Category: Our Stories

Narrative of Tom OToole, Jr. – Beyond Ex-Gay

Narrative of Tom OToole, Jr. – Beyond Ex-Gay.

I came to Christ at the age of 14 after attending a Christian boy’s camp in Maine. Within a year of accepting Christ, I was affirmed by people in my Conservative Baptist church as a “natural leader” with potential to do great things. At the age of 15 I began serving each summer as a camp counselor at various Christian camps in New England. I was also very active in my church’s youth group and began expressing my love for music by playing guitar and singing in church. I attended Bible college in New Jersey and a Christian liberal arts college in New York.

Tom in 1978

At the age of 23 I began working at a Christian school in Massachusetts, and I served as principal of that school for 7.5 years. My spiritual and intellectual gifts were always noticed by others and I never had trouble finding opportunities to serve God in fun and challenging ministry roles. But I had a secret…While my life as a natural-born Christian leader was moving full-steam ahead, my identity as a gay man was also moving forward, keeping pace with my outer successes in ministry.

Same-sex attraction has always been a part of my life, as far back as I can remember. I began acting on those attractions by “experimenting” with childhood friends as a young teen. It wasn’t until I was about 15 years old (the same time that I began growing in my faith) that I realized I might be gay. When I was 16 my mother became suspicious, confronted me and asked me if I was gay. I broke down crying and confirmed her suspicions. My parents took me to see a local pastor to see if he could help me. The pastor showed compassion but recommended that I see a Christian therapist.

I can still remember sitting in the office of that therapist. He was behind his big desk, and although I sat just a few feet in front of him, I felt like I was hundreds of miles away. It was my first encounter with feeling shame in the presence of a faith-based caregiver. After telling him my story, and sitting there in awkward silence for what seemed like an eternity, he said, “Do you want to change?” In the moments before answering his question, I remember thinking, “Change? Change what? I’m not sure I really understand what this is, let alone whether or not I want to change…” I told him that I did want to change, but I never met with him again. I proceeded to convince my parents that my “gayness” was just a phase. “I can change this with God’s help!”, I told them. And thus began a 24 year journey of repression, costly pursuits of healing and repeated disappointment. I never changed.

Image of boy with head in handsUnable to sustain the conflict raging within me, I left my ministry as a Christian school principal after 7.5 years. On one hand I was a successful, respected, young leader in the Christian community. On the other hand I was a closeted gay man, pursuing anonymous sexual encounters and experiencing secret affairs with men. I began doing research to see if I could find a “cure” from homosexuality. I was making phone calls all over the country. I attended week-long conferences focused on healing of sexual and relational brokenness. I spent thousands of dollars to attend these conferences.

After leaving my ministry at the Christian school I began attending a small church in Boston where I decided to be completely honest about my sexuality. I began meeting with the pastor weekly and also received weekly counseling from a Christian therapist who specialized in treating homosexuals. I spent over $3,000 on this therapy over the course of 2 years. At the age of 30 I attended my first Exodus affiliate ex-gay ministry program in Boston. I worked through the 40-week program 3 times, the 3rd time as a leader. I led worship for the program and attended 2 Exodus conferences. I had some of the biggest names in ex-gay ministry pray over me and even prophesy about my healing.

But my same-sex attraction never diminished. I never changed.

I began serving as a worship leader at my church. God began using me to lead His people in greater understanding, experience and expression of worship as a lifestyle. Before long I was leading worship at city-wide gatherings and concerts of prayer. I was invited to teach about and lead worship at other churches, Christian retreats and coffee houses. I began another wave of participating in ex-gay ministry and attended a 40-week Living Waters Program twice, the 2nd time as an assistant leader. Again, I was succeeding in ministry, but my same-sex attraction was very much alive and well. I guess I really believed that if I stuck with it, cooperated with caregivers and with God, I would eventually be free from homosexuality or free to live a celibate lifestyle. I was wrong.

At the age of 34 I joined Youth With A Mission (YWAM), graduated from YWAM’s Discipleship Training School and School of Worship in Hawaii and began traveling to many nations as a missionary worship leader. Although I did experience some wonderful adventures with God during those years, the conflict within me mounted. In 2000, at the age of 40 after spending about $25,000 for therapy, conferences and programs, and after 24 years of fighting, I became very depressed. I gave up ministry and trying to change my sexual orientation. I left my church and isolated myself from the Body of Christ for 6 years.Picture of Tom O'Toole Jr.

In March of 2005 I fell down stairs at my home while doing laundry. I fractured my ankle severely and needed 9 surgeries. I contracted osteomyelitis (infection in the bone) and almost lost my foot. I just started walking without crutches in January of 2007. Although the past 2 years have been the most lonely and challenging years of my life, somehow God used this time to draw me back into relationship with Him – but this time as a Christian gay man. I re-established relationships with dear friends at my church. Although they do not support my decision to live a gay lifestyle, we are able to share common ground based on our faith.

Recently some Christian friends approached me. They are a young heterosexual couple who happen to have several gay friends. They are not convinced that loving, committed, monogamous relationships between people of the same sex are forbidden by God. They invited me to join them in starting a small group that reaches out to people who feel completely alienated and estranged from God and His people, offering them hope and a path to intimacy with God, regardless of their sexual orientation.

So here I am again, exploring ministry opportunities after a long and lonely “desert” season. Now I’m moving forward as an openly gay Christian man. I’m dating guys again, and for the first time in my life I feel a deep sense of freedom to be the man God created me to be!

 

Christian, happy and gay. Yes, it’s possible!

Christian, happy and gay. Yes, it’s possible!
Benjamin Gresham
SX ONLINE, 31 October 2010

I wonder if you’ve ever thought about trying to change your sexual orientation. Is it even possible? Well, many religions seem to think so and still present this as one of the only options for LGBT people. What follows is a trail of devastation for many involved and my story is no different.

I was born and raised in the Hills area of Sydney, known to many as the ‘Bible Belt’. Brought up on Christian beliefs and values, I was taught from a young age that homosexuality was unacceptable and was not part of God’s plan.

I first knew I didn’t fit into this ‘plan’ when I was about 6-years-old. I didn’t really know much about being gay then, let alone that I was one of them; however I did know that I was different. And like any person who is ‘different’, the desire to conform and be accepted can make you do almost anything.

Even though I grew up in a Christian home, it wasn’t until I was about 15-years-old that I started going along to church, reading the bible and taking my faith seriously. At 15, my faith became more to me than just stories and historic figures. God became a real part of my life and my church was like my home. It was everything to me!

At high school I was one of those kids that everyone knew was a Christian. I would pray before school at the flag pole, lead the school Christian group and vowed to never have sex before marriage. However, under the cover of this seemingly ‘straight’ Christian boy was a closeted young gay man, ashamed of who he was and terrified of anyone knowing the truth.

My Christian identity in many ways also became a cover for dodging any possible questions that might suggest I was gay. However, despite the straight facade I was portraying, I still would often get bagged out at school for being too ‘soft’ and for liking all the ‘gay’ subjects. I still remember one Friday in Year Ten when I thought I had been found out. A boy in my grade came up to me and said, “You’re not going to heaven, Ben!” I replied, “Why not?” He responded with, “Because God doesn’t send faggots to heaven!”

At 16-years-old, I gathered up all the strength and courage I could muster and organised to meet with my church leader and managed to get out the words “I’m gay”. The look of disappointment on his face was too much for me to take and so I burst into tears only to be interrupted by him saying “You can change. Many others have become straight – you just have to believe”.

My desire to be a good Christian led me to wanting to take my church leader’s advice and made me want to change from gay to straight and so I entered my first ‘ex-gay’ program. ‘Ex-gay’ programs try to ‘cure’ your homosexuality as if it were some type of illness or abnormality.

Every day, for 60 days at a time, I would complete lessons on ‘Why homosexuality is wrong’, read the bible, pray and attend church up to 5 times a week, as well as answer accountability questions for things like whether I had looked at pornography, masturbated or even had thoughts about other men.

One day I slipped. After lasting for 42 days I masturbated, causing me to fall into a cycle of guilt, shame and self-hate. I attended the programs for another three years, desperately wanting for God to love me and for the church to find a place for me. As a gay man, I simply felt that God would not love me unless I was straight.

At the same time of trying to turn from gay to straight, I was in the home stretch of high school. As I studied hard, the formal came closer and closer and the fact that I didn’t have a date was becoming more and more suspicious. I would go to school only to be bullied with the words ‘faggot’, ‘homo’ or ‘queer’ which soon became commonplace. I would cringe every time I heard my friends say ‘that’s so gay’ and the bullying left me feeling like I didn’t belong, furthering my desire to become straight. My Christian identity was no longer covering my secret and so one day, I caved in and asked a girl to my formal just so I could fit in with the other guys.

As I battled between my faith and sexuality, I started to hate myself and felt like I had failed God. It was at this time that I was diagnosed with depression. My depression escalated and led to self-harm. I attempted to commit suicide twice.

Realising I could no longer go on living like this, I left the ex-gay programs and resigned myself to a life without God. I felt numb, broken, damaged. After all that work, nothing had changed and I had almost lost my life.

A few months later, I found Freedom 2 b[e], a group for LGBT people from Christian backgrounds. With this group I found the hope, strength and love I needed to move forward. Over time, my depression, self-harm and suicidal thoughts reduced significantly and for the first time in my life, I believed that I was loved by God, just as I was. At 19-years-old, I finally ‘came out’ for good as an openly-gay man.

Coming out was no easy process and telling my parents and family proved hard at first but today they are incredibly supportive. They are even marching with me in Mardi Gras in 2011.

Today I am a 22-year-old, very happy gay Christian man. I have an amazing boyfriend named Sam, I am in my 4th year of university and I am the Youth Coordinator for Freedom 2 b[e].

I am still attending the same church as before, except this time, I am not living a lie. I am living as a proud gay man and am currently working with the pastors and leaders to make it a safer place for LGBT youth. It is my hope that one day ex-gay programs will cease to exist and the church would become a place of love not judgement for LGBT people everywhere.

Even though ‘being different’ isn’t easy and often faith and sexuality seem like they are two worlds apart, I have managed to reconcile my faith in God and my sexual orientation and I am now the happiest I’ve ever been.

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More resources down under at freedom2be.org.

 

Life in Full Color, Wide Screen, HDTV!

At an early age, I found myself drawn to males: As a preschooler finding physical culturist Jack LaLanne’s muscular arms attractive as he exercised on his daily TV fitness program in the early 1960s; of wanting to get the attention of Paul, the dark haired boy who sat ahead of me in first grade; of looking forward to summer swim lessons where I would see other boys and men in swim briefs. From these examples and others, I noted that I was different from most boys in a way I did not begin to understand until adolescence.

Under loving Christian parents and faithful congregations of believers, mostly Lutheran but also Methodist and Presbyterian, I grew to recognize God’s love as manifested in His gift of Jesus Christ. Hence, as a young teen, I publicly professed my faith in Christ as Savior and Lord. Yet if the topic of homosexuality were to come up, it would be coupled with the unacceptability of being gay. In my evangelical Christian family, homosexuality was [incorrectly] regarded as sinful. But this was not a concern for me: there would be much time for God to change me. [Oh, the presumption!]

Up through medical school, I felt God would ‘hit me over the head’ with the right woman, at the right time. Obviously, this never happened. Until the mid twenties, dating was done with actual thoughts of a future wife. From the thirties onward, dating women was more for companionship and to be part of expected social events. Always a gentleman, I never pursued a sexual component. Faith convictions regarding inappropriateness of sexual intimacy outside marriage dovetailed nicely with my lack of desire to have intimacy with females.

For about eight months, I attended Homosexuals Anonymous monthly meetings, a fourteen step program that promises ‘Freedom from Homosexuality’. But I soon discovered that their core tenants were scientifically unsupportable and their methodology ineffective. [The American Psychological Association, the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics among others, regard such deceptively named ‘reparative therapy’ organizations to not just be ineffective but to also be potentially harmful.] Besides I had nothing that needed ‘repair’.

Not until about age thirty did I come to accept that I was chosen by God to be gay. [See Psalm139]. God created me gay for His reasons.

Sure, in some ways, it could be easier to pretend to be straight. But that would be unfaithful to God’s calling in my life. St. Paul wrote in Galatians 1:10 “For am I now seeking the favor of society, or of God? Or am I striving to please society? If I were still trying to please society, I would not be a bond servant of Christ.”

Hence, I will seek to live in integrity of how God made me. To hide or deny my identity is like the rebellious pot knowing better than the potter. [Romans 9:20: “On the contrary, who are you, O man, who answers back to God: The thing molded will not say to the molder, “Why did you make me like this,” will it? Or does not the potter have a right over the clay, to make from the same lump one vessel for honorable use and another for common use?”] To deny how I am created would be a form of spiritual rebellion.

As God continued to teach me to accept myself, as He created me, I realized that sexual orientation is a purposeful gift: being gay has given me a deeper compassion to others, a greater sensitivity for others, and a closer walk with Him.

Medicine is a nurturing profession. Would I have been as nurturing, or as sensitive or as compassionate, if I were not gay? I don’t think so. Being gay made me a better physician, and a better Air Force officer! Being gay has given me a greater acceptance of others. Being gay has made me a better humanitarian. Being gay has given me opportunity to know myself better. Being gay has given me a greater appreciation of God’s diverse love, grace and strength. Being gay has given me a closer walk with Him.

After a twenty two year career in the uniformed services, I was honorably discharged 1 September 2005. Finally, I was able to openly integrate my life as a gay Christian man. No more was life like black and white programs viewed on a 1950’s portable TV. Now living an authentic life of a Christian gay man, life became full color programs on wide screen, high definition TV!

Now, from a life of truth, can come a consistent witness of The Truth. Praise God!

Walt

 

A Peek Inside the Closet

NOTE TO READER: The following is a letter I wrote to my mom not long after I came out of that dark, despicable, life-quashing place the LGBT community knows as the closet. Having been under that oppression for more than 25 years, I wanted to help her understand, to open her eyes to many things, but two things in particular: 1) how much of a choice homosexuality is NOT, and 2) what growing up gay, homophobic, and in the closet was like from our conservative, intolerant evangelical church-perspective.

Everything written herein is based on my experience and life’s events.

I’ll admit, I took a harsh tone with her. She needed time, and I was impatient. I had lived with it for many years. It was all new to her. Since the writing of this, I’m very happy to report that time, grace, and increased knowledge and understanding has done its miracle.
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A Peek Inside the Closet

“A traditional religious belief is that “grace builds on nature,” in other words religious life depends on a good foundation in human health. Therefore we can legitimately evaluate the validity of a religious belief system by its psychological consequences. Good theology will result in good psychology, and vice versa. Accordingly, bad theology will have negative psychological consequences. This is nothing more than an application of the biblical norm: “You will be able to tell them by their fruits” (Matt. 7:16) If Saint Irenaeus proclaimed, the glory of God is humans FULLY ALIVE [emphasis mine], then clearly a belief system that results in the destruction of human health cannot serve the glory of God.”

~Dr. John J. McNeill

Mom,

For someone who has not lived this life, it is impossible for that person to fully understand. I am sitting here trying to think of some other current condition in life to which closeted homosexuality (of the variety that self-rejects and self-loathes) can be compared – I cannot think of one other condition that comes close.

Nevertheless, I tried to put some things down on paper because I wanted to help you understand to some small degree what life is like for people like me, people who because of the position of society, their family, and the Church feel they have to hide their true nature.

What follows is not intended to be a comprehensive list. If I wanted to be comprehensive, I would have to write volumes, and it would likely be a project that would take years. As the title suggests, this is just to give you a small idea of what growing up gay is like in our society, conservative religious context, and in a family that views homosexuality as a deviation from God’s plan. Believe me when I say this barely scratches the surface of what it’s like growing up gay, homophobic, and in the closet.

CHILDHOOD -

  • Age 7 to 8 years – the gay boy knows he is different than the other boys, although he cannot necessarily decipher why, or what the condition is
  • The gay boy begins to gain the awareness that for some reason he is unable to acculturate himself to the acceptable heterosexual pattern of his male peers/family members
  • The gay boy knows instinctively that he tends to identify more with his female friends/ relatives, but all the while does not understand why
  • The gay boy desires greatly to identify with his “straight” male peers/relatives, but for some unknown reason is inhibited
  • The gay boy fears that his parents (especially his Father) thinks less of him because of some perceived inferiority
  • The gay boy wonders and fears in the back of his mind what mom and dad think about his desire to have an “action figure” that resembles a Barbie-doll more than anything else
  • The gay boy likes going across the street and playing with the neighbor-girl’s dollhouse, knowing that this activity would be frowned upon by many, but he fears most the reaction of his parents

EARLY SCHOOL YEARS

  • The gay boy gains an interest in playing sports (soccer, to be precise), not because he has much affection for the sport itself, but because he wants to be close to one very cute player with whom he is enthralled
  • While others seem to have very little issue, the gay boy avoids the gym shower (and even PE altogether) for fear that while in the shower with his peers, his bodily reaction to their naked form – over which he has little control – will give him away

PARENTS

  • The gay boy cannot turn to his parents for support or guidance because he knows by the comments they’ve made about “those homosexuals” and the AIDS epidemic that his revelation to them will only bring condemnation, judgment, shame, and pain
  • The parents have made it clear to the gay boy, because of their statements/reactions towards a gay relative, that it is an emotionally charged and unsafe topic
  • The gay boy wants so badly to please his parents, but feels trapped between his desires and theirs

GOING TO CHURCH

  • While others at the “24 Hour Famine” are fasting and praying for the hungry/needy in less fortunate countries, the gay boy is fasting and praying that his deepest longings will be purged from him
  • While others are going to the altar for typical prayer needs (i.e. health, prosperity, spiritual needs for self and others), the gay boy’s trips to the prayer bench are a desperate plea to become like everyone else…or to die, whichever comes first
  • The gay boy learns quickly that bearing false witness (i.e. lying) is the “right thing to do” if he wants to survive life in his conservative church – what he does not realize is that this will produce a life-long pattern of dishonesty and deceit – something that is not easily shed
  • The gay boy avoids reading scriptures that appear to condemn him, rendering him completely incapable of reconciling his faith and his sexuality
  • The gay boy listens to respected church officials demonizing people exactly like himself – he is now certain there is no one at church to whom he can speak about his condition
  • The gay boy constantly feels like he is a failure in God’s eyes, in his own eyes, and will soon be in the eyes of his family and friends if he cannot free himself of the “problem”
  • The gay boy cannot stand that he is considered an “abomination” for something over which he had no choice – he doesn’t understand why God would hate him for wanting to express love to those whom his affection is “hardwired”

FRIENDSHIPS (gals)

  • The gay boy is surrounded by girl-friends… somehow they sense that he is different, he is not likely to try to take advantage of them in an undesired way – what they do not realize is that it is this very characteristic that precludes them from intimacy with him – nevertheless, some try
  • The gay boy listens to and agrees/disagrees with his female friend’s statements about certain other boys, but is not able to voice his opinions or affections
  • The gay boy realizes (whether consciously or subconsciously) that his feminine liaisons are his support group, yet he is often frustrated and jealous of them because they are free to express their emotional longings for the objects of their desire (which happen to be the same as his), while the gay boy is bound to silence

FRIENDSHIPS (guys)

  • The touch of a gay boy’s “best friend” sends chills up and down his spine and puts a hollow feeling in the pit of his stomach – welling up from within, he knows of no way to control, avoid, or rid himself of it
  • The gay boy knows instinctively that the object of his affection will more than likely not reciprocate his sentiment – in fact, the knowledge of that affection will almost certainly end the friendship
  • The gay boy on a sleep-over, in the same bed with his “best friend,” lies there petrified and unable to go to sleep because of what he feels, but upon which he dare not act

HIGH SCHOOL AND TEENAGE YEARS

  • The young gay teenager, as he has now gone through the bodily changes that mark the beginning of manhood, begins to realize how he is different – because of his culture, religious context and upbringing he instinctively knows he must hide – what’s more, according to everyone that the gay boy trusts and holds dear, Christians CANNOT be gay …he decides to believe he is not; thus begins his self-deception and denial
  • The two emotions that dominate the gay boy’s life are fear and isolation; fear of what family and friends would think if they knew the truth, and isolation because there is no one to whom he can turn – only much later in life will he realize how very psychologically damaging the denial, fear and isolation will be
  • The gay teen buys his clothing/tennis shoes with trepidation that some may think his choice to be a bit too feminine, thus blowing his heterosexual façade
  • The young gay teenager begins to modify and practice the way he pronounces his “S’s”, making them a bit harsher, more masculine sounding, not as soft as his more effeminate counterpart
  • The young gay teenager modifies and practices the way he points, making sure that the palm faces down rather than up, the latter of which seems to come more naturally to him
  • The young gay teenager upon dressing up as a girl for Halloween, and unexpectedly turning some guys heads, causes within him elation and horror at the same time

INTIMACY, SEXUALITY AND ATTRACTION

  • For the straight boy or girl feelings of attraction are reinforced and applauded by family, society, culture, and religion from the earliest age. For the gay boy and girl, even before they are fully aware of their same-gender feelings of attraction, they generally know that what they are feeling is not how things are “supposed to be”
  • Straight kids have no problems sharing with peers their crushes on a friend, a rock-star, or their favorite actor/actress… gay kids must hide it
  • The gay youth, having kissed the girls and not having understood why his male peers seem to think it “all the rage,” kisses another boy …and roman candles are set ablaze
  • The gay youth has a series of sexual encounters with another boy he loves, but he is terrified that he will be discovered by parents, and yet thrilled that his expression of affection and intimacy is mutual
  • The gay youth discovers that he feels no shame in that expression of love – this too, he does not understand if it is supposed to be so wrong – thus he begins to wonder if his conscience has been severed, making him incapable of a life worthy of being called a follower of Christ

COLLEGE DAYS

  • The young gay man seeks help and counsel from a “trained mental health professional” at his conservative Christian college and is told he is a “likely candidate for basket case” – he decides at an early point in his college career not to return for more emotional abuse
  • The young gay man comes up with excuses as to why he does not date the girls – his studies, his relationship with God, his interest in someone back home …but they are just lies, and he feels shame for, but bound to, his fabrications
  • The young gay man, when he does try to date a young girl, ends up hurting that precious soul after a few weeks, yet is unable to explain to her why – more lies and excuses? You got it!
  • The young gay man once again forms close bonds with the objects of his desire (his best male friends), but is unable to express the deep affection, in turn leading him to despair and to depression
  • The young gay man tries to show his affection through actions like doing his best friends laundry, or cleaning his friends desk, or even giving a foot massage, but it always ends with the young gay man’s physical and emotional frustration
  • The young gay man takes to unhealthy behaviors, like spying on his best friend – even while in the shower – hoping to make some sort of emotional connection that he knows will ultimately not happen

HETERO-MARRIAGE AND SEX

  • The gay fiancé decides, devoid of passion and the intense affection associated with marriage, that it is best for himself, his family, his church, and society that he marry… all the while trying anxiously to convince himself that he has made the right decision, and yet never assured of that – he does not realize that his calculated decision has the potential to destroy lives, leaving much unwanted and unnecessary wreckage
  • Once married, after the “newness” has worn thin, the gay husband cannot inform his wife of the mental gymnastics he has to go through in order to perform sexually with her
  • The gay husband sometimes sits on the edge of the bed before sex, massaging himself, worried, and hoping that soon his erection will become firm enough to begin the sometimes dreaded act
  • The gay husband cannot tell his wife that he sometimes looks at gay porn to fuel his hetero-sex-life
  • The gay husband cannot tell his wife that certain feminine bodily odors turn him off
  • The gay husband must quickly fabricate an answer when asked during the sex act, “What are you thinking (fantasizing) about?” He can never tell his wife that it is not her – that it is not a “HER” at all
  • The gay husband is constantly afraid that his wife will notice him doing something he does not intend to do, but nevertheless of which he often catches himself in the act – watching the good-looking guys at the mall, or the supermarket
  • The gay man cannot explain to the wife’s satisfaction why his libido is not as strong as one might think for his age, so she looks for possible reasons – low testosterone? Side-effects from medications? All the while, he knows, but dares not disclose, that his sexual appetite is as strong as it could possibly be

FATHERHOOD

  • The gay father fears what his child will think of him if she finds out that much of the society in which she’s been raised considers her daddy to be a “fag”
  • The gay father fears what his child will pick up subconsciously, while the extended family is unaware of what they are inadvertently communicating about him by their body language, the things they say (or don’t say), by everything they do

TICKING TIME-BOMB/DO NOT SHAKE – CONTENTS UNDER PRESSURE

  • The gay man has a crisis experience in which everything that he has sought to repress, deny, beat down, hold at bay, forget about, overcome, pray away, and sublimate, comes rushing to the surface…like a sleeping volcano that suddenly comes to life – the gay man, while married to a dear friend, is thrust speedily back to his natural inclination/orientation simply because a handsome young man asks him to kiss him
  • The gay man, remembering the incredible exhilaration and passion, and yet the tender intimacy, of that kiss with another boy (as teenagers), and so completely exhausted from trying to suppress reality in favor of a false reality, cannot resist, knowing that once that closet door is opened it will more than likely never be closed again

EX-GAY LIFESTYLE/WITCH-HUNTING MENTALITY

  • The gay man tries (in vain) to figure out why he is this way, which of life’s events could have caused such an atrocity because that is what the religious right touts; sexual molestation? But the gay man remembers everything from childhood; no memory is lost or blocked. Bad parenting? Both mother and father where loving, nurturing, and responsible parents. A broken relationship with a same-sex family member? But the gay man cannot justify this either as his same-sex attraction predates any such brokenness – the theories just do not stand up – Furthermore, the gay man discovers through extensive study that such theories were dismissed by the mainstream scientific/medical world over 40 years ago, and that the only groups that still follow such out-dated ideas are ultra-conservative religious groups that base their science on the Bible, a book that was never intended to be a science book, or a book on sexuality for that matter
  • The gay man begins to realize that a life-time of prayer, devotion to God, self-denial, self-deception, repression, and avoidance, has made no difference whatsoever with regard to his sexual orientation – he is still gay and will be so until the day he dies – if God Himself did not change him after so many years of endless pleading, why should he entertain the idea that an ex-gay ministry could? He then hears of the hundreds of thousands who have spent numerous years in, and thousands of dollars on, “reparative therapy,” and yet who have not changed anything accept their behavior, and even that is often suspect
  • The gay man begins to read for the first time in his life what the science actually says about sexual orientation in general; about homosexuality in particular – he is dumbfounded upon realizing that the religious right not only dismisses it, but attempts to bury the uncovered truths while shouting even louder its anti-gay rhetoric and spreading its fear and misinformation
  • The gay man reads about the shockingly large number of ex-gay ministry founders who now renounce their earlier claims, and have now come forward to apologize for the psychological harm they did to countless individuals from within those ministries
  • The gay man also reads about the untold scandals between the religious leaders (both ex-gay and straight) and people that his family trust and rely on for the “truth” that they proliferate, knowing, and yet unable to convince his family that they are being misled
  • The gay man does not understand why the majority of the population cannot see they discriminate when the use terms like “practicing homosexual” …no one has ever spoken the words “practicing heterosexual” because they realize that heterosexuality is not just about sex – why they cannot see that homosexuality is no different is beyond him
  • The gay man is now so exhausted with life in the closet, but he also fears what life must be like as a celibate, never knowing true love, passion, nor the depth of real intimacy; the gay man knows that neither condition would his straight counterpart ever dream of taking part in, and yet it is expected of the gay man
  • The gay man begins to read from sources that say he is “gay and OK” in God’s eyes – he finally begins to see a light at the end of the once endless closet – could it really be that God never intended for him to change into something he is not? Could it be that God never intended for His gay children to spend any amount of time in that dark hole? Some very intelligent gay and straight biblical scholars and theologians, as well as the majority of the scientific and medical authorities, people much smarter and far more studied than the gay man, seem to be saying so – is it really possible for the gay man to reconcile his faith and his sexuality?
  • The gay man, as he continues to study, begins to experience something he never dreamed was possible – hope and inner-peace
  • The gay man must now make the choice of a life-time – keep living a life of futility that is sure to put him in an early grave, or do the unthinkable – exit the closet for good, knowing that many of his friends and most of his family will think him hell-bound. What they do not realize is that HE WAS ALREADY THERE.

Mom,

I’m going to be forthright with you. You have asked me to be patient with you. I have done that, at least I’ve tried to very hard, but I need to ask you, “For what exactly am I being patient?” Am I being patient for you just to keep listening to the sources you rely on, not giving any consideration to any other voice? Am I being patient for you to remain in the position you’ve always held? Or am I being patient with you as you take an honest, truly open-minded look at what a quickly growing number of conservative (as well as liberal) biblical scholars are saying about faith and homosexuality?

Do you really believe that God wants His gay children to live as I have described above? God has given to every person the fundamental need for deep human intimacy. Science is clear as to the fact that sexual orientation is biologically fixed early in life and is immutable. Straight people are supposedly given God’s blessing to express and experience this fundamental, deeply-seated, God-given need, while gay people are told that we must change what cannot be changed, or remain celibate – never being able to express and experience that fundamental need for human intimacy – that which straight people take for granted.

Is this really a “God of love?” Or is this a picture of a cruel and sadistic God?

I don’t believe in that God anymore. Here is the picture of the loving God I believe in today:

“For You formed my inward parts;
You wove me in my mother’s womb.
I will give thanks to You,
For I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
Wonderful are Your works and my soul knows it very well.
My frame was not hidden from You,
When I was made in secret,
And skillfully wrought in the depths of the earth;
Your eyes have seen my unformed substance;
And in Your book were all written the days
That were ordained for me,
When as yet there was not one of them.
How precious also are Your thoughts to me, O God!
How vast is the sum of them!”

~Psalm 139:13-17 (NASB)

I need to let you know that I am not planning to send anymore study materials, unless you ask me to do so, as I have grown increasingly wary of something that gives the impression of fruitlessness. I guess that what I am ultimately saying is that I need to move on.

If you would like to look at any of the materials that I have on the subject and that have helped inform my views on homosexuality and faith issues, I am providing a list of resources below. As I read more, I will add more, but here is a good amount of the works I have read to date:

*The Good Book: Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart (Rev. Dr. Peter J. Gomes)
*What the Bible Really Says About Homosexuality (Daniel A. Helminiak, Ph.D.)
*Is It a Choice? (Eric Marcus)
*Virtually Normal (Andrew SullivanStranger at the Gate: To Be Gay and Christian in America (Rev. Dr. Mel White)
*Jesus, the Bible, and Homosexuality: Explode the Myths, Heal the Church (Rev. Jack Rogers)
*Homosexuality and Christian Faith: Questions of Conscience for the Churches (edited by Walter Wink)
*The New Testament and Homosexuality (Rev. Robin Scroggs)
*Anything But Straight: Unmasking the Scandals and Lies Behind the Ex-Gay Myth (Wayne R. Besen)
*What God Has Joined Together?: A Christian Case for Gay Marriage (David G. Meyers and Leitha Dawson Scanzoni)
*The Church and the Homosexual (Dr. John J. McNeill)
*Taking a Chance on God (Dr. John J. McNeill)
*What the Science Says – and Doesn’t Say – About Homosexuality (Jeff Lutes, MS, LPC)
*What the Bible Says – and Doesn’t Say – About Homosexuality (by Rev. Dr. Mel White)
*A False Focus on My Family (Jeff Lutes, MS, LPC)
*The Rainbow Kingdom (Rev. David W. Shelton)
*Prayers for Bobby (Leroy Aarons)
*Straight Parents, Gay Children (Robert A. Bernstein)
*CRISIS: 40 Stories Revealing the Personal, Social, and Religious Pain and Trauma of Growing up Gay in America (Edited by Mitchell Gold)
*The Best Little Boy in the World (Andrew Tobias)
*The Velvet Rage (Alan Downs, PH.D.)
*A Place at the Table (Bruce Bawer)
*The God Box (Alex Sanchez)
*Coming Out As Sacrament (Rev. Chris Glaser)
*Sex As God Intended (Dr. John J. McNeill)

In addition to these I have visited many websites that also have numerous resources. Here are a few:

*Soulforce: Freedom from Oppression Through Nonviolent Resistance
*Teach Ministries: To Educate About The Consequences of Homophobia
*PFLAG: Parents & Friends of Lesbians And Gays
*Whosoever: An Online Magazine for GLBT Christians
*Gay Christian 101: Solid Bible Teaching For Gay And Lesbian Christians
*Inclusive Orthodoxy: Gay Christian Ministry
*Would Jesus Discriminate
*Evangelicals Concerned
*Religious Institute
*ChristianGays.com

As I have mentioned to you before, I believe that one day the Church will view homosexuality differently. I believe that one day, just as the Church has done time and again, It will change yet again – this time Its position towards God’s gay and lesbian children. Furthermore, I believe that the Church will again find it necessary to issue a formal apology for sins committed (i.e. oppression, discrimination, defamation, etc.) against a percentage (be it ever so small) of the world’s population.

My hope and prayer in writing this, in trying to help you understand, is that you will be ahead of the Church. It may seem unthinkable to you now, but perhaps you would even become a member of the small, yet ever-growing, body of voices that will help guide It to Its certain and final, affirming position.

In any case, I will always love you and be grateful for a life-time of nurture and care.

Your child, and God’s,
Rick

“Happy are those who find wisdom, and those who get understanding.”
~Proverbs 3:13

“And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud
was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.”

~ French author Anaïs Nin

by Rick James, formerly a pastor in the Church of the Nazarene

Hi, new friend,

I’m Rick James. I am a passionate follower of Christ who lives in the mile high city of Denver, Colorado. Among other things, I enjoy riding my bike, hiking in the mountains, singing with a local male chorus, participating in ministry with two metropolitan-area churches, and helping people understand a very complex and controversial issue that faces us today.

A former pastor of Worship Arts and Christian Education, I recently began a new life of openness, honesty, transparency, authenticity, and integrity. One would think that those would be a given as a Christian, and especially as a pastor. But, for a certain constituency of persons among those who share my conservative Christian heritage, this is very hard to achieve and to have, at the same time, the level of love, support, and understanding that we need to live courageously in the kind of life I described above.

The world is beginning to open its eyes to this fact, however, and is slowly changing. The same Spirit that – among New Testament believers – erased the division between Jew and Gentile is moving among us again, opening hearts and minds. Yes, God is pouring out His Spirit on a people who are viewed in much the same way as early Jewish Christians regarded the Gentiles. Lines are being erased.  People of great diversity are being united in communion at God’s banquet table.

Thank God that His ways are higher than our ways.

 

My Story on why Gay Teenagers Commit Suicide

I found out today five teenagers in the LGBT community committed suicide in the last month and knowing the general statistic that homosexual youth are 4 times more likely to attempt suicide than heterosexual youth, I have something personal to share on this subject. To stand quiet while they suffer the insolence of this world is unjust and unlike me in my own nature. I can’t be quiet, nor should I be silent on this matter. It is for this reason that I am writing this special blog entry this week. Yes, an extra post.

Unfortunately, I am writing it to pay these teenagers the respect they deserve. I can’t help but think that if they had received honest loving respect while on this earth they might still be here with us, sharing their gifts and talents, and adding a little light to a darkening world.

The questions that follow these types of tragedies are usually, “Why did it have to happen? And how could it have been avoided?” They are very real and valid questions that make an honest attempt to get to the heart of the matter. I think it’s about time to start digging into the ugliness. We need to discover why these events happen in order to know how we can eradicate the evil that pushes down on the hearts of these victims and makes them see no other way out then to kill the beauty that is the spirit of their own life. The tragedy is and will always be that we let them down. We are responsible for their deaths. To say we are sorry is to reach down into our own souls, search our hearts and minds and discover the “why” in order to see the source of the “how”.

For me, this process of reexamination would have to start when I was in high school. In honest reflection, I could go as far back as elementary school, but high school is a perfect starting point since I was at the age where sexuality was an exploration of who I was and what I felt. Everything was new, exciting, and a little confusing. It was an age where soon I would have to face my feelings toward my own gender, but I wasn’t ready to face it then, not when I was already learning so much about myself. I had feelings for some of my friends, but I wasn’t consciously aware of it. I knew it, but didn’t look at it. The power of denial is so great that when you are in it, it is hard to see anything other than what you don’t want to see. I saw homosexuality. I didn’t see it in me. I saw it in everyone else that I “suspected” was gay. I made it a point to ask other people if they thought so-and-so was gay. I would ask in a way that made being gay seem disgusting and wrong. As time went on my feelings were growing. It was then that I rediscovered my Christian faith. It gave me an anchor for my denial. I used my religion to support my belief and I pushed with it.

Around the height of my denial, I was dating this boy Jeff. We dated for a couple of years. When we first started dating I was in my senior year of high school. I was working at a local store in town. I had gotten the job with a few of my friends. One of my friends was named Connie. Unbeknown to her I had a huge crush. I mean ridiculous to the point of pathetic. She was dating this kid Chris at the time. I would find any reason at all just to spend some time with her. The feelings that I had were wild. I had never experienced those types of feelings with a boy. I now understood what all my friends were feeling when they would talk about boys. I mean I liked guys. I loved them, but it wasn’t butterflies in my stomach kind of like. It was more like, just “like” I guess. I enjoyed their company, but I was missing that deep long lasting attraction.

As I continued to date Jeff, I found myself more and more attracted to Connie. I remember one time when Jeff and I took a trip to my grandparents’ house on Long Island; I couldn’t stop thinking about Connie. I remember writing a poem about her and it was this poem that made me ever so slightly start to face what it was I was actually feeling. I remember I was tucked in the back bedroom writing this impassioned poem while I had Jeff waiting in the living room. He didn’t know what I was writing. I never shared it with him or Connie. It was written as an outlet for my honesty. It was the birth of this: writing with honesty and not being afraid of the end result.

Unfortunately, the closer I got to looking at myself the more rigid my religious views became toward homosexuality. I have vivid memories of driving around with Jeff and getting into these long monologues about how homosexuality is against nature and immoral. I would ramble on about how you can’t create life through homosexual intercourse. Of course, at that time I wasn’t having intercourse. I rationalized it by saying I wanted to be in love. And yes, that was true, but it wasn’t the total truth. Subconsciously, I knew there had to be more than what I felt. I did play around, but could never allow myself to go all the way because it just didn’t seem right to me. I prided myself on my restraint. However, I guess I had an unknown advantage next to my hormone love stuck friends. I hadn’t experienced what they experienced. I wasn’t drunk in love.

I was on my own journey of discovery. I had to discover myself for myself, but how? I grew up in a conservative leaning house hold. My father was a Republican. Before I knew politics, I knew being a republican was good. Ronald Reagan was the best president ever and wearing a yellow ribbon was the highlight of the first Gulf War. Capitalism was good and welfare programs bad. This is how I was raised. Clearly, there was no room for being openly gay in that list of values.

Even so, I would grow into myself. I would discover who I was outside the set of values handed to me. And it would come in the most unlikely of places. I will never forget the moment it hit me that I might be gay. I had just gotten back from hanging out with Jeff. I remember we were just driving around. I noticed that it was a clear night and you could see the stars perfectly. As we were driving, I recalled that Connie said she had never seen the Little Dipper. I remember thinking that it would an amazing gesture if I went there to show her. All fine and good, but her mother scared the life out of me. She had her own things going on, so needless to say, she wasn’t the kindest person at that time. So what did I do? I had Jeff call for me! He called and Connie came out. I remember everything important about that night, like how cool the air felt, how I was standing next to her pointing up, showing her something she had never seen before. Being able to do that made me the happiest person on the earth for that moment. It was so simple and so pure for me. It was the catalyst for my awakening.

Later that night, I was taking a shower. In the shower, I was washing my hair and reminiscing about showing Connie the stars. I had a big smile on my face and then literally in mid scrub, I paused. The first conscious thought of “What if I am gay?” hit me hard in my gut. It wasn’t a “What if I’m gay?” as if I didn’t know the answer. It was more like “What if I am gay because I am gay?” if that makes any sense. I think I sat in that shower until the water turned chill. I probably sat down in the tub and let the water run over me, because that’s what I do when a big revelation appears in my life. I couldn’t ignore it any longer. I was gay and I had to face it, but I still wasn’t ready.

Graduation came and gone. Connie had gone off to college and I was commuting to UMass. I was still dating Jeff, but more and more I was conflicted inside. I had these passionate feelings for girls. I still had a crush on Connie and would look forward to my letters from her. I went to visit her once and it was after that visit that I decided I was going to tell her how I felt. She was coming home for Christmas break and it was during this time I set my sights on telling her. Until then, I waited patiently.

Finally, when Christmas arrived I went to her house to tell her my feelings. She was going to be the first person I admitted my feelings to; she was going to be the first to know I was gay. That was the plan. What ended up happening was I sat there awkwardly for what felt like an eternality trying to get the words out. It never happened and I ended up leaving with an awful feeling inside. Worse then her knowing I was gay was her thinking I was a weirdo for how I was acting, but I let it go and moved on.

Eventually, there was another girl who came into my life to distract me. I had a total puppy dog kind of crush on this girl. It was one of those crushes where none of your words come out right. Your tongue all most seemingly wraps around itself and you’re left speechless. I felt like one of those cartoon characters who float with angel wings and hearts in their eyes when she was around. However, she gave me a reason to go to class. At least the classes she was in! Her name was Darcy. During this time, Jeff and I were having major problems. He was going to UMass too. I remember we would be in these fights on the stairs. It seemed to be our spot to argue and Darcy would walk by, pinch my cheek or something and then that was the end of my fighting. I liked how it made me feel inside. It just reinforced that I needed to discover the answers, was I gay for real?

One summer Darcy and I decided to go rollerblading together. We drove up to Hampton Beach and on the way there Alanis Morissette’s “Ironic” was on. Now looking back it was sort of Ironic for me. Here I am sitting in this car with the girl that I was dying to make out with or something! And she was singing along with the song and tapping on my thigh while singing. She would look over at me and I swear to you she knew my feelings and liked the attention. It drove me freaking crazy inside. Well, all these years later it was confirmed she did know. It’s just an assuming subtext to my life. Oh, Darcy.

Well, she was the reason I had to find out the truth of who I was inside. If I didn’t find out, I really felt like I was going to explode. I couldn’t contain how I felt any longer. I did what any rational closeted homosexual does, I went online!

I discovered my first girlfriend there. Her name was Bobbi. She was from North Carolina. At first we just talked. It was nice to talk to someone else who was gay. Jeff and I were on the outs at this point. I remember one night I was talking to Bobbi on the computer. I told her how I had never kissed a girl and how kissing a guy was just OK. She said to kiss him and imagine it was her and then let her know how it felt. We had been sending letters back and forth so I had a picture of her. Later the next day, after not seeing Jeff for awhile I kissed him and it felt so different. I discovered what was missing from the equation and that was my desire for another.

In ever relationship I had up until that point, it was always about me. It was always about if I was “in the mood” or if I wanted to go here or there. I was selfish in my relationships because I was missing the desire to do for another in love. In my relationships with men, it was about sex: it was about me getting off, not about them. I would soon discover that desire to want to touch and please another. I would discover love.

It sounds romantic, but the truth is to get there I had to take a bunch of lumps. I still do. When my mother caught on to my relationship with Bobbi through my 300 plus dollar phone call bills and impulsive trips to North Carolina, she confronted me on it. She asked, “Do you have feelings for Bobbi?” She said that it hit her because it reminds her of when she was a teenager and that it’s the only thing that made sense to her. I admitted to it in tears. She held me and there was that moment of relief.

After that moment pasted, it became something not talked about in the house. It was out of sight, out of mind, but never really was gone. It was the elephant in the room. At family gatherings, as my girlfriends changed people began to ask questions and it would just be denied. This hurt. It cut like a knife, but I never said anything. I just wanted to be loved by my family.

The love I desired became a point of contention as my family became more involved with the Pinewood Lutheran Church in Burlington, MA. There Pastor Fox would share his invaluable wisdom about the truth of homosexuality. He would share bible verse and handouts ultimately meant for me. I could not tell you what was on the hand outs said because I never looked at them. Thankfully, God shared personal wisdom in my heart and I didn’t need Pastor Fox to make me right with God. I had God to heal the wounds that people like Pastor Fox inflict when they try to play God.

It was this time in my life that I found the simplest of truths: Love is never wrong. All I wanted, more than anything in my heart, was someone to love, to express my love, to share in something beautiful. I wasn’t a lust filled creature preying on the weak minded. I wasn’t overcome with depravity. I was the same person I am today just a little bit more confused and a lot more naive. I couldn’t understand how people could not see that I just wanted to be happy and love the people in my life. I loved my family and now I felt like an outcaste. I was living a duel life, not by choice, but by fear. I was afraid I would lose my family, so I hid as much as I could from them.

However, as much as I tried to keep my love life a secret, I was constantly reminded of the fact that my relationships would never be accepted by my family. This became painfully clear when my sister-in-law was pregnant with my nephew. They were searching out God parents. They wanted me because of my religious beliefs, but couldn’t have me as Justin’s God Mother because of my “lifestyle”, so Justin has none.

I could go down the list of how often I have been reminded that because I love differently I am somehow immoral, but that’s not the point in writing this. I am not writing this to attack the people in my life. The bottom line is that they are my family and I love them without condition, even the condition of acceptance. Does it hurt? Of course, it’s real honest to goodness pain I feel over the rejection. Yet, I understand it.

Where I am today is on the other side of the mountain. My mother is my best friend, who accepts me without condition as I do her. My father has faced his own revelations. My brother still does his thing. We spend time, but there is distance. I think he feels comfortable that way. He’s never been comfortable with closeness. My sister-in-law and I will probably never be close. I am all right with that because I have so many people in my life who love me for me.

I believe acceptance is a two way street. I accept that some people will not be comfortable with homosexuality. However, I don’t think pushing to change other people so you can feel comfortable works either. We need to come to an understanding. I believe that understanding can only arise in love, not judgment.

My life has seen me shift from one side of the spectrum to the other, so where am I now? Truth be told I am somewhere in the middle. If someone feels more comfortable calling me gay then so be it, but even though I have been calling myself gay for sake of this post, I don’t see myself as gay. It’s really not a part of my definition for myself. I’m Christa and I love who I love. Right now, it so happens to be a girl, but I can’t answer for tomorrow. I can only speak for today.

Today, I love Michele. This is where I am at here and now. I don’t think we do ourselves or each other any service by labeling the world to death in hopes of making ourselves feel more comfortable with our surrounds and the people in it. We only aim to hurt each other because now we have to live up to the definition of gay or straight, Christian or Muslim. If I’m a straight Christian and start having thoughts about another man then I might be gay, if I am gay then I’m sinning against God, and if I sin against God then I could go to hell. Wow! All of that worry because you might be attracted to another guy. Would it be simpler to explore openly and honestly your feelings or ignore it and hope that you have the strength to suppress it? Well when we ignore something, it only grows stronger. It comes out when no one is looking. Guilt and shame are powerful motivators for fueling secret desires. And it becomes an addiction. What if I get found out? It just dirties our moral compass. Yet, we force each other into it through expectation within our labels.

Pressuring each other with standards that are unrealistic is never going to solve anything. All through my early to mid twenties, I craved the acceptance of my family. This caused me to have a fair amount of unstable relationships because I had them in secret. I hid who I was and in doing, I lost my sense of self in a very real way. My esteem plummeted. I drank a lot more than I would have otherwise, because I was pushing down the hurt. I lost the voice of who I was and it was only through writing that I discovered it again; this time stronger and wiser. I am thankful I found myself. And out of it all I have found purpose and ripped all the labels off of me. Thousands of labels over 34 years worth are gone and I like the naked feeling. I like being free to just be me. I am OK with being Christa Lamb. I like her.

I am fortunate. I battled through the pain. I still have battles here and there with people who use the bible to support their label of me. I still get into arguments and afterwards wonder why I even bothered? I know better than to try and change another human beings point of view, but it’s hard when the wounds get picked at again and again. I don’t think people will ever quite understand how we hurt others until we are truly in their shoes. Maybe that’s why in life we tend to wear many hats. Maybe the goal is to reach the end carrying a bit of everyone in our hearts. Maybe this truth is the meaning of being humble. Perhaps, the ability to understand all the pain through all the experiences, and still be able to walk with a smile hold the truth to our inner most conflicts: we are the same. We share the same pain and experience the same joy. It is our persistent need to label everything that divides us.

I want to get married for the same reason as you. I want the same acceptance. I am a human being and I have spent the better part of 34 years facing who I am and the conclusion I have come to is that I am you.

When we rip each other apart because of a perceived difference, we rip apart the foundation of our collective human happiness. When I point the figure and declare someone a homosexual, I am calling myself one. When a 13 year old child hangs himself because he is afraid his family won’t love him because he is gay, we all get hanged.

We live or die together in heaven or in hell. There is no difference between my happiness and yours. If I suffer, you suffer. If you suffer, I suffer. You can call me a dyke. You can call me a lesbo. You can call me confused. You can call me a queer, a sinner, a depraved soul, but understand the mirror is always there. Your face is always staring back at you.

When I read the Bible before I came out, I felt judgment. I felt the fear of God in fear. I felt passion for my beliefs, and I wasn’t afraid to share it in righteousness. Now, when I read the bible, I don’t feel judgment. I feel love and acceptance. I feel God’s grace. I feel the love of God and it gives me reverence for all life. I don’t feel I need to make right with God. I feel the truth of God. I don’t feel righteous about my beliefs. I feel at peace with them. I feel the unconditional love I give and receive within my heart. I see the truth. It isn’t what we read, but from the point of view we read it. It is what is in the heart that matters. Without applied judgment, whether toward myself or others, the truth becomes clear.

The root of the ugliness is fear. These Teenagers, these children, died because a finger was pointed at them in fear. They died because they were being honest with who they are and we couldn’t accept that truth.

Look all around, what are they being told? You can’t serve openly to defend the country you love. You can’t get married to the one you love. You are not like me. This is the message they receive. And what if they can’t be you? And they can’t be accepted as me. What do they have left? They can’t turn to God because they are told God doesn’t condone them either. What do they have left?

Those who are religious seem to think that just loving God will bring them home, will erase the label as an immoral sinner, and rescue them from their evil ways. Well what if it’s not evil? What if it so happens that the very love they desire from another is what brings them home? For me, it was the answer.

For every law that passes in an attempt to put the true homosexual population in the closest is another law that brings another straight man into the dark. What is buried in darkness becomes the darkness of the heart. Nothing gets solved by denying those who want to live open in the light of truth their wish to do so. It only serves to create an underworld of darkness for those who seek to go against themselves.

To force a portion of the population to be in darkness (to deem homosexuality immoral) when they are screaming for the light (to be able to express their true selves) is only embracing the darkness. Perhaps, there is such a strong fight because some would be afraid. They may think, “If we give homosexuals what they want it might expose me.” It might expose their true depravity because there are those who don’t want to be found out. The latest news story about Bishop Long shows this truth. For them it pays off to vilify the gay person. If they keep the homosexuals in the dark then he can work in the dark. He would have something to hide behind. Without oppression, the oppressor is exposed.

We have to stop pointing fingers at others for our own benefit. I did it many years ago. I pointed my finger in an attempt to push myself further away from the truth. What I should have done was just to look in the mirror without judgment.

I guess these stories really hit home because I was 16-20 when I went through my struggle. I never right out called someone a fag to their face, but I did say it behind their backs. I promoted this idea of superiority. I was right and they were wrong.

Well, no one is right, or wrong. We’re just growing and learning about our selves and life. It breaks my heart to know that those children never grew to the point of acceptance inside themselves because the pain was too great. I’m writing this to share my story because I believe somewhere in my story is your story, our story together.

Please, just love each other because this is the root of healing. A finger pointed in judgment, judges all. A hand out stretched in love, loves all.

I love you. Come out of the darkness and join me in the light.

Light &Love to all,

Christa A Lamb.

 

Natural Born: A Personal Journey

You know, everything that the typical “church” taught throughout my life told me (in their own fixed logic) many things about myself that I could not relate with and pretty much were not true at all. In this I was unable to make any real connections except for the fact that I tried very hard (with no success) to “change” to hetero. One of the things that stands out the most is the fact that I was told that I actually CHOSE this way of “lifestyle.” Yet I knew from about the age of 12 that I was attracted to other males. To the men and boys that were around me. I didn’t give it a thought at the time. At that age I didn’t know that I was any different than any other untill I faced extreme rejection by other students at school and even shamed even more so by the principal (of which he is now head of the department of education in Prince Georges County). Well, I eventually came to the realization that I am not a living lie, that I was born this way. That despite “good meaning Christians” that they were absolutly wrong on this particular subject.

In my studies of the biblical passages that are traditionally refered to, one message stood out:  that off-the-hook and out-of-control self indulgent hedonism is the commonality. There is (on the otherhand) no connection in these refered to passages to a person who lacks a natural “heat” for the opposite sex and this person’s desire to live their life with that one special person. I have come to learn through extensive research that those like myself (without a natural heat for the opposite sex) by ancient definition were known as “natural born eunuchs.” I read that Kings had enormous palaces which required strong servants to keep and run them. So they had a hiring practice for eunuchs (Greek for keeper of the bed chamber) A prospective applicant for this position that had all of their “tools” in place (as the majority did) applied for the position. The King in turn had quarters set up for this purpose. The applicant would thus be assigned these quarters and be provided all his basic needs. He was served by either two or three BEAUTIFUL virgin women. As their secondary service was to provide his basic needs, their primary service was to the King. They were to try to sexually arouse and seduce him. If they succeeded, he was terminated. If they failed (after a set given time) he was considered valid and a potential candidate for this position. (There is a comical skit in the movie “History of The World Part I” by Mel Brooks that gives a comical twist to this).

The Catholic Church saw the power and infulence that these eunuchs had in the palaces and that did not jive well with them. So they declared these eunuchs as vile and immoral because they had relations with full legal men. In this declaration, the Church eliminated the catagory of “Natural Born” from the text, forceably castrated all of the known natural eunuchs to level the playing field and thus drove the remaining unknown eunuchs into the first proverbial “closet” of secrecy. This is known today as “closeted homosexuals”. This is one of the things that I discovered.

I know in my heart that God has given me many gifts and abilities. I know that He did not make a “mistake” when He did so. In these things and more, I have come to fully accept myself and the results have been simply amazing. I am a much happier and more settled individual. I have been set spiritually free from the self hatred and self loathing that “good” Churches pound into people like us. I am currently single but I have hopes of reuniting with my teen friend of 33 years. He tells me that he wants me and me only and this is more than enough for me. Our heat of sexuality has diminished but we still have one another. Also in these things I realize that my ORIENTATION is only a small part of the much greater “me”. Orientation is gradually no longer defining me but now I am defining it. In retrospect, I have hopes that my little story helps others. Thanks.

Charles

Baltimore, MD
 

Sharing Our Stories: I AM

Sharing Our Stories

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By Joseph Thomas M.

I am. I am not. I am inclusive. I am exclusive. I am Christian. I am not. I categorize myself and include those that fit into my category and exclude those that do not. I try to explain to those excluded to understand why they should be included. I rationalize. I debate. I fight for the cause. I am right and they are wrong. They do not understand. They are the not included and must be changed, or they must not be included. They must be changed to belong. They must change to be included into my world, my understanding, my rightfulness.

“I AM WHO AM”, says the Lord. The Lord is not, the Lord is. We all exclude. We look down. We take pity on those that do not see the light. But whose light is it? Is it truly the light of God? I AM WHO AM.

Did Jesus where a cross around his neck? No, he carried a cross, and he died on a cross. Some wear a cross to acknowledge the fact. They say, “I am included”. Some have a decal on their car that says, “I am included”. They say to you, either you are included or you are excluded. Jesus did not exclude. Jesus did not die for those that sinned by a specific commandment. Jesus did not die for those that were there at the cross. Jesus did not die for the Jews. Jesus did not die for the Romans. Jesus died for us all. Jesus died for sinners, of which we are all included. We share that in common. Why not wear your sin around your neck with pride? Why do we hide it? And whom do we hide it from? We hide it from ourselves. We put on our garments of deceit and walk around filled with pride. Filled with the knowledge that we are not, that we are better, that we are included, and certainly you are not, unless you are the same, unless you wear the same garments of deceit.

Jesus wore sandals on his feet, on his dirty feet. And his garments were ordinary, if not dirty also. His hair was curly, like lamb’s wool, and like lamb’s wool it was probably not washed every day. Jesus wore nothing for Jesus was transparent. Jesus was what he appeared to be. Jesus came to declare, “I AM WHO AM”. Jesus came to include. Jesus
came to speak with us all, and to die for us all.

Shed your garments of deceit. Do not be ashamed. Become transparent. God already sees you as he created you. It is a common phrase to say, “whoever among you is without sin, cast the first stone.” I challenge you to have courage enough to take off your garments of deceit and not only put down your stones, but to join your fellow sinner in the line of fire. I am included. I am a sinner.

I challenge that whoever among you is with sin, please stand up. Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Joseph Mueller and I am a sinner. My sin may be different from yours and may even change from day to day, season to season, but I am a sinner. I am included, and it is I whom Jesus chose to die for on the cross.

 

Sharing Our Stories: A Servant in the King’s Court

Sharing Our Stories

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by Kathy W. (EC Laguna)

I was meditating this morning on the importance of all the servants of God. The images that came to me were those of a wealthy powerful person in a huge mansion. Even the most powerful among us need assistance to exist well. Without someone to scrub the mansion’s floors and dust and maintain the grounds, the mansion would fall into disrepair. The master needs the servants. The servants need the master. A wealthy man left to do all the cleaning of the mansion would soon fall apart. The beautiful castle would become an eyesore.

In service to Christ, none should be disdained. All the servants are important. The warriors on the front lines fight the battles, but the water bearers and the cooks provide necessary sustenance, without which, the battle would be lost. The cooks and the water bearers would be crushed without the warriors. Without the laughter of the children, and the comfort of the mothers, the seriousness of the battle would be too much to bear.

The warrior slays the dragons and doesn’t always realize the importance of stopping to inhale the fresh aroma of a spring morning. It is, perhaps the poet’s calling to convey this need to he or she who battles. The song of the psalmist relays the battle cry, the message of victory, the comfort in loss. The shield of the warrior protects the psalmist from the spears and arrows and keeps the song alive. The psalmist tempers the warriors rage and brings clarity. The water bearer and the cook bring sustenance to all. The clothing of the warriors and the cooks and the water bearers, etc need to be laundered. The children must be fed, the mothers must be comforted and must still the cries of the children. All must be fed. All need protection. All need inspiration. All need to laugh to still the rage of the enemy. All need to drink the water of life. No one is frivolous. All need to hear the song. All are needed. There are no extras. No one is unimportant. No one’s gift should be belittled. Scripture says, “Woe unto him who touches God’s elect”. And the elect might just be the one who scrubs the floors.