prostitutes and tax collectors: the outsiders and heretics, the untouchables, the unholy, and people with a past, they'll think your just like them...and worse yet, they may start treating you like they treat them.  Constantly remind people that you aren't like "those" people.  Lent is an easy journey when you live your life as an attempt to do things that are easy rather than things that are right.


But if you insist on making the hard journey of Lent...the journey that leads to the cross...

1.  Be willing to hungry.  To be dissatisfied with the hunger in the world.  To be upset that your neighbors are neglected and mistreated and poor and marginalized.  Be willing to give up some of your food, your power, your influence, your privilege to make things better for others.  Don't turn stones into bread just to feed yourself, go dig up stony ground to plant a garden that can feed others.

2.  Worship God instead of your own self-interests.  Realize that God's agenda in the world goes against the grain, and be willing to give up the recognition and religious acclamation that comes with maintaining the status quo in order to see God's will done on Earth as it is in heaven.  Be willing for people to see the real you and be willing to share that authentic self with people who are more like you than you may be comfortable admitting.  Don't bow down to those things that will give you all the power and fame you ever dreamed of, bow down to the God who became "Emmanuel"-God with us-and dream different dreams that include all of the "US" in the world.

3.  Embrace the cross.  Stop looking for shortcuts to glory and realize that sometimes, in the process of pursuing glory, there will first come suffering.  Be willing to be called different, but more importantly, be willing to BE different.  Be willing to be accused of being dangerous, but more importantly, be a real danger to the status quo of a world full of violence, hatred, grudges, discrimination, and religious elitism.  Be willing to be like Jesus...and pay the price for being like Jesus.  Be willing to be hated for loving, called a heretic for preaching truth, be called a sinner for inviting sinners like you to the Lord's table.


And here's why you should choose the hard journey of Lent.  Both journeys will end in death...But only one will end in resurrection.