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              <text>lEVEl&#13;
ONE&#13;
THE NATIONAL NEWSPAPER FOR GAY AND LESBIAN CHRISTIANS _...._ $2.25&#13;
,-rv.,w .. ,1 ... ,&#13;
'•&#13;
New Age Has Firm, Foothold&#13;
In Gay/Lesbian Community&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
There are dozens of times&#13;
that the word "new" is used&#13;
in the Bible. Paul uses the&#13;
word frequently: we are a&#13;
"new creation,• we are to,&#13;
put on the "new self," and&#13;
we are _given a "new life"&#13;
FAMILIES:&#13;
Revelation: Dad&#13;
through what Peter called&#13;
a "new birth." "New" Testament&#13;
and "New" Covenant&#13;
are other examples as is&#13;
Jesus' "new commandment•&#13;
that we love one another.&#13;
The frequency of the&#13;
appearance of the word&#13;
"new" reveals its importance&#13;
jn biblical terms.&#13;
For a lot of Christians, of&#13;
course, the life in Christ is&#13;
not now new, with perhaps&#13;
many years passing since&#13;
they first gained know•&#13;
ledge of Christ. That&#13;
familiarity, as well as&#13;
SEE. COVER STORY, Page 9&#13;
ESSAY:&#13;
We Are War II Finalylhierslood IE Veterans, Of Sorts&#13;
By Rev. Sylvia Pennington By Chris Glaser&#13;
--,-,&#13;
\dduate Theological Union&#13;
Anti-Gay "Big Brothers"&#13;
Amendment Killed&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. - An&#13;
anti-gay amendment offered&#13;
by Sen. William Armstrong&#13;
(R-CO) that would have&#13;
allowed organimtions in the&#13;
District of Columbia to bar&#13;
Gays and Lesbians from being&#13;
"Big Brothers," coaches or&#13;
role models was killed last&#13;
month in a U.S. House and&#13;
Senate conference committee.&#13;
The amendment had been&#13;
originally passed on September&#13;
12 as part of the 1991&#13;
D.C. Appropriations Bill.&#13;
The National Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Task Force has&#13;
tracked and lobbied against&#13;
the Big Brothers rider both in&#13;
this and the previous appropria&#13;
ti(\ns bills.&#13;
Before the conference committee&#13;
action, the House&#13;
rejected an attempt by Congressman&#13;
William&#13;
Dannemeyer (R-CA) to&#13;
"instruct" House conferees to&#13;
retain the Armstrong Big&#13;
Brothers language. Both&#13;
Dannemeyer and Annstrong&#13;
perennially advocate antigay&#13;
language in Congressional&#13;
appropriations bills.&#13;
On October 11, the House&#13;
vo.ted 255 to 156 to accept a&#13;
motion from Rep. Dean Gallo&#13;
(R-NJ) to instruct conferees to&#13;
accept language that&#13;
retained funds earmarked for&#13;
the University of D.C. By&#13;
doing so the House "shut out"&#13;
Dannemeyer and prevented&#13;
him from offering his own&#13;
motion.&#13;
"For the time being we have&#13;
struck down these attempts in&#13;
Congress to reinforce the&#13;
horrible stereotypes that gay&#13;
people are prone to recruit&#13;
and molest children and&#13;
therefore should not be Big&#13;
. Brothers or work with kids,"&#13;
said Peri Jude Radecic,&#13;
NGLTF legislative director.&#13;
Rep. Dannemeyer,&#13;
infuriated at the successful&#13;
SEE BIG BROTHERS, Page 18&#13;
-- - --··--- Lutheran Synod Postpones&#13;
Action On Proposal To&#13;
Welcome Gays/Lesbians&#13;
Delegates to the Evangelical&#13;
Lutheran Church in&#13;
America's Southeastern&#13;
Texas-Southern Louisiana&#13;
Synod Assembly in Galveston,&#13;
Texas voted on October&#13;
21 to "postpone indefinitely"&#13;
action on a proposal which&#13;
called for public affirmation&#13;
and welcome of Gays and&#13;
Lesbians into congregational&#13;
life. Although a Synod&#13;
Commission had recommended&#13;
adoption, a delegate&#13;
to the assembly who had&#13;
spoken in opposition to the&#13;
resolution called for a vote to&#13;
postpone any action indefinitely&#13;
before arguments in&#13;
favor of the resolution could&#13;
be heard.&#13;
Only four other synods in&#13;
the ELCA have adopted such&#13;
a resolution.&#13;
SUBSCRIBE TODAY! ONE YEAR ONLY S12.60!&#13;
BOX 8340 • NEW ORLEANS, LA 70182&#13;
8UlX PATE&#13;
U.S. POSTAGE&#13;
PAID&#13;
NEW ORI.EANS, LA&#13;
PERMIT No. 511&#13;
Disciples Of Christ Group Gathers&#13;
"Lift As We Climb" - a motto&#13;
borrowed from the turn of the centuty&#13;
group, the National Association of&#13;
Colored Women - was the theme for&#13;
the 1990 Kansas City GLAD Event&#13;
held in October. Participants in the&#13;
special weekend were members of the&#13;
laity and clergy of the Christian&#13;
Church (Disciples of Christ) in the&#13;
United States and Canada. The&#13;
group, known as the Gay, Lesbian,&#13;
and Affirming Disciples Atuance,&#13;
provides a network of support and&#13;
advocacy for members across the&#13;
United States and Canada.&#13;
Keynote speaker Rev. Jan&#13;
Griesinger, who serves as campus&#13;
minister at Ohio University in&#13;
Athens, Ohio and is National&#13;
Coordinator for the United Church&#13;
Coalition for Lesbian/Gay Concerns,&#13;
challenged those gathered to boldy&#13;
claim their place in the church.&#13;
Griesinger encouraged gay and&#13;
lesbian persons to tap into the&#13;
spiritual power inherent in a&#13;
healthy acceptance of one's&#13;
sexuality. Referring to the theme,&#13;
she led the community to explore&#13;
images of lifting and being lifted and&#13;
called participants to climb out of the&#13;
homophobia which threatens to&#13;
entangle them, both from within and.&#13;
from society at large.&#13;
Worship became an integral part of&#13;
the retreat for many attending since&#13;
local congregations of ten fail to be&#13;
inclusive of gay and lesbian concerns.&#13;
A service for healing and prayer for&#13;
the HIV/ AIDS crisis drew members&#13;
together early in the event and&#13;
several who were present shared&#13;
openly regarding their being HIV&#13;
infected of having AIDS. This&#13;
provided a grounding which was&#13;
Letters&#13;
Albuquerque. New Mexico&#13;
Reaction To&#13;
Pro-Life Letter&#13;
Emotional And&#13;
One-Sided&#13;
Dear Second Stone,&#13;
Michael Blankenship's reaction to&#13;
my letter in the July/ August issue was&#13;
predictably one-sided and emotional.&#13;
I would like to · see more openmindedness&#13;
and logic.&#13;
I continue to work for the rights of&#13;
all people. I, too, am a Christian,&#13;
and sensitive to the needs of a truly&#13;
oppressed minority: unborn babies. Is&#13;
their "choice" protected? If we adopt&#13;
the stance of sharing in the struggles&#13;
for human rights of all people, logic&#13;
demands that we include unborn&#13;
B&#13;
transfonned into sense of celebration&#13;
present at other services during the&#13;
weekend. Judy Wray, ordained&#13;
minister and Ph.D. candidate at&#13;
Union Theological Seminary in New&#13;
York City, preach~ an invitation for&#13;
listeners to discover in themselves&#13;
the pearl of great price for which&#13;
God and Jesus Christ has given all.&#13;
An "affirming" participant remarked&#13;
later how empowering the worship&#13;
services were for her. "Sexuality is&#13;
something that my local church just&#13;
doesn't talk about. .. it's so refreshing&#13;
to hear these things spoken out loud!"&#13;
The retr~at was held at a&#13;
Disciples-owned and operated&#13;
retreat center near Kansas City.&#13;
Representatives who attended came&#13;
from states in the heartland of the&#13;
denomination such as Indiana,&#13;
Kentucky, and Texas as well as from&#13;
the California and New York coasts.&#13;
Several family members of lesbian&#13;
and gay persons were present ~ well&#13;
as were several officials cit the&#13;
broader church structure.&#13;
1be selection of Kansas Oty as the&#13;
site of this year's Event is significant.&#13;
In 1977 the General Assembly of the&#13;
Christian Church, the denomination's&#13;
biennial oonvention, meeting&#13;
in Kansas Oty, became embroiled in&#13;
conflict over the church's position on&#13;
homosexuality and the consideration&#13;
of ordination of lesbian and gay&#13;
clergy. Now one of the strongest local&#13;
chapters in the GLAD Alliance,&#13;
Kansas City proved thirteen years&#13;
later to be the perfect setting for&#13;
nurture and the building of community&#13;
for lesbian and gay Christians.&#13;
Workshops and strategy sessions on&#13;
Sunday afternoon elicited great&#13;
energy and enthusiasm. The Alliance&#13;
□.&#13;
babies in our agenda, alongside their&#13;
mothers.&#13;
The Gospel of Jesus requires more&#13;
than sentimental thinking about the&#13;
real problems facing us and taking&#13;
emotional pot-shots at those with&#13;
whom we disagree.&#13;
is expected to meet organized oppoir&#13;
ition at the denomination's .membly&#13;
next year in Tulsa, Oklahoma.&#13;
Kansas Oty Event participants were&#13;
confident about the strategies set&#13;
forth and are preparing to continue&#13;
with plans for sev~ral major&#13;
assembly activities.&#13;
Rev. Johnson retired from parish&#13;
ministry and came out of the closet as&#13;
a gay man. In October of 1987 he&#13;
placed an ad in the Kansas Oty gay&#13;
and lesbian press and began to fonn a&#13;
group, later to become the Kansas&#13;
Oty chapter of GLAD Alliance. The&#13;
tribute said in part, ''We thank God&#13;
for O. 0. and for his courage ... to&#13;
break the silence in the Greater&#13;
Kansas Oty Region and to name the&#13;
reality that Lesbians, gay men, and&#13;
those who affinn them in the church&#13;
are here."&#13;
Alongside such serious planning&#13;
were placed opportunites for fun and&#13;
laughter. Spontaneous gatherings for&#13;
volleyball and singing around the&#13;
guitar were a welcome relief from the&#13;
busy schedule. An evening out on the&#13;
town took the entire group to a&#13;
Meditteranean Restaurant and to the For more information about the&#13;
historic Country Club Plaza district GLAD Alliance and its future&#13;
of Kansas City. programming, write to P. O. Box&#13;
Special recognition was given to the 19223, Indianapolis, IN 46219-0223.&#13;
Rev. O. 0. Johnson of Kansas City. -&#13;
In This Issue&#13;
FEATURES&#13;
COVER STORY&#13;
COLUMNS&#13;
COMMENTARY&#13;
FAMILIES&#13;
CLOSER LOOK&#13;
1RAVEL&#13;
PARTING 1HOUGHT&#13;
DEPART1\1ENTS&#13;
-LrnE--R--S-----NEWSBRIEFS&#13;
□ ·&#13;
Page9&#13;
Page3&#13;
Page 10&#13;
Pa2e 14&#13;
Page 19&#13;
Page20&#13;
Page2&#13;
PageS&#13;
Page8&#13;
Sincerely in Christ,&#13;
Rev. N. F. Thompson, n-c-:l-,f-------t· CHURCH &amp; ORGANIZATION NEWS Page 11&#13;
Page 12&#13;
We welcome you to share your views,&#13;
opinions, feelings and experiences&#13;
with our readen. Send letters to:&#13;
LETrERS, The Second Stone, P. 0.&#13;
Box 8340, New Orleans, LA 70182.&#13;
All letters must be original and&#13;
signed by the writer. Clearly&#13;
indicate if your name ls to be&#13;
withheld. We reserve the right to&#13;
edit.&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
ESSAY&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
THE SECOND STONE&#13;
Page 13&#13;
Page 16&#13;
Page20&#13;
Commentary □ Queer Nation&#13;
Antagonizing For Gay/Lesbian&#13;
Rights, Pride And Visibility&#13;
DyJimRarbc&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
At the former Vatican exhibit in&#13;
Flushing Meadows, New York, where&#13;
during the 1964 World's Fair&#13;
Michelangelo's Pieta was exhibited,&#13;
it's like being on the set of Pee Wee's&#13;
Playhouse. Absurd. Make believe.&#13;
The set is cheaper than Pee Wec's,&#13;
more bizarre, because it's real life,&#13;
and there's no Jane Pauley here to&#13;
explain it to us. It's here that local&#13;
"seer" Veronica Leuken has her&#13;
public devotions, where she tells her&#13;
faithful followers from everywhere&#13;
that the Virgin Mary speaks directly&#13;
to her and has let her know that,&#13;
"until homosexuals change their&#13;
ways and repent ... AIDS will never be&#13;
cured." She claims to have visions&#13;
and, during a recent heart attack, to&#13;
have ventured to heU and returned.&#13;
She and her followers have made&#13;
homosexuals a special interest,&#13;
through condemnations, curing of&#13;
Gays and Lesbians, and confrontations&#13;
with gay groups during parades and&#13;
ISSN No. 1047-3971&#13;
THE SECOND STONE Newspaper is&#13;
published every other monlh by Bailey&#13;
Communications, P. 0. Box 8340, New&#13;
Orleans, LA 70182. Copyright 1990 by&#13;
The Second St.one, a registered trademark.&#13;
SUBSCRIPTIONS, U.S.A. $12.60 per&#13;
year, six issues. Foreign subscribers add&#13;
$8.&lt;IO for posta8e. All paymenll U. S.&#13;
currency only.&#13;
ADVERTISING, Display advertising&#13;
one time ntes: PuU Page, $595.00; Half&#13;
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EDITORIAL. send letters, calendar&#13;
announcements, and church/organization&#13;
news to (Department title) The Sec:ond&#13;
Srone, P. 0 . Box 8340, New Orleans, LA&#13;
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should be accompanied by a stamped. self&#13;
addressed envelope.&#13;
THE SECOND STONE, an ecumenical&#13;
Christian newspaper committed to&#13;
informing the gay and lesbian community.&#13;
PUBLISHER/EDITOR: Tun Bailey&#13;
MARKETING DIRECTOR: Eric Hess&#13;
CONTRIBUTORS: Rev Bruce Roller,&#13;
Rev Sylvia Pennington,&#13;
Cynthia Marquard, Danni Munson.&#13;
Dr. Martin Fowler, David Rickey,&#13;
Robert McKnight, Jim Roche,&#13;
Michael Blankenship. Dan Grippo,&#13;
Dr. Louie Crew, John-Michael Olexy,&#13;
Dr. Buddy Truluck. Chris Glaser.&#13;
Rev. Gail A. Van Buren&#13;
marches. She speaks these words of&#13;
hatred against Gays and Lesbians on&#13;
the very spot that housed the most&#13;
famous representation of her patron,&#13;
the Virgin Mary, Michelangelo's&#13;
Pieta. Michelangelo, who today is&#13;
himseU considered a gay icon. The&#13;
incongruity doesn't faze her but it has&#13;
come to the attention of another group&#13;
of New Yorkers. Veronica's group,&#13;
who set up a complete church with&#13;
nearly life-size plaster statues,&#13;
banners, lawn chairs, candles, loud&#13;
speakers, numbered offering envelopes&#13;
and devotional boxes, uses this&#13;
public park without a permit and&#13;
against city, state and federal laws&#13;
every week. There's also a large box&#13;
just for- miracle requests. That's the&#13;
largest box to be seen. Together they&#13;
recite the rosary and pray for&#13;
miracles, including the curing of&#13;
homosexuals. By eight o'clock over&#13;
350 have arrived by foot, subway,&#13;
chartered bus and car. Every year&#13;
Veronica and her "Baysiders," as&#13;
they're called, send an aggressive&#13;
contingent to harass and jeer at&#13;
marchers in New York's gay and&#13;
lesbian pride day parade. They&#13;
carry placards, scream and holler&#13;
death wishes and more at the gay&#13;
and lesbian marchers. They claim&#13;
AIDS is God's revenge on homosexuals.&#13;
But this time, the tables are&#13;
going to be turned.&#13;
Veronica and her rosary crew aren't&#13;
alone in the park. Queer Nation, a&#13;
group of New Yorkers devoted to&#13;
fighting homophobia and working for&#13;
gay and lesbian visibility are&#13;
holding what they've chosen to call&#13;
their "Rosary Zap." Some associated&#13;
with the group and many others&#13;
outside Queer Nation, fear that this&#13;
action, or any action against a&#13;
religious service, will only draw&#13;
negative publicity as the ACT-UP&#13;
protest at St. Patrick's Cathedral did&#13;
last year where, without ACT-UP&#13;
approval, a small group disrupted&#13;
the Mass and a communion Host was&#13;
desecrated. Through spokespersons,&#13;
ACT-UP as a group was quick to&#13;
disassociate itself from that action,&#13;
but many within ACT-UP felt the&#13;
church deserved it. "What about the&#13;
sacrilege against women and Gays&#13;
that the church supports," they ask.&#13;
Those in the gay and lesbian&#13;
community who continue to be&#13;
concerned, worry that the apparent&#13;
SEE COMMENTARY, Page 4&#13;
f Subscribe&#13;
Today.&#13;
And You'll Never Be Without&#13;
_A Friend For Your Journey.&#13;
I • Jom thousands of lesbians and gay men&#13;
who've embarked on an inward journey.&#13;
Through the pages of The Second Stone, an&#13;
ecumenical Christian newsmagazine, you'll be&#13;
challenged, inspired, angered and encouraged.&#13;
Meet brave men and women who are confronting&#13;
social injustice and religious bigotry.&#13;
Explore family and relationship issues. Enjoy&#13;
our engaging features and columns, newsbriefs&#13;
and book reviews. Our national calendar puts&#13;
you in touch with life-changing retreats, community-&#13;
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people you'll ever meet!&#13;
The Second Stone will inspire you, keep you&#13;
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... y Es , ..... N~;,;,: ·.~.:.:..:.:.~:.:.:.~.~.~.:.~..: : .:.:.:.:.:.:.~.~.:.:.::.:.:.:.~&#13;
~ SE~o'f.!l:~~ f~r ~c1nm ............ : ................................................... .&#13;
( )Oneyear(8--)for~ City,Stat.e&amp;Zip ............................................... .&#13;
[ ]Two,-n(lJtt..)fcJr... ~_'!_:' ',".".. ,.,,_.__ .. ___ ., _ ,_ . ..... ._.._I ....I .-,• - .,... ..._&#13;
Mail To: THE SECOND STONE, Box 8340, New Orleans,LA '10182&#13;
THANK YOU&#13;
for your subscription!&#13;
November/December 1990 •&#13;
Reconciling Congregations Program&#13;
Announces Major Evangelism Campaign ,,&#13;
The Board of Directors of the&#13;
Reconciling Congregation Program, a&#13;
network of United Methodist local&#13;
churches that publicly welcome the&#13;
full participation of all persons&#13;
including Lesbians and gay men, has&#13;
announced a campaign which would&#13;
double the number of Reconciling&#13;
Congregations by the end of 1992.&#13;
There are currently 46 congregations&#13;
in the program.&#13;
"We are launching a major&#13;
evangelism campaign," said Rev.&#13;
Kim Alice Smith, chair of the board&#13;
COMMENTARY,&#13;
FromPage3&#13;
anti-Catholic or anti.-church slant of&#13;
this 1.ap will be all that is picked up&#13;
by the media, and that the call for&#13;
justice and gay and lesbian visibility&#13;
will get lost in the ensuing&#13;
antagonisms. Some conservative&#13;
publications such as The Advocate&#13;
and writers like Dave Walters have&#13;
condemned such actions as counterproductive&#13;
and divisive. Queer&#13;
Nation gives them a lot to work with&#13;
if that's the way they want to report&#13;
the story.&#13;
As Queer Nation arrives they break&#13;
into chants and cat calls every time&#13;
the prayer group says, "Blessed are&#13;
the fruits." "We're here, we're queer,&#13;
and pastor of Bethany UMC in San&#13;
Francisco. "We think it is critical&#13;
that other congregations hear the&#13;
stories of new life and revitalization&#13;
in Reconciling Congregations a11d that&#13;
these congregations be invited to join&#13;
our growing movement."&#13;
The "92 in 92" campaign builds on&#13;
what is currently happening in the&#13;
program, according to Mark Bowman,&#13;
RCP coordinator and staffperson.&#13;
"Current Reconcjling Congregations&#13;
are already talldng with other UMC&#13;
we're fabuJous, get used to us," and&#13;
"Veronica is the anti-Christ - go back&#13;
to hell where you came from." Queer&#13;
Nation members run around outside&#13;
the service which is encircled by&#13;
park department barriers, breaking&#13;
down the perimeter, eludidg the&#13;
police who seem unprepared. They&#13;
tum over the barricades, throw&#13;
leaflets at the crowd, fly them as&#13;
paper airplanes into the service and&#13;
scream "shame, shame, shame." Just&#13;
as the police are preparing to make&#13;
arrests, they simply wave goodbye&#13;
and leave.&#13;
Some in more conservative gay and&#13;
lesbian groups ask, "ls this acceptable?&#13;
Aren't we hurting ourseJves by&#13;
alienating more people?" This isn't&#13;
GAY AND CHRISTIAN&#13;
ACCEPTED AS LIVING MEMBERS&#13;
Announcln1 • conference for g■J men, lesbians ■nd&#13;
bisexual people and those who sup(IOl't them.&#13;
Sponsotcd by the Episcopal D1ocae of Nonh Carolin■&#13;
led by MALCOLM BOYD&#13;
Ikttmbrr 11-16, 1990&#13;
Conlcrrncr Center&#13;
Browaa Summit, North Carolin■&#13;
" ••. to give life to the claim of homosexual persons upon the love,&#13;
■a:q)tllntt ■nd put(&gt;t•I care and conurn ol 11,e Church."&#13;
Raol.rion l&gt;ioctse o/ Nard. Qarolina Con11en1ion, 1976&#13;
We Invite YoU to Join us for thla week-aid of ah■ring and he■lina,&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
-Healing lflef ■nd •n~r toward the Oiur~h -Relationships -lmAges of&#13;
Ood -Spirituality and 1e11u1ll1y -The Bible and homosexu■llty -Where do&#13;
PY and labl■n pmrons Rt In the church.&#13;
t.hil ;~~ to: Regimtr, St. l'hllip'1 Eplscop11l Ch .... ch,&#13;
Poat Oftb Bo. 218, Durham, North C.rollna 27700&#13;
NAME _________________ _&#13;
ADDRESS ________________ _&#13;
CITY,5fA'JE ____________ Zfp __ _&#13;
PHONE: HOME _______ WORK ______ _&#13;
AMOUNTENa.OSEO:$ ___________ _&#13;
C-ost: $135-165 per~ Includes registration, room, and mals.&#13;
Sc:bolanhlpa available. A depoalt of $50. per iier- will - a ■pace.&#13;
Rooma ■re twin bedded.&#13;
lampedna fur the dmf avalliible upoct requat.&#13;
congregations in their cities about&#13;
becoming 'reconciling.' I have&#13;
received inquires from 15 new&#13;
congregations in the past two months&#13;
alone."&#13;
Related to recent denominational&#13;
sanctions against two Reconciling&#13;
Congregations, Dumbarton UMC&#13;
(Washington, D.C.) and University&#13;
UMC (Madison, Wisconsin) for their&#13;
policies on blessing the commitment&#13;
of same-sex couples, the RCP Board&#13;
called upon the larger church to&#13;
the first time a minority group has&#13;
been questioned, or questioned itself,&#13;
about its tactics. Anti-gay and&#13;
lesbian bias related attacks are on&#13;
the upswing, and to many it's because&#13;
groups like ACT-UP and Queer&#13;
Nation have brought visibility to&#13;
the gay and lesbian civil rights&#13;
movement. Even within the&#13;
community itself there is a backJash.&#13;
The Advocate continues to push their&#13;
agenda of assimilation based on&#13;
monetary standing - let's buy our way&#13;
into acceptablity. Dave Walters has&#13;
even called for gay and lesbian groups&#13;
to stop opp(&gt;Sing ROTC programs since&#13;
ROTC, he says, gives closeted Gays&#13;
and Lesbians a way to serve their&#13;
country. The• Advocate and similar&#13;
gay papers continually complain&#13;
about the use of the words fag, homo&#13;
and queer which this new breed of&#13;
activist uses to describe itself. In his&#13;
recent confrontation with ACT-UP&#13;
the editor of Washington's Blade&#13;
called ACT-UP a "bunch of brown&#13;
shirts." Others, like New York's&#13;
Outweek take the opposite position,&#13;
always willing to use the words fag,&#13;
queer and homo is their writing,&#13;
declaring the community's identity&#13;
will be determined by the community&#13;
itself. Just as black is beautiful, we&#13;
are proud to be gay, proud to be queer&#13;
(the name Queer Nation was chosen&#13;
by the group because it was thought&#13;
to be less gender specific than gay.)&#13;
Gays and Lesbians are finally&#13;
starting to control the language that&#13;
describes them, the first step in&#13;
developing self-identity.&#13;
In cities like New York, where a&#13;
call went out to boycott the gay New&#13;
York Native and in Washington&#13;
where ACT-UP occupied the offices&#13;
of The Washington Blade, or San&#13;
Francisco where The Sentinel is under&#13;
similar pressure, the gay and lesbian&#13;
press is under attack from activist&#13;
groups who want to make dear-that&#13;
there is no going back.&#13;
Assimulationist views aren't wel- • THE SECOND STONE&#13;
remember the long-standing tradition&#13;
of local churches developing liturgies&#13;
which meet the needs of their&#13;
committees.&#13;
In other action the board encouraged&#13;
all Reconciling Congregations to&#13;
celebrate "RCP Sunday" during the&#13;
season of Epiphany in January;&#13;
supported the development of&#13;
"reconciling" conferences, seminaries,&#13;
campus ministries, and other groups;&#13;
and began making plans for the 1992&#13;
United Methodist General Conference.&#13;
• come any more. Many have grown&#13;
tired of ACT-UP's unwiUingness to&#13;
self-identify as a gay or lesbian&#13;
group. Queer Nation's call is "We're&#13;
here, we're queer, we're fabulous, get&#13;
used to it." Their tee-shirts,&#13;
advertised on their answering&#13;
machine, have left behind the maybe&#13;
gay-maybe not slogans of ACT·UP&#13;
like "SiJence=Death" and demand&#13;
visibility with words that leave&#13;
very little to be imagined or&#13;
questioned. They scream out queer,&#13;
fag, a map of America with the&#13;
words "queer nation" written across&#13;
it. There's a gay Bart and one&#13;
warning that from now on "queers&#13;
bash back." Further evidence of this&#13;
attitude can be seen in New York's&#13;
Greenwich Village where a new&#13;
organi1.ation called "Pink Panthers"&#13;
has formed to protect Gays from the&#13;
ever-increasing bias attacks.&#13;
Criticism that gay AIDS organizations,&#13;
who have co-opted&#13;
themselves by giving up board control&#13;
to homophobic minorities and&#13;
corporate representatives in the name&#13;
of coalition building, is being heard&#13;
more frequently throughout the&#13;
country and ACT-UP and AIDS&#13;
activism is no longer the only concern&#13;
for Gays and Lesbians interested in&#13;
making significant changes.&#13;
Queer Nation has started to catch&#13;
on, As with the previous flourishing&#13;
of AIDS related groups we can expect&#13;
lo see the growth of these direct&#13;
action, pro•gay and lesbian&#13;
identified politicaJ groups. There&#13;
are now Queer Nation groups in&#13;
Boston, Washington, San Francisco,&#13;
Rhode Island, lthica, Philadelphia,&#13;
Montreal and England. Queer Nation&#13;
Philadelphia has even called for a&#13;
Queer Nation Constitutional&#13;
Convention to be held there next&#13;
year. But a lot of Gays and Lesbians&#13;
who don't live in large metropolitan&#13;
areas, who live in less liberal areas&#13;
where being openly gay or lesbian can&#13;
SEE COMMENTARY, Page S&#13;
Newsbriefs&#13;
Left Unused: House&#13;
For Catholic Clergy&#13;
PWAs Closes&#13;
The nation's first home created to&#13;
care for Catholic clergy with AIDS,&#13;
closed because it had no patients,&#13;
may reopen to the general public.&#13;
The facility, located in Oakland,&#13;
Calif., was dosed after going five&#13;
months without one priest asking for.&#13;
aroom.&#13;
•we found that they are so afraid&#13;
to· come forward," said Jim&#13;
Mansmann, the director of the special&#13;
residence. Mansmann, a former&#13;
Maryknolt brother, said that even&#13;
though priests would call and&#13;
inquire, "they'd only give us their&#13;
first name. They would say that no&#13;
one knows except their doctors."&#13;
The ti~y, red-tiled roof, white&#13;
frame house, caned Bethany House,&#13;
was created by a group of religious&#13;
organizations. Including the Missionary&#13;
Brothers pf Charity, the&#13;
Franciscan Fathers of California, and&#13;
the Redemptorists. After it opened,&#13;
brochures were sent out to Catholic&#13;
COMMENTARY, From Page4&#13;
cost you your job or your life, are&#13;
scared. Afraid that there will be a&#13;
backlash from middle Amercia. The&#13;
fear is that actions and zaps like&#13;
Queer Nation is doing now ultimately&#13;
get fence-sitting liberals to take&#13;
sides, but it will be the wrong .side.&#13;
Even more, that those homophobes&#13;
who have been quiet because we mind&#13;
our own business wilJ finany speak&#13;
out and strike out. Some think its&#13;
already happening. Queer Nation,&#13;
some hold, is only going to alienate&#13;
our straight supporters (like the&#13;
infamous "I Hate Straights• leaflet&#13;
handed out during the Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Pride Day march in New&#13;
York that caused some hetero&#13;
members of ACT-UP to cry foul!)&#13;
Queer Nation has more in store. So&#13;
far they_ have visited New Jersey&#13;
malls for "the Queer Shopping&#13;
Network," welcomed Greg Louganis&#13;
to Macy'f and almost weekly invade&#13;
some local New York straight bar to&#13;
hold a kiss-in. • They've crashed&#13;
hetero McSorley's Saloon, The White&#13;
Horse Tavern, Flutie's and even the&#13;
notorious New York skin head bar&#13;
Alcatraz. Queer Nation has decided&#13;
whether middle America likes it or&#13;
not, it's time to stand up and be&#13;
counted.&#13;
These actions aren't as absurd and&#13;
new, innovative or original as some&#13;
would have us believe. They reflect&#13;
the same techniques used by blacks&#13;
who refused to move to the back of&#13;
churches throughout the U.S., but&#13;
they elicited almost no response.&#13;
Rev. William Macchi of the&#13;
Oakland Diocese said the church&#13;
decided to open the residence for&#13;
clergy after hearing of the need.&#13;
Fletcher. The book, Clergy Under&#13;
Stress: A Study of Homosexual and&#13;
Heterosexual Clergy, is the result of&#13;
two years of research. Fletcher&#13;
believes the gay priests "suffer ... very&#13;
high, even abnormal, levels of stress&#13;
and disilJusionment with the&#13;
Church."&#13;
-Baltimore Alternatiue&#13;
□ Christian ideal of celibacy, despite&#13;
occasional "missteps" or "serious&#13;
reversals." Twenty percent were&#13;
found to be engaged in heterosexual&#13;
rela~ns; another 20 percent are gay,&#13;
half of whom are sexually active;&#13;
and six percent are involved sexually&#13;
with minors.&#13;
-Religion Watch&#13;
I .&#13;
-We had heard stories that there&#13;
were some priests around the country&#13;
who had AJDS who were not welJ&#13;
accepted .. .and reaUy needed a place&#13;
to go,• Maccht said. Study: Twenty&#13;
Gay Activists,&#13;
Fundamentalists&#13;
Collide&#13;
Several AIDS facilities around the p Of C&#13;
country have accepted priests, but ercent atholic&#13;
none have exclusively sought Priests Are Gay&#13;
Catholic clergy. Two priests with An extensive study of celibacy in the&#13;
AIDS lived at Bonaventure House in American Catholic priesthood&#13;
Chicago, dyi~g about three months reports that half of U.S. priests have&#13;
after they amv~. been sexually ACJive at least one time&#13;
Bethany House 15 expected to open - during their priesthood, according to&#13;
SAN FRANOSCO - Two members of&#13;
Queer Nation and a Christian&#13;
activist were arrested during an&#13;
afternoon skirmish at the edge of&#13;
Civic Center Plaza. The confrontation&#13;
occurred during a prayer rally&#13;
sponsored by Save Our Souls, a&#13;
fundamentaJist reJigious coalition&#13;
that conducts a Bay Area street&#13;
ministry directed toward Gays and&#13;
Lesbians.&#13;
~r the C:tublic in January. the National Catholic &amp;porter. The&#13;
ay controversial study (which was&#13;
One In Seven&#13;
.Anglican Priests&#13;
Gay, Book Says&#13;
One in seven Anglican priests is gay,&#13;
according to a new book by Hatfield&#13;
Polytechnic professor Dr. Ben&#13;
the bus, marched into small&#13;
restaurants and ordered coffee when&#13;
the sign said whites only and drank&#13;
from fountains that were restricted to&#13;
whites only. They are meant to&#13;
antagonize. They are meant to put&#13;
gay and lesbian rights, pride and&#13;
visibility first. Over and above.&#13;
coalitions, assimilation or satisfying&#13;
those in power. The theme of the&#13;
Rosary Zap was simple - Queer&#13;
Nation wasn't there to change minds,&#13;
they weren't there to negotiate. As&#13;
one member said, "we aren't here to&#13;
change minds but to give a warning."&#13;
Their signs and lea1Jets, cheers and&#13;
jeers said it simply, •vou spoil our&#13;
party and we'll spoil yours!" lbat&#13;
night on the local news, this time at&#13;
least, that one theme did get across in&#13;
the broadcast.&#13;
We have to defend ourselves. Stand&#13;
up for ourselves. Fight back, bash&#13;
back, kick, hoJler and scream. We&#13;
have to let the bigots know that if&#13;
they want to be a bigot that have to&#13;
do it publicly, in the open and to&#13;
expect a. fight. Queer Nation's&#13;
warning is an American warning, it&#13;
says "don't tread on me." They aren't&#13;
wilJing to negotiate or wait, and&#13;
don't care what you think. They&#13;
don't intend to change minds, they&#13;
only intend to change behaviors. As&#13;
one protester said, "All we want to do&#13;
is hold our lover's hand in public."&#13;
Queer Nation wants to see just that'&#13;
become possible.&#13;
rejected by American bishops)&#13;
presented by researcher A. W.&#13;
Richard Sipe during a national convenJion&#13;
of the American Psychological&#13;
Association, bases its findings&#13;
on interviews and reports ~nducted&#13;
from 1965 to 1985 with 1000 priests&#13;
and 500 people who were "lovers,&#13;
sexual partners,• or otherwise&#13;
Fifty Queer Nation activists&#13;
antagonized the reJigious group with&#13;
pro-gay chants and engaged in&#13;
heated debate with some of the&#13;
missionaries.&#13;
involved in such situations. Among&#13;
his findings, Sipe says that around&#13;
eight to ten percent of vowed celibate&#13;
clergy have approached the -Bay Area Reporter&#13;
The International Gay Travel Magazine&#13;
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countryside, a qreelc pension overlooking&#13;
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Plus, every month, regular departments&#13;
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November/December 1990 ii&#13;
•&#13;
'\&#13;
Newsbriefs&#13;
Gay Credit Card&#13;
Angers Christians&#13;
The "Pride Card; a new Mastercard&#13;
that helps benefit the Seattle--btsed&#13;
Prid~ Foundation, which finances&#13;
programs to assist Gays and Lesbians,&#13;
has come under fire by conservative&#13;
organizations and fundamentalist&#13;
Christian groups.&#13;
James Galbraith, a Washington&#13;
politician, said he advised the 2500&#13;
members of the political action group&#13;
he founded to switch banks. "I don't&#13;
want to do business with people who&#13;
cater to a lifestyle we disapprove&#13;
of," Galbraith said.&#13;
Rev. Ed Nelson, an Assembly of God&#13;
pastor told his congregation that the&#13;
card is an "endorsement of a moral&#13;
position taken by the gay movement."&#13;
Betty Lattie, a spokesperson for&#13;
Seafirst ·Bank, provider of the Pride&#13;
Card, said "Banks don't endorse&#13;
lifestyles. Banks are here to serve&#13;
the credit needs of the CQmmunity and&#13;
to provide banking services.&#13;
-Cruise&#13;
Lutherans Plan&#13;
Sexuality Study&#13;
A 17-member task force preparing a&#13;
' social statement on sexuality for the ...&#13;
E ~ ii a journal dw claaves ou,&#13;
111ppon for die original and cttative work it&#13;
does m the in1erat of ttutb iUld justice.&#13;
.+ Rn, Malcolm Boyd, author of 23 boob&#13;
incl~Ar, y,,,, Riuming with Mt,Jmul,&#13;
Tut 0/f thr M,uh, aqd C., Prit,,&#13;
E tnpm,y pro.ides a much-nttd,-d and&#13;
•dcormd communication link for penons&#13;
involved in education about homophobia. At it,&#13;
best it will keep UII informed and in touch,&#13;
supporud 111d challenged, eacitcd and proucl.&#13;
If&gt; Brian Mc Naught, lcrnittr and author of 0,,&#13;
Btmg G41: Tbo.ghu on F.,,,ily, F.ith, .,,,J Low&#13;
■&#13;
Evangelical Lutheran Church in&#13;
America plans to have a study of the&#13;
topic ready for congregational use by&#13;
fall 1991. The studies are to help&#13;
ELCA members discuss issues of&#13;
sexuality before a 1993 Churchwide&#13;
Assembly considers a statement on&#13;
the subject.&#13;
-The Lutheran&#13;
Methodist&#13;
Bookseller Won't&#13;
Carry Gay Titles ..&#13;
A bookseller affiliated with the&#13;
Methodist Church is continuing a&#13;
policy of not featuring gay and&#13;
lesbian Christian books and authors&#13;
in its catalog, although local&#13;
Cokesbury bookstores may stock some&#13;
titles. An article in the October,&#13;
1990, issue of More UghrUpdate, a&#13;
national publication of Presbyterians&#13;
for Lesbian/Gay Concerns hinted at a&#13;
possible boyoott of the bookseDer.&#13;
Tutu Urges Church&#13;
To Welcome Gay&#13;
Clergy&#13;
LONDON, Ont. - Discrimination&#13;
against homosexuals was recently&#13;
denounced by South Africa's Anglican&#13;
f,mpathy&#13;
&lt;...An&#13;
Interdisciplinary&#13;
journal&#13;
for Persons&#13;
Working to&#13;
End Oppression&#13;
on the Basis of&#13;
Sexual Identity&#13;
PUBU5KID nna ". Y1!.U, l!NPATHY INCLUDES&#13;
SCHOI.ULY USo\YS, l'IOSf. AND POSTU, PltACTIT1ONU&#13;
.umau, ANIICDOTAL IISIAYS, AND USMactl lllOtln&#13;
AS WEU. AS ANNOrATI!.D 811UOCRAPKl!S POii&#13;
usouaca MATUIAU, uaNT USlldCII AND IOOl&lt;S.&#13;
llll JOuaNAL S!&amp;VU PEOPU! WOUJNC IN BDUCAflON,&#13;
COUNS£1.ING, HZAl.nl C,\U, SOCIAL 'WO.U,&#13;
COMMUNITY ACl'IVISII, AND TIIB loONIS'l'1IT&#13;
NATIONALLY AND INTEIIN.\T10NAU.Y.&#13;
Archbishop Desmond Tutu when he&#13;
spoke to the national legislative&#13;
body to the United Church of&#13;
Canada.&#13;
"For myself, I would say that it&#13;
W-Ould be a gross injustice to exclude •&#13;
people from becoming ordained&#13;
ministers on the grounds of sexual&#13;
orientation," Tutu said.&#13;
The United Church of Canada has&#13;
been struggling with the controversial&#13;
issue ever since a statement,&#13;
passed two years ago at the last&#13;
General Council meeting, said all&#13;
members of the church, regardless of&#13;
sexual orientation, can apply to be&#13;
considered as ministers.&#13;
.:Equlll Time/Record&#13;
□ Bart Eijrond of the Dutch AIDS&#13;
commission called the new guidelines&#13;
•completely unnecessary," according&#13;
to De Gay Krllnt.&#13;
-Outlines&#13;
Task Force Backs&#13;
Marlboro/Miller&#13;
Boycott&#13;
W ASHINGlON, D.C. - The Board of&#13;
Directors of the National Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Task Force has voted to&#13;
endorse the nation-wide boycott of&#13;
Marlboro cigarettes and Miller beer,&#13;
two highly visible products of the&#13;
Philip Morris Corporation, which is&#13;
one of the largest corporate donors to&#13;
Ex-Gay Leader - - the re-election campaign of anti-gay&#13;
Senator Jesse Helms and also the Doug Houck largest corporate donor to the Jesse&#13;
Helms museum in Monroe, North "Relapses" earouna.&#13;
Doug Houck, former director of- "Jesse Helms, more than any other&#13;
Metanoia Ministries, was fired from individual, has worlced to destroy our&#13;
his position in Metanoia for being community and our Hves," said John&#13;
involved in homosexual activity. D'Emilio, NGL1F board of directors&#13;
Metanoia Ministries is a co-chair. •Companies must recogni7.e&#13;
Seattle-based chapter of Exodus they cannot take money from lesbian&#13;
International, an umbrella group of so and gay consumers and, at the same&#13;
called "ex-gay" ministries. Houck time, support those who attack us in&#13;
founded the Metanoia Ministries in Congress. This boycott is forcing a&#13;
1979 and has directed the major American corporation to take&#13;
organization since that time. the lesbian and gay community&#13;
A former client of Metanoia, who seriously and hear our message:&#13;
wished to remain unidentified, told corporate-sponsored gay bashing will&#13;
Stllttle Gay News reporter Tom Flint not be tolerated.■&#13;
that Houck has "relapsed into NGLTF, the nation's preeminent&#13;
homosexual activity several times lesbian and gay lobbying organduring&#13;
his tenure as director." In ization, is encouraging its 17,000&#13;
explaining his motivation for members to stop buying Marlboro&#13;
exposing the issue to the public, the cigarettes and Miller beer. The Task&#13;
former client said, "I grew up in a Force has also encouraged members to&#13;
church and took my Christian faiQ\ write Philip Morris to voice&#13;
seriously as an adolescent and now as opposition to the corporation's&#13;
an adult. Like many others I assumed support of Jesse Helms. (Hamish&#13;
as a young teen that my homosexual Maxwell, CEO, Philip Morris, 120&#13;
orientation signified my having been Park Ave., New York, NY 10017,&#13;
abandoned by God. The repeated FAX: (212)878-2167.&#13;
testimonies of charasmatic ex-gay&#13;
Christians like Doug Houck only&#13;
inlreased my des~ir because God&#13;
was not delivering me as he had&#13;
others. As a result I was seriously&#13;
suicidal for a number of years."&#13;
-Seattle Gay Nt'U!s&#13;
Congregation Fears&#13;
-Catching AIDS&#13;
From Communion&#13;
Arsonist Torches&#13;
MCC/Knoxville&#13;
After months of harassing and&#13;
threatening phone calls, the&#13;
Metmpnlitan Community Church of&#13;
Knoxville, Tennessee, was set ablaze&#13;
in what pastor Bob Galloway called&#13;
"a dumb act of homophobia." The&#13;
building that housed the MCC also&#13;
housed aids Response Knoxville&#13;
(aJK).&#13;
One yar (2 issues) individml subscription&#13;
$10 (SIS institutional)&#13;
---a1-.1.u two Protestant churches in the city&#13;
of Hardenberg, the Netherlands,&#13;
worshippers-afraid of AIDS may now&#13;
bring their own communion cups. The&#13;
policy was passed at the Hervormde&#13;
and Gereformeerde churches after&#13;
parishioners threatened to boycott&#13;
church for fear of catching AIDS. Dr.&#13;
Mau checks payabk to Gay and Lesbiaa...Ad!1&gt;c:&#13;
acy Rcscarcb Project (GLARP) arid mail to:&#13;
· Emp,uby, PO Bo• 508s. Columbia, SC 292so.&#13;
Investigators have confirmed that&#13;
the fire was the result of arson.&#13;
According to the Tennessee&#13;
gay /lesbian paper Dare, Galloway&#13;
said his church had received a series&#13;
of harassing telephone calls,&#13;
beginning around the end of March.&#13;
-Sou,t,h,. ern Voice&#13;
THE SECOND STONE&#13;
Newsbriefs&#13;
Minneapolis&#13;
Civil Rights&#13;
Commission Hears&#13;
Dignity Case&#13;
A discrimination complaint filed by a&#13;
chapter of Dignity against the&#13;
Catholic archdiocese in Minneapolis&#13;
is moving ; through the city&#13;
Commission on Civil Rights.&#13;
Dignity members say Archbishop&#13;
John Roach discriminated against&#13;
them based on their affectionaJ&#13;
preferences, in violation of city law,&#13;
when, in 1987, he forbade the&#13;
University of Minnesota Newman&#13;
Center to renew the group's lease&#13;
unless Dignity officers signed a&#13;
statement affirming Catholic&#13;
teaching on homosexuality.&#13;
-Philadelphia Gay News&#13;
ABC Won't Rerun&#13;
thirtysomething&#13;
Gay Episode&#13;
ABC's summer rerun schedule did not&#13;
incJude the controversial thirtysomething&#13;
episode that showed two&#13;
men in bed together because the&#13;
nelwork lost more than $1 million in&#13;
cancelled advertising the first time&#13;
the episode aired. Under pressure&#13;
from the American Family&#13;
Association, 50 percent of advertisers&#13;
pulled their ads from the original&#13;
broadcast.&#13;
Pie In The Face&#13;
Of Bigotry&#13;
Edwards Bakery in Atlanta,&#13;
Georgia, has been donating offices,&#13;
desks, meeting rooms, phones and free&#13;
pies lo the anti-gay Family Concerns&#13;
Ministries and Citizens for Public&#13;
Awareness. The group was quoted as&#13;
saying they "oppose the homosexual&#13;
destructive lifestyle that is&#13;
condemned by God and is a threat to&#13;
the family ... " BLK, the national&#13;
magazine for gay and lesbian people&#13;
of color has suggested its readers not&#13;
buy Edwards Bakery products.&#13;
Theatre Group&#13;
Moves From Church&#13;
Building In Dispute&#13;
Over Gay Play&#13;
The Upstairs Theatre Company,&#13;
Pittsburgh, Penn., has moved from its&#13;
South Side home rather than submit&#13;
to a censorship clause in its lease,&#13;
which incJuded a "no homosexual&#13;
content" condition. The theatre group&#13;
had performed for the past six&#13;
months at the United Methodist&#13;
□ Church.&#13;
"The Upstairs Theatre was renting&#13;
from the United Methodist Church,&#13;
but then the church dissolved," said&#13;
Ted Hoover, the actor starring as&#13;
Arnold in the company's production of '' • Torch Song Trilogy. "Then they had&#13;
to rent directly from the Western&#13;
Pennsylvania Regional Methodist&#13;
Church, which put a clause in its&#13;
lease stating the tenant had to agree&#13;
it wouldn'I stage any events&#13;
inappropriate to a church setting,&#13;
take the Lord's name in vain or show&#13;
homosexual conduct or sexual&#13;
perversion."&#13;
Great 1&#13;
. Resppnse!&#13;
-Pittsburgh's Out&#13;
Anti-Gay Staffer&#13;
Fired By&#13;
White House&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The White&#13;
House has fired the most vocal critic&#13;
of the administration's inviting gay&#13;
men and Lesbians lo the White House&#13;
to witness two bill signing ceremonies.&#13;
Doug Wead had been the&#13;
administration's liaison to religious&#13;
groups for 19 months. Rev. Richard&#13;
Land", director of the Christian Life&#13;
Commission of the Southern Baptist&#13;
Convention reportedly wrote&#13;
President Bush a letter demanding a&#13;
meeting over Wead's termination.&#13;
Guilt By&#13;
Association&#13;
IRVINE, Cal. - A 10-year faculty&#13;
member at Christ College has been&#13;
fired for "public association" with&#13;
the Los Angeles Gay Men's Chorus. A&#13;
college report said Wayne Bisbee was&#13;
dismissed because the chorus&#13;
"publicJy condones ... homosexual&#13;
behavior" and because Bisbee's&#13;
membership in the chorus could be&#13;
"construed as conduct unbecoming a&#13;
Christian and as giving offense to the&#13;
weak, especially the students."&#13;
-Baltimore Alternative&#13;
Where Are&#13;
The Women&#13;
The Lesbian and Gay Community&#13;
Services Center N~tional Museum of&#13;
Lesbian and Gay History is&#13;
presenting an exhibition of work by&#13;
women artists entitled Where Are&#13;
The Women. Working in painting,&#13;
photography, and mixed media, the&#13;
artists included in the show are&#13;
Sandra Desando, Ana Ferrer, Cheryl&#13;
Gross, Diane Henderson, Marin&#13;
Henkels, Usa Jacobson, Amy Kool,&#13;
Sherry Lane, China Marks, Angela&#13;
Muriel, Aida Pavlovich and Pamela&#13;
Ryan. The show will run through&#13;
November 30.&#13;
November /December 1990&#13;
'' '!bat's what a Second Stotie advertiser&#13;
told us recently.&#13;
And we hear that mere aid more tbcse days. That's because&#13;
The Second Stone reaches rcaden where many other gay and&#13;
lesbian publications can'L Like public and univmity libraries.&#13;
We don't cany advertising or editorial content lhat would put&#13;
us behind the COIDlttl'. We're up front - in plain sight!&#13;
For busi:oesses'lfferinlproducta andaerv•&#13;
ices to the natioDaJ gay andlesbien ,-om,&#13;
munity, we're an emtin, new marbtinar&#13;
approacbl&#13;
Reach new customers in every Slate 8CJO&amp;'l die USA. The&#13;
Seoond Stone offers a variety of hH:olumn ad sizes with frequency&#13;
discounts. We offer spot and full color. We'll lay out&#13;
your ad at no charge and we'll get it right - we11 send you a&#13;
proof to mate sure. The Second S10ae will also insert your&#13;
brochure, flier or C8la1og_ in our mailing.&#13;
It doesn't cost as much as JOU think&#13;
You can reach a paid amt to COlm readership fm- about what&#13;
you'd pay to advertise in ooe local free disbl'bution gay newspaper.&#13;
And. •• to mail your insert in The Second Stone costs&#13;
less lhan mailing it yourselfl&#13;
You won't know till JOU try it..&#13;
The potential sales you lose while you're thinking about adVC2'tising&#13;
cannot be recaptmed. If you're thinking you've paid too&#13;
much for advertising that lmn't worted ••• you're probably right!&#13;
But you haven't tried The Second Stone.&#13;
SECOND STONE&#13;
You'll be p1eased wi1h 1he re.suits.&#13;
Call 1-504-949-5625 fm- advertising assistance.&#13;
People □ Massachusetts Woman Recognized For Selfless Commitment To Others&#13;
Dr. Margo McMahon Honored By Quota International&#13;
A Massachusetts woman and&#13;
member of the Western&#13;
Massachusetts Chapter of Integrity,&#13;
Inc., has received the International&#13;
Outstanding Deaf Woman of the Year&#13;
award from Quota International. Dr.&#13;
Margo E. McMahon, an Amherst,&#13;
Mass., resident was recently honored&#13;
by Quota Clubs from all over the&#13;
world, at their 69th Annual Quota&#13;
International Convention in Seattle,&#13;
Washington. Quota International is&#13;
a non-profit service organization.&#13;
The award is given annually to&#13;
highlight the abilities and&#13;
accomplishments of deaf persons. Dr.&#13;
McMahon was nominated for the&#13;
award by the Springfield, Mass.,&#13;
Quota Club in recognition of her&#13;
community service and professional&#13;
achievements.&#13;
A panel of internationally known&#13;
professionals served as judges for the&#13;
award. On hand to witness the award&#13;
presentation was Mel Matteson, an&#13;
Ecumenical Officer for the Northwest&#13;
Harvest and member of the Standing&#13;
Commission on Human Affairs for the&#13;
Episcopal Church.&#13;
Active in Integrity /Western Mass.,&#13;
Dr. McMahon coordinates an Emergency&#13;
Food and Clothing Project for&#13;
the chapter's service project with&#13;
Digni1ife, a local organization&#13;
serving individuals and families&#13;
affected by AIDS. She also serves as&#13;
an acolyte for the Integrity worship&#13;
services. In addition to her Integrity&#13;
activities, Dr. McMahon is active in&#13;
her local parish and diocese. In&#13;
January, 1990, she was elected to the&#13;
Grace Church Vestry. More recently,&#13;
Bishop Andrew Wisseman has&#13;
invited her to serve on the Diocesan&#13;
Dr. Margo E. McMahon&#13;
Committee on Disability Concerns.&#13;
This committee was formed as a&#13;
result of Integrity/Western Mass.'&#13;
resolution at Diocesan Convention&#13;
calling on the church to make its&#13;
parishes and programs accessible to&#13;
Black Leaders Meet To Discuss Lesbian/Gay Issues&#13;
ATLANTA, GA - A group of black&#13;
leaders from around the country met&#13;
at The King Center in September to&#13;
discuss placing black lesbian/ gay&#13;
concerns on the agendas of mapr black&#13;
institutions.&#13;
· Representatives from The King&#13;
Center, Southern Christian Leadership&#13;
Conference, and the National&#13;
Conference of Black Mayors met with&#13;
the heads of black lesbian and gay&#13;
organizations, including the&#13;
National Coalition of Black Lesbians&#13;
and Gays and the Black Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Leadership Forum.&#13;
Discussion centered on lesbian/ gay&#13;
rights, historical contributions of&#13;
black Lesbians and Gays to black&#13;
■&#13;
history and the black liberation&#13;
struggle, and the resources black&#13;
Lesbians and gay men can bring to&#13;
currentooncems of black oommunities.&#13;
The devastating affect of AIDS,&#13;
anti-gay/lesbian violence and sexism&#13;
were also discussed by the group.&#13;
The group of black leaders agreed&#13;
that recognition and utilization of&#13;
the talents and expertise of black&#13;
Lesbians and gay men by traditional&#13;
black institutions needs to be a&#13;
priority. "It's difficult to believe&#13;
anyone would tum down the&#13;
opportunity to increase their&#13;
resources by ten percent," said Dr.&#13;
Ma,;&gt;rie Hill, Director of the Office&#13;
for the Lesbian and Gay Community&#13;
for the Mayor of New York City. Dr.&#13;
Hill's remark refers to research&#13;
indicating at least ten percent of any&#13;
population is gay. "The black&#13;
community is not is a position where&#13;
it can afford to tum down that kind of&#13;
increase of human and financial&#13;
resources," she said.&#13;
"Most black Lesbians and Gays&#13;
believe traditional black institutions&#13;
such as the (National Association for&#13;
the Advancement of Colored People)&#13;
and (Southern Christian Leadership&#13;
Conference) are dosed to them,· said&#13;
Sabrina Sojourner, one of the&#13;
meeting's conveners. "Part of the&#13;
purpose of this meeting was to&#13;
explore the extent to which this&#13;
THE SECOND STONE&#13;
persons with disabilities.&#13;
Dr. McMahon holds a Doctorate&#13;
Degree in Counseling and Special&#13;
Education from the University of&#13;
Massachusetts at Amherst, a Masters&#13;
Degree in Education of the Deaf from&#13;
Smith College, Northampton, Mass.,&#13;
and a Bachelors Degree from&#13;
Hartwick College, Oneonta, New&#13;
York. She has served as a community&#13;
advocate and volunteer within a&#13;
number of agencies and programs to&#13;
increase accessibility to services and&#13;
employment by persons with&#13;
physical, emotional, mental and/ or&#13;
perceptual handicaps. In 1985, she&#13;
was appointed by Governor Michael&#13;
· Dukakis as a member of the Board of&#13;
Trustees at Belchertown State&#13;
School, a position she served in until&#13;
May, 1990. She has published&#13;
several papers and lectured at&#13;
numerous educational facilities.&#13;
Congenitally hearing-impaired, Dr.&#13;
McMahon has a profound/total&#13;
hearing loss. She also has a&#13;
congential absence of her left forearm&#13;
and a traumatic spinal cord injury&#13;
from an accident in 1974, for which&#13;
she uses an electric wheelchair. The&#13;
emphasis of Dr. McMahon's&#13;
activities has consistently been a&#13;
selfless commitment to improving the&#13;
lives of others despite her own&#13;
disabiliites.&#13;
Quota International is a non-profit&#13;
organization of professionals,&#13;
business persons, and executives,&#13;
dedicated to service for persons with&#13;
speech and hearing problems.&#13;
Organized in 11 countries, Quota&#13;
International includes 437 clubs and&#13;
12,000 members.&#13;
might be true and to begin a dialogue&#13;
to bring about inclusion." Ms.&#13;
Sojourner commented she found&#13;
acceptance as well as resistance to&#13;
the idea of inclusion of black Lesbians&#13;
and Gays from the organizations&#13;
contacted.&#13;
Though unable to attend in person,&#13;
Dr. Joseph .Lowery, president of the&#13;
SCLC, sent a representative with a&#13;
statement expressing SCLC's&#13;
dedication "to the-ettminatior of bias&#13;
and discrimination based on race,&#13;
color, religion, age, national origin,&#13;
sex and sexual orientation."&#13;
flit groaywtD spend the next few&#13;
SEE BLACK LEADERS, Page 18&#13;
Cover Story&#13;
Petition Calls For Statement From Rev. Troy Perry&#13;
Too Much New Age In MCC?&#13;
By Jim Bailef&#13;
Editor&#13;
Has the New Age movement crept&#13;
too far into Metropolitan Community&#13;
Churches? One congregation thinks&#13;
so. A petition calling for a position&#13;
statement on New Age teaching is&#13;
now circulating among MCC congregations.&#13;
The petition says that the&#13;
"Fellowship is being systematically&#13;
and methodically infiltrated by&#13;
these exotic cults/ideas, all&#13;
masquerading as 'Christian Liberation,'&#13;
yet rejecting much of the&#13;
Christian faith in the process" and&#13;
calls for · UFMCC Moderator Rev.&#13;
Elder Troy Perry to "reaffirm the&#13;
ancient creeds of the church" and to&#13;
"publicly reaffirm this FelJowship&#13;
as a Christian Church, which should&#13;
preach the Gospel of salvation in&#13;
Jesus Christ, not some 'goddess.'" The&#13;
petition continues, "Let the&#13;
Christians remain on their chosen&#13;
path, let the goddess worshipers, the&#13;
New Agers, the cults, wiccans, etc.,&#13;
choose their own ways in peace."&#13;
Sources say that Rev. Perry&#13;
disagreed with the content of the&#13;
petition but that he had no objection&#13;
to it being circulated. The petition&#13;
originated from the Divine Redeemer&#13;
MCC in Glendale, California, and&#13;
was signed by Rev. Stan Harris,&#13;
pastor of Divine Redeemer, Rev.&#13;
David Kromer, and Rev Willie&#13;
Smith, who was said to have&#13;
assisted Perry in the establishment of&#13;
the UFMCC.&#13;
Edited portions of the petition&#13;
follow:&#13;
When many of us joined the&#13;
Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches we&#13;
were pleased to find that basic&#13;
Christian teaching, (albeit making&#13;
room for both Catholics and&#13;
Protestants) was the norm. In the&#13;
last ten years or so, some of us have&#13;
begun to view with increasing alarm&#13;
the gradual, sometimes aggressive&#13;
attempts by some feminists, (also&#13;
some clergy, laity,. those in&#13;
leadership positions), to either&#13;
water down our faith, or to render ii&#13;
almost unrecognizable as part of the&#13;
Christian religion.&#13;
"The tiine is sure to come&#13;
when, far from being&#13;
content with sound&#13;
conferences, workshops, Samaritan&#13;
College classes, pulpits, etc., which&#13;
seem to be presenting a "new"&#13;
religion, based upon some very oldyet&#13;
modernized "heresies• which&#13;
Christians rejected so long ago, but&#13;
have risen up once more, breeding&#13;
chaos and confusion.&#13;
Some examples of what is being&#13;
taught in some places:&#13;
THE CREEDS: Both Nicene and&#13;
Apostles Creeds can be ignored; they&#13;
were compiled by a patriarchal&#13;
male-dominated oppressive society,&#13;
hence have no value or credibility,&#13;
nor are their doctrines to be taken&#13;
seriously.&#13;
THE BIBLE: Like the Creeds, the&#13;
Bible is another patriarchal, oppressive&#13;
and primitive work and can be&#13;
disregarded at will, denying most if&#13;
not all 'supernatural' events listed.&#13;
fiOD: is not really Cod, there is a&#13;
"goddess" the "Great Mother" of all.&#13;
teaching, people will be&#13;
avid for the latest novelty&#13;
and collect a whole series&#13;
of 'teachers' according to&#13;
, "She" is the only one to be adored.&#13;
their own tastes; and then,&#13;
instead of listening to the&#13;
truth, they will turn to&#13;
myths."&#13;
-2 Tim. 4:1-5&#13;
New Age/Theosophical cult&#13;
interpretations of Scripture, Cod,&#13;
Jesus, etc. seem to be more prevalent,&#13;
and traditional Christians in&#13;
UFMCC are perhaps feeling pushed&#13;
out, even estranged, by what we hear&#13;
and/ or observe, either at certain&#13;
"She" is called Ishtar/ Ashteroth,&#13;
Diana, Sarah, Isis, etc., as in&#13;
Wicca/Witchcraft. Only sexists call&#13;
God "Father." As part of women's&#13;
(wommyn's/wimmins?) spirituality,&#13;
Wicca-type rites are encouraged at&#13;
women's retreats.&#13;
JESUS CHRIST: "Jesus" and "The&#13;
Christ" are two separate entities/&#13;
persons (A New Age rewrite of&#13;
Theosophy, also Gnosticism.) The&#13;
risen Christ (or the ascended Christ)&#13;
is not the same as Jesus, but a spirit -&#13;
so is sexless, and can be called "she."&#13;
Jesus is not divine as taught by the&#13;
□&#13;
early church, but rather is "divine,"&#13;
as we all are. Jesus is not unique in&#13;
creation. He is not Cod Incarnate.&#13;
" ... and let me warn you&#13;
that if anyone preaches a&#13;
version of the good news&#13;
different from the one we&#13;
have already preached to&#13;
you, whether it be&#13;
ourselves or an angel from&#13;
heaven, he is to be&#13;
condemned .. :'&#13;
• -Gal. 1:8&#13;
BLOOD ATONEMENT/SIN: Sin&#13;
doesn't exist. We are a product of our&#13;
environment, so we are not personally&#13;
responsible for our thoughts, words&#13;
and deeds. So we have nothing to be&#13;
sorry for or "saved" from. Jesus'&#13;
crucifixion was political only, and&#13;
has no spiritual merit. The idea of&#13;
sacrificing His life for sin is&#13;
primitive, superstitious and ignorant,&#13;
smacking of "human sacrifice"&#13;
ideology, and must be rejected as such&#13;
by truly enlightened 20th century&#13;
folk. All "blood" hymns, etc., to be&#13;
discarded, replaced by the word&#13;
"love."&#13;
BAPTISM: totally unnecessary.&#13;
Unbaptized are given church&#13;
membership, without commitment to&#13;
Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior,&#13;
without explanation, or preparation&#13;
offered in some churches.&#13;
COVER STORY,&#13;
FromPagel&#13;
mistakes made by the&#13;
Christian community, have&#13;
a part in some Christians&#13;
exploring involvements&#13;
that may be quite appealing&#13;
but are clearly outside&#13;
the realm of Christianity.&#13;
Generally such movements&#13;
promise some "new" truth.&#13;
remove most, it not all,&#13;
prejudice against gay and&#13;
lesbian lifestyles. In&#13;
.addition, it also appears to&#13;
be quite compatible with&#13;
Christian teachings so that&#13;
relatively uninformed&#13;
Christians may think that&#13;
they can easily follow both&#13;
paths. But such is not the&#13;
case. New Age is not a&#13;
supplement to Christianity;&#13;
it's seeping into the&#13;
Christian community is a&#13;
confusing problem with no&#13;
easy answers.&#13;
can also be distorted and&#13;
now many Americans hold&#13;
the attitude, referred to as&#13;
relativism, that anything&#13;
is as good as anything else:&#13;
there are no absolutes and&#13;
if you believe so there is&#13;
something wrong with you.&#13;
You are the object of&#13;
disdain if you believe in a&#13;
God who says "no• to&#13;
certain ways. You are told&#13;
you're "intolerant, closedminded."&#13;
But it is clear&#13;
that God does say "no" to&#13;
some things. The challenge&#13;
facing Christians in the&#13;
New Age is how to&#13;
proclaim our beliefs amidst&#13;
the surging tide of beliefs&#13;
we see as false. We are not&#13;
to condemn others, but much&#13;
of the power of the early&#13;
church rode on its proclamation&#13;
of good versus&#13;
evil and the separation of&#13;
believers from the way of&#13;
wrong doing.&#13;
either personal or impersonal,&#13;
not both: he is either&#13;
moral or amoral, not both;&#13;
people are nondivine or&#13;
divine, not both; there is&#13;
resurrection or reincarnation,&#13;
not both; ethics are&#13;
absolute or relative, not&#13;
both. You cannot serve both&#13;
God and the New Age.&#13;
Even if it is considered&#13;
impolite in a pluralistic&#13;
culture to dispute the truth&#13;
of another's beliefs, the&#13;
Christian must speak the&#13;
truth in love, saying, 'No! I&#13;
cannot agree with&#13;
pantheism, monism, relativism,&#13;
spiritism, and the&#13;
rest. I will have no part.'"&#13;
New Age promises a&#13;
better sense of self and a&#13;
greater power over one's&#13;
life. It is easily seen how&#13;
such a promise is attractive&#13;
to everyone, especially to&#13;
men and women in the gay&#13;
community, who have often&#13;
felt powerless and disenfranchised.&#13;
Its very lack of&#13;
a central ethical base (it is&#13;
very subjective in its&#13;
philosophical roots)&#13;
Relative to other times in&#13;
history, we live in a&#13;
tolerant time. Attidudes of&#13;
openness and acceptance&#13;
have benefitted the gay&#13;
community in its struggle&#13;
for affirmation in church&#13;
and society. But any good&#13;
November /December 1990&#13;
So it is today: we have to&#13;
proclaim these things but&#13;
such proclamations must&#13;
stem from introspection and&#13;
study, not from reaction.&#13;
Christians are called&#13;
apart, informed by gospel&#13;
that we are in this world&#13;
but not of it. That is&#13;
difficult, but central to the&#13;
gospel message. Douglas&#13;
Croothuis, writing in&#13;
Christianity Today,&#13;
January 13, 1989, writes:&#13;
"The separation theme is&#13;
crucial for confronting the&#13;
New Age. The New Age&#13;
world view is antithetical&#13;
to Christianity: the two&#13;
cannot mingle. God is&#13;
There are other places&#13;
where Christian faith and&#13;
SEE COVER STORY, Page 18&#13;
Families&#13;
But Inspiration Comes From Revelation&#13;
Even A Fool Can&#13;
Be Educated&#13;
DJ Rey, Sywja Pcnninpm&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
I guess we all have a picture of&#13;
what certain types of people&#13;
stereotypically look like. I remember&#13;
meeting a man whose father worked&#13;
the land in Brittany, where the land&#13;
was full of rocks, granite and hard&#13;
places. Soon those who worked the&#13;
land bore the mark of the land that&#13;
they worked. Not that they were&#13;
hard men, but just that they became&#13;
one with the land and had a hard,&#13;
rough look.&#13;
I have a picture of Southern&#13;
red•necked farmers. They work a&#13;
hard land too. They're tall and thin&#13;
and sinewy, brown as berries. The&#13;
skin on their neck and face is&#13;
wrinkled because of the hours of hot&#13;
sun under which they labor. They're&#13;
tough looking. They work hard and&#13;
on Sunday they go to church. They&#13;
rule their land, their wives and their&#13;
children. They want their sons to be&#13;
tough and sinewy, just as they are.&#13;
Recently I met a man like that. His&#13;
name was Parker and he fit my&#13;
stereotypical picture to a "T" except&#13;
for one thing - he had the softest,&#13;
kindest blue eyes I'd ever seen. I&#13;
heard of him a year earlier when he&#13;
piqued my curiousity by ordering 20&#13;
copies of my first book, But Lord,&#13;
They're Gay. I wondered why this&#13;
southern farmer was ordering 20&#13;
copies of my book. He enclosed a note&#13;
that if I was ever in his state to&#13;
please let him know for he would&#13;
like to talk to me, even if I only had&#13;
about ten minutes to spare. About a&#13;
year later, I called him. We&#13;
arranged to meet and he said he&#13;
would be bringing his wife and&#13;
~ EvangeHcals&#13;
Ii. V lbgether-.&#13;
MUS1UIWGIIOWS&#13;
IOCUtS • IOflllSNOPS. llrnlE.VI&#13;
Hlf/AIDSIU'P'Ollt~&#13;
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FOR Gay &amp; Lesbian Christians&#13;
ii Southem Cabrit....silt&gt; 1979&#13;
Sult• 10fl-Bo,c 1fl&#13;
711/1~ B•nta Monica BoultwMd&#13;
W.•r Hollywood, CA r1004fl&#13;
213/656-B570&#13;
adopted son. He didn't mind the&#13;
distance they'd have to travel to&#13;
have a brief talk. We met in a&#13;
restaurant.&#13;
As we talked Parker spoke of his&#13;
son, his only child who had never&#13;
quite measured up to his image of&#13;
what a strong son should look like or&#13;
act like. His son had one thing going&#13;
for him - he was a Christian and he&#13;
loved the Lord. Parker couldn't deny&#13;
that. Tony was a kind boy - but not&#13;
tough. One day Tony told his parents&#13;
that he was gay and he had someone&#13;
Parker was outraged&#13;
with a combination&#13;
of disbelief that his&#13;
one child could be a&#13;
pervert and that, in&#13;
his righteous&#13;
N azerene certainty,&#13;
Tony was doomed to&#13;
hell unless he&#13;
' repented.&#13;
in his life he loved very much -&#13;
another man. Parker was outraged&#13;
with a combination of disbelief that&#13;
his one child could be a pervert and&#13;
that, in his righteous Nazerene&#13;
certainty, Tony was doomed to hell&#13;
unless he repented.&#13;
Parker spent the next year and a&#13;
half harrassing Tony despite his son&#13;
constantly telling him that he was&#13;
still a Christian and he still loved&#13;
the Lord. Parker refused to meet his&#13;
son's mate, certain that the&#13;
relationship had to be from the&#13;
devil. Then came the day that I&#13;
Bubleaor&#13;
PIIIOIIIL&#13;
TIJaSemnclSlone&#13;
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BY ANDREA NATALIE&#13;
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I&#13;
guess every family of a gay man fears&#13;
most will happen. Tony told his&#13;
father that he had AIDS.&#13;
Despite Parker's broken heart he&#13;
doubled up on his efforts to have Tony&#13;
repent and get right with God and&#13;
secure anew his eternal life. His&#13;
angry pleas fell on deaf ears as Tony&#13;
constantly maintained his Christianity.&#13;
Parker worked harder than&#13;
ever to "save" his son from a Godless&#13;
eternity in hell as Tony grew weaker&#13;
each day.&#13;
Parker's eyes filled with tears as he&#13;
told me of a day in the hospital room,&#13;
when even while he argued with his&#13;
son, hooked up to oxygen and&#13;
breathing machines, something began&#13;
to happen in the room • something&#13;
that Parker recognized - that his life&#13;
and love of the Lord had prepared&#13;
him for as the room filled with the&#13;
presence of the Holy Spirit. The&#13;
presence of Cod was intense and the&#13;
reality of Christ's presence was&#13;
undeniable. Suddenly Tony sat up,&#13;
took off his oxygen and said, "Dad,&#13;
do you feel him here?" Parker said,&#13;
"Yes, but put your oxygen on Tony."&#13;
Tony weakly answered "But there's&#13;
no need to, Dad, Jesus has come for&#13;
me," and he closed his eyes and died.&#13;
As Parker sat there telling me about&#13;
it his tears flowed freely down his&#13;
hard, weather beaten face. "Jesus&#13;
came to take my boy home and&#13;
nothing can ever again convince me&#13;
that my Tony did not belong to Him.&#13;
Why don't they understand that,&#13;
Sylvia?" Too choked up to· talk, we&#13;
just held hands for a few moments.&#13;
The young man with whom Tony&#13;
had fallen in love, Joseph, had&#13;
grown up in an orphanage and never&#13;
had a family. Parker and his wife,&#13;
Maria, took him home after Tony's&#13;
death and for the first time in his&#13;
life Joseph has the family he had&#13;
always longed for. Parker said he's&#13;
just going to keep sending books out to&#13;
every minister in his county so that,&#13;
hopefully, one day the world and the&#13;
church would understand as he&#13;
finally did.&#13;
I thank God for a brief stop in a&#13;
small farm community in Oklahoma&#13;
and an opportunity to meet some&#13;
people - Parker, Maria, and Joseph -&#13;
my "family" now too.&#13;
Need we ever doubt that we serve a&#13;
Risen Savior?&#13;
11D THE SECOND STONE&#13;
Church &amp; Organization News&#13;
Attempt Underway&#13;
To Revive Dignity/&#13;
Baton Rouge&#13;
"Modest but persistent" efforts are&#13;
underway to revive the Baton Rouge,&#13;
Louisiana, chapter of Dignily,&#13;
according to acting president Joe&#13;
McCarty. "We are undaunted in our&#13;
belief that Gays and Lesbians can&#13;
come together and pray, and find&#13;
sustenance for their journey from the&#13;
Bible," McCarty said. "Because of&#13;
the stance of the Catholic hierarchy&#13;
we presently are unable to have&#13;
Dignity Eucharistic liturgies. We are&#13;
unshaken in the hope that the&#13;
present impasse can be turned around&#13;
in time."&#13;
For more information on&#13;
Dignity/Baton Rouge contact P.O.&#13;
Box 4181, Baton Rouge, LA 70802 or&#13;
can (504 )383-601 o.&#13;
King Of Peace MCC&#13;
To Purchase New&#13;
Church Building&#13;
The congregation of King of Peace&#13;
MCC, St. Petersburg, Florida, voted&#13;
in late August to purchase property&#13;
for church expansion. The church&#13;
board is currently negotiating with&#13;
architects for contracts for extensive&#13;
renovations to the building, a former&#13;
movie theater. The new facility will&#13;
feature a sanctuary with seating for&#13;
450, a social area with seating for&#13;
300, library, bookstore, and office&#13;
areas and a guest suite. The&#13;
congregation hopes to move into the&#13;
23,000 square foot building by spring&#13;
or summer.&#13;
AIDS Project&#13;
Receives Dignity&#13;
Donation&#13;
Dignity /Seattle has donated $825.00&#13;
to the Multifaith AIDS Project of&#13;
Seattle. MAPS will use the money,&#13;
which Dignity raised at its second&#13;
annual Pride Week breakfast, to&#13;
manage two homes for people with&#13;
AIDS, both located in Seattle.&#13;
Conrad To Pastor&#13;
Good Shepherd&#13;
Good Shepherd MCC, Chicago, has&#13;
installed the Rev. Ralph Conrad as&#13;
its new pastor. Conrad, formerly a&#13;
Catholic priest, was previously&#13;
affiliated· with MCC/Las Vegas.&#13;
Church spokesperson Bradley&#13;
Mickelson told the Chicago Outlines&#13;
that Conrad "is particularly well&#13;
known ... for his preaching talent ...&#13;
and his ability lo motivate his&#13;
congregation to be an important,&#13;
viable and active part of the lesbian&#13;
and gay community." Mickelson said&#13;
Good Shepherd was very active in&#13;
the Chicago community in the late&#13;
70s and early 80s "and would like to&#13;
return to that role again."&#13;
Morning Star MCC&#13;
Pastor Dies&#13;
Rev. Emmett J. Watkins, Jr., pastor of&#13;
Morning Star MCC, Worcester, Mass.,&#13;
passed away on August 25. He was&#13;
praised by his congregation as an&#13;
excellent teacher. "}le taught not&#13;
only with words but also by his&#13;
shining example," said Glenda&#13;
Caron, editor of the church's&#13;
newsletter. "Never has a man of God&#13;
been loved and respected to the extent&#13;
that our Pastor was," she said.&#13;
Pastor Watkins was born in Houston&#13;
and raised in San Francisco. He spent&#13;
two years serving his country during&#13;
the Viet Nam era in Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska. Upon discharge from the&#13;
military he lived for a short time in&#13;
Seattle and then moved to Los&#13;
Angeles where he joined the MCC of&#13;
Los Angeles and became interested in&#13;
ministry.&#13;
He attended the College of New&#13;
Rochelle New York Theological&#13;
Seminary, receiving a degree and&#13;
working to fulfill the requirements to&#13;
become a minister in the UFMCC.&#13;
Under his leadership, Morning Star&#13;
grew from eight members to over&#13;
eighty members and friends.&#13;
Survivors include the Reverend and&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Watkins, Sr., the Reverend&#13;
and Mrs. E. H. Watkins, Mrs. Denise.&#13;
MacKinon, Mrs Patrisse Dawson, Mrs.&#13;
Elisicia Wright, Mr. Eric V. Watkins&#13;
and several nieces and nephews.&#13;
Reconciliation MCC&#13;
Takes To The Tube&#13;
An hour-long weekly telecast of&#13;
worship services from Reconciliation&#13;
MCC was scheduled to debut in&#13;
October on three public access stations&#13;
serving the Grand Rapids, Michigan,&#13;
area.&#13;
The program, Reconciliation, is&#13;
produced by Bradmack Productions&#13;
and features Sunday sermons taped&#13;
during the church's worship services.&#13;
The telecast is part of Reconciliation&#13;
MCCs five year plan.&#13;
Bradmack plaMed to add another&#13;
five stations before November; three&#13;
more by March 1991; and stations in&#13;
the three largest cities in Ohio,&#13;
Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana by&#13;
September 1991, giving the ministry&#13;
the opportunity to be seen on 25 public&#13;
access stations covering a large part&#13;
of the Great Lakes area by September&#13;
1991.&#13;
Rochester Group&#13;
Celebrates 15th&#13;
Anniversary&#13;
Dignity•lntegrity /Rochester, New&#13;
York, has begun its 15th year of&#13;
service to the gay and lesbian&#13;
community. The ecumenical religious,&#13;
educational and social organization&#13;
began as a small group of gay&#13;
Catholics and gay Episcopalians who&#13;
met on Easter Sunday, 1975, to&#13;
worship together for the first time at&#13;
St. Luke's Episcopal Church. Shortly&#13;
after, the groups were chartered as&#13;
the first combined chapter of the&#13;
Dignity and Integrity national&#13;
organizations.&#13;
MCj::/Baton Rouge&#13;
Reslructures&#13;
A "major restructuring" including the&#13;
adoption of a new name is underway&#13;
for the Metropolitan Community&#13;
Church of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.&#13;
Severe financial problems forced the&#13;
loss of the group's building and&#13;
pastor. The church has been renamed&#13;
Joie de Vivre (Joy of Life) to reflect&#13;
the French heritage of the area and&#13;
is holding meetings at 333 East&#13;
Chimes. For more information, call&#13;
(504 )665-9645.&#13;
Lesbian To Pastor&#13;
New Hope UCC&#13;
The 200-member New Hope United&#13;
Church of Christ, located in a&#13;
low-income area of Milwaukee's&#13;
south side, has hired an openly&#13;
lesbian pastor. Church officials said&#13;
Rev. Margarita Suarez's ministry&#13;
will broaden the church's resolve to&#13;
be open to all people, regardless of&#13;
sexual orientation. There are 10&#13;
openly gay UCC ministers&#13;
nationwide.&#13;
New Editor Picked&#13;
For WAVES&#13;
Dorothy J. Many of Middletown,&#13;
Connecticut, has been selected as the&#13;
new editor of WAVES, the newsletter&#13;
of the United Church Coalition for&#13;
Lesbian/Gay Concerns. Many is an&#13;
active member of the UCCL/GC&#13;
Connecticut Chapter and of the&#13;
Connecticut Conference Department of&#13;
Church Life and Leadership&#13;
Committee on Homosexuality. She is&#13;
a graphic artist and visual media&#13;
November/December 1990&#13;
□ designer for the Connecticut State&#13;
Library in Hartford. Many is also&#13;
editor of the Magny Families&#13;
Association Newsletter and the&#13;
owner of Frankfort Publishing Co.,&#13;
which she established.&#13;
Vision of Hope&#13;
MCC Celebrates&#13;
Anniversary&#13;
Vision of Hope MCC in Lancaster,&#13;
Penni, was scheduled to kick off a&#13;
major building fund drive during the&#13;
celebration of its tenth aMiversary in&#13;
early November. Rev. Elder Troy&#13;
Perry was scheduled to speak. For&#13;
more information, call the church at&#13;
(717)392-27294&#13;
Cincinatti Group&#13;
Seeks Pastor&#13;
All Saints Chapel, a non-denominational&#13;
fel!owship that provides&#13;
worship in the Protestant tradition&#13;
for Lesbians, gay men, their friends&#13;
and supporters is seeking a qualified&#13;
person to serve as part-time pastor for&#13;
the group. For more information&#13;
contact Pastoral Search Committee,&#13;
c/o All Saints Chapel, P.O. Box&#13;
19096, Cincinatti, OH 45219, Attn:&#13;
Mark Steffen.&#13;
Ex-Gays?&#13;
There&#13;
Are None&#13;
Lambda Christian Fellowship is&#13;
pleased ID anoourr:e a new book&#13;
by Rev. S_yMa Pennington -an&#13;
examination of ex.gay ministries -&#13;
what they do • what they don't do.&#13;
You'B meet people who, Ollly&#13;
throuah God's grace, have survivea&#13;
and stopped trying to be&#13;
ex-gays, because, in truth, them&#13;
is no such lhilg as an ex-gay&#13;
,-sot&#13;
Now Available From&#13;
Lambda Christian&#13;
Fellowship&#13;
P. 0. Box 1967&#13;
Hawthorne. CA 90250&#13;
$15.00 plus $1.50 for postage and&#13;
handling. califomia residents add&#13;
6% sales tax.&#13;
Try a Second Slone&#13;
CmifiedAd&#13;
iii&#13;
Calendar&#13;
The following announcements have&#13;
been submitted by sponsoring or&#13;
affiliated groups.&#13;
Third Annual&#13;
'Creating Change'&#13;
Gathering&#13;
NOVEMBER 9-12, Lesbian and gay&#13;
activists from around the nation will&#13;
meet in Minneapolis for the National&#13;
Gay and Lesbian Task Force's third&#13;
annual Creating Change conference.&#13;
The Holiday Inn Metrodome is the&#13;
setting. The conference will feature&#13;
leading activists from the national&#13;
and grassroots gay and lesbian scene,&#13;
prominent and provocative speakers,&#13;
PATLAR&#13;
IICICEOF-GAY~&#13;
MONTHLY NEWSMAGAZINE&#13;
FREE AT OUR DISTRISUTION POINTS&#13;
SUBSCRIPTIONS 1f ANNUALLY&#13;
SAMPL,}t4&amp;,y~ OiJT~~t USA $4&#13;
FOR INFO ON ADVERTISING .&#13;
CALL (9181391-9756 OR 452-0769&#13;
PO BOX 22-402 SACRAMENTO CA 95822&#13;
42 skills-building workshops, social&#13;
events, organizing sessions and more.&#13;
Plenary speakers will be Barbara&#13;
Smith, black lesbian feminist writer&#13;
and activist, Dr. C. T. Vivian, civil&#13;
rights activist and Center for Democratic&#13;
Renewal chairman and Kate&#13;
Ointon, popular feminist humorist.&#13;
Early registration is $120.00. The&#13;
Chicago Resource Center has provided&#13;
a grant to help fund a scholarship&#13;
program for people of color and&#13;
people with disabilities. Contact&#13;
NGLTF, 1517USt.NW, Washington,&#13;
DC 20009 or can (202)332-6483.&#13;
Creative Approaches&#13;
To Grief&#13;
NOVEMBER 17, a mini-retreat led&#13;
by Rev. Louis F. Kavar and sponsored&#13;
by Emmaus House of Prayer. For&#13;
information write to P.O. Box 70434,&#13;
S.W., Washington, DC 20024.&#13;
Women's&#13;
Thanksgiving Cruise&#13;
NOVEMBER 17•24,. Robin Tyler&#13;
. ;J&#13;
ristmas."&#13;
January: "Thinking Of You."&#13;
March: "You're Special."&#13;
May: "Love You."&#13;
July: "I Care."&#13;
September: "You're In My Heart."&#13;
A Christmas gift subscription to THE SECOND STONE lets someone&#13;
brow how much you care •. .and it's a gift that keeps on giving ... all year&#13;
long. What a nice way to say so much to someone you love!&#13;
Please send a gift subscription&#13;
and greeting&#13;
card to:&#13;
Nane,_ ____ _&#13;
Adlt8sa.·---·-···-·-······ .. ··----&#13;
Cily, S1ale &amp; lip....... ...................... __ _&#13;
Name.---·-·- - ··--··- ··---··-·--&#13;
Adliess. ......•..., ___. •_ . ..., . ..........&#13;
City, S1al8 &amp; Zip. ............................................... ..&#13;
Nilne .. _________ ........................... .&#13;
Adliess..--··-·················-··········---· .............. ..&#13;
City, - &amp; Zip ................................................. .&#13;
l J One gift-$12.60 YOUR NAME .... ----····-- ----·-··-·--- --·--&#13;
. ( J 'two gifts - $23.00&#13;
( J Three gifts ~2.00&#13;
ADORESS ..........•...................... ---·······--········'"· .......... .&#13;
CITY.STATE &amp; ZIP .................................................................... .&#13;
All gift sul,scriplion, t11t mailed i11 a plinn artldope.&#13;
AM $8.00 aKII . _s116scri6irr. U.S. t&#13;
Productions presents a seven night&#13;
women's Thanksgiving cruise to the&#13;
Mexican Riviera on the SS Bermuda&#13;
Star, a magnificent luxury vessel that&#13;
has all the spaciousness and ambiance&#13;
of the classic era cruise ships.&#13;
Join over 800 other women from all&#13;
over the world on the high seas on a&#13;
cruise from San Diego to Cabo San&#13;
Lucas, Puerto Vallarta and&#13;
Mazatlan. For furthur information,&#13;
write to Robin Tyler Productions,&#13;
15842 Chase St., Sepulveda, CA&#13;
91343 or call l-818-893-4075.&#13;
Robin Tyler is now producing two of&#13;
the major women's music and comedy&#13;
festivals (7th Annual Southern and&#13;
11th Annual West Coast) as well as&#13;
this cruise, thereby producing the&#13;
highest number of national women's&#13;
events.&#13;
The Book&#13;
And Beyond ...&#13;
Chris Glaser&#13;
NOVEMBER 18-19, Stony Point&#13;
Center, Stony Point, New Xork,&#13;
presents The Book and Beyond with&#13;
Chris Glaser; the author and readers&#13;
in conversation expanding upon the&#13;
ideas raised in Glaser's book Come&#13;
Home! Reclaiming Spirituality and&#13;
Ministry as Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Christians. Cost is $70.00 for&#13;
registration, room and meals. For&#13;
information contact Stony Point&#13;
Center, Crickettown Road, Stony&#13;
Point, NY 10980 or calJ (914)&#13;
786-5674.&#13;
Casa De La. Paloma&#13;
Three Day Revival&#13;
NOVEMBER »DECEMBER 2, Casa&#13;
De La Paloma Apostolic Cl\urch in&#13;
Tucson, Arizona hosts a three day&#13;
revival. Featured guests include the&#13;
Rev. Sheri Hayes of NashvilJe,&#13;
Tenn., and the Rev. William H.&#13;
Carey of Schenectady, New York,&#13;
Presbyter of the National Gay&#13;
Pentecostal Alliance. Rev. Carey&#13;
will present a workshop entitled&#13;
Hcmrosaw,lity and the Bible using&#13;
Hebrew and Greek scriptures to&#13;
determine what the Bible does and&#13;
does not say about homosexuality.&#13;
Special music and singing is also&#13;
being planned.&#13;
For information, contact the church&#13;
at P.O. Box 14003, Tucson, AZ&#13;
85732-4003 or call (602)323-6855.&#13;
Casa De La Paloma Apostolic Cl\un:h&#13;
is pastored by the Rev. Sandy Lewis, • THE-SECOND STONB&#13;
□&#13;
Elder of the West Central District of&#13;
the National Gay Pentecostal&#13;
Alliance.&#13;
God 'Comes Out'&#13;
At Advent&#13;
DECEMBER 7~, an advent workshop&#13;
for Lesbians, gay men, their families&#13;
and friends at Land's End, Saranac&#13;
Lake, New York. Led by Chris&#13;
Glaser, author of Uncommon Calling&#13;
and Come Home. Registration, room&#13;
and meals (based on double&#13;
occupancy) is $125.00. For&#13;
information write to Dr. Michael J.&#13;
Craven, Land's End, Star Route, Box&#13;
5, Saranac Lake, NY 12983 or call&#13;
(518)891-4034.&#13;
~ Gay And Christian&#13;
Accepted As Living&#13;
Members&#13;
DECEMBER 1~16, the Episcopal&#13;
Diocese of North Carolina sponsors a&#13;
conference for gay men, Lesbians and&#13;
bisexual people and those who&#13;
support them. Facilitator is Malcolm&#13;
Boyd. Workshops include: Healing&#13;
Grief and Anger Toward the Church,&#13;
Relationships, Images of God,&#13;
Spirituality and Sexuality, The&#13;
Bible and Homosexuality and Where&#13;
Do Gay and Lesbian Persons Fit in&#13;
the Cl\urch. To be held at the&#13;
Conference Center, Browns Summit,&#13;
North Carolina. Cost is $135-165&#13;
including registration, room and&#13;
meals. Contact the Registrar, St.&#13;
Philip's Episcopal Cl\urch, P.O. Box&#13;
218, Durham, NC 277C11.&#13;
Just Say Yes:&#13;
A Call To Thrive&#13;
FEBRUARY 15-17, a conference to&#13;
bring together gay, lesbian and&#13;
bisexual seminarians and divinity&#13;
school students. The Episcopal&#13;
Divinity School, Cambridge, Mass.,&#13;
is the setting. Cost is $30.00.&#13;
Keynote speakers scheduled: Carter&#13;
Heyward, Chris Glaser, Irene Monroe&#13;
and (tentatively) John Boswell. In&#13;
addition to the several workshops&#13;
scheduled, there will be a session on&#13;
developing strategies for change in&#13;
seminaries, the church and beyond.&#13;
For information, contact Michael&#13;
Musolf, 99 Brattle St., Box 30,&#13;
Cambridge, MA 02138 or call&#13;
(617)547-7629.&#13;
SEND EVENT NOTICES TO:&#13;
CALENDAR, THE SECOND STONE, P .0. BOX 8340, •&#13;
NEW ORLEANS, LA 70182&#13;
1&#13;
--- --- - --- --- --- --&#13;
Essay . ! □&#13;
War Veterans&#13;
By Chris Glaser&#13;
Columnist&#13;
I cried through much of the film&#13;
Born on the Fourth of /uly. It is the&#13;
story of Ron Kovic, who initially&#13;
believed and fought in the Vietnam&#13;
war, returned in a wheelchair to a&#13;
nation questioning its in~olvement&#13;
there, and was himself transformed&#13;
into a peace activist and a leader of&#13;
Vietnam Vets Against the War.&#13;
I cried because I was there too - not&#13;
in Vietnam, thank God • but initially&#13;
in favor and then adamantly in&#13;
opposition to our military involvement&#13;
in Vietnam. I demonstrated,&#13;
boycotted, went on strike, spoke, and&#13;
wrote against the war. I was accused&#13;
of being unpatriotic, a Communist, a&#13;
traitor. But never by my friends in&#13;
Vietnam, with whom I corresponded&#13;
and exchanged audiotapes. Some&#13;
were drafted; others volunteered. On&#13;
furloughs they told me about buddies&#13;
blown up, drugs, anxiety, terror, grief,&#13;
and boredom.&#13;
I cried because a lot of us around at&#13;
that time - American or Vietnamese -&#13;
are Vietnam vets whether we served&#13;
as soldiers or not. By saying this, I do&#13;
not intend to underrate the severe&#13;
emotional, physical, and spiritual&#13;
trauma of those who actualJy fought&#13;
in the war or those whose home of&#13;
Vietnam was the battlefield. But I&#13;
do believe that most Americ_a~lost&#13;
something if not someone in th'at war;&#13;
an of us were wounded by i( And the&#13;
wounds have never been fully&#13;
recognized, let alone healed.&#13;
And this is true of all wars.&#13;
CoincidentaUy, the same day I saw&#13;
the film based on Ron Kovic's&#13;
autobiographical book, I finished&#13;
watching a videotape of the old film&#13;
The Best Years of Ou, Lives. It&#13;
depicts the awkward, painful, and&#13;
dispiriting return of veterans from&#13;
World War II. Given their&#13;
emotional, physical, and spiritual&#13;
wounds, as well as those of all the&#13;
nations involved, it's small wonder&#13;
that fifty years after its end we are&#13;
still bombarded by books and films&#13;
about WWII.&#13;
. Uke Ron Kovic, Leonard Matlovich&#13;
was also a Vietnam veteran. In 1975,&#13;
he contested the U.S. Air Force's&#13;
expulsion of him as a gay m.a n.. I&#13;
happened to meet him the week after&#13;
his picture appeared on the cover of&#13;
--Time magazine as part of a story on&#13;
being homosexual in America. He&#13;
pointed out the irony that the&#13;
military could give him a medal for&#13;
killing two men in Vietnam, and yet&#13;
oust him for loving one. As a result,&#13;
Matlovich became a veteran in a new&#13;
war, the one for gay acceptance. And&#13;
he later became a casualty in our&#13;
battle with AIDS.&#13;
We were born into this war&#13;
and never knew anything&#13;
different. Like children of&#13;
alcoholics and children .&#13;
abused by parents, we&#13;
guessed at what "normal"&#13;
meant.&#13;
I believe that all lesbian women&#13;
and gay men have been involved in a&#13;
war. We have fought battles to be&#13;
who we are personally. We have&#13;
fought battles to protect our rights&#13;
publicly. We have fought battles to&#13;
secure our freedom of thought and&#13;
expression. We have fought battles&#13;
to defend our homes; as couples, as&#13;
parents. We have fought battles to&#13;
maintain our employment and pursue&#13;
careers. We have fought battles to&#13;
defend our right to exercise our&#13;
religion.&#13;
We are veterans who have been&#13;
wounded emotionally, physically,&#13;
and spiritually. Our wounds are&#13;
barely recognized, let alone healed.&#13;
Like other war veterans, many of us&#13;
know something's wrong, but can't put&#13;
our finger on it. We may feel anxious&#13;
and uneasy. We may lash out at one&#13;
another. At the least we may find it&#13;
difficult to develop intimacy -&#13;
because our wounds might get rubbed&#13;
the wrong way. Intimacy may be too&#13;
painful.&#13;
We are veterans with generational&#13;
differences. When I began minis•&#13;
tering within the gay community, I&#13;
soon noticed a generation gap between&#13;
pre-Stonewall Gays and those of us in&#13;
the Stonewa11 generation. More&#13;
,ecent years have revealed yet&#13;
another gap between my generation&#13;
and younger Gays and Lesbians. F.ach&#13;
generation's approaches to the same&#13;
war have been different. Older&#13;
"homophiles" applauded the&#13;
liberation of "Gays and Lesbians,•&#13;
while at the same time envying us&#13;
and questioning whether we were&#13;
asking too much. The younger&#13;
g~eration admittedly benefits from&#13;
the openness achieved by us, but often&#13;
takes it for granted and (a little too&#13;
self-righteously) questions our&#13;
excesses. Of course my generation too&#13;
smugly condemned closets and double&#13;
lives in our otherwise just call to&#13;
"Come out!" But whatever our&#13;
differences, we must not forget .that&#13;
we are veterans of the same war.&#13;
Many of us do not grasp that we&#13;
have suffered shell shock, battle&#13;
fatigue, and disabling wounds. We&#13;
were born into this war and .never&#13;
knew anything different. Like&#13;
children of alcoholics and children&#13;
abused by parents, we guessed at&#13;
what "i,formal" meant. A friend who&#13;
is very involved in AA has told me&#13;
that he believes almost every lesbian&#13;
and gay man was reared in&#13;
dysfunctional families because there&#13;
was something that could not be&#13;
discussed: sexuality, particularly&#13;
homosexuality. No matter how&#13;
loving our parents were, the societal&#13;
milieu in which most of us grew up&#13;
screwed us up in some way.&#13;
He pointed out the irony&#13;
that the military could give&#13;
him a medal for killing two&#13;
men in Vietnam, and yet&#13;
oust him for loving one.&#13;
I sec this in my own life. With full&#13;
acceptance withheld by the church&#13;
and the society, I hunger for love. Yet&#13;
when I reach out in love or for love,&#13;
my war wounds get in the way. I can&#13;
identify with the apostle Paul who&#13;
found himself doing the very things&#13;
he did not want to do and failing to&#13;
do the things he intended (Romans&#13;
7:15•25). I hurt myself and I hurt&#13;
others even though I believe my true&#13;
God-given nature to be loving and&#13;
good.&#13;
AIDS complicates the war. It is not&#13;
uncommon for wars to be complicated&#13;
by disease. In the U.S. Civil War, for&#13;
example, perhaps as many died of&#13;
dysentery and disease as died in&#13;
battle. But in these other wars, those&#13;
November/December 1990&#13;
who were sick were ca~ for behind&#13;
the lines. In the case of AIDS, gay&#13;
PWA's and HIV+'s are often forced to&#13;
the front lines: closets no longer&#13;
afford protection, political action&#13;
must be taken to secure health care&#13;
and civil rights, and society's&#13;
experience of our community is&#13;
filtered through media reports on&#13;
AIDS. To send the sick and&#13;
vulnerable to the front lines is not&#13;
humane. That's why, I believe, those&#13;
who are healthy and uninfected&#13;
might consider volunteering for front&#13;
line duty.&#13;
I know that in some circles it is&#13;
unpopular to use~he language of war.&#13;
But, as we learned in Korea and again&#13;
in Vietnam, calling a war by any&#13;
other name does a disservice to its&#13;
veterans, who have forever been&#13;
wounded by the horror and terror of&#13;
war. As I cried for those who fought&#13;
the Vietnam War - whether on the&#13;
battlefields or on the campuses - in&#13;
the film Born on the Fourth of /uly, I&#13;
realized I was also crying for all of us&#13;
who have fought the battles for&#13;
liberation and justice for Lesbians and&#13;
gay men. We are walking wounded&#13;
who need understanding, forgiveness,&#13;
and tender loving care.&#13;
Chris Glaser is a graduate of Yale&#13;
Divinity School and the author of&#13;
two books: Uncommon Callini - A&#13;
Gay Man's Struttfe to Serve the&#13;
Church, and Come Home! - Reclaimint&#13;
Spirituality and Community as&#13;
Gay Men and Lesbians, both from&#13;
Harper &amp; Row.&#13;
LlftD to HI BDl'IOlt:&#13;
I All DIIPLY DISTRB888D IT YOOR&#13;
IIAGAIIRI, Tlllll IIASll'T BIIR A&#13;
PUBLICAflOII IIB081 'nlOLOGICAL&#13;
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II&#13;
..&#13;
Closer Look&#13;
Stop Letting People Despise You!&#13;
lJ Rev, Bwcc Roller&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
Another Biblical personality who&#13;
certainly has a word to speak, albeit&#13;
second-ban~, to gay and lesbian&#13;
Christians is Paul's close companion&#13;
and dear lriend (sometimes referred&#13;
to as Paul's "beloved and faithful&#13;
child in the Lord"), Timothy.&#13;
Though homosexual orientation was&#13;
not identified scientifically until&#13;
fairly recent times, and there is little&#13;
evidence that occasional homosexual&#13;
behavior was used to discredit people&#13;
in the early church, something about&#13;
Timothy was definitely used lo make&#13;
him appear "less than" other leaders&#13;
of the early church. The Pastoral&#13;
Epistles, 1 and 2 Timothy, refer to&#13;
this as his "youth," "youthfulness,"&#13;
or "boyishness" though by this time&#13;
Timothy would certainly have been&#13;
38-40 years old, according to Marvin&#13;
Vincent, Kenneth Wuest and others.&#13;
Obviously the Apostle Paul&#13;
considered Timothy a worthy&#13;
colleague, referring to him in 1&#13;
'Ibessalonians 3:2, as God's servant in&#13;
the gospel of Christ, and by&#13;
implication even ranks him among&#13;
the apostles (2:6). Paul took it as his&#13;
personal responsibility to circumcise&#13;
Timothy so that this man of&#13;
presumably mixed Jewish-Gentile&#13;
heritage would be more acceptable to&#13;
the Jewish Christians who then were&#13;
the primary leaders of the church&#13;
(Acts 16:3). The Pastoral Epistles&#13;
emphasize Timothy's gift and speak&#13;
of his having been set aside by&#13;
prophetic utterance for the work to&#13;
which he was called.&#13;
In 1 Corinthians 16:10-11, however,&#13;
Paul feels it necessary to come to&#13;
Timothy's defense, urging the Corinthian&#13;
Christians to put Timothy at&#13;
ease when he comes to them as Paul's&#13;
emissary so that Timothy will have&#13;
no need to feel . timid among. them.&#13;
Paul assures the Corinthians that&#13;
Timothy really is doing the Lord's&#13;
work, just as Paul is. "So," Paul&#13;
writes, "see to it that no one despises&#13;
Ti!]lothy, or treats him as if he were&#13;
of no account or slights hift. But send&#13;
him off (cordiaJly), in peace ... " Also&#13;
in Wuest's Word Studies in the Greek .&#13;
New Testllment the expanded&#13;
translation of 1 Timothy 4:12 reads,&#13;
"Stop allowing anyone to contemptu011Sly&#13;
push you aside because of your&#13;
youth, but keep on becoming an&#13;
example to the believers, in word, tn&#13;
behavior, in love, in faith, in&#13;
A Presbyterian Promise&#13;
"We will work to increase the acceptance and&#13;
participation in the church of all persons reganiless&#13;
of racial-ethnic origins, sex, class, age,&#13;
disability, marital status or sexual orientation"&#13;
-195th General Assembly (1983),&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia&#13;
If this is your promise, too,&#13;
we inl'ite you to join&#13;
Presbyterians for&#13;
Lesbian/Gay Concerns&#13;
Write to Elder James D. Anderson&#13;
PLGC, P.O. Box 38, New Brunswick, NJ&#13;
08903-0038,201/846-1510&#13;
purity."&#13;
The word for "despise" above is&#13;
kataphroneo. It speaks of that&#13;
contempt felt in the mind which is&#13;
displayed in injurious action. As&#13;
Moulton and Milligan say of the&#13;
word: "The word does not denote a&#13;
mere feeling of contemp • it is active."&#13;
The verb is present imperative in a&#13;
prohibition, forbidding the continuance&#13;
of an action already going on.&#13;
Timothy was being despised. Paul&#13;
says, "Stop a11owing anyone to&#13;
despise you."&#13;
Whatever the "something"&#13;
about Timothy that made&#13;
him different and "less ~&#13;
than" the other early&#13;
church leaders - such as&#13;
Paul and Silas, among&#13;
whom he was classed - we&#13;
derive a word of&#13;
instruction in dealing with&#13;
the modem church&#13;
members who feel for&#13;
lesbian and gay Christians&#13;
a feeling of contempt that&#13;
is displayed in injurious&#13;
action: "Stop letting them&#13;
treat you that way!"&#13;
Perhaps by now you can see why I&#13;
have honored Timothy by writing of&#13;
him is a series of articles that&#13;
address ways in which Biblical&#13;
personalities speak to gay and&#13;
lesbian Christians today. Whatever&#13;
the "something" about Timothy that&#13;
made him different and "less than"&#13;
the other early church leaders - such&#13;
as Paul and Silas, among whom he&#13;
was classed - we derive a word of&#13;
instruction in dealing with the&#13;
modem church members who feel for&#13;
lesbian and gay Christians a feeling&#13;
of contempt that is displayed in&#13;
injurious action: "Stop letting them&#13;
treat you that way!"&#13;
First, Paul wrote to Timothy, "God&#13;
did not give us a spirit of timidity - of&#13;
cowardice, of craven and cringing and&#13;
fawning fear ... (2 Timothy 1:7)." I&#13;
believe we as lesbian and gay&#13;
Christians must identify that our&#13;
fearfulness to assert who we are in&#13;
Christ - even to ourselves - is not the&#13;
gift of God, but is from oppressive and&#13;
restrictive powers that have held us&#13;
captive from expressing our true gifts&#13;
•of power and of Jove and of calm and&#13;
well-balanced mind and discipline&#13;
II THE SECOND STONE&#13;
□&#13;
and godly self-control, (1:7b)."&#13;
Once we have come to this&#13;
conclusion for ourselves through&#13;
prayer and meditation in the Word&#13;
and Spirit of God, then we can move&#13;
on to Paul's next admonition to&#13;
Timothy, "Stop letting them&#13;
contemptuously push you around." In&#13;
the book The Penguin Principles,&#13;
David Belasic and Paul Schmidt&#13;
describe "The Tweaking Principle."&#13;
The essence of the principle is&#13;
"They'll only do it to you if you let&#13;
'em." Too many people have&#13;
sacrificed too much for us to allow&#13;
ourselves to be treated abusively by&#13;
the church.&#13;
The Rev. Elder Troy Perry, founder&#13;
of Metropolitan Community&#13;
Churches, tells of hanging up the&#13;
phone on a reporter who in a radio&#13;
interview ca11ed him "Mr. Perry,"&#13;
explaining .. ."I just can't bring myself&#13;
to call you Reverend." The Reverend&#13;
Perry remarks, "I've come too far to&#13;
need that kind of abuse anymore!"&#13;
Praise God!&#13;
I urge gay and lesbian Christians to&#13;
hear the voice of God from Paul and&#13;
Timothy, from Rev. Perry, and a host&#13;
of other voices crying in the&#13;
wilderness, "Stop allowing people to&#13;
despise you!"&#13;
Finally Paul gave Timothy a&#13;
long-term, sure-fire method for stop- '&#13;
ping such contemptuous treatment,&#13;
"continue being an example to them."&#13;
As we dare to "come out," as we dare&#13;
to Jive lives that are godly, loving,&#13;
sensitive, forgiving examples, slowly&#13;
- ever so slowly • the "ignorance of&#13;
foolish people is silenced" (1 Peter&#13;
2:15), and we are finally stopping&#13;
people from treating us and our&#13;
spiritual gifts to the church with&#13;
active contempt.&#13;
Whether Timothy was young, gay,&#13;
physically or emotionally challenged&#13;
- whatever the stigma - the&#13;
message is the same, "Stop allowing&#13;
people to despise you!"&#13;
The Reverend Bruce Roller is ptiStor&#13;
of Reconciliation MCC in Grand&#13;
Rllpids, Ml. He hlls prepllred 11&#13;
workbook on 1 Corinthians 6:9-10&#13;
that is availllble for $3.50 plus 25%&#13;
handling llnd shipping. This book&#13;
llllows the student to drllw&#13;
conclusions themseloes from the&#13;
Word of God, llnd has helped many&#13;
people ooer their fear of&#13;
condemnlltion from this pasSllge of&#13;
Scripture. The wolkbook is twailable&#13;
from Faithful Publications, P.O. Box&#13;
3701, Grand Rltpids, Ml 49501.&#13;
Episcopal Bishop Admo=nished By House Of Bishops&#13;
WASHINGTON, O.C. • The But it's reaHy a water pistol: '&#13;
Episcopal Church's House of Bishops, Although the resolution actually&#13;
meeting here on September 18, voted said little - and the document being&#13;
by a slender margin to •disassociate" endorsed included the phrase. -We&#13;
itself from the December, 1989, do not disassociate ourselves from the&#13;
ordination of an openly gay priest by . many members of our church who are&#13;
Bishop John Spong of Newark. lesbian and gay,• the leader of the&#13;
By a vote of 80 to 76, a revised traditionalist Episc~pal Synod,&#13;
"officiaJ- count of a previously Clarence Pope, Bishop of Fort Worth,&#13;
reported vote of 78 to 14, the bishops said, "If we don't adopt this&#13;
"affirm[ed) and support[ed)" the resolution, we go a long way to&#13;
February 20 statement by the changing our religion. Much of the&#13;
Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church's teaching will be altered if&#13;
Church and his Council of Advice, we don't take steps."&#13;
(Omprlsed of bishops representing Other negative bishops more&#13;
each of the nine provinces of the candidly stated that they were&#13;
church, which in tum quoted a 1919 bothered by the publicity and what&#13;
resolution that it is "inappropriate" their clergy and people had said to&#13;
to ordain "practicing" homosexuals. them about the ordination. Retired&#13;
''The way the church treats&#13;
its gay and lesbian&#13;
members so deeply violates&#13;
my conscience that it&#13;
strains the very fabric of&#13;
my life by tearing it&#13;
between my loyalty to&#13;
Jesus Christ, who made a&#13;
habit of embracing&#13;
outcasts, and my loyalty to&#13;
a church that historically&#13;
has rejected Blacks,&#13;
women, and Gays.11&#13;
-Bishop John Spong&#13;
In · the wake of the highly&#13;
publicized ordination and subsequent&#13;
controversial remarks by the newly&#13;
ordained priest, Bishop Spong was&#13;
severely criticized for defying the&#13;
collegiality of the House of Bishops.&#13;
Earlier this year, many Bishops&#13;
had spoken in favor of censure.&#13;
Efforts by extreme conservatives to&#13;
bring a presentment, which might&#13;
have lead to a churcJt trial, were&#13;
dismissed by Presiding Bishop&#13;
Bdmond Browning several m~nths&#13;
~go.&#13;
The resolution wa~ initiated by&#13;
William Wantland, bishop of the&#13;
tiny (2000 communicants) diocese of&#13;
Eau Oaire, Wisconsin and a member&#13;
of the Advisory Board of the&#13;
vehemently anti-gay American&#13;
Family Association. He described&#13;
the proposal as a "strong&#13;
admonition." Another ultra-conservative&#13;
bishop, William Frey,&#13;
notorious for having perfotmed an&#13;
unsuccessful exorcism of a gay priest&#13;
and now dean of a new right-wing&#13;
seminary near Pittsburgh, disagreed,&#13;
saying, " Some have said that this is&#13;
a gun pointed at the head of Spong.&#13;
Bishop. Gordon Charlton said that&#13;
"the Church will be watching" and&#13;
that the "integrity of the House [of&#13;
Bishops] is at stake. That's a word&#13;
(integrity) I want to reclaim," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Most of those speaking opposed the&#13;
resolution, including three of the&#13;
authors of the document being&#13;
endorsed who said that it had value&#13;
when written, but restating it now&#13;
would serve no purpose and that they&#13;
would remove their names as authors&#13;
if the resolution passed. When the&#13;
final vote came, only one of the seven&#13;
members present who had served on&#13;
the Council of Advice and drafted&#13;
the February statement voted to&#13;
endorse it. The Presiding Bishop,&#13;
long a supporter of lesbian/ gay&#13;
ordination also voted against the&#13;
resolution.&#13;
In a defiant half-hour response to&#13;
the vote, Bishop Spong admonished&#13;
the House for what he called its&#13;
hypocrisy, especially contrasting its&#13;
gentle treatment of conservative&#13;
bishops who refuse to ordain women.&#13;
Spong argued that, unlike the&#13;
traditionalists who are his harshest&#13;
critics, he followed the canonical&#13;
process when he went ahead with&#13;
the ordination.&#13;
"I wonder if this House can embrace&#13;
the fact that other bishops besides&#13;
Episcopal Synod bishops have a&#13;
conscience that cannot be&#13;
compromised?" Spong asked. "The&#13;
way the church treats its gay and&#13;
lesbian members so deeply violates&#13;
my conscience that it strains the very&#13;
fabric of my life by tearing it between&#13;
my loyalty to Jesus Christ, who made&#13;
a habit ot embracing. the outcast, and&#13;
my loyalty to a church that&#13;
historically has rejected Blacks,&#13;
women and Gays. It is not the bishop&#13;
of Newark who is violated by this&#13;
process but the gay and lesbian&#13;
members of this church," he added.&#13;
He reminded the bishops that the&#13;
1919 resolution opposing lesbian/gay&#13;
ordmation was a recommendation and&#13;
therJ!fore not binding. Repeating an&#13;
argument he had made · earlier in&#13;
defense of the December ordination,&#13;
Spong said that the church has been&#13;
quietly ordaining practicing homosexuals&#13;
for years. Non-celibate&#13;
homosexuals are found at all levels of&#13;
church life - not only in parishes but&#13;
also the House of Bishops, seminary&#13;
faculties and student bodies.&#13;
He said that the charge that he&#13;
violated the collegiality of the&#13;
House is 7a sign of fear, even of&#13;
homophobia." Similar charges have&#13;
never been leveled against members&#13;
of the Episcopal Synod or others who&#13;
hold views contrary to General&#13;
Convention resolutions.&#13;
Bishop Spong's speech ~ived a&#13;
standing ovation from several&#13;
bishops and most of the visitors.&#13;
Following the vote, there was&#13;
universal agreement that the church&#13;
is closelr, divided on the issue of .&#13;
ordaining Lesbians and Gays.&#13;
Several observers suggested that if&#13;
the vote had been repeated after&#13;
Spong's speech, the result would&#13;
have been different. .&#13;
On the final day of the meeting,&#13;
September 20, the bishops again&#13;
returned to the issue of Lesbians and&#13;
Gays in the Church. A statement&#13;
adopted on that day renewed a call&#13;
made in 1988 to discuss the issue in&#13;
every diocese and parish, a call that&#13;
has been widely ignored in the&#13;
November/December 1990&#13;
church. "To call for dialogue in a&#13;
puzzling and complex area is not to&#13;
abdicate our leadersh~p/ - it is/&#13;
precisely to give it in a way.&#13;
consistent with our Anglican&#13;
heritage: to call God's people to&#13;
stand faithfully in the midst of life,&#13;
seeking the mind and heart of God,•&#13;
it said.&#13;
"Obviously, we do not expect easy&#13;
answers. Dialogue is not going to&#13;
produc;e consensus. It may not even&#13;
provide grounds for a compromise&#13;
presently beyond our ken,• the&#13;
unanimously approved statement&#13;
said.&#13;
"We recognize that it would not be&#13;
faithful to the Gospel to ignore the&#13;
anguished cries ol homosexual men&#13;
and women who feel hurt, rejected,&#13;
and angry by what they see about&#13;
them. At the same time, we recogna.e&#13;
that it would not be faithful to the&#13;
Gospel to ignore or simply label as&#13;
homophobic the anguished cries of&#13;
men and women who feel hurt,&#13;
rejected and angry that what they&#13;
see as sin is not being reaffinned as&#13;
such.• The statement was primarily&#13;
authored by the Bishop of New York,&#13;
Richard Grein, a moderate who has&#13;
been supportive of the many lesbian&#13;
and gay clergy in his new diocese. ·&#13;
Integrity and the Episcopal&#13;
Women's Caucus were the only&#13;
organizations fonnally represented&#13;
at the meeting.&#13;
Books □ A Lyrical Work By A Gifted New Writer&#13;
Matthew Stadler's 'Landscape: Memory~ •&#13;
Matthew Stadler, author; Charles&#13;
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Landsc11pe: Memory, Matthew&#13;
Stadler's first novel, is the&#13;
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old whose entries written daily in his&#13;
memory book bring n!lders a rerord of&#13;
his own and the collective attempts&#13;
of the culture he lives in to remember.&#13;
The time is the summer of 1914. San&#13;
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this Jewel City. They are not sure&#13;
-.yhat to make of it. "What was here&#13;
two years ago? What was here a&#13;
thousand years ago?" Max finds his&#13;
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readers come to see Max evolving, his&#13;
gifts developing and his mind giving&#13;
structure to the world about him.&#13;
There is startling poignancy in the&#13;
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scraping boats in France, teaching&#13;
philosophy and political theory at&#13;
an international school in&#13;
Manhattan, and volcano watching in&#13;
Seattle. He is currently in the&#13;
Netherlands working on a novel set in&#13;
the 17th century in ~t country.&#13;
Come Home! Reclaiming Spirituality and ,&#13;
Community as Gay Men and Lesbians&#13;
Chrla Glasa, author; Harper &amp; Row,&#13;
San Frandsc:o. $10.95&#13;
Chris Glaser's new book, Come·'&#13;
Home!, is written for persons outside&#13;
and within the church, as well as the&#13;
many standing on the church's&#13;
threshold. He writes, "It is written&#13;
for Gays and Lesbians, as well as&#13;
others seeking to benefit from gay&#13;
spirituality and ministry. It is an&#13;
invitation to come home to Christian&#13;
tradition and community. Like any&#13;
homecoming, risk and vulnerability&#13;
will accompany the joy and&#13;
hospitality we experience. But the&#13;
spiritual wealth of God's love and&#13;
home and peace awaiting us far ·&#13;
exceeds the temporary and occasional&#13;
poverty we may endure as we seek a&#13;
new Christian reformation."&#13;
Through the medium of the story,&#13;
and reflections on both the ordinary&#13;
experiences of daily life and the&#13;
lesbian and gay experience, Glaser&#13;
invites us to look beyond feelings of&#13;
anger, alienation and loneliness to&#13;
the hope and promise of Jesus Christ.&#13;
He calls us back to the basic fact of&#13;
our Christian calling, that we are&#13;
indeed loved and cared for by a God&#13;
who desires our love in return.&#13;
Chris Glaser offers a unique&#13;
testimony to our Christian faith,&#13;
breaking through denominational&#13;
differences and traditions of worship&#13;
that sometimes set us in opposition to&#13;
one another. He is a gifted&#13;
storyteller and a talented writer.&#13;
His style is ~traightforward and&#13;
honest His work makes for easy&#13;
reading, but with a message and&#13;
perspective that is both provocative&#13;
and challenging. His insightful&#13;
reflection on biblical connections to&#13;
the ord,inary human experiences we&#13;
some much needed encouragement,&#13;
since we too often become weighed&#13;
down and angry with the narrowness&#13;
of present-day church and civic&#13;
leadership, ~ith the tragedy of&#13;
AIDS, and with the disillusionment&#13;
of broken promises and failed&#13;
friendships. .&#13;
Come Home! is divided into five&#13;
"spiritual" movements: 1.) accepting&#13;
God's way of welcoming us,&#13;
2.)receiving our spiritual inheritance,&#13;
3.) discerning what God calls us to do&#13;
with it, 4.) making our witness to the&#13;
church and to the lesbian and gay&#13;
community, and 5.) "coming home" to&#13;
ourselves, to our community and to our&#13;
church, reborn and renewed in spirit,&#13;
truth and love.&#13;
-From CommuniClltions Newsletter, a&#13;
ministry to gay and lesbian Catholic&#13;
clergy and religious, P.O. Box 60125,&#13;
Chicago, IL 60660-0125.&#13;
II THE SECOND STONE&#13;
,- .......&#13;
.,&#13;
Books&#13;
Panels Of Love&#13;
By MicltaeJ BlanktNhip&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
Some people, when they are diagnosed&#13;
with AIDS or one of its&#13;
forerunners, tum in μpon themselves,&#13;
ceasing to oommune with life around&#13;
them. Bitterness is their only&#13;
companion, and existing in this&#13;
spiritless desert they soon wither and&#13;
pass away. Others, knowing their&#13;
days may be numbered, reach&#13;
outward, seeking new inspiration and&#13;
new ways of communicating their&#13;
love of life. Instead of a desert, they&#13;
create and share a colorful landscape&#13;
of ideas, and words, and pictures.&#13;
They often surprise those who know&#13;
them best by bringing forth a new&#13;
understanding of faith, and a fresh&#13;
appreciation of the beauties of&#13;
nature. They know God in a new way,&#13;
and it flows to those around them.&#13;
Timothy Walters Grummon is most&#13;
definitely the latter sort of person.&#13;
His recently published book, Panels&#13;
of l.Dve, describes his experience and&#13;
displays the marvelous creative&#13;
energy he now possesses. A great&#13;
analogy can be drawn between&#13;
Grummon's painted panels and the&#13;
panels of the Names Project Quilt. In&#13;
both cases a great deal of love went&#13;
into their creation, both are&#13;
byproducts of the AIDS crisis, and&#13;
both are dramatically beautiful&#13;
because of their diversity and&#13;
individuality. The main difference ·&#13;
is that the Quilt was made by hands&#13;
honoring those who have suffered. In&#13;
Grummon's case the sufferer is also&#13;
the creator, using his hands to honor&#13;
those who have made living with&#13;
the disease a bit easier.&#13;
In 1985 Grummon's doctors&#13;
determined that he had ARC ( AIDS&#13;
Related Complex), and his life&#13;
quickly became, in his words, "a&#13;
swirling vortex of negativity." At&#13;
the age of 33 he seemed shattered&#13;
and confused, his health declined as&#13;
he concentrated on this death&#13;
sentence. It was at this point that he&#13;
somewhat reluctantly joined an art&#13;
therapy group in San Diego. His art&#13;
teacher, author Barbara Peabody,&#13;
recalls that his first paintings filled&#13;
her with dread. They were drawings&#13;
of arcs, a double entendre for his&#13;
sickness. She foresaw only deterioration&#13;
and a quick death for him.&#13;
But she was wrong!&#13;
Grummon felt a "rekindling of the&#13;
life force within" as he threw&#13;
himself into his art, and as his&#13;
artistic abilities improved, amazingly,&#13;
so did his health. He simply&#13;
allowed himself to be overwhelmed&#13;
by this compelling, inventive energy&#13;
and this new focus added greater&#13;
meaning and strength to this life.&#13;
Grummon felt a&#13;
"rekindling of the life force&#13;
within" as he threw&#13;
himself into his art, and as&#13;
his artistic abilities&#13;
improved, amazingly, so&#13;
did his health. He simply&#13;
allowed himself to be&#13;
overwhelmed by this&#13;
compelling, inventive&#13;
energy and this new focus&#13;
added greater meaning&#13;
and strength to this life.&#13;
Two years later he was inspired to&#13;
begin work on a major project, relying&#13;
on his friends and family to infuse&#13;
this work with their own particular&#13;
influences. He asked these twelve&#13;
people to give him Bible verses&#13;
which he, in tum, interpreted by&#13;
painting individual panels.&#13;
The theme of love runs throughout&#13;
the artworks, and he used the color&#13;
gold in all of the panels to symbolize&#13;
the precious quality of love. All of&#13;
the works are highly symbolic,&#13;
really requiring a reading of the book&#13;
to understand their full meaning. But&#13;
the ideas and the art work together&#13;
beautifully. Grummon's works have&#13;
an almost art deco quality, a&#13;
wonderful geometry combined with&#13;
vibrant colors to form a most&#13;
appealing expression of his concepts&#13;
of faith and love. The panels also&#13;
have delicate textures, adding an&#13;
interesting dimension of depth to the&#13;
paintings. The book and the&#13;
paintings combine the spiritual and&#13;
the creative and you come away&#13;
knowing how closely they are&#13;
related.&#13;
The book contains 16 large glossy&#13;
colorplates of the Panels of Love.&#13;
They vividly show the expertise and&#13;
talent involved in their creation. In a&#13;
similar way the written passages&#13;
reveal Grummon's imagination and&#13;
sense of the divine. My favorite&#13;
porti~ reminds me of l Corinthians&#13;
13, he writes: "Love transcends&#13;
without effort, penetrating those&#13;
barriers humanity erects. Love in&#13;
intangible, yet causes profound&#13;
impact. It consoles, comforts and&#13;
□&#13;
heals. Love is all color, surrounding&#13;
and moving through us. It is form,&#13;
without confines and boundary. Love&#13;
respects without qualification and&#13;
enables a vision of dignity beyond our&#13;
limited perception. Love maintains&#13;
balance and harmony; it is pure in&#13;
spirituality, fluid in tolerance, and&#13;
endless in compassion. Love is calm&#13;
amid chaos and devastation; its&#13;
nature is infinite in understanding&#13;
and forgiveness. Love inspires. To&#13;
strive for love is to reach for the very&#13;
essence of perfection.•&#13;
Those who read this book will find&#13;
inspiration, not only from Timothy&#13;
Grummon's artistic abilities, but also&#13;
from his courage. He unashamedly&#13;
proclaims, "I am gay, I am a&#13;
Christian, and I have AIDS!" As&#13;
fellow gay Christians, we can only&#13;
admire the way he is facing the&#13;
challenges of his life. He is&#13;
combating death and prejudice with&#13;
beauty and love, a role model we can&#13;
all use.&#13;
T'S THE BEST&#13;
Men's magazine ...&#13;
- the one that deals&#13;
most honestly with how men relate to each&#13;
other, to women, and to kids; the one that's&#13;
gay-affirmative and opposes sex•role&#13;
stereotypes, ... the one that movingly explores&#13;
men's hurts and joys . . .&#13;
Ml&#13;
I Order a no obHgatlon. If you change your mind. 1us write u I&#13;
We'll refund the subscription price!&#13;
: Name ___________ Enclosed: $16 I&#13;
I Addrea -----------.-------r&#13;
I City ___________ State . . I&#13;
I Mall to: ""'··-- Men 306 N Brooks 305A Mod I ------------------&#13;
November/December 1990 ■&#13;
,.&#13;
Gay Reformation Hymn&#13;
Tune: Ein'fnte lnn-g&#13;
Two thousand years wt feared our lwe,&#13;
condmrntd "umu,hln,l sinners."&#13;
Ncno stepping forth from ht4'0ffl 11bove&#13;
Christ makts grzys sptdal winners.&#13;
This world is filltd with hate.&#13;
It sums almost too late&#13;
for Gad to interfere&#13;
again to bring low here,&#13;
but that's what God is doing.&#13;
No more can foes God's plan decide,&#13;
nor obfuscate God's choosing.&#13;
God's 1ovt for grzys they cannot hide,&#13;
their puppetry is losing.&#13;
The God of hetroen and mrth&#13;
affirms gays' priceltsS WQrlh.&#13;
Our ransom has b«n paid: ·&#13;
joint heirs with Christ we're madt&#13;
let homophobes take notice!&#13;
The Church once askt4 to have us killtd:&#13;
our blood has writ this witness.&#13;
All ignorant minds must now be filltd&#13;
with stXUlll truth and fitness.&#13;
The pressuTt!S still art! strong&#13;
to work on gays much wrong.&#13;
We're adltd to pmeve,t,&#13;
endure our holy fear,&#13;
for Christ commands our anny.&#13;
Our strength is not is guns or lllws.&#13;
Our wtapan is but Meekness.&#13;
We can forgive our fots their flaws:&#13;
Gay Might is just such "wmkntss."&#13;
More frieruls will join this fight&#13;
because the u,rd is right.&#13;
Gay bodies house God's Spirit,&#13;
but only through Christ's merit.&#13;
God's 1ovt will triumph. through us.&#13;
Louie Crew&#13;
COVER STORY, FromPage9&#13;
New Age diverge. Some&#13;
New Age followers are into&#13;
trance or spirit-channeling,&#13;
but the Bible clearly&#13;
condemns consultation with&#13;
mediums (Deut. 18:9-14),&#13;
communication with the&#13;
dead and other "detestable&#13;
practices." The New Age&#13;
teaches that there is&#13;
II&#13;
healing through cystals&#13;
and other objects. The&#13;
Bible teaches that healing&#13;
comes only through Cod's&#13;
hand (Acts 3:16) and that&#13;
healing is related to the&#13;
renewing of one's heartfelt&#13;
relationship with God, and&#13;
often, with the forgiveness&#13;
of sins.&#13;
f&#13;
BLACK LEADERS,FromPage8&#13;
months encouraging other black civil&#13;
rights organizations to issue&#13;
anti-discrimination policies and&#13;
statements which include sexual&#13;
orientation.&#13;
The group also agreed to: develop&#13;
organizational specific programs to&#13;
sensitize staff, board and oonstituency&#13;
to lesbian/ gay issues; review existing&#13;
programs and public agendas to&#13;
include lesbian/gay concerns;&#13;
actively recruit openly lesbian/ gay&#13;
individuals for membership, staff&#13;
and board positions; encourage&#13;
increased visibility of current staff,&#13;
board and constituency members who&#13;
are openly gay or lesbian; and include&#13;
lesbian/ gay concerns in organizational&#13;
conference and meetings.· •&#13;
''These changes are not going to&#13;
happen overnight," said Maurice&#13;
Franklin, representing SCLC, "but&#13;
they can happen and I know Dr.&#13;
Lowery will do what he can to help&#13;
facilitate these changes." Kelvin&#13;
Lynn Cothren, representing The King&#13;
Center and Fulton County Commissioner&#13;
Martin Luther King Ill,&#13;
concurred and assured the group of&#13;
Mrs. King and Commissioner King's&#13;
support.&#13;
The meeting was the result of a&#13;
decision made by the Leadership&#13;
Roundtable at the Third Annual&#13;
National Black Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Leadership Conference in Atlanta&#13;
earlier this year. Phill Wilson,&#13;
co-chair of the Black Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Leadership Forum, sponsor of&#13;
the conference, stated that the&#13;
meeting was the first of several in&#13;
preparation of a major conference&#13;
between traditional black institutions&#13;
and black Lesbians and Gays.&#13;
The date for that meeting will be&#13;
announced at the Fourth Annual&#13;
National Black Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Leadership Conference in Los Angeles&#13;
next February.&#13;
Among those attending the meeting:&#13;
Maurice Franklin, representing •&#13;
Southern Christian Leadership&#13;
Conference; Joan Gamer, Co-chair&#13;
African American Lesbian/Gay&#13;
Alliance and Senior Advisory Liaison&#13;
to the City of Atlanta's Mayor's&#13;
Office for Lesbian/Gay Concerns;&#13;
Keith Hinch, representing National&#13;
Conference of Black Mayors, Inc.;&#13;
Anthony Home, Chair, Black Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Alliance for Dignity,&#13;
Memphis; Charles Nelson, Co-chair&#13;
African American Lesbian/Gay&#13;
Alliance; Dennis Odums, Board&#13;
member and past Co-chair Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Community Service Center,&#13;
Los Angeles; Sabrina Sojourner, Board&#13;
Member, National Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Task Force; John Teamer, Co-chair,&#13;
National Association of Black and&#13;
White Men Together /Men of All&#13;
Colors Together; and Phill Wilson,&#13;
Co-chair, Black Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Leadership Forum and convener of&#13;
the Fourth Annual National Black&#13;
Gay and Lesbian Leadership&#13;
Conference.&#13;
BIG BROTHERS, From Page 1&#13;
move to block his measure,&#13;
fired off a "Dear Colleague"&#13;
letter to all members of the&#13;
House. The letter discussed&#13;
the "predatory tactics" of&#13;
gay people and said "groups&#13;
such as the National Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Task Force forever&#13;
explain to the public that the&#13;
'homosexual molester' of&#13;
children is a myth and that&#13;
heterosexuals are much more&#13;
likely to sexually molest&#13;
kids." NGLTF, working with&#13;
data from national child&#13;
abuse agendes, has fought to&#13;
dispel homophobic stereotypes&#13;
that prevent gay&#13;
people from providing&#13;
positive role models for&#13;
children.&#13;
At the heart of the New&#13;
Age belief is a concept that&#13;
is simply. unacceptable to&#13;
Christians, namely the&#13;
claim that "we are God."&#13;
That is the original&#13;
rebellion against God and&#13;
the prime heresy. It is the&#13;
violation of the first of the&#13;
Ten Commandments.&#13;
Instead, our power and joy&#13;
as Christians must come in&#13;
the knowledge that we are&#13;
"created," not creator.&#13;
test and approve what&#13;
God's will is - His good,&#13;
pleasing and perfect will."&#13;
THE SECOND STONE&#13;
St. Paul's admonition in&#13;
Romans 12:2 comes to mind:&#13;
"Do not be conformed to this&#13;
world but be transformed by&#13;
the renewing of your mind.&#13;
Then you will be able to&#13;
Nick Warner is a psychologist&#13;
and Methodist minister.&#13;
He is a contributor to&#13;
The EC Cable, newsletter of&#13;
Evangelicals Concerned,&#13;
Western Region.&#13;
Travel&#13;
Riding The Rails&#13;
•&#13;
By Cynthia Marquard&#13;
andQamdMvmm&#13;
Contributing Writers&#13;
One of the most popular interests&#13;
among a large group of gay people is&#13;
trains and railroads, both antique&#13;
and modem. There is even a loosely&#13;
organiz.ed group of gay /lesbian train&#13;
buffs called The ·Phoebe Snow&#13;
Society, named after a famous train.&#13;
A number of exciting train trips are&#13;
available that offer exotic travel&#13;
opportunities, from the adventurous&#13;
Copper Canyon train trip in Mexico to&#13;
the elegant Orient Express in Europe&#13;
and even our own US. version of the&#13;
Orient Express between Chicago and&#13;
Washington, D.C. But even a plain&#13;
vanilla Amtrak trip can be something&#13;
out of the ordinary, not just for rail&#13;
hobbyists, but for the rest of us.&#13;
Were you just the least bit bored&#13;
sitting six across on your last flight?&#13;
Does the idea of being able to get up&#13;
and walk around while you're enroute&#13;
sound interesting? Would you like to&#13;
experience more of Colorado than&#13;
clouds at 35,000 feet? Then the next&#13;
time you plan your vacation, consider&#13;
the train.&#13;
On an Amtrak train, you can relax in&#13;
a coach seat that's nearly as big as a&#13;
first-class airline seat. For an&#13;
overnight trip, you can choose from a&#13;
variety of sleeping accommodations,&#13;
ranging from an economy Slumbercoach&#13;
room to a deluxe bedroom&#13;
complete with private bath.&#13;
Dining is no problem either. All&#13;
Amtrak trains outside the BostonWashington&#13;
rail corridor offer food&#13;
service. Depending on the train you&#13;
take, there's a wide choice, from&#13;
buffet service featuring sandwiches&#13;
and drinks to dining cars with fullmeal&#13;
service, for which you make a&#13;
reservation with the conductor.&#13;
Entertainment While&#13;
You Ride&#13;
The lounge car is a popular place on&#13;
trains. There you can relax and chat&#13;
with other passengers over a drink.&#13;
Some trains also show movies in the&#13;
lounge car. The Montrealer (most&#13;
Amtrak trains have names), running&#13;
between Washington, D.C., and&#13;
Montreal and serving the Vermont ski&#13;
resorts, even has live entertainment.&#13;
Trains between Chicago and the West&#13;
Coast--The Empire Builder, for&#13;
example-have double-deck lounge&#13;
cars with glass roofs so that&#13;
passengers can have a maximum view&#13;
of the scenery.&#13;
Just being able to move about and&#13;
meet other passengers provides a&#13;
great relief from the tedium of&#13;
travel. You aren't strapped into your&#13;
seat, so if the urge hits you, you can&#13;
get up, stroll down the aisle, and&#13;
strike up a conversation with that&#13;
interesting person who caught your&#13;
eye.&#13;
Costs and&#13;
Other Considerations&#13;
For any trip you take on Amtrak,&#13;
there is a basic coach fare. Basic&#13;
coach has open seating, that is, the&#13;
seats are not reserved. Certain trains&#13;
to St. Louis and Detroit and in the&#13;
Boston-Washington corridor offer&#13;
Custom Class service, which is a&#13;
fancier version of coach that includes&#13;
a reserved seat, complimentary coffee&#13;
and juice, and a newspaper.&#13;
Sleeping car accommodations are&#13;
priced as an add-on to the coach fare&#13;
and vary in cost depending on the&#13;
type of sleeping accommodation you&#13;
choose. Prices for sleeping car space&#13;
are quite a bit higher than the basic&#13;
coach rate but, except for the&#13;
Slumbercoach rooms, all include&#13;
meals. Deluxe sleeping accommodations&#13;
offer the feel of old-time&#13;
travel luxury. A complimentary&#13;
bottle of wine and snack pack will be&#13;
awaiting you in your room when you&#13;
board the train.&#13;
There are a variety of reduced fares&#13;
available, including the "All Aboard&#13;
America" fare. This allows you to&#13;
make a round trip with stop-over&#13;
points in one of three regions: between&#13;
the East Coast and Chicago; between&#13;
Chicago and Denver; and between&#13;
Denver and the West Coast. You can&#13;
combine travel in two or three&#13;
regions, if you like. Your&#13;
International Gay Travel Association&#13;
agent can help you figure out which&#13;
fare is the most economical for your&#13;
journey.&#13;
Some Famous U.S. Trains&#13;
Chicago is the hub of the national&#13;
east-west Amtrak network. All&#13;
overnight trains to the East Coast&#13;
and all trains to the West Coast&#13;
leave Chicago in the afternoon or&#13;
early evening. Here are some favorite&#13;
Amtrak trips:&#13;
• The Lake Shore Limited, Chicago&#13;
to New York City via Oeveland and&#13;
Buffalo. This train carries you&#13;
· through •he Mohawk Valley of&#13;
upstate fl.l~w York, then down the&#13;
Hudson River valley and arrives in&#13;
the Big Apple in the afternoon. If you&#13;
think all of America's scenery is in&#13;
the west, you haven't seen the&#13;
Hudson Valley. There is also a&#13;
section of the The Lake Shore&#13;
Limited train that splits off at&#13;
Albany, N.Y., and runs through the&#13;
Berkshire Mountains of western&#13;
Massachusetts to Boston.&#13;
• The Capitol Limited, Chicago to&#13;
Washington via Pittsburgh. This&#13;
train is the only one in the East to&#13;
carry a glass-domed lounge car. East&#13;
of Pittsburgh, head for a seat in the&#13;
observation level of the dome and&#13;
watch the train climb up through the&#13;
Allegheny Mountains, then drop into&#13;
the Potomac Valley.&#13;
• The Cardinal, · Chicago to&#13;
Wash4'gton via Cincinnati. You'll&#13;
get to see parts of the country that are&#13;
relatively inaccessible. Deep in West&#13;
Virginia it travels through the wild&#13;
New River Gorge, then passes&#13;
through the Blue Ridge Mountains.&#13;
• The California Zephyr, Chicago to&#13;
Denver, Salt Lake City, and San&#13;
Francisco.The Zephyr climbs up the&#13;
Front Range of the Rockies west of&#13;
Denver, one of the most spectacular&#13;
rail lines ever built. Then it diven&#13;
through the seven-miles-long Moffat&#13;
Tunnel. After crossing the Nevada&#13;
Desert at night, it passes through&#13;
Reno and heads over the Sierra&#13;
Nevada mountains through Donner ·&#13;
Pass, named after the tragic Donner&#13;
Party of pioneers. (Trapped by a&#13;
blizzard, they ate each other; an&#13;
interesting piece of history.) The&#13;
train leaves you off in Oakland, a&#13;
short bus, cab, or BART ride from San&#13;
Francisco across the bay.&#13;
• The Coast Starlight, Los Angeles to&#13;
Oakland, Portland, and Seattle. You&#13;
get the Pacific from Santa Barbara to&#13;
San Luis Obispo, Calif. You get the&#13;
Coast Range between San Luis Obispo&#13;
and Salinas and the Cascade Range&#13;
between Redding and Eugene, Ore.&#13;
This is the rolling vacation that has&#13;
it all. This trip can be divided into&#13;
two segments-L. A. to Oakland and&#13;
Oakland to Seattle. A stopover will&#13;
give you time to recuperate--or&#13;
whatever-in the City by the Bay.&#13;
• The Boston-Washington Corridor&#13;
trains travel here via New York City&#13;
and Philadelphia-not one train, but&#13;
a whole fleet of them. The Corridor&#13;
is the closest you can come to&#13;
European-style, high-frequency train&#13;
service. Between Washington and&#13;
November/ December 1990&#13;
□&#13;
New York Oty on weekdays train&#13;
service runs an average of every 30&#13;
minutes. The New York-Boston&#13;
segment has less frequent service, but&#13;
there are still enough trains to plan&#13;
on convenient day trips. Trains&#13;
serving Florida also begin and end&#13;
their runs in New York City and serve&#13;
major cities in the Corridor.&#13;
Less Frequent Service&#13;
One work of caution: Outside the&#13;
Boston-Washington Corridor and the&#13;
Los Angeles-San Diego route, Amtrak&#13;
doesn't run more than a few trains a&#13;
day. Trains ·oR various runs from&#13;
Chicago operate once a day.&#13;
Despite-or perhaps because of-this&#13;
relatively minor limitation, Amtrak&#13;
offers the individual, couple, or group&#13;
a dimension in travel that nearly&#13;
disappeared in the United States, but&#13;
may be slowly coming back into favor.&#13;
Cynthia A. Marquard is the&#13;
owner/mtlnAger of Envoy Travel,&#13;
Inc., in Chicago ,md vice-president of&#13;
the InternationAl Gay Trtlf1el Assn.&#13;
Danni Munson is the publisher of&#13;
TM Lesbian antl Gay Alma,uu: anti&#13;
Er,ents of 1990.&#13;
A Gay Co1111tl'J 11111 ...&#13;
OIi IOObcalllifll..,.willl ~r.::.if.t.•-nrm NeWllllllir,vm, ,..,., wriloor&#13;
call ro,. bmcll-&#13;
P. 0. Box Ill SL&#13;
Bethlehem, NH 03514&#13;
(603) 869-3971&#13;
Ila, "otlwr" /IIM• """' ,,,. , .....&#13;
.••.Y.8l.o.-.lt •....-.-,.,,MP.a..bl c-&#13;
0., --~ ., _..._.... ... _&#13;
Write or c:all for brochure.&#13;
120 E. AIOI St., P. 0. Box 2326&#13;
South Padre Island. Texas 78597&#13;
(512)761-LYLB&#13;
Air eonneetlou wla&#13;
Amerlcu Contlaental Southwest&#13;
Ii&#13;
Parting Thought&#13;
The View From The Trapeze&#13;
By JCevin G. Richams&#13;
Contributing Writer&#13;
Last week when the computers at&#13;
work crashed everyone laughed.&#13;
Then we began to worry, because we&#13;
knew there would be a town full of&#13;
angry people if dew•covered&#13;
newspapers were not sitting on their&#13;
doorsteps in the morning. After 10&#13;
minutes I began to hope I could go&#13;
home instead of working until&#13;
midnight. But within a few minutes&#13;
the lights popped on, and the&#13;
newsroom was filled with the&#13;
electronic chirps of computers waking&#13;
up.&#13;
Of course, every business has&#13;
contingency plans, and we had ours.&#13;
But in personal affairs people are&#13;
often inept in dealing with a crisis.&#13;
I can think of friends who went&#13;
beserk when a re1ationship ended,&#13;
ARE YOU&#13;
MOVING?&#13;
The Post Office will not&#13;
forward The Second Stone.&#13;
You rrust notify us for&#13;
uninterrupted service if you move.&#13;
Please notify us lour weeks in advance lor&#13;
unintenupled delivety. Send both old and new&#13;
addresses. II possible allach mailing label in&#13;
Space provided.&#13;
PAINT&#13;
NEW ADORES$&#13;
when they flunked a class or lost a&#13;
job. I did this recently when I&#13;
wrecked my car.&#13;
The process of&#13;
growth, Miller said,&#13;
always occurs when&#13;
we let go of one&#13;
security, rethink our&#13;
lives, take the risk,&#13;
dive in.&#13;
But a book I read for an otherwise&#13;
forgettable college class presented a&#13;
challenging way to view catas-&#13;
NGLTF To Release&#13;
"Report Cards" On&#13;
Members Of 101st&#13;
Congre~s&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The&#13;
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force&#13;
will once again release "Report&#13;
Cards" on all members of Congress.&#13;
The report cards will grade members&#13;
and their voting records on lesbian&#13;
and gay issues during the current,&#13;
101st Congress. NGL TF last released&#13;
report cards in October, 1988,&#13;
following adjournment of the 100th&#13;
Co~&#13;
Local activists are encouraged by&#13;
the Task Force to write or call for&#13;
kits: NGL TF, attention: report cards,&#13;
1517 U St., NW, Washington, DC&#13;
20009, (202)332-6483.&#13;
trophcs. The book, The Becomers by&#13;
Miller (first name also forgotten),&#13;
compared life to a flying trapeze&#13;
where you can swing along and enjoy&#13;
the view. Once in a while some crisis&#13;
or big decision breaks our grip. We&#13;
flail around for a handhold, and for a&#13;
few eternal moments we fear a&#13;
violent landing. But then we touch&#13;
another trapeze, grasp it, look down.&#13;
The process of growth, Miller said,&#13;
always occurs when we let go of one&#13;
security, rethink our lives, take the&#13;
risk, dive in.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Books&amp;N,lcaikn&#13;
"HEARTILY RECOMMENDED," "Excellent,•&#13;
"At last! A dialogue ol rationality .. ."&#13;
Reviewers applaud CHRISTIAN'NEW AGE&#13;
QUARTERLY. Wonder why? Great articles&#13;
and tively columns make this bridge ol dialogue&#13;
between New Agers and Christians as&#13;
entertaining as it is substantive. Subscribe&#13;
for only $9.50. Or sample us for $2.50.&#13;
Prices increase on Jan. 1st, so order now and&#13;
save! CHRISTIAN'NEW AGE QUARTERLY,&#13;
PO Box 276, Clillon, NJ 07011-0276. TF&#13;
EMERGE! A heafing journal ol EMtRGENCE&#13;
International: Christian Scientists Supporting&#13;
Lesbians and Gay Men. For infOnnation and&#13;
subscriptions write P.O. Box 581, Kentfield,&#13;
CA 94914, or call (415)485-1881. 2/91&#13;
UNIQUE STUDY PACKET: Thinking It&#13;
Through: United Methodists Look al the&#13;
Church and Homosexuality. Useful tor all&#13;
denominations. 120 pages covering homopho·&#13;
bia, theology, AIDS ministries, further&#13;
resources. $10.00 postpaid trom the&#13;
Methodist Federation for Social Action, 76&#13;
Clnton Ave., Staten Island, NY 10301. 12/90&#13;
□&#13;
Naturally, the newspaper has not&#13;
invested in a new computer system ..&#13;
But the friend of mine who lost her&#13;
job (and her husband) got a fabulous&#13;
offer in the North and found a better&#13;
man. And one person who nearly&#13;
flunked a class (me, accounting)&#13;
changed majors.&#13;
Kevin Richards is the editor of the&#13;
SDA Kinship Connection, Box 3840,&#13;
Los Angeles, CA 90078.&#13;
□ Organizations&#13;
HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT ABOUT&#13;
JOINING A MONASTERY? Have you ever&#13;
thought ol becoming a religious? Do you have&#13;
strong religious convictions? Have· you ever&#13;
felt that because of your life style religious&#13;
lite would not be agreeable to you? If you have&#13;
answered YES to any ol the above questions,&#13;
we would like to hear from you. Let us know&#13;
how you would feel about living in a religious&#13;
community life. A group ol gay religious&#13;
Brothers living and working together in the&#13;
world, with strong religious ideals helping and&#13;
caring for one another. Please write to:&#13;
Ecumenical Order or: The Brothers of The&#13;
Mercy ol God, Suite 212/341 East Center&#13;
Slreet, Manchester, CT 06040. 2/91&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Key West women's bar/deli priced at&#13;
$299,000. C&gt;.Nner negotiable - land, building,&#13;
and business. BENDER-TANIS ERA REAL&#13;
ESTATE. (305)296-6200. 12/90.&#13;
Trya Sec:ond Stone&#13;
Classified Ad&#13;
se 9 ~ z&#13;
.!! :; !~ ! Classified Order Form Please place my ad in these&#13;
issues: [ J Jan/Feb [ ) Mar/Apr&#13;
[ 1 May/Jun [ ] JuVAug&#13;
[] Sept/Oct [) Nov/Dec&#13;
r n&#13;
.8..&#13;
Send completed form lo:&#13;
THE SECOND STONE&#13;
Box8340&#13;
NewOrltans, LA 70182&#13;
(,/)&#13;
C&#13;
1;I&#13;
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2.&#13;
a.&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
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a.&#13;
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FOR ONLY 35 CENTS&#13;
PER WORD, your ad&#13;
can appear in the next&#13;
edition of THE SECOND&#13;
STONE.&#13;
Take advantage of our low&#13;
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classified section by placing&#13;
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Mail To: 1BE SECOND STONE&#13;
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__ words X .35= $ ..;.' __ _&#13;
20 word minimum. All classffu;&amp;•&#13;
m.ust be pre-paid. Deadline o~rmallth&#13;
prior to cover date. We will mail you a&#13;
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appears&#13;
November/ December 1990&#13;
•&#13;
CIMSIFICATIONS&#13;
[ ] Books &amp; Publications&#13;
[ ] Business Opportunities&#13;
[ ] Employment&#13;
[ l Friends/Relationships&#13;
[] General Interest&#13;
[ l Mail Order&#13;
[ ].Merchandise&#13;
[ ) Organizations&#13;
[ ] Professional Services&#13;
[ ] Real Estate&#13;
[ )Retreats&#13;
[ ) Roommates&#13;
[ ]Travel</text>
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              <text>SECOND STONE&#13;
PO Box 8340&#13;
New Orleans , LA 70182&#13;
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED&#13;
TIME DATED MATERIAL&#13;
II.I. ., 1 .. 1 .1., 11.1.I ,. I .,,,,I II&#13;
SERIALS DEPARTMENT&#13;
GRADUATE THEOLOG ICAL UNION LIBR&#13;
2400 RIDGE RD&#13;
BERKELEY CA 94709&#13;
Bulk Rate&#13;
U.S. Postage&#13;
PAID&#13;
New Orleans LA&#13;
Permit No. 51 I&#13;
-&#13;
lssue#59 UVlNGINTHEEM8RACE0F A loVI NG ANDJUSTGOD July/August 1998&#13;
GayC atholicssa ye x-gaya ds&#13;
don'tr eflecct hurchte achign&#13;
Dignity /USA calle d the mid-Jul y advertising&#13;
camp aign supporting ex-gay ministries&#13;
"misleading and destructiv e, and&#13;
not representative of Catholic teaching ."&#13;
Full-pag e newspaper adverti sements&#13;
appearing in the New York Times . the&#13;
Washington Post and USA Today and&#13;
pai d fo r by conse rva tive Chri stian&#13;
groups say that homosex uals could&#13;
change their sexu al ori entati on by&#13;
accepting God's love.&#13;
"The message in this ad campaign is&#13;
mi sleading and wrong. These groups&#13;
arc telling lesbian s and gay men that&#13;
God's love is exclu sive. The truth is&#13;
that God's love is inclu sive and knows&#13;
no bounds," says Charl es L Cox, Executi&#13;
ve Dir ec tor of Dignity /USA . He&#13;
said , "Onc e again, we are seeing the&#13;
words and spi rit of Chri st's message&#13;
misused by the radical right , Their message&#13;
is plain and simple . You canno t be&#13;
a lesbian, a gay man, a bisexual or a&#13;
tran sgendered person and be a person of&#13;
faith. Like the advertisements and the&#13;
sponsors' campaign , they are wrong."&#13;
Dignity/USA President Robert F.&#13;
Miailovich said, "The ads stand in stark&#13;
contrast to the spirit and messageo f the&#13;
U.S. Catholi c Bishops' I 997 letter&#13;
Alw ays Our Childr en. The letter,&#13;
though imperfect , tells us: 'God loves&#13;
every person as a uniqu e individua l.&#13;
Sexual identity helps to define the&#13;
unique persons we are. One component&#13;
of our sex:ual identity is sexual orientation.&#13;
Thus, our total per sonbood is&#13;
more encompassing than sexual orienta-&#13;
SEE CATHOLICS, Page 9&#13;
Interfaith Working Group calls&#13;
f or religious response to ads&#13;
THE EX-GAY ADS that appeared in&#13;
mid -July in major publications were&#13;
called "the Normandy landing in the&#13;
larger cultural war" by Robert Knight of&#13;
1he Family Research Council.&#13;
The In terfaith Working Group bas&#13;
called on gay -affirming mini stries to&#13;
respo nd to the ex -gay ads . The group&#13;
hop,·11 10 enlisl 1,000 gay-friendly coogrcgatio&#13;
ns aro und the country to contribute&#13;
$63 each to take out a full page&#13;
ad in USA Today later this year which&#13;
would list all the congregations , with&#13;
contact numbers for gay and lesbian&#13;
people to call .&#13;
The group has a signup page at&#13;
http ://www.libenynet .org/iwg/conlllcl.h&#13;
1ml.&#13;
UCC minister says&#13;
ads ofter 'false hope'&#13;
CLEVELAND, Ohio - "fa -gay ministrie&#13;
s," promoted in national newspaper&#13;
ads placed in mid-July by the Christian&#13;
Coalition and other religiou s-right&#13;
groups. offer "false hope." says an&#13;
expert in lesbian. gay . bisexual and&#13;
transgender ministries with 1J1e United&#13;
Church of Christ.&#13;
In a statemen t released July 16, the&#13;
Rev. Dr. William R. Johnson of Cleveland,&#13;
a UCC minister with the United&#13;
Church Board fm Homeland Ministries ,&#13;
criticiz ed full-page ads that appeared in&#13;
the New York Time s on July 13, the&#13;
Washington Post on July 14 and USA&#13;
Today on July 15.&#13;
"Tens of 1bousands of lesbians and&#13;
gay men, and hundreds of fonner victims&#13;
of such 'therapies' who learned the&#13;
hard way, know that sexual orient ation&#13;
SEEF ALSEH OPE, Page 9&#13;
Perty:' Here'st het ruth... a nd&#13;
I'm nota fraitdo telli t'&#13;
REV. TROY PERRY of the Universal&#13;
Fell owship of Metropolitan C01mn unity&#13;
Chur ches issued a statement in&#13;
response to ex-gay newspaper and magazine&#13;
ads paid for by 15 far-right groups&#13;
including Alliance for Traditional Marriage.&#13;
American Famil y Associat ion,&#13;
Center for Reclaiming America. Christian&#13;
Coa lition, Concerned Women for&#13;
America, and Coral Ridge Ministries .&#13;
Perry said:&#13;
"I am today adding my voice to religious&#13;
leaders and human rights activists&#13;
across the US in condemning the false&#13;
and misleading full page ad in the July&#13;
13 edition of the New York Times promoting&#13;
so-called 'ex-gay' ministries.&#13;
"My 30 years of experien ce in ministcriug&#13;
to gay s, lesbi ans, bise xuals and&#13;
tran sgendcred persons have convinced&#13;
me beyond any doubt that God's creation&#13;
is filled with infinit e variety and diversity&#13;
- and that this variety and diversity&#13;
arc innate parts of God's plan. This plan&#13;
, includes every one of God's gay and lcsi&#13;
bian children.&#13;
"The ad carries a bold head line proclaiming&#13;
, 'I'm living proof that Truth&#13;
can set you free . ' As au open ly gay&#13;
Christian, I, too, can make that claim ,&#13;
as can hundred s of tl1ousa11closf deeply&#13;
spiritual gays and lesbians witl1 whom I&#13;
have ministered , served and worshiped&#13;
SEE TRtrrH , Page 20&#13;
.: :::::·:, ,::::.:: •:,:•·:» ..i•.:.~.:• ·■ ..•: •.:,:•·~:: ~·:::::::::,:,~::~::~~:::::&#13;
;:~.;.,~-~•;: ;&gt;,~I.,'I,.:;:~■1 ~!;ttti;,i~&#13;
• Prayer •1'he Bible •Words &amp; Deeds&#13;
It makes sense Prograinaitton fisn dg ay&#13;
An untold number of the state's&#13;
l1omeless adolescents are on the&#13;
streets because they've been&#13;
rejected by their families and are&#13;
reluctant to be placed in similarly&#13;
unsympathetic foster homes ...&#13;
foster{xlrenfotsr g ayy ouths&#13;
BY ALEXIS CHIU&#13;
WORCESTER . Mass. - Some are victims&#13;
of neglect. Others are abused. No&#13;
· child who circulates through the state's&#13;
Depart.me.at of Soci al Servic es has it&#13;
easy.&#13;
But teenagers who are gay, lesbian,&#13;
bisexual or confu sed about their sexual&#13;
orientati on have an especially tough&#13;
time, say those whose job it is to place&#13;
them in foster homes.&#13;
among the first of its kind in the nation:&#13;
activ e recruitment of gay, lesbian ,&#13;
bisexual and tran sgeuder men and&#13;
women along with "heterosexual allies"&#13;
- to be foster parents for gay kids.&#13;
"We agree I.here's definitely a need to&#13;
provide them with safe homes," Kuffour&#13;
said.&#13;
larly unsympathetic foster home s, said&#13;
Albert Toney III, 31, a former W orccster&#13;
police officer.&#13;
"Just because they 've come out, some&#13;
are thrown out and ph_ysically or verbally&#13;
abus ed on their way out the door,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Toney should know. He and his male&#13;
partner of six years have cared for six&#13;
foster children , three of them gay teens.&#13;
One was a 16-year-old whose parents&#13;
adopted him through DSS - and then&#13;
kicked him out when they found he was&#13;
gay, Toney said.&#13;
Toney, director of the Safe Homes&#13;
project for gay teens, is working with&#13;
DSS to help them find home s where&#13;
tl1eir needs are understood .&#13;
"DSS tries to place African -American&#13;
children in African-American home s,&#13;
Hispan ic children in Hispanic home s,"&#13;
he said. "For gay kids. why not put&#13;
them in a gay hous ehold where sexual&#13;
orientation isn't an issue, where they&#13;
SEE GAY YOUill , Next Page&#13;
"Adole scent placem ent is the most&#13;
diffic ult placement in all of DSS," said&#13;
Benetta Kuffour, the department' s Central&#13;
Massachusetts foster care liaison. " If&#13;
you add gay . lesbian and transgender&#13;
youth, you're adding another whammy."&#13;
The program, which started in Boston&#13;
with a pilot program three years ago and&#13;
is getting und erway in Central Mas sachu&#13;
sett s, also offers a relevant twoweek&#13;
addition to an erjsting DSS training&#13;
course for prospective foster parents.&#13;
No one knows how many of the&#13;
young people in DSS custody face&#13;
issues rel ated to their sexuality . An&#13;
untold nwuber of the state's homele ss&#13;
adolesc ent s are on the street beca use&#13;
they've been rej ected by tl1eir families&#13;
and are rel uctant to be place d in simi-&#13;
'Chicken Soup for the Soul' books&#13;
were a turning point in ~riter' s life&#13;
That's why the department is expanding&#13;
a campaign they believe could be&#13;
CAMPBELLS PORT , Wis. - Writ er&#13;
Rochelle Pennin gton thinks the search&#13;
for inspira tion and insight drew people&#13;
by the millio ns to her works.&#13;
"Renewal • Restoration • Reconciliation"&#13;
Midwest SpiritQuest 1998.&#13;
September 4-6 • Ramada Inn• LaPorte Indiana&#13;
Pastor Randy Duncan and Dan Wright of host&#13;
church New Life Comm unity Church of Hope in&#13;
Michigan City, Indiana, in vite you to a Labor Day&#13;
Weekend of praise, worship, special music and&#13;
exciting fellowsh ip!&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4&#13;
7 p.m. Pastor Randy Duncan with evangelist Jeff&#13;
Ferguson, songwriter/minister from Nashville, Tenn.&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5&#13;
9 a.m. Dan Wright, raised Mormon, now a born-again&#13;
Christian: Pastor Gyongyi LuclVig, Hungarian lesbian&#13;
minister from Kalamazoo, Mich.; Jerry Montgomery from&#13;
Valparaiso, Indiana. a 80Cial worker and mother of a gay&#13;
man; Susan Duncan from Porter, Indiana, a singer/&#13;
musician and former wife of a gay minister; Rev. Dave&#13;
Farrell from San Antonio and Rev. Todd Farrell from San&#13;
Francisco. father and gay son; and Tony Teso from&#13;
Portage, Indiana, a Christian living with HIV.&#13;
'&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5&#13;
7 p.m. Pastor Greg Coats from Chattanooga, Tenn.,&#13;
associate pastorhnusic minister: Pastor Dolly Hamby&#13;
from Hope For All Ministries in McDonald, Tenn.&#13;
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6&#13;
1 O a.m. Evangelist Doug Clanton from Casa de Cristo&#13;
Church in Phoenix, Arizona&#13;
SPECIAL MINISTRIES:&#13;
Rev. Bob Ellis, artistic expression&#13;
Gospel artists and musicians:&#13;
Glenn Baker&#13;
Derek, Denee and Jenny Duncan&#13;
Janice Lacount&#13;
New Life Singers&#13;
MSQChoir&#13;
Joe Johnson&#13;
Robert Morgan&#13;
and more ...&#13;
For further Information call (219)778-2803 or (219)778-9332 or write to&#13;
P.O. Box 9212, Michigan City, IN 46360·9212, lnnulife@netnitco .net&#13;
2 JULY•A tJOUST 1998&#13;
Pennin gton worked as a quot atio ns&#13;
speci alist and writer on the "C hicken&#13;
Soup for the Soul" series and "Life's&#13;
Little Instruction Book."&#13;
There appea rs to be an intensified&#13;
public hunger for meaning and awareness&#13;
as the tum of the century approaches,&#13;
Pennington said.&#13;
"We're busy. very fas t-paced and don't&#13;
have time to read the great big books.&#13;
We still like to be inspi red , but in a lit tle&#13;
bit of time," she said.&#13;
Pennington, who lives in Campbellsport&#13;
with her husban d Les Pennington&#13;
and their children, Nicholas, 16, and Erica,&#13;
12, said the Chicken Soup books&#13;
were a turning point in her life.&#13;
"They put powerful infonnation in&#13;
very short pieces of literature," she said.&#13;
She currently is working on more&#13;
"Life's Little Instruction" books with H.&#13;
Jackson Brown. One book is "Life's Little&#13;
Instruction Book of Quotations."&#13;
The other is "Life 's Little Instruction&#13;
Book for tl1e Loving Parent ."&#13;
The Reporter of Fond du Lac has ·&#13;
started publishing a new column by&#13;
Pennington called , "Insight and Inspira tion."&#13;
ft invites readers to take a break&#13;
from work and reflect on life, Penning ton&#13;
said.&#13;
She hopes the column will touch people&#13;
aod inspire tl1cm to send it to a&#13;
friend or family member. (AP)&#13;
t&#13;
I •.&#13;
GAY YOUTH,&#13;
From Previous Page&#13;
can have a role model and where it's a&#13;
safe environment?"&#13;
Toney said gay foster children often&#13;
are teased or abused by other foster&#13;
children in the same household. Studies&#13;
DAYTON , OHIO&#13;
CO:tvnv1UNITY&#13;
GOSPELC HURCH&#13;
P.OB. JX1 6.34• D\YIONO, H4 S401&#13;
DISCOVER YOUR DESTINY!&#13;
ALL ARE WELCOME&#13;
meets: 546X eniaA ve.&#13;
Dl)'tOn, Ohio&#13;
SundaylOam&#13;
E-MAIi.; RevSamueJK@aol.rom&#13;
V1Siot ur Web Site!&#13;
http:/ M\\W.oomeaoLcom/re.s'.lll1UeJk&#13;
937-252-88.55&#13;
REV. SAMUEL KADER,&#13;
PASTOR&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
So[ufarity Sunday&#13;
October 4, 1998&#13;
"Let us work together to end&#13;
verbal and physical gay bashing!"&#13;
Solidarity Sunday - P. 0 . Box 701592&#13;
San Antonio , TX 782 70-1592&#13;
BruceSJ @AOL COM&#13;
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI&#13;
Come share your ministry with us&#13;
at. ... r:s&#13;
Abiding Peace Lutheran Church&#13;
S090 NE Chouteau Trafficway&#13;
Kansas City, MO 64119&#13;
(816) 4S2-1222&#13;
Caring for People and Creation&#13;
(Ncrth of the River)&#13;
Sunday Worship: 10:30 am&#13;
Sunday School: 9:00 am&#13;
blip :/ /www .sound.nct~/pickle&#13;
have suggested gay teenagers are more&#13;
likely than their straight peers to be suicidal&#13;
or to abuse drugs and · alcohol.&#13;
Toney now is recruiting applicants for&#13;
potential foster parents and mentors .&#13;
The 12-week training class will begin&#13;
this fall, and those who successfully&#13;
complete the course and pass a home&#13;
study will be eligible to take gay youths&#13;
into their homes.&#13;
It wasn't always so easy for non hetero&#13;
sexual parents in Massachnsctts.&#13;
In the mid-1980s, then-Gov . Michael&#13;
Dukakis banned state-sponsored gay&#13;
fo ster parenting after hearing a report&#13;
that a child had been placed in tl1e home&#13;
of a gay couple. After a heated public&#13;
debate, Dukakis backed down and the&#13;
policy was scrapped .&#13;
But the debate was still alive as&#13;
recently as last year , when a Belmont&#13;
man claimed his right to religious freedom&#13;
was violated when the state temporarily&#13;
placed his 14-year-old son in the&#13;
care of gay foster parents.&#13;
The man, whose name never was&#13;
made public, said his Catholic beliefs&#13;
were incompatible with the foster par ents'&#13;
homosexuality and took the case to&#13;
the U.S . Supreme Court. The court,&#13;
without comment, turned away the argu ment.&#13;
Toney, too, is quick 10· turn away&#13;
Distribution of Second Stone in s01ne&#13;
co1n1nunities is sponsored by our&#13;
Outreach Partners. We invite you to&#13;
visit thetn for worship.&#13;
SAN DIEGO , CALIFORNIA&#13;
fl.-,.,.,_&#13;
I~~\ l I \&#13;
l 1m~ . ·,s\ I 3960 Park B d, Suite E l&#13;
J San Diego,CA 92103 f&#13;
619-542-1ss1 I&#13;
Sunday Worship : 10:00am -&#13;
Thursday Study: 7:00pm&#13;
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA&#13;
Come&#13;
Celebrate&#13;
With Us&#13;
The New&#13;
life In&#13;
Jesus!&#13;
(Luu 15:11)&#13;
Non-Denomlno1tlono1• IB ible Centered&#13;
Sunday Services - 10:30 am&#13;
at The Bflly Defrank Center&#13;
175 Stockton Ave .• San Jose. CA&#13;
Pastor David Harvey • (408) 345-2319&#13;
hltp://www.lodC?SYs.conv'celebrntc/&#13;
MICHIGAN CITY, INDIANA&#13;
Pastor Randy Duncan&#13;
S1D1da y Service : 11 :30 am&#13;
...A caringc hurchf ora hurtingw orld&#13;
whereE VERYONE1s welcome!&#13;
• Full Gospel&#13;
• Chri31 centered&#13;
• Bible based&#13;
P.O. Box 92 12&#13;
Michigan City, IN 46360-9 212&#13;
(219) 778-2803 • (21 9) 778-9332&#13;
Email : inn ulife@nc:tnitco.nd.&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
We can make a world of&#13;
DIFFERENCE!&#13;
Society of the Franci scan&#13;
Secvant s of the Poor&#13;
(Ecummical, lnclusiw)&#13;
113 Pavo nja Ave . - 335&#13;
Jt:rsey City NJ 07310&#13;
E-mail: sfsp@bellatlantic .net&#13;
Nearly 35 million Americans Jive in&#13;
hungry or "food insecure" households ...&#13;
There is still no cure for AIDS ...&#13;
HomO"...exuality remains a "hot-button"&#13;
issue in many churches ...&#13;
St. Fra11cis wrote i11 llis rule of 1221&#13;
"All the brothere are to preach by their works"&#13;
Consider joining us as an Associate&#13;
or Vowed Mem6er ... and help make&#13;
a difference !&#13;
criticism of the unorthodox program for&#13;
gay teens.&#13;
"If you can find them a safe place&#13;
where they can be themselves, then this&#13;
is a wonderful program," Toney said.&#13;
"For them to be derailed in life just&#13;
because of who they love, it's ridiculous."&#13;
(AP)&#13;
SAN BERNARDINO , CALIF&#13;
First Congregational Church&#13;
An Open &amp; AHlrmlng Congregation&#13;
Unbed Church of Christ&#13;
Welcomlng Everyone. lncludlng&#13;
Lesbian. Gay, Bisexual,&#13;
and Transgendered Persons&#13;
established 1867.&#13;
Is theologlcally liberal&#13;
blbllcaffy based,&#13;
socially progressive,&#13;
and actively Involved In the communny.&#13;
Worship on Sundays at 10 a.m.&#13;
We are loeated at&#13;
3041 N. Sierra Way. San Bernardi/lo&#13;
(haff block north of 30th. St./Crosstown Freeway&#13;
909/886-4911&#13;
MEMPHIS , TENNESSEE&#13;
HOLY TRINITY&#13;
COMMUNITY&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
Sunday Olrfstbn Educ.idon- I 0:00 a.m.&#13;
Sund.iy Worship er Holy Commun lon-&#13;
11 :00 a.m.&#13;
Wednesday Program-7:00 p.m •&#13;
Come join us at the lord's tablewe're&#13;
savinga seat fory ou!&#13;
1559 Madison Ave. 9 Memphls, TN 38104&#13;
90 I / 726- 9 443&#13;
e-mail: holytrfnltyc c@Juno.com&#13;
The Rev. Timot hy Meadows, M. Div., Pastor&#13;
LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA&#13;
FIRST Cm.JGREGATIONAL CHURCHl&#13;
LONG BEACH&#13;
UNITED C HURCH OF CHRIST . . •&#13;
An Open and Affirming Congregation&#13;
We welcome you to Worship in a&#13;
nurturing environment,&#13;
241 Cedar Ave• long Beach CA 90802&#13;
562) 436 -2256 • Fax (562) 436-301&#13;
://users.eol.c;om/ revme k{index..html&#13;
SECOND STONE 3&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Spiriot fA mericang ospels ingingin spirinEgu ropeans&#13;
BY MA TI KOHLMAN&#13;
LONDON - By the end of the concert,&#13;
Anna Ludvigsen had worked up a good&#13;
sweat, clapping to the rhythms and&#13;
swaying ann-in-ann with her neighbor s&#13;
to the beat ·&#13;
It wasn't a rock concert this London&#13;
student was attending .&#13;
She was among 1,000 people dancing&#13;
in the ai sles to the gospel tunes of&#13;
Queen Esther Marrow and the Harlem&#13;
Gospel Singers .&#13;
"It was very participatory," Ludvigsen,&#13;
24, said. "It's very entertaining as&#13;
well as got a message across." .&#13;
Her words are musie to the ears of&#13;
Queen Esther, one of Ilic many singers&#13;
finding Ilic international scene a fertile&#13;
ground for music mote~ in Ilic Soutliem&#13;
black communities of the United States.&#13;
And just as jazz and blues did generations&#13;
ago, gospel is reaching beyond its&#13;
American roots of churches in big cities&#13;
and the South.&#13;
Not that gospel is suffering at home.&#13;
The entire gospel genre, which includes&#13;
Christian rock acts like Jars of Clay and&#13;
Bob Carlisle, is tl1e sixth-biggest musical&#13;
category, behind pop and ahead of&#13;
classical. The Recording Industry Association&#13;
of America said gospel accounted&#13;
for 4.5 percent of all music sales in&#13;
1997.&#13;
Gospel music has become so mainstream&#13;
that Queen Esther was picked as&#13;
the headline performer July 7 at the&#13;
Montreal Jazz Festival, where past acts&#13;
like Pat Metheny have played before&#13;
150,000 people .&#13;
Queen Estlier sings a traditional fonn&#13;
of gospel music associated with her&#13;
idol, Mahalia Jackson . Newer stars opt&#13;
for a more contemporary take. One of&#13;
its most successful stars, Kirk Franklin,&#13;
borrows from rhytlun 'n' blues and hip&#13;
hop to give his music a younger edge.&#13;
His protege, God's Property , went plati num&#13;
with a se lf-titled album that&#13;
debuted No. 3 in Billboard a year ago.&#13;
Whatever the form, gospel groups are&#13;
playing before sold-out audiences in&#13;
Man's faith will live on in&#13;
temple model he ~rafted&#13;
WINSTON -SALEM - Bill McGehee&#13;
raced against age. and cancer to find a&#13;
spot for the 240-square-foot model that&#13;
he built to teach people the importance&#13;
of Jesus.&#13;
McGehee, 7 9, invested his faith, five&#13;
years of his life and $54,000 to building&#13;
a detailed model of Jerusalem's Herodian&#13;
Temple Mount.&#13;
But he was ready to term his project a&#13;
failure because he couldn' t find a site&#13;
large enough to display it. Fully assembled,&#13;
it is as big as some small cars.&#13;
1n July, McGehee's search finally ended.&#13;
He will donate his model to GardnerWebb&#13;
University in Boiling Springs.&#13;
"He has really devoted part of his life&#13;
to what I think is a very significant&#13;
project," said Fred Horton Jr., the&#13;
Albritton professor of I.he Bible at Wake&#13;
Forest University.&#13;
McGehee didn't start on the model&#13;
until Ilic winter of his life.&#13;
Soon after McGehee and his wife&#13;
retired here, Virginia McGehee learned&#13;
that she had liver cancer. She died in&#13;
1986.&#13;
In 1991, McGehee learned that he had&#13;
cance r. first of the colon and lymph&#13;
nodes, then of the prostate . By then. he&#13;
had become fascinated with Temp le&#13;
Mount.&#13;
He 8aid he didn't focus on the temple&#13;
4 JULY•AUGUST 1998&#13;
to take his mind off his loneliness or&#13;
the cancer; it just grew out of his interest&#13;
in archeology.&#13;
During tlie next several years. McGehee&#13;
made more than IO trips to Israel to&#13;
study the ruins of the temple. He tracked&#13;
down Alec Garrard of England, who had&#13;
made his own model of the temple. Garrard&#13;
sold McGehee a copy of his blueprint&#13;
and pem lission to duplicate it.&#13;
McGehee began work on his own&#13;
model in 1993. He also absorbed&#13;
volumes of infom1ation about the temple&#13;
and ancient Hebrew culture.&#13;
"The guy has taught me as much as&#13;
any seminary professor I've had," said&#13;
tlie Rev. George Robinson, who retired&#13;
in June as senior minister at Centenary&#13;
United Methodist Church.&#13;
McGehee said the model is a crucial&#13;
teaching tool because the temple was&#13;
the site of so much of the action in the&#13;
Old Testament, as well as where Jesus&#13;
studied Judaism, had his bar mitzvah and&#13;
overturned the tables of ihc moneychangers.&#13;
"This temple isn't anything, but it&#13;
represented so many things Jesus said&#13;
and did and make s it easier for us to&#13;
understand Jesus as a hun1an," he said.&#13;
"The more you know about him as a&#13;
human, tJ1e more you Jove him as the&#13;
son of God." (AP)&#13;
concerts from Barcelona to Berlin. Even&#13;
Pope Jolm Paul II has tapped his toes to&#13;
tl1e soulful voice of Queen Estl1e.r, who&#13;
opened and closed a papal show last&#13;
October before 300,000 people.&#13;
"ln America, gospel music among the&#13;
African-Americans is part of their life.&#13;
It's like eating and sleeping," said Queen&#13;
Estbe r, which is her birth nan1e. "In&#13;
Europe, it's a tlclicacy for those that&#13;
don't hear it all the time. They like tlie&#13;
culture. They like the music . So they&#13;
appreciate it more."&#13;
She has firsthand knowledge of just&#13;
how much that appreciation has grown.&#13;
She started annual European tours in&#13;
I 992, sometimes playing before only a&#13;
few hundred people on small stages with&#13;
a sheet as a backdrop and 10 lights. The&#13;
smallest venue on her latest winterspring&#13;
tour was London's Hackney&#13;
Empire, where actor Ralph Fie1mes had&#13;
played Hamlet. Queen Estlier offered . a&#13;
cross between a rock concert and a&#13;
Broadway play, complete with rich&#13;
lighting, a colorful backdrop and a cl10-&#13;
reographed choir.&#13;
"This is a technical show. It's a level&#13;
above gospel shows," she said. "The&#13;
feedback from older people , they probably&#13;
would be saying, 'Well you're a&#13;
sellout to Ilic devil."'&#13;
Bitt it's not a churchgoing crowd&#13;
going to this gospel.&#13;
"I don't follow it religiously,'' said&#13;
Zen Saipaia , a 32-year -old Polynesian&#13;
man who lives in south London. "But I&#13;
think it's very entertaining and very&#13;
soulful."&#13;
Bob Garland, a 45-year-old British&#13;
percussionist, wanted to sample what he&#13;
called a tlierapeutic music style tbat had&#13;
even inspired a gospel singing group in&#13;
his town of Hemel Hempstead.&#13;
"It's another type of world music and,&#13;
iu a way, a bit closer to home than a lot&#13;
of those styles out there."&#13;
Crowds certainly find a lot of familiar&#13;
songs, from traditional melodies like&#13;
• "Yon Are My In spira tion" .to footstamping&#13;
pieces like "Sit Down You're&#13;
Rocltin' the Boat" and "Walkin' on&#13;
Sunshine ."&#13;
Queen Esther's roots are deep in traditional&#13;
gospel. She was disco vered by&#13;
Duke Ellington at the age of 22, and&#13;
toured with musical greats from B.B.&#13;
King to Bob Dylan .&#13;
An invol vemen t in the civil rights&#13;
movement introduced Queen Esther to&#13;
Mabalia Jackson. The two later sh'ared&#13;
the stage and Queen Esther even wrote&#13;
and starred in a short-lived Broadway&#13;
musical about Jackson.&#13;
After tlie Montreal performance and&#13;
another world tour starting in September&#13;
that will take her lo Japan, Queen&#13;
Esther may bring her act back to Broad -&#13;
way.&#13;
"I don't want to go back to the states&#13;
until it is really tiptop shape," she said.&#13;
"I don't find your mainstream American s&#13;
going to gospel musi~. fr~ mostly A~rican-&#13;
Americans. I tlunk 1f what we re&#13;
doing was presented to them, they&#13;
would like it" (AP)&#13;
"In America, gospel music among the&#13;
African-Am ericans is part of their life.&#13;
It's like ea ting and sleeping. In Europe,&#13;
it's a delicacy for those that don't hear&#13;
it all the time. They like the culture.&#13;
They .like the music. So they&#13;
appreciate it more."&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Something is missing&#13;
BY CATHERINE GROVES&#13;
FOR MANY MONTHS. increasingly&#13;
acute has become my knowing of what&#13;
I've known for years, perhaps the whole&#13;
• of my lifetime, and oftentimes with the&#13;
same sense of urgency: something is&#13;
missing in my life. That something is a&#13;
core element, key and basic to wellbeing&#13;
- and most decided! y a sbapeshifter .&#13;
Let me jump in quickly before any&#13;
might leap to my rescue. In the course&#13;
of my life, I've discovered my Higher&#13;
Self. channeled Divine Mind and dived&#13;
into the oceanic depths of the All. I've&#13;
found religion and the Good Book and&#13;
salvation in the Lord Jesus Christ. I've&#13;
herbed. vitamined, fasted, feasted , and&#13;
even Shaklee'd. I've been romanced and&#13;
I've been married and I've mothered&#13;
children . I've launched myself into&#13;
social actions and climbed the ivory&#13;
tower. I've served and I've be.en served.&#13;
All these expe riences have broaden ed&#13;
who I am and, indeed , comprise my very&#13;
fiber. And not a one of them is 10 my&#13;
point - although, in a way, they make&#13;
it.&#13;
I suspect I am not alone in-sensing&#13;
something missing. In fact, I would say&#13;
it's common to most people, felt for&#13;
part or all of their lives. As with hunger.&#13;
gratification, sorrow or success, the&#13;
inte nsity of the sensa tion comes and&#13;
goes. One individ ual, quite dear to me,&#13;
is foreve r seek ing , almost desperately&#13;
pinni ng hopes on this answer or that&#13;
per son, this job or that place, but seldom&#13;
finds a moment's calm in the&#13;
achieving . Another has marked a single,&#13;
unattainable ideal as the thing missing&#13;
and never ceases clutching after it. Still&#13;
others seem oddly unto uched by any&#13;
sense of lack ; perhaps the wise ones,'&#13;
their inner life appears to be a simple&#13;
matter of extracting from the moment&#13;
whatever is needed to reestablish a comfortable&#13;
balance .&#13;
But I know my own shapeshift er best&#13;
and of it I will speak. At times it feels&#13;
as if the thing missing is freedom , the&#13;
fr eedom to str etch the wings of my&#13;
mind and spirit. I am clipped short by&#13;
many exig enci es and circumstances .&#13;
Simply . I do not find the time to spend&#13;
on deepe ning a pace of fre.edom. Im lead,&#13;
I snat ch moment s of a quasi-freedom&#13;
mar ked by i ts sense of fl eeti ngn ess.&#13;
Still. the time-loc k of my situatio n&#13;
seems equally true of others who choose&#13;
to live responsib ly. Even so. that what&#13;
seems missi ng is a mere conseq uence of&#13;
the facts of my life makes no less pressing&#13;
the plight.&#13;
At other limes, the lack takes the&#13;
shape of a belief - a central magnetic&#13;
truth to which my faith could moor. I&#13;
am deeply attracted to beliefs and ideas,&#13;
and so I study them minutely. Yet my&#13;
passion for understanding the ways and&#13;
means of belief tends to empty their&#13;
content for me, melt their spell upon&#13;
me. What entices another's mind leaves&#13;
, me unmoved . If others are captivated by&#13;
the fire of the conlent, I see only cool,&#13;
lucid waters of the process. But&#13;
sometimes, oftentimes, would that I&#13;
could trade clarity for the thrill!&#13;
The most fixed shape of my shifter in&#13;
recent months seems to be my lack of&#13;
connection to flesh and blood others, the&#13;
loss of any viable community . And it&#13;
has occurred to me that the exact form&#13;
of this shapcshifting phase could be a&#13;
significant other. Bluntly, my sense of&#13;
something missing might be most&#13;
neatly filled by someone with whom to&#13;
share my life .&#13;
It seems I buck against every natural&#13;
instin ct and societal nonn in my choice&#13;
to remain solitary . At times ii hardly&#13;
feel s like a choice at all. More often&#13;
these days, it smacks close to feeling&#13;
unwanted, uncho sen, left out. One&#13;
would think that having decided to be&#13;
solit ary, I'd be reliev ed to find that&#13;
indeed I am! Ironical ly. however, without&#13;
occasions for seeing a choice anew,&#13;
without the chance to choose what I&#13;
have already chosen, being solilary feels&#13;
more as if it were a condition that has&#13;
happened to me than an option I have&#13;
myself embraced . No, I am not wholly&#13;
content with the choice I've made, nor&#13;
do I know it to be one I will honor long&#13;
into my future.&#13;
It's longevity notwithsta ndin g. at&#13;
least for now my decision remains: I&#13;
will not partner again. I suspect part of&#13;
my logic has to do with wounds from&#13;
an anguish -filled marriage. I mistook&#13;
what shouted a11 signs of being hell on&#13;
earth for the hope of its opposite - and&#13;
that's one mistake I will not make&#13;
again . As I am unable to fully gra sp&#13;
how I was able to be that blind to all&#13;
portents of misery ahead, it is possible I&#13;
would make a simil arly sightl ess stum ble&#13;
again were I to allow myself the&#13;
occas ion to do so. And so, I have opted&#13;
for the obvious : if I refuse to endur e&#13;
an other rel ationshi p like the one I&#13;
endured and if I cannot wholly trust my&#13;
abil ity to disce rn the inner nature of&#13;
anoth er. I wi ll abstain from suc h&#13;
invo lvements entirely.&#13;
When I was younger, I responded to&#13;
loss quite differen tly. Then it seemed a&#13;
clearc ut, even if tremulous, course : out&#13;
SEE MISSING, Page 9&#13;
Since&#13;
1988,&#13;
a friend&#13;
for the&#13;
I Journey.&#13;
THANK YOU&#13;
FORA ·&#13;
DECADE OF&#13;
YOUR LOVE,&#13;
PRAYERS,&#13;
AND SUPPORT.&#13;
SecoSntdo ne THE STONE THAT THE BUIWERS REJECrED&#13;
BECAME THE CORNERSTONE- Mark 12:10&#13;
SECOND STONE 5&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
After coming out&#13;
FonnerU nitedP entecostμali storfindns ewm eaning&#13;
THE REVEREND Randy Dw1can of&#13;
LaPorte , Indiana, thought when he&#13;
returned home after an eight month&#13;
period of time to "come out" and "find&#13;
himself ' in the gay Christian communities&#13;
of Phoenix and Seattle, tltat it was&#13;
to pack up and relocate .&#13;
Little did he know as he drove back to&#13;
his Midwest habitat.what God had waiting&#13;
on him iu Northwest Indiana.&#13;
"All of the exits seemed to be&#13;
blocked," Duncan said, and "the doors of&#13;
new ministry and opportunity in the gay&#13;
community began to open very wide!"&#13;
Duncan said he never dreamed that he&#13;
would be starting a church for people&#13;
like himself in North west Indiana .&#13;
"But, God secs the big picture and,&#13;
thank God, I hav e alw ays tried to&#13;
listen."&#13;
After being back in Indiana after his&#13;
divorce was final and he was all alone,&#13;
lite forme r Pentecostal mini ster ~ gan&#13;
meeti ng and talki ng with gay people in&#13;
lite area . A fellow who had once visited&#13;
the LaPorte church tltat Duncan once&#13;
pastored with hi s wife conta cted him&#13;
while Duncan was in Seattle and invited&#13;
him to minister to a small group of lesbian&#13;
and gay Christians meeting in the&#13;
Oak Park section of Chicago. But, upon&#13;
Duncan's arrival back in Indiana, he&#13;
found out that the man and his partn er&#13;
had relocated ju st 30 miles from Duncan.&#13;
These men began to pray about&#13;
God's will and on November 2, 1997,&#13;
t11e first service of New Life Community&#13;
Church of Hope was held in Pastor&#13;
Duncan's home near Michigan City.&#13;
"We started with seven guys and have&#13;
now grown to approximately 22&#13;
people," Dunc an said. "Some come&#13;
with skept ici sm, others come hopeful.&#13;
But, almost alw ays people le ave the&#13;
service having felt love aud acceptance&#13;
and greate st of all, the ~vonderful Spirit&#13;
ofGod ."&#13;
Duncan , who was rai sed in tlte ~rec&#13;
Will Baptist Church in Arvin, Califor nia,&#13;
becam e involved in tl1e Apostolic&#13;
Pentecostal church as a young teenager.&#13;
He was the only se lf-d e scrib ed&#13;
"Pentecost al-hol y roller" in his family&#13;
so he got te ased about that. Then, to&#13;
complic ate thin gs, he reali zed he was&#13;
gay and j ust knew unless he stayed&#13;
Ce lebra te Solidarity Sunday, Octob er 4, 1998.&#13;
J oin the more than I 00,000 who did last year!&#13;
· Wear the ribbon.&#13;
Pray the Soli darity Prayer&#13;
God , You are th e Creator and Lover of all. You wish us to live in&#13;
so lidarity with each oth er and to rejoice in our diversity. We pr ay&#13;
th at Your lesbian, gay, bisexual , transge nd er and strai gh t childr en&#13;
experience j ustice, enjoy peace and spr ead Your love th roughout&#13;
the world. We pray in the name of J esus, who welcomed all to His&#13;
circle of friends. Amen.&#13;
Let us work together to end verbal and phy~icaJ gay bashing!&#13;
For lnfonna tion on how to par ticipate :&#13;
Solidarity Sunday&#13;
A proje ct of Di gni ty / USA&#13;
P. 0. Box 701592&#13;
San Antonio, Texas 78270-1592&#13;
Brua:S.Jla AOL COM, MTDudd,✓a AOLCOM, Fax - (210) 545-6906&#13;
National Coordinators&#13;
Marwuic Duddy and Bruce S. J:in.tfcr. MD&#13;
Dignity/USA, 1500 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 11&#13;
Washington, DC 20005&#13;
www.dignityusa.org / e-mail: Dignity@aol.com&#13;
Telephone : (202) 861-0017 or (800) 877-8797&#13;
6 JlJLY•AUOUST !998&#13;
"delivered" he would bum in hell.&#13;
"For many years I hated myself and&#13;
had a hard time believing God really&#13;
loved me because of all the negative and&#13;
downright hateful things ministers&#13;
would say about homosexual s from the&#13;
pulpit," Duncan said .&#13;
After years of suppres sion and strug :&#13;
gling a seri es of events led him to Mel&#13;
White's book, Stranger at the Gate.&#13;
"I felt at times it was me telling lite&#13;
story as I read along," Duncan said. "I&#13;
felt every emoti.on and tears rolled down&#13;
my face as I read White's story of struggle&#13;
and finall y , reconciliation ... It&#13;
played a big role in my being able to&#13;
finally consid er that God made me i;ay&#13;
and that He might jn st love me as I&#13;
a:rn. 0&#13;
Now nearly two years after reading&#13;
that book and beginning to meet gay&#13;
Chri stians for lite first time, Duncan is&#13;
more happy and at peace with God titan&#13;
ever.&#13;
Duncan had been out of the church for&#13;
a period of time during his college years&#13;
and experienced "gay encow1ters" and&#13;
even had a couple of relati onships. But,&#13;
feeling all along that it was all sinful,&#13;
he said hi s hear t lo nged to return to&#13;
church where he wanted to use his musical&#13;
talents and sing in the cboir.&#13;
So, he returned to church and marrie d&#13;
a Pen tecos tal pas tor 's daughte r au&lt;l&#13;
hoped the "gay thi ng" was all behind&#13;
him .&#13;
Duncan recalled a 11encli11g , al o ng with&#13;
his wife . a nati onal music ministry conf&#13;
ercnce in Jackso n, Mississippi, hosted&#13;
by Lanny W ~lfe and the Jackson CollcP,&#13;
e of Ministrie s. At the con fe rence,&#13;
buncan took note of the many gay people&#13;
involved as clinicians , musician s,&#13;
and singe rs. It tot ally baffled him .&#13;
On the way back home as he laid in&#13;
the back scat of the car while his wife&#13;
and mother-in -law drove, he asked God&#13;
for the first time, "Why? .. . Why hasn't&#13;
it gon e away ? ... Why, even after being&#13;
spirit-filled , haven't these feeling s left?"&#13;
Duncan said, "If God ever spoke to&#13;
me, He spok e to my heart and said,&#13;
'Someday , you will be able to help people&#13;
just like yourself." '&#13;
Duncan said he lived with that message&#13;
for many years during his struggles&#13;
wondering just what God meant.&#13;
He got involved witlt an ex-gay ministry&#13;
for a time in California and&#13;
thought that that might be what God&#13;
was speak i ng to him about. But, he&#13;
said, tl1at didn't work for him or the other&#13;
s seeking help.&#13;
But. now, Duncan says he knows&#13;
without any doubt that what God was&#13;
saying to him nearly 20 year s ago , is&#13;
coming to pass before his very eyes.&#13;
" I thought when I finally took tltis&#13;
last ma sk off and came out , that my&#13;
mini stry would be o ver," Duncan said.&#13;
"But , now I see clearly that it has only&#13;
ju st begw1!" .&#13;
Duncan says he is now partnered wtlh&#13;
a wonderful man he met al a church concert&#13;
in Phoe nil( during hi s coming out&#13;
time there. Dan Wri ght , a fonner Mormon,&#13;
who was excommuni cate d ~hi _le&#13;
servi ng his two year missionary sunt m&#13;
Ecuado r, has now moved to Indiana , and&#13;
is assistin g Duncan in the day to ~y&#13;
ministry of New Life Com murnt y&#13;
Church of Hope .&#13;
Ed. Note : This Labor Day week end ,&#13;
Sept. 4, 5 &amp; 6, Pastor Randy Duncan&#13;
and New Life Communit y Church of&#13;
Hope will host Midwest Spirit Ques t&#13;
'98 at lite Ramada Inn Confer ence Center&#13;
in LaPort e, Indian a. For furtlt er&#13;
information reader s may conta c t the&#13;
church office at 219-778 -2803 .&#13;
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FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Lighten up&#13;
Monk has a ministry of mirth&#13;
BY JEFF DONN&#13;
PETERSHAM. Mass. - When Brother&#13;
Craig isn't praying in the hushed solemnity&#13;
of his monastery, he's often cracking&#13;
one-liners.&#13;
Though he prays and meditates five&#13;
hours a day as a monk, Brother Craig&#13;
Driscoll has found time to write a book&#13;
on the funny side of life and fashion his&#13;
own Roman CaU1olic "mirth ministry."&#13;
Just for laughs, he speaks at churches,&#13;
libraries and religious conferences about&#13;
Ute power of humor to elevate the spirit.&#13;
He recently began writing a humor column,&#13;
"Oh, Brother!" for Grit, a secular&#13;
family magazine.&#13;
"I just believe that God wants people&#13;
to lighten up," he said in a recent interview.&#13;
"People are so stressed and tense&#13;
and angry."&#13;
A native of Fitchburg, Driscoll has&#13;
been wisecracking since he was a like.&#13;
In high school, he gravitated toward&#13;
comic theater and dreamed of a career in&#13;
acting. But a religious retreat turned his&#13;
aspirations upward, and he eventually&#13;
studied theology in Rome .&#13;
Never ordained as a pries t. Driscoll,&#13;
39, founded the Monks of Adoration&#13;
monastery 14 years ago in Petersham, a&#13;
central Massachusetts town in the wilderness&#13;
of lhe giant Quabbin Reservoir.&#13;
A self-confes sed bad cook, he says his&#13;
~rotherhood never considered making&#13;
Jam or some other food, as some&#13;
monasteries do to help support themselves.&#13;
But he knew how to write.&#13;
. He started on aust ere, erudite topic s,&#13;
hke the life of soon- to-be -ca nonized&#13;
Edith Stein and "the coming chastisement."&#13;
But two years ago, he took a&#13;
more secular tum and wrote a book on&#13;
dieting, "Love Yourself So ... Hate the&#13;
Weight." Telling how he lost more than&#13;
110 pounds, it gained him a modest&#13;
celebrity and set him on the path of selfhelp&#13;
writing from a Catholic perspective.&#13;
His speaking jobs had long revolved&#13;
around "very Catholic topics" iliough.&#13;
Then, about two years ago, he was giving&#13;
a talk and felt high anxiety around&#13;
the room. OK, so it wasn't Saul on the&#13;
road to Damascus. But Brother Craig&#13;
bad his own vision: He glimpsed the&#13;
potential force of humor to ease troubled&#13;
spirits.&#13;
"I discovered after you say a few sentences,&#13;
what can you say? Then I started&#13;
using humor on them," he said.&#13;
''Humor Helps!: The Benefits of&#13;
Hwnor, Laughter and Being Funny" was&#13;
published in June by Woodbridge Press.&#13;
In the 159-page work, Brother Craig&#13;
preac hes that "God wants you lo laugh&#13;
and be happy."&#13;
He also lampoons everything from&#13;
game shows lo his own life as a monastic&#13;
yuckmcister: "My ambition is to be&#13;
the world's funniest monk. Okay, the&#13;
competition isn't tough, given all that&#13;
silence."&#13;
A fellow brother, John Raymond,&#13;
took goofy ·photographic portraits of&#13;
Brother Craig for the book. One shows&#13;
him in his monk's hooded habit, wearing&#13;
a Groucho Marx mask and holding a&#13;
banana like a cigar.&#13;
Brother John says that monastic life&#13;
can actually heighten comedy because it&#13;
stands out so boldly against a backdrop&#13;
of quiet, sobriety and rout ine.&#13;
"Probably, under the circumstances,&#13;
things become funnier," he says, adding&#13;
that "it's probably essential in some&#13;
ways to close living too."&#13;
Brother Craig says that be has shaped&#13;
many of his ideas of what's funny from&#13;
comic writings, like those of SJ. Perelman&#13;
and Woody Allen. He likes humor&#13;
columni st Dave Barry and sometimes&#13;
seems to echo his style of rapi d-fire,&#13;
throwaway lines. He tries not to let the&#13;
monkeyshines get too wild, though.&#13;
"I certainly don't do any risque humor.&#13;
I don't do any insu lting humor," be&#13;
adds. "I do humor on life."&#13;
He says that religions faith f recs a&#13;
person to laugh wholeheartedly, even in&#13;
the face of so much human suffering in&#13;
the world. "If you don't have faith, then&#13;
you're probably nuts to laugh," he says.&#13;
"Henny Youngman put it very well:&#13;
He tried being an atheist, but he gave it&#13;
up because there were no holidays."&#13;
Ba-da-bing and back to the chapel he&#13;
goes.&#13;
Here are some excerpts from Brother&#13;
Craig Driscoll's book, "Humo r Helps!":&#13;
When you pray, be cheerful, be&#13;
humorous, be funny. Tell God jokes and&#13;
funny stories ... Now don't tell me that&#13;
God already knows the punch line. I&#13;
know He does. But He wants lo hear the&#13;
joke from you, in your owo words.&#13;
I once got my habit caught getting on&#13;
a train. One woman suggested, "Why&#13;
don't you tie up your dress?" I told her&#13;
that if I did that all the time it might&#13;
become a habit.&#13;
Brother Contracticus ... bas a good&#13;
heart - by which I mean he's never had a&#13;
bypass .&#13;
Anyway. here I am - a monk and a&#13;
kneel-down comic.&#13;
And once, a young man in an airport&#13;
"When you pray, be cheerful, be&#13;
humorous, be funny. Tell God jokes&#13;
and funny stories ... Now don't tell&#13;
me that God already knows the punch&#13;
line. I know He does. But He wants to&#13;
hear the joke from you,&#13;
in your own words. "&#13;
said, "I just wanted to meet you. I've&#13;
never met a monk before. You're iu&#13;
such an unusual profession." So I asked&#13;
him what he did - he was a lawyer who&#13;
didn't charge!&#13;
In a way, being a monk is a lot like&#13;
being a comic. Both take a lot of faith&#13;
and prayer. I actually believe I'm funny,&#13;
and I pray that the audience will laugh.&#13;
My idea of trauseendental is an ocean&#13;
liner .&#13;
"Humor Helps" can be ordered from&#13;
Woodbridge Press at (800) 237-6053.&#13;
(AP)&#13;
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SECOND STONE 7&#13;
MANNA&#13;
BY REV. DONNAE . SCHAPER&#13;
~gourkeel&#13;
We need to be guided by something&#13;
more than the need for guidance.&#13;
WHEN JESUS CAME into people's live s, they felt appreciated. They felt&#13;
noticed. They felt like they mattered. He did not issue awards, or patronage, or&#13;
monetary gifts. He issued apprecia tion. He issued comfort. He issued a sense of&#13;
belonging lo life, and to God, and to living by a deep keel. A deep keel is what a&#13;
big sailboat needs: ii needs more tlianju st a little one.&#13;
Jesus did not belittle the need for wine at weddings, or com on the Sabbath, or&#13;
workers to get paid for picking grapes. He did not make nonnal life and food&#13;
look ridiculous on behalf of a large and grandiose spirituality. Instead he honored&#13;
"things" sacramentally: he showed tl1eir connection to a deeper keel. It is hard to&#13;
even imagine Jesus as tired. We know him as frustrated, and grieving, and angry.&#13;
But tired he wasn't. He simply rested in the one he called his heavenly Fatllcr . .&#13;
If we want to feel less tired, all we have to do is deepen our keel. We need to&#13;
be guided by something more than the need for guidance. We ueed to befriend&#13;
Jesus' message and his witness to rest in God.&#13;
It is important to remember how simple the appreciations are tJiat are our own&#13;
responsibility. It is not our task to save or appreciate tile whole world. We only&#13;
• do our small part. Heavy water becomes light, wit11 mauy hands and hearts.&#13;
Yoke: Easy. Burden: Light.&#13;
Weariness creeps us on us much too often.&#13;
FA TIGUE CAN BE a friend. It is also a part of our holy way.&#13;
When Julia Ward Howe wrote in the last century that she was "tired, tired,&#13;
tired, way down into tile next century," she was talking about the struggle to&#13;
abolish slavery . Now, many of us can identify with that statement but we are&#13;
not talking about so obviously grand a mission . We are talking about the&#13;
sl1rinking economy, lengthy commutes, and a near Sabbathlessness. My aunt&#13;
used to do 24 claims a day as an insurance agent; now she is required to do 70.&#13;
She is not alone in overwork.&#13;
Many just want to "get throu gh the day." We want to "make it" through the&#13;
day. Weariness creeps up on us much too often. Even at breakfast some of us are&#13;
tired. By lunch we need a nap. \Vhcn both men and women now start our second&#13;
shift at home, we are often quite bleary eyed. We let the children watch the television&#13;
because we know they want "off'' time as much as we do. We tum on to&#13;
tum off.&#13;
One good way to tum off is to remember the promises of God. We will get&#13;
tired! And we wilJ also get untired. We will get beyond weariness. Even tile&#13;
youtlis will faint But then they will walk again.&#13;
We do not become weary in well doing.&#13;
THERE ARE PLENTY of reasons for increased fatigue. The causes include the&#13;
need for two or more incomes to support a household, increasing stimuli for&#13;
more expensive lifestyles, a desire for college educations, and a myriad of oilier&#13;
interacting economic , political, social issues. None of lhese will be changed by&#13;
words. They can and should be humanized! We humanize ourselves and our&#13;
fatigue by using words.&#13;
Words are well doings. They are mighty beginnings for humanizing tile world&#13;
of work.&#13;
We can use wise words to befriend fatigue. In this strategy, we welcome its&#13;
waming . We accept our limits . We can' t do any more claims than we can do! We&#13;
are, after all, human beings, not human doings. Befriending fatigue as a welcome&#13;
warning is a way to live beyond tired into time. Now time is the destination.&#13;
8 J ULY •AU OUST 1998&#13;
Being tired is a result of packing too much into too small a unit of time. It is&#13;
like a size 14 woman wearing size 12 jeans. The fit is not quite right. Bulges&#13;
occur. the bulges cause fatigue.&#13;
When we move from tired into time, we wear tile right size day. We acknowledge&#13;
our limitation s. We sec tl1e overweight nature of our lives. We slim tliem&#13;
down. We w1clutter them. We forgive ourselves excess. We make plans for less&#13;
excess. We become comfortable again. We may not change the direction of the&#13;
economy but we change our own directions.&#13;
We do not become weary in well doing!&#13;
Whatever lies before me is not blocking&#13;
my next step: it is my next step .&#13;
MOST OF US LIVE in packed time. We are living on too many levels at once.&#13;
\V c are worrying about what we didu' t do yesterday or what we must get done by&#13;
tomorrow. We are not here . We arc not borne in here. We are "there,"in anxiety.&#13;
The anxiety makes us tired. If we accept our fatigue as a warning, we can make&#13;
fatigue our friend. If we listen deeply to it, we may even hear the call from God.&#13;
That call includes refonning our economy. and our own personal life. Both arc&#13;
implied when fatigue is our friend, not either. We may be tired now, but we&#13;
don't need to be tired forever.&#13;
Failure anal ysts say things fail from the interaction of difficulty, not just one&#13;
thing. Just as we will nol be less tired by onJy one strn tcgy. so we will nol be&#13;
released from fatigue if our job dehumanizes us. Some attention to tl1c economic&#13;
reality is necessary for the spiritual strategics to work. Also, we need to be part&#13;
of a commwlity of spiritual strategy. We can' t do it alone.&#13;
How do we bef ricnd fatigue? We slop doing some of the things that make ~15&#13;
tired. We remove some of the obstacles in our way. Maureen Brady says the sp1r·&#13;
itual strategy well when she says, "Whatever lies before me _is not blocki~g my&#13;
next step: it is my next step." We get beyond our fatigue usmg person-fnendly&#13;
strategies. We do not get over fatigue by making ourselves crazy gcttmg beyon&lt;l&#13;
i I.&#13;
God can be counted on to show up at the bottom&#13;
of the bottom of the bottom of trouble.&#13;
T. S. ELIOT SAID, "You bring me news of a door that opens at the end of a&#13;
corridor, swtlight and singing, when I had felt sure tllat every corridor only led to&#13;
another, or to a blank wall." Those who have made friends out of tlicir own trou•&#13;
blc know what he means. We have come to know the dark places within us and&#13;
we have seen tlieir doors and windows. I have become intimately acquainted with&#13;
tl1e bottom of my stomach. It opens! But not until it is ready to open . Pain&#13;
takes its own good time. But God, whom Eliot is addressing here, can be&#13;
counted on to show up at the bottom of the bottom of the bottom of tile trouble&#13;
• and there to open a door.&#13;
Folk wisdom tells us that "God never shuts a window not to open anotlicr." I&#13;
remember being in a church once where all the windows were open and a service&#13;
was being conducted . A gusty wind blew up on both sides of the church . The&#13;
ushers shut all the windows, all very quickly. Air pressure opened one back up!&#13;
The whole congregation smiled . We knew tliat God uses air pressure to make a&#13;
point.&#13;
Even tile stress and pressure of our lives may carry God.&#13;
The Rev. Don11aE . Schaper is Associate Co11ferec1e1 Minister&#13;
with the Massachusetts Confere11ce of the U,rited Church of Christ.&#13;
fALSE HOPE,&#13;
FromPagel&#13;
cannot be changed," Johnson said.&#13;
"Indeed the more truthful 'ex-gay' counselors&#13;
privately tell their clients what&#13;
they rarely acknowledge in public - that&#13;
they cannot change a gay or lesbian person's&#13;
same-gender attractions."&#13;
He said the ads seemed timed to coincide&#13;
with a political effort to overturn&#13;
President Clinton's executive order banning&#13;
discrimination based on sexual orientation&#13;
in federa l agencies and to&#13;
oppose the Employment NonDiscrimination&#13;
Act.&#13;
"Such organizations cannot afford for&#13;
the fact of tl1e innate nature of sexual&#13;
orientation - be it heterosex~11. bisexual&#13;
or homosexual - to be widely accepted,"&#13;
"Indeed the more truthful 'ex-gay'&#13;
counselors privately tell their clients&#13;
what they rarely acknowledge in public -&#13;
that they cannot change a gay or lesbian&#13;
person's same-gender attractions."&#13;
MISSING,&#13;
FromPageS&#13;
with the old, in with the new; if you&#13;
fall off the horse, jump back into the&#13;
saddle; pick yourself up, dust yourself&#13;
off, and start all over again; when one&#13;
door shuts, another opens. Though nagging&#13;
was the inkling that I was not&#13;
pausing long enough to recognize how I&#13;
used replacement as a means of shoring&#13;
myself up against my shapeshifter,&#13;
replacing seemed inevitable, even necessary.&#13;
I could not bear that pause.&#13;
It seems , as I look around, that we&#13;
never quite leave the fairy -tale aura of&#13;
childhood. At times this looks cultural;&#13;
other times, psy chological; but, most&#13;
often, just plain human . Our social glue&#13;
is the assumption of a happily-ever-afte r&#13;
story against which we measure the pity&#13;
of lives that fall short of it. Yet the reality&#13;
of having attained a something once&#13;
missing seems to me much more gray a&#13;
matter , an uneasy tension between rainbow&#13;
promise and steel-toned fact. But&#13;
what else could one expect of a&#13;
· shapeshifter?&#13;
The dream of freedom to Wlfurl one's&#13;
inner wings pales with awakening to a&#13;
world where a true sense of freedom is&#13;
contingent upon a balance between&#13;
structure and soar . As in fine writing&#13;
the free flow of rich imagery, unbounded&#13;
in expressiveness and depth of meaning,&#13;
comes not in abandon but mindful of&#13;
fonn, so too in life.&#13;
Beliefs. too, are such that they rein&#13;
the power of psyche and spirit in a&#13;
directed focus upon a singular truth. But&#13;
how quickly they fall apart or , worse,&#13;
become those errors to which we cling.&#13;
when taken out of their conte,;t! Most&#13;
of us know, at least in the quieter&#13;
moments of our live s, that much of&#13;
what we believe is not so in all ways,&#13;
but nonetheless fiercely do we_ clutch&#13;
our beliefs to us, even in the face of&#13;
their poverty .&#13;
The freedom to e,;pre ss and e,;plore;&#13;
fresh ideas to stir the imagination or&#13;
ignite a sense of infinite meaning ;&#13;
human connections to make real our&#13;
heart's hope for a God who wears skin -&#13;
these are as much a part of being human&#13;
as breathing or eating. Without them we&#13;
are the less, poorer every bit as much as&#13;
if we were denied nourishment , sleep or&#13;
shelter . I do not trivialize their cruciaJ&#13;
role, even if a shapeshiftiog role, in the&#13;
very fabric of our lives, in my life.&#13;
Unquestionably , something is missing&#13;
in my life. But before rushing to&#13;
name this shapeshifter one more time,&#13;
prior to relinquishing this most acute&#13;
lack and embracing the balm of a named&#13;
focus, I think I will let this shapeshifter&#13;
just be. The discomfort is yet an easier&#13;
pill to swallow than the remedies I've&#13;
gulpedd own in the past.&#13;
Catheri11e Groves is editor of The&#13;
Christia 11 New Age Quarterly. from&#13;
which this article is repri11ted.&#13;
Johnson said. He noted that the American&#13;
Psychological Associa ,tion and the&#13;
American Medical Association have&#13;
repudiated the claims of ex-gay ministries.&#13;
Johnson, whose title is Minister for&#13;
CATHOLICS,&#13;
From Pagel&#13;
lion. Human beings see the appearance,&#13;
• but tlie Lord looks into the bean."'&#13;
Always Our Children goes on to say&#13;
"it is appropriate to understand sexual&#13;
orientation... as a deep -seated dimension&#13;
of one's personality and to recognize&#13;
its relative stability in a person."&#13;
Miailovich also said, "Always Our&#13;
Children reminds parents of homosexual&#13;
persons that they should respect 'a person's&#13;
freedom to choose or refuse therapy&#13;
directed toward changing a homosexual&#13;
orientation. Given the present&#13;
state of medical and psychological&#13;
knowledge , there is no guarantee that&#13;
such therapy will succeed. Thus there&#13;
may be no obligation to undertake it,&#13;
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender&#13;
Concerns, has been an ordained minister&#13;
in the United Church of Christ since&#13;
1972. He was the first openly gay person&#13;
ordained to the Christian ministry&#13;
in modem times.&#13;
through some may find it helpful.'&#13;
"And that is the truth," Miailovich&#13;
said. "Too many people have gone&#13;
down the change therapy road only to&#13;
experience even greater pain than when&#13;
tl1ey first came out as gay or lesbian.&#13;
The groups supporting a change -campaign&#13;
instead of helping people · live&#13;
integrated lives are hurting women and&#13;
men who have struggled, in some cases&#13;
for years, to integrate their se,;ual orientation&#13;
witli their faith. To say that lesbians,&#13;
gay men, bise,;u,1.sl and transgendered&#13;
persons cannot have a relationship&#13;
with God is misleading and destructive.&#13;
To say that hom.ose,;uality is a sin is&#13;
wrong."&#13;
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SE CO ND ST O NE 9&#13;
Caliof mia-RlcifUicn itedM ethooists&#13;
declarec hurch' welcomingt'o all people&#13;
BY JIM JOHNSON&#13;
MORE THAN l,600 United Methodists&#13;
attending the 1998 session of the Califomia-&#13;
Pacific Annual Conference have&#13;
pledged to make tl1eir local churches&#13;
"welcoming" to all people without&#13;
regard to sexual orientation.&#13;
The conference's new directional statement&#13;
came after several days of spiritual&#13;
discernmen t in which delegates tried to&#13;
understand God's will regarding homosexuality.&#13;
The conference, which met&#13;
June 17-21, includes 407 churches in&#13;
Soutllem California, Hawaii, Saipan and&#13;
Guam.&#13;
The choice of the word "welcoming"&#13;
represents a new way of identifying how&#13;
a conference is approaching tlie issue of&#13;
homosexuality . More common terms&#13;
adoptedb yotberconferencaens di ndividual&#13;
churches are "reconciling" (accepting&#13;
all people into the life of the church)&#13;
and "transforming" (reflecting the t,elief&#13;
that homosexuality is a sin but that God&#13;
can "transfollll" gays and lesbians).&#13;
United Methodists in tl1e CaliforoiaPacific&#13;
conference have debated the issue&#13;
of gay and lesbian participation in tlie&#13;
life of the local church for several years.&#13;
Al the 199'7 conference session, delegates&#13;
agreed to a yeac-long study of&#13;
whether the conference would declare&#13;
itself "reconciling" or "transforming ."&#13;
What was different about this year's&#13;
action was that conservatives and liberals&#13;
, gays and lesbian s, lay and clergy, I&#13;
young and old stood up to affirm the&#13;
direction of the annual conference. People&#13;
on both sides of the issue felt they&#13;
could suppo rt the idea of havin g a&#13;
"welcoming" conference or congregation&#13;
. By not using the labels&#13;
"reconciling" or "transfonning," they&#13;
■&#13;
By not using&#13;
the labels&#13;
"reconciling" or&#13;
"transforming,"&#13;
they avoided&#13;
saying they&#13;
accepted or&#13;
rejected a&#13;
particular&#13;
sexual&#13;
orientation.&#13;
■&#13;
avoided saying tlley accepted or rejected&#13;
a particular sexual orientation.&#13;
Using the new approach of discemment,&#13;
conference members were asked to&#13;
commit personally to "affinning all&#13;
members as Christian in spite of individual&#13;
differences, and to consider all&#13;
members as a part of tlie body of Christ&#13;
while working to determine the will of&#13;
God.''&#13;
Creech back in North Carolina&#13;
OMAHA, Neb. - The Rev. Jimmy&#13;
Creech, who created a rift in his First&#13;
United Methodist Church in Omaha by&#13;
performing a union ceremony for a lesbian&#13;
oonple last fall, has left Nebraska&#13;
to return to North Carolina.&#13;
Creech, who was not reassigned to the&#13;
Omaha church by Nebraska Bishop Joel&#13;
Martinez, stepped down from the pulpit&#13;
June 7.&#13;
"It is important for me to step aside&#13;
and let tllc church go,'' Creech said.&#13;
Creech will take a leave of absence&#13;
from the Nebraska conference of the&#13;
United Methodist Church and spend the&#13;
summer with his family at a Ocracoke&#13;
Jshmd off the coast of North Carolina .&#13;
10 JULY•At/GUST 1998&#13;
He said he and his wife intend to clean&#13;
cottages and take other odd jobs while&#13;
on tl1e island .&#13;
Theo, he said, he will move the family&#13;
to Raleigh, N.C., where he lived&#13;
before taking the Omaha appointment in&#13;
July 1996. He said he is uncertain what&#13;
he will do while in Raleigh. Creech was&#13;
ousted from the Fairmont United Metliodist&#13;
Church in Raleigh after marching&#13;
in a gay rights parade in l 990.&#13;
Creech said he has no regrets about&#13;
pcrfonning the union ceremony or the&#13;
resulting fallout. He said he is proud of&#13;
the couple he united and the integrity&#13;
they have shown. (AP)&#13;
Creechr evealsre rnaikable&#13;
stoiy of' oourageouws' omen&#13;
NEW YORK - The United Methodis t&#13;
pastor who was subjected to a church&#13;
trial after pcrfonning a same-sex covenant&#13;
service said it was the two women&#13;
he blessed "who were Intl y courageous ."&#13;
As preacher at the June 28 Gay Pride&#13;
Sunday service at Riverside Church in&#13;
New York, the Rev. Jimmy Creech&#13;
spoke both about the women themselves&#13;
and his belief that "the church&#13;
needs to be with every couple who&#13;
choose to make such a commitment."&#13;
Creech received a warm welcome at&#13;
Riverside, an interdenominational, multietlmic&#13;
congregation with 2,400 members&#13;
and affiliates. The Riverside Church&#13;
Council endorsed same-sex civil marriage&#13;
in April 1997.&#13;
He described tlle ceremony he conducted&#13;
last September for the two&#13;
women he calls Mary and Martha and&#13;
the journey that brought tl1em to that&#13;
point.&#13;
Mary grew up in a Mon11on family,&#13;
married and had a daughter, and stayed in&#13;
tl1at unhappy marriage until "she could&#13;
no longer Jove and be true to herself,"&#13;
he said ..&#13;
Martha, raised a Roman Cat11olic, had&#13;
t11ree children with a husband she considered&#13;
her best friend but finally could&#13;
110 longer live with the internal conflicts&#13;
she felt about her sexuality. After she&#13;
left the marriage, she joined a support&#13;
group .and found friend ship with a gay&#13;
man who also agonized over leaving his&#13;
wife. They introduced tl1eir spouses to&#13;
each other and the spouses later married .&#13;
"The former husband has remained&#13;
very supportive and very affinning,"&#13;
said Creech about Martha's spouse.&#13;
Previously, "God had been to diem an&#13;
enemy , an opposing force in their&#13;
lives," he added. But after accepting their&#13;
sexual orientation, they learned tl1at God&#13;
had not rejected them . Mary and Martha&#13;
were ab le to cast off their self-hatred&#13;
"and embrace the gifts that God had&#13;
given tl1em," he said.&#13;
The covenant ceremony occurred after&#13;
Mary and Martlia had been together for&#13;
several years, once they had accepted&#13;
God's love for them, love for themselves&#13;
and their love for each other.&#13;
"It was a triumph of love over fear,"&#13;
Creech explained . (UMNS)&#13;
United Methodist Churc ,h&#13;
close to schism, many say&#13;
BY JULIA McCORD&#13;
IN THEIR 214 years in America, Methodists&#13;
have fought, separated made up.&#13;
The denomination was tom apart in&#13;
the mid-1800s over the great moral&#13;
issue of the era -- slavery. · The Southern&#13;
and Nortllem wings of the church&#13;
were reunited in the late 1930s. And in&#13;
1%8, a merger with the Evangelica l&#13;
United Brethren created today's United&#13;
Methodist Omrch.&#13;
Now the 20tll-century love fest is&#13;
threatening to unravel over a new issue,&#13;
homosexuality. The issue has deeply&#13;
divided the 8.5 million-member denomination&#13;
, so much so that as the millennium&#13;
draws near Methodists are talking&#13;
openly of schism.&#13;
Emotions over the issue were on&#13;
prominent display in Kearney, Neb.,&#13;
during the ecclesiastical trial of the Rev.&#13;
Jimmy Creech for conducting what he&#13;
called a covenant ceremony for two&#13;
women in his Omaha congregation in&#13;
September.&#13;
''To a lot of United Methodists&#13;
today, homosexuality is a very serious&#13;
issue," said Charles Yrigoycn, general&#13;
secretary of the General Comm.ission on&#13;
Archives and Ilistory at Drew University&#13;
in Madison, NJ . "I don't think it's&#13;
possible to say whether it will divide&#13;
the church. Some think it will, or&#13;
could. Others don't. . .. It's the most&#13;
serious moral issue the church has grappled&#13;
with in the last couple of decades."&#13;
The court's decision to acquit Creech&#13;
caused a sensation, but it has done little&#13;
to resolve the controversy over homosexuality&#13;
. Nebraska Metl10dists remain&#13;
in an uproar, as does Creech's church -&#13;
tlle 1,900-member First United Metl1odist&#13;
Church in Omaha.&#13;
The "s" word - schism - was openly&#13;
discussed by 23 theologians and bishops&#13;
from both the liberal and co nservative&#13;
wings of the church who participated in&#13;
two rec ent dialogues on theological&#13;
diversity.&#13;
Participants met in Nashville,&#13;
Tenn., on Nov. 20 and 21 and again in&#13;
Dallas on Feb. 19 and 20. Two of them&#13;
- the Rev. J. Philip Wogaman , President&#13;
Clinton's pastor in Washington,&#13;
and tlle Rev. Gregory Stover of Sharonville,&#13;
Ohio - attended the Creech trial.&#13;
Wogaman testified for Creech.&#13;
In a document titled "In Search of&#13;
Unity," participants said issues related&#13;
SEE SOIISM, Next Page&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
TwoB aptisct hurchesst andf.i nn in acceptancoef g ays&#13;
BY SALLY MACDONALD&#13;
SEATTLE - Two of this city's most&#13;
historic Baptist churches - Seattle First&#13;
Baptist and University Baptist - may be&#13;
ousted from their denomination because&#13;
they welcome lesbians and gays in the&#13;
pews and the pulpit.&#13;
The American Baptist Churches of&#13;
the Norlhwest took steps toward doing&#13;
that by considering -resolutions that&#13;
w.ould limit approved sexual relationships&#13;
to "one man and one woman in a&#13;
monogamous marriage relationship" and&#13;
allow churches to be dismissed for&#13;
~ejecting "basic Christian beliefs and&#13;
practices or Baptist distinctives."&#13;
University Baptist has a gay copastor,&#13;
the Rev. Tim Phillips, and both&#13;
Seattle churches belong to a national&#13;
group of 31 Welcoming and Affirming&#13;
Baptist churches. The group pledges to&#13;
welcome lesbian, gay and bisexual&#13;
members, support same-sex partnerships&#13;
and advocate the same rights for homosexuals&#13;
as hetero sexuals.&#13;
·n1e congregations of the two Seattle&#13;
churches have voted in favor of tl1ose&#13;
SCHISM,&#13;
From Previous Page&#13;
to homose .xuality represent a fwtdamental&#13;
challenge "so deep as to harbor the&#13;
danger of explicit disunity or schism"&#13;
within the church, the group said. ,&#13;
Underlying the controversy, the group ·&#13;
said, is a basic disagreement over the·&#13;
authority of Scripture and divine revelation.&#13;
The group reached no consensus&#13;
about whether unity can be maintained&#13;
given such division s.&#13;
"Compatibilists," both liberal and&#13;
conservative, believe that the Methodist&#13;
umbrella is big enough to accommodate&#13;
sharply opposing points of view, the&#13;
statement said.&#13;
"lncompatibilists," it said, "do not&#13;
believe that these divergent judgments&#13;
can he housed indefinitely within the&#13;
same denomination. They believe that&#13;
the church is faced with a difficult&#13;
choice many will want to avoid but&#13;
which cannot ultimately be ignored."&#13;
The group recommended that the&#13;
Methodist Council of Bishops take the&#13;
lead in fostering theological dialogue&#13;
within the church and prepare a teaching&#13;
paper 011 the authority of Scripture and&#13;
divine revelation.&#13;
John C. Green, director of the Ray&#13;
C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics in&#13;
Akron, Ohio, said good leadership is&#13;
policies. If they are ousted from the&#13;
denomination - a process tl1at could take&#13;
years - tl1eir ministers could suffer financially&#13;
and, in an extreme event, the&#13;
churches could lose nonprofit tax status.&#13;
The two churches are among Seattle's&#13;
oldest. First Baptist was established&#13;
in 1872 by 11 pioneers who met in&#13;
homes at the start. Its building on the&#13;
comer of Seneca and Harvard streets on&#13;
Capitol Hill was completed in 1912.&#13;
The church has about 900 members.&#13;
University Baptist, established in&#13;
1902, has about 100 members.&#13;
The American Baptist regional board&#13;
pas sed a resolution last fall saying its&#13;
member churches would not recognize&#13;
the ordination of any pastor who is a&#13;
practicing homosexual. Phill ips, hired&#13;
in 1996 to pastor University Baptist&#13;
with the Rev. Anne Hall, said the resolution&#13;
litnits his ability to minister.&#13;
"This action is not one of love ," Hall&#13;
wrote members of the church afterward.&#13;
"It sounds like and feels like an action&#13;
of reprimand and insult."&#13;
"The momentum for Ibis is fear,"&#13;
paramount during decisive moments&#13;
such as these.&#13;
"When people have fundamental &lt;lisagreements,&#13;
leadership is critical," he&#13;
said. "If the situation isn't carefully&#13;
managed, the conflict will spill over&#13;
into other issues."&#13;
Green and James L. Guth of Funnan&#13;
University in Greenville, N.C., recently&#13;
published a book, "People Called Methodists,"&#13;
that underscores the differences&#13;
in Mctliodist thinking about homosexuality.&#13;
According to opinion survey data in&#13;
their book , 51 percent of Methodists and&#13;
53 percent of Americans say gays&#13;
shonld have the same rights as other&#13;
people. But only 40 percent of conservative&#13;
Methodists agree, compared with&#13;
64 percent of liberal Methodists.&#13;
Other data suggest that Method ists&#13;
sup port preventing discrimination&#13;
agains t lesbians and gays in the workplace&#13;
but would balk at guaranteeing&#13;
them the right to marriage and ordination,&#13;
Green said.&#13;
'The church wants to be supportive&#13;
of all people, including gays," he said.&#13;
"The Christian lradition, on the olhcr&#13;
hand, identifies certain aspects of homosexuality&#13;
as sinful, and Methodists want&#13;
to support that, too."&#13;
If history is any guide, open debate&#13;
and a flex.ibility by church hierarchies in&#13;
Phillips said. ·'People are afraid of either&#13;
homosexuals themselves or what homosex&#13;
uality means. But I can't help but&#13;
believe if Jesus were here now , he&#13;
would be most present to people like&#13;
me who were most excluded from the&#13;
church."&#13;
Until now, the denomination could&#13;
· remove a church from membership only&#13;
if tl1e church requested it or was inactive&#13;
for two years. Resolution s such as tlie&#13;
ones considered pave the way for major&#13;
cliange in a denomination tl1at bas prided&#13;
itself on allowing congregations to&#13;
interpret tl1e, Bible as the spirit moves&#13;
tl1cm.&#13;
"We're alarmed by the fact lhat they&#13;
are putting together a credo to conformity,"&#13;
said the Rev . Rodney Romney, pastor&#13;
of Seattle First Baptist. "It isn't historical.&#13;
The purpose of the Baptist&#13;
movement was to allow for diversity&#13;
and autonomy to exist. We Baptists&#13;
have always lived with diversity."&#13;
Siit American Baptist churches already&#13;
have been rejected by regional organizations&#13;
over the homosexuality issue -&#13;
four in the Bay Arca and one each in&#13;
allowing for local and regional interpre'.'.&#13;
tations of rules can help avert schism.&#13;
For example, the Catholic Church&#13;
in the 1800s raised serious moral questions&#13;
about slavery and forbade participation&#13;
in the slave trade, but it stopped&#13;
short of banning slaveholding by mem-&#13;
. bers, said Bryan LeBeau, a religious historian&#13;
at Creighton University.&#13;
"As a result, it was able to survive&#13;
as ooe body," l..eBeau said.&#13;
In contrast, Methodist bishops of&#13;
the era were afraid that a public debate&#13;
over slavery would cause schism, said&#13;
Yrigoyen, the Methodist historian.&#13;
They successfully suppressed discussion&#13;
of the issue at the church's 1836 and&#13;
1840 general conferences, or legislative&#13;
gatherings. But at the next general conference,&#13;
in 1844, the issue boiled over.&#13;
In a general conference lasting three&#13;
weeks, the longest ever, abolitionists&#13;
targeted a prominent Georgia bishop&#13;
who bad never traded in slaves but had&#13;
inherited some through marriage. The&#13;
bishop refused to emancipate his slaves&#13;
because to do so would have violated a&#13;
Georgia law. As a result, abolitionists&#13;
forced the general conference to oust&#13;
him.&#13;
Soutberu Melhodisls immediate! y&#13;
drew up a plan of secession. The dissi -&#13;
Alaska and Ohio. And while none has&#13;
gone on to be dismissed by the national&#13;
organization - a process that could take&#13;
up to two years - the resolutions signal&#13;
deep divisions in the denomination,&#13;
• which has 1.5 million members nationally.&#13;
If a church should be ousted by the&#13;
national body, its ministers would 110&#13;
longer be recognized as ordained American&#13;
Baptists and be ineligible for the&#13;
denomination'$ pension plan. The congregation&#13;
would have no support in&#13;
finding a pastor and the church might&#13;
lose its nonprofit tax status.&#13;
On the other hand, Romney pointed&#13;
, out, the denomination would lose about&#13;
$80,000 a year that Seattle First Baptist&#13;
sends to the mission program - some of&#13;
which comes back to the Northwest&#13;
'region.&#13;
"l suppose I'm naive about this, but&#13;
I'm really not deeply disturbed by it,"&#13;
Romney said. "I would be sorry to see it&#13;
happen, but it will not change one bit&#13;
the way we do what we do."&#13;
(Seattle Times)&#13;
dents organized the Methodist Episcopal&#13;
Church, South, in Louisville, Ky., in&#13;
1845. They elected two new bishops&#13;
and authorized a new hymnal and Book&#13;
of Discipline detailing the church's laws&#13;
and administrative guidelines, and they&#13;
immediately started arguing with the&#13;
Northern church over the division of&#13;
assets of a church publishing house, a&#13;
conflict that eventually was settled by&#13;
the U.S. Supreme Court.&#13;
In 1939, the Northern and Southern&#13;
churches and the Methodist Protestant&#13;
Church joined to create the Metl1odist&#13;
Church.&#13;
On the issue of homoseitualit y, at&#13;
least, Methodists are talking and have&#13;
been for more t11an two decades, And&#13;
that fact counse ls against pushing the&#13;
slavery comparis on too far, said Green,&#13;
. of the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied&#13;
Politics.&#13;
"We've had many votes on this issue&#13;
(homosexuality), 11 Green said. "The&#13;
issue has been aired regularly. One side&#13;
keeps losing. That's the difference.&#13;
One of the reasons for the slavery split&#13;
was that the issue wasn't discussed tmtil&#13;
no compromise was possib le.&#13;
"Methodist leaders hope discussion&#13;
and debate will lead to consensus . It&#13;
hasn't happened yet. 11 (Omaha World&#13;
Herald)&#13;
SECOND STONE 11&#13;
NATIONALN EWS&#13;
Presbyterialena deru rgesg aysl,e sbiantso persevere&#13;
BY JERRY VAN MARTER&#13;
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Jack Stotts,&#13;
recently retired president of Austin Pres- .&#13;
byterian Theological Seminary, urged&#13;
tl1e Covenant Network of Presbyterians&#13;
to persevere in their efforts to make the&#13;
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) more&#13;
inclusive during his keynote speech at&#13;
the organization's inaugural General&#13;
Assembly luncheon June 15.&#13;
More than 4.50 persons turned out for&#13;
the luncheon, including a dozen of the&#13;
17 foaner moderators who have endorsed&#13;
the Covenant Network's call to a more&#13;
inclusive church. Current moderator&#13;
Douglas W. Oldenburg also greeted tl1e&#13;
gatllering and indicated that he, too, will&#13;
sign on to the network's call.&#13;
The Covenant Network was formed&#13;
last summer to advocate in the presbyteries&#13;
for tile passage of Amendment A -&#13;
the commonly called "fidelity and integrity"&#13;
amendment - to "The Book of&#13;
Order." The amendment was defeated,&#13;
114-59, by the presbyteries, but Stotts&#13;
pleaded with the audience not to give&#13;
up. "I have had a lot of dreams tl1at did&#13;
not come tme," he said, quoting a favorite&#13;
author, "but I have had enough&#13;
dreams come true tllat I still believe in&#13;
the dream."&#13;
Stotts said the proper relationship between&#13;
unity and diversity "is a human&#13;
issue and promise ... and is symptomatic&#13;
of the same issues in American society."&#13;
He described the tension between&#13;
seeking unity and seeking diversity as&#13;
"an w1dergroW1d current that sometimes&#13;
creates turbulent waters on the surface -&#13;
like now." In such times, he added,&#13;
African-American Presbyterian&#13;
clergy vote to support inclusivity&#13;
BY JOHN GREGG&#13;
CHARLOTTE, N.C,. - In its annual preGeneral&#13;
Assembly Conversation, held in&#13;
Charlotte, N.C., on June 10-11, Semper&#13;
Reformanda (Always Being Reformed),&#13;
voted enthusiastic aJJy to endorse the&#13;
challenging open Jetter from AfricanAmerican&#13;
leaders in the denomination,&#13;
and to support Overture 98-65 from the&#13;
Presbytery of National Capital which&#13;
ask.s General Assembly to implement&#13;
the recommendations exth e open letter .&#13;
Specifically, the open letter and the&#13;
Overture ask the church to convene "a&#13;
special conference oo ~The Nature of the&#13;
Unity We Seek: in our Diversity,' to be&#13;
held within six months following the&#13;
adjournment of the 210th Gener al&#13;
Assembly (1998). "&#13;
The open letter and the Overture further&#13;
recommendth at: .&#13;
" (I) the conference include person s&#13;
who represen t the broad diversity of the&#13;
Presbyt erian Church (U .S.A.) a t this&#13;
point in time,&#13;
(2) the disc ussion foc us on an&#13;
info rmed analysis of the ~odem history&#13;
of ec clesi as tic al co nflict s within the&#13;
Reformed tradition and their resolution,&#13;
the nature of and need for j ustice in&#13;
church and society, the meani ng of the&#13;
love and grace of Jesus Christ in&#13;
Reformed theology, and the values and&#13;
contrib utions of our various diversities&#13;
io light of the unity already given to us;&#13;
ml&#13;
(3) the report from this conference,&#13;
12 J lJ LY • A U OUST l 9 9 8&#13;
with accompanying docume ·nts, be&#13;
pray,erfully received by the 211th General&#13;
Assembly (1999) as advisory and&#13;
ministerial counsel for all members and&#13;
congregations, We also call upon sessions,&#13;
presbyteries, synods, and theological&#13;
institution s to consider seriously&#13;
undertaking similar conferences prior to&#13;
the convening of the 21 Hh General&#13;
Assembly ( 1999)."&#13;
In the discussion before the vote,&#13;
memben of Semper Ref onnanda made it&#13;
clear that a conference on ''The Nature of&#13;
the Unity We Seek in our Diversity" is&#13;
exactly the topic for discussion that&#13;
should engage all Presbyterians who&#13;
would try to serve within the church&#13;
with creativity, integrity, and love.&#13;
Semper Refonnanda is an organization&#13;
of Presbyterians , which has four&#13;
emphases: Maturing in Gospel understanding,&#13;
appropriation , and expre ssion;&#13;
Working to correct systemic injustice in&#13;
church and society ; F.ncouraging com munities&#13;
of prayer /study/action/reflection;&#13;
and strategizing and action with&#13;
Pres byterian groups that share our mission&#13;
.&#13;
Gro up s tha t now participate in&#13;
SR(ABR) are: Chautauq ua Presbyterian&#13;
Renewal Group, Presbyterians for lesbian&#13;
and Gay Concerns, Presbyterian&#13;
Peace Fello wship, Presbyteria ns for&#13;
Restoring Creation, Voices of Sophia,&#13;
and The WitherspooSno ciety .&#13;
unity and diversity become "opposing&#13;
virtues."&#13;
Stotts warned tllat when the two virtues&#13;
are out of balance, "the dark side of&#13;
unity is exposed, which is imperialism,&#13;
. and the dark side of diversity is exposed,&#13;
which is the loss of identity."&#13;
He offered three theological principles&#13;
for finding balance between unity and&#13;
diversity: Unity precedes diversity -&#13;
Stotts cited Gal. 3:28 and said oneness&#13;
in Christ "is a costly unity because it&#13;
means giving up our enemies;" Unity&#13;
presumes diversity - Stotts said that&#13;
unity without diversity is uniformity,&#13;
which is static "and even worse,&#13;
boring." Unity in Christ is dynamic, he&#13;
added; Unity presupposes reaching out&#13;
to tl1e margins - Stotts said "being conscious&#13;
of our center is to be aware of tile&#13;
margin ... to draw from the strength of&#13;
the weak."&#13;
Fonner General Assembly moderator&#13;
Robert W. Bohl, who is co-moderator of&#13;
the Covenant Network with John M.&#13;
Buchanan, also a fonner General Assembly&#13;
moderator, was equally insistent that&#13;
those seeking greater diversity in the&#13;
church continue their struggle .&#13;
Saying he had "never borne the brunt&#13;
of so much vicious mail'' because of his .&#13;
support for Amen dment A, Bohl said,&#13;
"We must find a way lo be faithful...&#13;
We're the church, remember that, and we&#13;
will not allow ourselves to victimized&#13;
and villainized."&#13;
Growing more combative, Bohl said&#13;
"the issne here is not so much ordination&#13;
standards as it is control , domination&#13;
and ultimately, the destruction of&#13;
the church as we have known and loved&#13;
it. We must not let this denomination&#13;
become captive as the Southern Baptist&#13;
Convention has become captive to those&#13;
who systematically exclude and purge&#13;
from leadership those who disagree with&#13;
tl1em."&#13;
"I don't know how," Bohl said, "but&#13;
God will show us a way to be together&#13;
in this church, to be a church that is&#13;
open and inclusiv~ of all people ."&#13;
Covenant Network executive director&#13;
Pamela Byers of San Francisco&#13;
announced plans for a networksponsored&#13;
national conference, Nov. 5-&#13;
7, 1998, in Denver.&#13;
Rep. Barney Frank speaks at&#13;
Cathedraol f Hope MCC&#13;
DALLAS - Religion should not be used&#13;
to attack people for their sexual orientations,&#13;
U.S. Rep. Barney Frank said Jtwe&#13;
21 at a gay and lesbian church service at&#13;
the stan of Gay Pride Week.&#13;
Frank, who is gay, gave his first public&#13;
response to reoe.nt comments by Senate&#13;
Majority Leader Trent Lott that les bians&#13;
and gays should be helped "to&#13;
learn to control that problem."&#13;
"You do have people who are trying&#13;
to use religion as a stick to beat other&#13;
people with - particularly, for 9001er eason,&#13;
gay men and lesbians," Frank, DMass.,&#13;
told a service at the cathedral of .&#13;
Hope Metr opolitan Community&#13;
Church. ·&#13;
Lott , R-Miss ., made his remarks&#13;
while taping an interview for "The Ann sbOng&#13;
Williams Show" on the America&#13;
's Voice television netw&lt;Xk .&#13;
During their interv iew , Will iams&#13;
asked Lott if he consi ders homosexual ity&#13;
a sin and Lott replied , "Yeah, it is."&#13;
Lott added : "You should still love that&#13;
pers on. You should not try to mistreat&#13;
them or treat them as outcasts. You&#13;
should try to show them a way to deal&#13;
with that problem, just like alcohol ...&#13;
or sex addietioo ... or kleptomaniacs."&#13;
Asked about Lott's comments, House&#13;
~ajority Leader Dick Anney, R-Texas ,&#13;
said the Bible considers homosexuality a&#13;
sin and "I abide by the Bible." Ann ey&#13;
said he and his wife had read relevant&#13;
sections in the Bible that morning and&#13;
"I do not quarrel with I.he Bible on this&#13;
subject."&#13;
Frank said some people interpret the&#13;
Bible selectively .&#13;
"It also says that you're violati ng the&#13;
10 Commandments if you work on the&#13;
Sabbath or if you take the name of the&#13;
Lord in vain," Frank said. "It says that&#13;
if you're divorced and remarried. you're&#13;
doing something terrible."&#13;
Frank also said Armey and Lott were&#13;
respooding to frustrated religious conservati&#13;
ve s, who ha ve threat ened to dese rt&#13;
Republicans in the November congr essional&#13;
electiom and beyond .&#13;
"The y have said , 'We'll sit out the&#13;
next elec tion ; we'll mak e you lose , "'&#13;
Frank: told The Dall as Morning News .&#13;
"But the probl em is their agenda is one&#13;
that the general public does n't like."&#13;
Frank was introd uced by the Rev.&#13;
Michael S. Piazza, who drew la ughter&#13;
when he said, "All week long, we've&#13;
been given theological lessons by politicians&#13;
in Washington . We thought we&#13;
would give a politician from our side&#13;
his say." (AP)&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
_G_ ayc ouple's union blessedI llF .pisco!cEe remony&#13;
BY DEEPTI HAJELA&#13;
FAIR LAWN, New Jer sey - In a state&#13;
that does not legally recognize same-sex&#13;
unions, Jon and Michael Galluccio came&#13;
as close as they could to getting married.&#13;
Standing before fami ly an d friend s&#13;
during a weekly worship service at The&#13;
Episcopal Church of the Atonement on&#13;
June 21, the men made the ir vows to&#13;
each other and exchanged rings.&#13;
"When we first came out 16 years&#13;
ago, first fell in love, this wasn't an&#13;
option ," sa id Jon Ga lluc cio, who&#13;
chan ged his name earlier this year from&#13;
Jon Holden.&#13;
The coupl e had alre ady taken a big&#13;
step toward family life by jo intly adoptin&#13;
g a 2-year-old boy, in a case that&#13;
prompted a landmark chan ge in state&#13;
ado ption la ws las t December. As a&#13;
result, New Jersey became the first state&#13;
in th.e country to allow gay or unmarried&#13;
couples to jo intly adopt.&#13;
A settlement reached after the two&#13;
brought a class-acti on lawsuit required&#13;
the state Divis ion of Youth and Family&#13;
Lutheran commission says safety&#13;
for women more than physical&#13;
CHICAGO - Conversatio n centered on&#13;
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in&#13;
America (ELCA) being a safe place for&#13;
women, particularly for lesbians, when&#13;
the 12-mcmber steering committee of&#13;
the ELCA Commission for Women met&#13;
here March 20-22.&#13;
"We took some time to look at our&#13;
focus area of safety and what that really&#13;
means," said the Rev. Ann M. Tiemeyer,&#13;
New York, steering committe, , chair.&#13;
The commission's mandate is to "assist&#13;
t~e ELCA to realize lite full par ticipallon&#13;
of women, to create a safe euvironment&#13;
for women and to advocate j ustice&#13;
for women in the church and in society."&#13;
For its 10-year history the commission&#13;
has been involved in harassment&#13;
and domestic violence issues. Tiemeyer&#13;
said the "safe environment" that the&#13;
commission works to create is more&#13;
tlmn a place of physical safety but will&#13;
give women the freedom to discuss their&#13;
theological perspectives. "It's the safety&#13;
of being able to have your whole being&#13;
recoguized as part of God's gift 10 the&#13;
world," she said.&#13;
"As we challenge the church to&#13;
cha nge, we don't necessarily create&#13;
safety," Tiemeyer noted. The sleering&#13;
committee concluded lliat it must risk&#13;
its own safety to "offer it as a gift for&#13;
others," she said.&#13;
Tiemeyer is pastor of St. Jacobus&#13;
Lutheran Church, Woodside, Queens.&#13;
The commission participated earlie r in&#13;
an exercise in "moral deliberation" in&#13;
which it convened about a dozen women&#13;
for a confidential conversation about&#13;
what it means for the ELCA to be welcoming&#13;
and hospitable to lesbians. The&#13;
steering committee reviewed a videotnped&#13;
report from tlial conference.&#13;
The steering committee can1e to the&#13;
conclusiou that the personal experiences&#13;
of Christians must be considered while&#13;
reading such sources as the Bible and the&#13;
Luthcrmt Confessions for dire ction. "If&#13;
we share our stor ies, we get at how&#13;
those sources become important in our&#13;
lives," said Tiemeyer. "Moral delibera tion&#13;
has to start with the stories."&#13;
Another focus of tl1e Commission for&#13;
Women is to enable the ELCA "to&#13;
foster parl11ersh.ip between women and&#13;
men." The steering committee continued&#13;
its discussion of Promise Keepers,&#13;
who recen tly sent letters to some&#13;
Lutheran congregations asking for contribu&#13;
tions.&#13;
"We want to find a way to hold up the&#13;
value of men experie ncing and discovering&#13;
spiritua lity and suppor t amongst&#13;
each other. We know that's incredibly&#13;
importan t," said Tiemeyer . She said&#13;
Lutheran Men in Mission, the men's&#13;
organizatio n of the ELCA. is providing&#13;
"similar types of experiences with a&#13;
theology and a community that we&#13;
support."&#13;
''The Rev. Richard Jensen, a professor&#13;
of homi letics at ll1c Lutheran School of&#13;
Theology at Chicago, gave the committee&#13;
a presentation 011 Promise Keepers.&#13;
He outlined the promises tlmt the organization&#13;
is asking men to keep to God,&#13;
their wives and to their families.&#13;
"If all men did this, the world would&#13;
be a better plac e," Jensen said, noting&#13;
that Promise Keepers has had a very&#13;
positive impact on millions of lives.&#13;
On the other hand, Jensen said,&#13;
Lutheran theology is based on the fact&#13;
that people cannot keep all U1eir promises.&#13;
"God keeps promises," he said.&#13;
"fhe nature of the gospel is at stake&#13;
in Utls conversation," said Jensen. The&#13;
love of God is not given on the condition&#13;
that we keep promises or live by&#13;
social structures described in the Bible,&#13;
he said. (ELCA News Service)&#13;
Service s to scrap its policy barring joint&#13;
adoption of its wards by gay or unmarried&#13;
couple s.&#13;
The settle ment talks began af ter a&#13;
judge approv ed a petition by the couple&#13;
to adopt 2-year-old Adam Gallu ccio, .a&#13;
foster child the two men had cared for&#13;
since he was 3 month s old . The Galluccios&#13;
also plan to adopt an 18-month-old&#13;
foster daughter.&#13;
Holden, 34, and Gal luccio, 36 , were&#13;
rai sed as Roman Catholics but became&#13;
Episcopalians four years ago , saying the&#13;
Prot es ta nt de nomination was more&#13;
acceptin g of thei r sexual ori entation.&#13;
(AP)&#13;
Second MCC is target&#13;
of bomb threat&#13;
LOS ANGELES - In late May, for the&#13;
second lime in a two month period, a&#13;
congrega tion of the Universal Fellowship&#13;
of Metropolitan Community&#13;
Churches was the target of a bomb&#13;
tltreat.&#13;
Metropol itan Commmtity Church of&#13;
Bournemouth, England received anonymous&#13;
bomb threats which are under&#13;
investigation by local police.&#13;
Fundamentalist religiou may have&#13;
played a role in the bomb threats.&#13;
According to the Rev. Neil Thomas,&#13;
senior pastor of MCC Bournemouth, a&#13;
local fundamentalist church recently&#13;
condeinned the MCC ch urch. Tensions&#13;
were further heightened when three&#13;
members of the fundmnentalist church&#13;
moved their membership to Metropolitan&#13;
Comm wlity Church.&#13;
The Rev. Troy D. Perry, founder and&#13;
moderator of UFMCC said, "These&#13;
llireats are still another reminder of the&#13;
impor!ant work we have yet to accomplish&#13;
on behalf of gays, lesbians, bisexuals&#13;
and transgcndered persons. This&#13;
marks the second bomb threat again st&#13;
UFMCC congregations in the past two&#13;
months . Over the past 30 years, more&#13;
than 20 of our churches have been victimized&#13;
by arson or firebombing."&#13;
"I caJJ upon all people of goodwill to&#13;
uphold the Rev. Neil Thomas and the&#13;
congregation of Metropolitan Commu nity&#13;
Church of Boumemoutl1 witlt their&#13;
love and prayers during this ,lime," Perry&#13;
oow1&#13;
In April, the 3000-membcr Cathedral&#13;
of Hope Metropolitan Comm unit y&#13;
Church in Dallas, Texas, the world's largest&#13;
predominantly gay and lesbian congregation,&#13;
Wi1s the larg~t of a bomb&#13;
threat posted on the l11teme1. Tbe threats&#13;
ue under investigatio n by tl1e FBI.&#13;
Lutheran organization decides&#13;
against gathering for gay youth&#13;
CHICAGO - The youth of tl1e Evangelical&#13;
Lutheran Church in America&#13;
(ELCA) will "pursue a dynamic, interac tive,&#13;
open and welcoming ministry"&#13;
with gay, lesbian and bisexual young&#13;
people, but will "exclude the possibility&#13;
of a gathering" for homosexuaJ and&#13;
bisexual youth to precede tlte triennial&#13;
ELCA Youth Gathering in the year&#13;
2000. The board for the Lutheran&#13;
Youl11 Organization (LYO) met here&#13;
March5-8 .&#13;
At its 1997 convention, members of&#13;
t11e L YO passed a resolution to ask the&#13;
church to "investigate the feasibility" of&#13;
an event for gay, lesbian and bisexual&#13;
youth. Two other events that usually&#13;
precede the gathering are the Defiuitely&#13;
Abled Youth Leadership Event&#13;
(DAYLE) and the Multicultural Youth&#13;
Leadership Event (MYLE).&#13;
"We've found that planning this&#13;
gathering is not feasible because we&#13;
could not detcnnine how to create a safe&#13;
environment for gay, lesbian and bisexual&#13;
young people who decide to attend.&#13;
Because of this we felt that plann ing a&#13;
gathering like this may not be the best&#13;
way to do ministry," said Meredith&#13;
Lovell, board member from Elliwll&#13;
City, Md. Lovell is a member of the&#13;
task force organized to address the resolution&#13;
.&#13;
''The specific suggestion for a&#13;
gathering is not feasible but there arc&#13;
other things 10 do," said Jay McDivitt.&#13;
board member from Loveland, Colo.&#13;
''The intent of the resolution was to&#13;
,dck-start the youth organization into&#13;
doing ministry with gay, lesbian and&#13;
bisexual young people," he said.&#13;
"The youth organization is not&#13;
going to shut up about doing this ministry,"&#13;
McDivill said. "We will continue&#13;
to organize and re-envision how&#13;
we can pursue this ministry," he said.&#13;
At its meeting last fall the board&#13;
acted to designate l 998 as "A Year of&#13;
Prayer" for homosexual 1md bisexual&#13;
youth. (ELCA)&#13;
SECOND STONE 13&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
Dignity/USAB:i shop;d ilutinga ffirmingm essageto gays&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Leaders of&#13;
Dignity/USA say they are "very concerned"&#13;
by the latest efforts of the&#13;
National Conference of Catholic&#13;
Bishops (NCCB) and its Committee on&#13;
Marriage and Family Life to dilute the&#13;
message and spirit of Always Our&#13;
Children: A Pastoral Message to Parents&#13;
of Homosexual Children and Suggestions&#13;
for Pastoral Ministers.&#13;
On October 1, 1997, the U.S.&#13;
Catholic Bishops' Commillec on Marriage&#13;
and Family Life released Always&#13;
Onr Children, and at that time&#13;
Dignity/USA stated that they "welcome&#13;
the pastoral le(ler ... it is a positfve step&#13;
and we commend the bishops for their&#13;
improved sensitivity to the issues which&#13;
confront parents and their lesbian and&#13;
gay children, but all is not perfect."&#13;
"Today, however, our hope has been&#13;
replaced with conccm and fear that the&#13;
pastoral sensitivity that once marked&#13;
Always Our Children may have been&#13;
replaced with a dogmatic, legalistic&#13;
approach in the Church's ministry to&#13;
homose xual persons," said Charles L.&#13;
Cox, Dignity/USA Executive Director.&#13;
"The original version of Always Our&#13;
Ouldren was not perfect, and the latest&#13;
revision makes it even more imperfect.&#13;
E.ach of the changes represents a capitulation&#13;
to the conservative voices in the&#13;
Church," he said.&#13;
D' gnity/USA President Robert F.&#13;
Miailovich said, "When Always Our&#13;
Children was first released, Dignity /&#13;
USA expressed our disappointment in&#13;
'the bishops' continued distinction between&#13;
homosexual orientation and activity.'&#13;
Today it seems that the bishops&#13;
have decided that a pastoral message that&#13;
encourages sensitivity and open dialogue&#13;
is too risky for our Church."&#13;
What makes the revisions particularly&#13;
distressing to Dignity/USA is the fact&#13;
that Always Our Children, now to be in&#13;
its third printing, has been well received&#13;
by the faithful and viewed positively by&#13;
many Catholic families with homosexual&#13;
children. Last November, the&#13;
bishops' office said they had over 500&#13;
letters in support of the state ment and&#13;
hardly any against. For years families&#13;
have struggled with the reality of their&#13;
love for their homosexual children and&#13;
the teachings of the Catholic Church&#13;
toward their children. Commenting on&#13;
the substance and spirit of the revisions&#13;
to Always Our Children, Miailovich&#13;
said, "It seems that the hand that had&#13;
once been outstretched to the families of&#13;
Florida-Catholicsl aunch&#13;
ministryt o gaysa mid·p rotests&#13;
BY DEREK L. KINNER&#13;
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - ln a major&#13;
break from traditional practice, the&#13;
Catholic Church in Northeast Aorida&#13;
launched a new ministry for gay men&#13;
and women - with the pope's approval.&#13;
While about 300 gays and lesbians&#13;
attended Mass inside Jacksonville's&#13;
Assumption Catho lic Church, a smaller&#13;
gathering prayed outside and held signs&#13;
protesting the event&#13;
The Diocese of St. Augustine became&#13;
the second Catholic diocese in Rorida,&#13;
and the 36th in the nation, to start a gay&#13;
and lesbian ministry.&#13;
The move doesn't mean the church&#13;
has changed its stance. The new minis&#13;
try is simply an outreach program,&#13;
Bishop John J. Snyder said during a&#13;
Mass to start the ministry .&#13;
Snyder said he broached the subject&#13;
during a recent 20-minute audience with&#13;
Pope John Paul II. He said he told the&#13;
pontiff he planned to follow the chun:h's&#13;
teachings but wanted to reach out to lesbians&#13;
and gays and lbcir families.&#13;
Snyder said the pope sat quietly for a&#13;
few moments, then said, "We all need ·&#13;
redeemingd,o n't wer '&#13;
14 JULY •A UOUST 1998&#13;
The bishop said the ministry's purpose&#13;
is to bring gays and lesbians back&#13;
to the church.&#13;
"I fully realize we are not going to&#13;
keep everyone happy, especially those&#13;
on either end of the spectrum," Snyder&#13;
said.&#13;
"We want brothers and sisters to be&#13;
part of the church and to have an active&#13;
role," he said, adding that he remains&#13;
"fully committed to upholding the&#13;
teachings of the church."&#13;
Kathleen Bagg-Morgan, the diocese's&#13;
spokeswoman, said the diocese, which&#13;
covers 17 counties in Northeast and&#13;
Central Aorida, has begun reaching out&#13;
to gays and lesbians in an effort to&#13;
,acrease understanding and compassion&#13;
tbroughont the community.&#13;
"We're not focusing so much on the&#13;
sexuality of this as we're focusing on&#13;
the human being," she said.&#13;
Snyder , during his homily, said the&#13;
church is making strides at reconcilia tion.&#13;
"We have taken steps," he said. "We&#13;
L,c: oot yet where we need to be.&#13;
"I believe that ultimate judgment&#13;
belongs to the Lord." (fimes-Union)&#13;
lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans gendered&#13;
persons has become less loving and&#13;
more threatening."&#13;
Miailovich also raised the question as&#13;
to why a document that in the words of&#13;
Committee chairman Bishop Thomas J.&#13;
O'Brien "was well received" was revised.&#13;
Miailovich said, "It is regrettable that&#13;
the American bishops, who only last&#13;
October felt free to release Always Our&#13;
Children on their own, now feel compelled&#13;
to consult with the Vatican's&#13;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the&#13;
Faith (CDF) on these matters. The sad&#13;
part is that the changes reveal the philosophical&#13;
and pastoral tensions within&#13;
the hierarchy. The document's new&#13;
tone of voice has the potential on the&#13;
one hand for dis suading some persons&#13;
who are in need of the Church's ministry&#13;
from approaching their local priest.&#13;
And yet on the other hand, the document&#13;
may be still viewed by some as not&#13;
strict enough to enjoy conservative support.&#13;
These conservative voices have&#13;
shown their power by getting the CDF&#13;
to intervene and pressuring the bishops&#13;
to make certain changes. Let us sec&#13;
now if they will make good on their&#13;
revised conunitrneut to ministry."&#13;
Dignity /USA leaders say they remain&#13;
committed to seeing that the original&#13;
message and pastoral sensitivity of&#13;
Always Our Children is retain ed · and&#13;
fully implemented. Their hope is that&#13;
the work started because of Always Our&#13;
Children by bishops, priests and pastoral&#13;
counselors will continue.&#13;
Dignity/USA has invited the U.S.&#13;
Catholic Bishops to recall their offer of&#13;
an "outstretched hand" and meet with&#13;
them to discuss how to proceed with&#13;
implementati ~n of Always Our Children.&#13;
California Catholics aggressively&#13;
courting gays and lesbians_&#13;
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. - The San&#13;
Dernardino Catholic Diocese is aggrcssi&#13;
vcly courting lesbians and gays in a&#13;
dramatic turnaround from years of condemning&#13;
a gay lifestyle as the surest&#13;
route to eternal damnation.&#13;
"We are telling them they are to~ly&#13;
welcome," said the Rev. Howard Lincoln,&#13;
spokesman for the diocese and a&#13;
priest at St. Catherine of Siena Church&#13;
in Rialto. "All forms of prejudice are a&#13;
fundamental act of disobedience against&#13;
the Lord who creates us .... II is profane&#13;
to assume God values the souls of&#13;
homosexuals less than heterosexuals. "&#13;
The diocese, which includes Riverside&#13;
and San Bernardino counties, set up a&#13;
special committee in February to examine&#13;
the needs of lesbians and gays and&#13;
now wants to establish a pennanent&#13;
office of gay and lesbian affairs.&#13;
"We think there are gay people sitting&#13;
in our pews suffering in silence who&#13;
don't feel part of the congregation," said&#13;
Joan Gonzales, chairwoman of the&#13;
diocese's newly fonned Ad Hoc Comrnittee&#13;
on Ministry to Gays and Lesbians.&#13;
"We want to open the doors lo every one.&#13;
We want support groups for gays&#13;
and lesbians. But we are going to go&#13;
slowly ," she said.&#13;
A committee member, the Rev.&#13;
Patrick Kirsch of Our Lady of the&#13;
Snows in Phelan , said: "If we don't&#13;
reach out, we are alienating a whole&#13;
population. "&#13;
The change came in September when&#13;
:the National Conference of Catholic&#13;
Bishops released a lengthy statement&#13;
snying people don't generally choose&#13;
their sexuality but arc given it by God.&#13;
"By itself. therefore, a homo sex ual&#13;
orientation cannot be considered sinful,&#13;
for morality presumes a freedom to&#13;
choose ;" the statement said. The&#13;
bishops called for compassion and love&#13;
for lesbians and gays along with an eud&#13;
to stereotyping.&#13;
There was skepticism.&#13;
Many priests tell homosexuals see~:&#13;
ing counseling "you don't belong here,&#13;
said Charles Cox, eitecutive director of&#13;
Washington-based Dignity USA, the&#13;
nation's largest organizatio n for gay,&#13;
lesbian and transgcnder Catholics.&#13;
For the past eig ht years, the Rev .&#13;
Peter Liuzzi has directed the Ministry&#13;
with Gays and Lesbians for the Los&#13;
Angeles Archdiocese . He frequently&#13;
counsels parents of gays who ask, "Will&#13;
my child go to hell?"&#13;
"I ask, does he feed the hungry, docs&#13;
he clothe the naked, docs he grow in&#13;
justice and compassion each day?" said&#13;
Liuzzi, noting most of his work involves&#13;
education about church teaching and&#13;
directing lesbians and gays to parishes&#13;
that are accepting of them.&#13;
"We have hundreds of gays and lesbians&#13;
attending church every Snuday, but&#13;
most gay people who are Cat1101ic are&#13;
alienated," Liuzzi said. "We try to tell&#13;
them that they can come back."&#13;
Lincoln noted that the church does&#13;
not support sex outside of marriage, and&#13;
since gays and lesbians cannot marry ,&#13;
celibacy is required. (AP)&#13;
C'hurch votes to&#13;
keep gay minister&#13;
MONTREAL - Members of a Presbyterian&#13;
congregation near Montreal have&#13;
voted to keep their gay mini ster despite&#13;
a threat of expulsion by the denomination's&#13;
national leadership .&#13;
The secret ballot was held Jooe 28 -&#13;
coincidental ly celebrated as Ga y Pride&#13;
Day acros s North America - at St.&#13;
Andrew 's Presbyterian Church in&#13;
Lachine, Quebec .&#13;
The brea kdown of the vote was not&#13;
di scl osed by the thr ee church official s&#13;
who count ed the ballot s - they simply&#13;
announced that a maj ority of the 90-&#13;
member congregation had voted to keep&#13;
Darryl Macdonald as their mini ster.&#13;
The Presbyterian Chur ch of Can ada&#13;
has re peat edly ordered the congregation&#13;
to fire Macd onald over the past three&#13;
years. Th e cong regation refused, insis ting&#13;
Macdonald was an effec tive, cari ng&#13;
preach er, and that his homosexuality&#13;
was irrelevant.&#13;
Earlier in June, the parish was given&#13;
a final ultimatum by tl1e church's highest&#13;
court to find another minister or be&#13;
expelled.&#13;
"When it came time to cast that ballot,&#13;
it was really difficult," said Suzanne&#13;
West, 34 , a St. Andrew's churchgoer for&#13;
six years,&#13;
"It was hard for me to look around&#13;
and see the people armmd me . People&#13;
were cryin g." .&#13;
Macdonald, who was not at the meeting,&#13;
had said pre viously tl1at the dispute&#13;
was about more than homosexual ity.&#13;
"It' s the que stion of tl1e Presbyte rian&#13;
Chur ch pulling more stock in its rule s&#13;
than it does in the membership's beliefs&#13;
and con viction s," he told The Montreal&#13;
Gaze tte. (AP)&#13;
Sexualitym ostv olatileo f toughi ssues&#13;
faci~g LambetCh onference&#13;
BY DA VIDSKI DMORE&#13;
WH EN NEARLY 800 Anglic an&#13;
bishops gath er on the grou nd s of the&#13;
Univ e rsi ty of Kent and Can terbury&#13;
Cathedr al this summer for the 13th&#13;
Lambeth Confe rence they will be bringing&#13;
more tbau their vestments . Most&#13;
will also be carting a satchel brimmi ng&#13;
with cultural , political and theolog ical&#13;
conce rns - some more volatile tlian others.&#13;
Al t11ough intema tion al debt has been&#13;
gi ven top bill ing by the co nfer ence&#13;
organizers, it is likely to be upstaged by&#13;
simmering issues o f fait h and orde r,&#13;
such as the role of gays and lesbians in&#13;
the church, es peciall y in the ordain ed&#13;
mi nistry . At the last conference in&#13;
1988, the ordination of women pushed&#13;
other issues to the wings, promp ting a&#13;
protest from African bishops who felt&#13;
their concerns over human rights, poverty,&#13;
debt relief and evangelism were&#13;
being shortchanged . Those issues are&#13;
back on tlie agenda , along with the keynote&#13;
issue of 1988 - structure and&#13;
accountability in the Anglican Communion&#13;
- but are just as vulnerable to&#13;
being shunted to tlle periphery as they&#13;
were in 1988.&#13;
Bishop Duncan Buchana n , bishop of&#13;
Joh annesb urg in the Church of the&#13;
Provi nce of Sou thern Africa, predicts&#13;
that sexuali ty could be the scene-stealer ,&#13;
Like the ordina tion of women to the&#13;
prie sthood and episcopate 10 years ago,&#13;
homosexuality "wi ll throw its shadow&#13;
pretty much over the present confer ence&#13;
," said Buchanan .&#13;
The pressure to put sexuality at center&#13;
stage is coming from several direction s.&#13;
The conservativ e wing of the Episcopal&#13;
Church in the United State s, represeut ed&#13;
by snch organizat ions as the Episcopal&#13;
Synod of America (ESA) , the American&#13;
Anglican Coun cil (AAC) and tlle lrenaeus&#13;
Fellowship of Bishops, is among&#13;
t11c mo5t persis tent. All thre e organi zatious&#13;
l,av•? endorsed the Kuala Lumpur&#13;
statement on sexual morali ty, which&#13;
opposes the ordination of non-celibate&#13;
gays and lesbians and the blessing of&#13;
same-sex unions.&#13;
The ESA also has called for the establishment&#13;
of an independent ''orthodox&#13;
province of the Anglican Communion"&#13;
within the bowidaries of the Episcopal&#13;
Church.&#13;
Siding with them are several primates&#13;
iwd bishops oflnird World provinces in&#13;
Issues concerning women, gays threaten&#13;
to tear apart global assembly&#13;
Church council splits&#13;
on' inclusiveness&#13;
ATHENS, Greece - A doctrinal rift is&#13;
threatening to pull apart the World&#13;
Council of Churches, the global assembly&#13;
formed 50 years ago to unite Christianity&#13;
.&#13;
Ironically, the di spute between the&#13;
council's dominant Protestant denominations&#13;
and its Orthodox Chri stian members&#13;
involves issues that touch directly&#13;
on the council 's mission of inclusion:&#13;
ordination of women and acceptance of&#13;
lesbians and gays and other ostracized&#13;
groups .&#13;
Orthodo x leaders, supported by other&#13;
conservative churche s, are demanding&#13;
the council backtrack on such liberal&#13;
reform s. The dispute threatens even&#13;
greater di vision s - including a closer&#13;
ecumenical bond between the Orthodox&#13;
church es and the Roman Catholic s, the ·&#13;
only major Christian church not a full&#13;
member in tlle 330-chur ch World Cowicil.&#13;
"Thi s is a clear signal that tlle Orthodox&#13;
are no lon ger satisfied ," said the&#13;
Rev . Hilar ion Alfe yev of the Russian&#13;
Orthod ox Chur ch's ex ternal relat ions&#13;
department.&#13;
The di vis ions also reflect the forces&#13;
reshaping Chri stiani ty as its nearly 2&#13;
billion belie vers prep are to celebrate&#13;
2,000 years since the bicth of Jesus.&#13;
"This is a real ity sweeping the human&#13;
famil y," said the Rev. James Morton ,&#13;
bead of the Inter faith Center of New&#13;
York. "The context has changed - people&#13;
are now in terested in a broader canvas."&#13;
But the Orthodo x churches , whose&#13;
350 million follow ers account for about&#13;
25 percen.t of the coun cil's membership ,&#13;
believe the group has already grown too&#13;
diverse and inclusive ,&#13;
They have decided to boycott World&#13;
Council -sponsored prayers and religiou s&#13;
celebrations and to abstain from voting,&#13;
They also threaten to snub some discussions&#13;
at the World Co uncil 's eight h&#13;
assembly, to be held in Decembe r in&#13;
Africa , Asia aud Sout h Ameri ca who&#13;
have advocated a strict biblical interpretation&#13;
of sexual moralit y and joined&#13;
ilieir North American coun terparts in&#13;
cal ling for grea ter accountability for&#13;
bishops operating outsi de "the historic&#13;
faith,"&#13;
Meeting at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia&#13;
in February 1997, about JO bishops and&#13;
church leaders from the SOL ·1,em Hemisphere&#13;
issued a stateme nt calling for "a&#13;
clear and unambiguous" teaching of the&#13;
biblical wider.1tanding of human sexual&#13;
ity which . iliey said, prohibit s sc;,.ual&#13;
expre ssion out side of marriage, and&#13;
Harare, Zimbabwe.&#13;
The decisions - initiated by the Russian&#13;
Orthodox Church - were made during&#13;
a rare meeting of a number of&#13;
Orthodox churches in the Greek city of&#13;
Salonica on May 1. They have not been&#13;
fully ratified by the churches but appear&#13;
certain to be adopted .&#13;
"We don't want to dissolve the coun cil,&#13;
but to restructure it," said Father&#13;
Geo rge Tetsi s , envoy to the council&#13;
envoy for F.cumenieal Patriarch Bartholomew&#13;
I, tlle spiritual leader of the&#13;
world's Orthodox Christians .&#13;
A spokesman for the Geneva-bas ed&#13;
council, John Newbury, acknowledged&#13;
the Orthodox move would have "ve ry&#13;
far -reaching implications. "&#13;
The Orthod ox are not alon e. Conservative&#13;
African churches have also&#13;
threatened a boycott of the Hara re&#13;
assembly if the council all ows gay&#13;
groups to parti cipate,&#13;
The Orthod ox church es also are seeking&#13;
a greater voice in the council , which&#13;
they maintain is steered by Protes tant&#13;
values.&#13;
Many Orthodox churches, particularl y&#13;
in Russia and Eastern Europe, perceive&#13;
Prot estant mi ssionary work as a threat&#13;
to tlleir cong regation s, whose connection&#13;
with tl1e Orth od ox chur ch was&#13;
eroded durin g de cades of Comm unisr&#13;
rule.&#13;
Orthodox leaders also are wary of possible&#13;
Roman Catho lic encroachment in&#13;
the form er Sovie t bloc - so urin g&#13;
Patriarch Bartholomew's efforts to mend&#13;
a nearly 1,000-year division between the&#13;
two church es.&#13;
But tile cri sis in tile World Cow1cil of&#13;
Churches could help bri ng Rome and&#13;
the Orthodox closer. Rev . AJfeyev noted&#13;
a proposal for a "family of chur ches"&#13;
between tlle Orthodox and the Roman&#13;
Catllolic s, who par1icipa te in only one&#13;
World Council committ ee, dealing with&#13;
doctrinal issues .'(AP)&#13;
declared as "unacceptable " the ordination&#13;
of non-ce li bate gays and lesb ians and&#13;
blessi ng of same-sex unions . The following&#13;
September at a co nference in&#13;
Dall as organize d by the AAC and&#13;
Bishop James Stan ton of Dalla s, 45&#13;
bishops - over half of whom were from&#13;
Third World provinces • reaffirmed the&#13;
Ku~a Lumpur statement and called for&#13;
greater acco untability and disciplin e for&#13;
those "who chcx,sc beliefs a.ud pr .... uccs&#13;
outside tlle boundari es of the his1ori l'&#13;
faith,"&#13;
The Standing Committee of tl1e Pro\'-&#13;
SEE LAMBETH, Page l 9&#13;
SE C OND ST ONl 15&#13;
....&#13;
I&#13;
Grollllbdr okenfo rl abw here&#13;
HIVp ioneewr ill seekc ure&#13;
NEW YORK - Tossing a spadeful of&#13;
dirt, the president of Queens College&#13;
symbolically began work on a new&#13;
AIDS research complex. ·&#13;
College President Allen Sessoms dug&#13;
into the campus turf June 23 to start&#13;
construction of a $30-million laboratory ·&#13;
to be heac,ted by one of the discoverers of&#13;
mv.&#13;
"My coIJeagues and I are impatient to&#13;
start work in these facilities ," said Dr.&#13;
Luc Montagnier, the Fr ench c odiscoverer&#13;
of the virus that causes the&#13;
fatal immune deficienc y disease. " It will&#13;
save many lives ."&#13;
Jay Bargmann, a senior executive of .&#13;
Rafael Vinoly Architects , said he would&#13;
"g uarantee that work on AIDS research&#13;
will begi n in this building 30 month s&#13;
from now" in the year 200 l.&#13;
Unti l then , Mon tag nier and his team&#13;
will work in a temporary laboratory on&#13;
the camp us.&#13;
"We are very opt imistic about&#13;
Ecumenical &amp; Inclusive&#13;
_,'1.,':N1 I(! I•, \· 1&#13;
.. -~fl&#13;
\, ~ .' -.~!h.M ,\· l",t ,.. -;i -·&#13;
1, . fl, .-1, I . l f&#13;
! ' I ~ I! (. '. l'Jl' .&#13;
I 'H?&#13;
improving treatment by bolstering the&#13;
immune system of patients and about&#13;
our ultimate goal, a vaccine to prevent&#13;
infection by the AIDS virus," Montagnier&#13;
said.&#13;
He added that it looked like a 10-year&#13;
job .&#13;
In addition to combating AIDS, Montagnier&#13;
has said he expected secondary&#13;
benefits from the research in the form of&#13;
treatments for cancer and, eventually ,&#13;
multiple sclerosis .&#13;
Montagni .er, whose research bas been&#13;
at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, is talcing&#13;
up a chair at Queens College&#13;
endowed with $3 million by Bernard&#13;
Salick , a graduate of the school who&#13;
became a physician and then a medical&#13;
entrepreneur. .. .&#13;
The new facili ty will be call ed the&#13;
Salick Center for Molec ular and Cellul ar&#13;
Biology, with space for a staff of 70 and&#13;
labo ratories for virology , immunolo gy,&#13;
molecular genetics and vaccine developmen&#13;
t.&#13;
The building, lookin g out on a&#13;
reflectin g pool, will be cre scent-shaped&#13;
and mo stly one story.&#13;
New York. City and state are contrib uting&#13;
nearly $20 million to the project .&#13;
The res t is being raised privat ely. (AP)&#13;
We are a Christian community of men&#13;
and women from various Catholic and&#13;
Protestant traditions involved in minstries&#13;
of love, compassion and reconciliation.&#13;
We live and work in the world,&#13;
supporting ourselves wid our ministries&#13;
and are inspired by the spirit of St.&#13;
Francis and St. Clare. We are not&#13;
canonically affiliated with wiy denomination.&#13;
~ Kl~DGE&#13;
For more information or a copy of our&#13;
newsletter, Footsteps, please write us:&#13;
V ocntion Dirtetor&#13;
PO Box 8340&#13;
New Orlenns, LA 70182&#13;
Mercy of God Community&#13;
16 JULY•AlJOUST 1998&#13;
Sisterly Conversati ons '98:&#13;
Cunent Concerns of&#13;
Lesbians of Faith&#13;
Vil'ginia Ramey Mollenkott&#13;
September 18 - 20&#13;
Agai,6 1998 :&#13;
Being Whole , Being Home&#13;
For young adulta 18 · 30&#13;
Brad Colby and Grace Fala&#13;
Octobe r 23 - 25&#13;
For f urther Information, contact:&#13;
KIRKRIDGE, 2495 FoK Gap Rd.&#13;
Bangor, PA I 8013 (610) 588-1793&#13;
www.kirkridge .org&#13;
Located on the beautiful Klttattnny Ridge of&#13;
eastern PA. 85 mUes from NYC and Phlla.&#13;
Kansasg irlr eceivens ational&#13;
awardf orA IDSs ervice&#13;
WICHITA , Kan. - A 14-year -old girl&#13;
whose mother and uncle died from AIDS&#13;
and whose father has the di sease will&#13;
receive her second national award for&#13;
work in AIDS education this summer.&#13;
Jamie Morales , of Wichita, is one of&#13;
20 winners of the 1998 Metropolitan&#13;
Life Foundation/National AIDS Fund&#13;
Caring Counts Award. It honors 12- to&#13;
18-year-olds whose work exemplifies&#13;
volunteerism and community service in&#13;
the fight against HIV and AIDS.&#13;
Jamie received $200 and a plaque dur ing&#13;
the Caring Counts Conference July&#13;
15-17 in Washington , D.C.&#13;
She has been giving presentations&#13;
about AIDS for six years , and she estimates&#13;
she 's spoken to 5,000 people .&#13;
Last May , she was one of 10 national&#13;
winners of the Prudential Spirit of&#13;
Communit y award . It is design ed to laud&#13;
young people who take it upon themsel&#13;
ves to improve their communitie s.&#13;
Jami e speak s about AIDS to school .&#13;
group s, church group s, health professional&#13;
s and "whoever calls ." She talks&#13;
about her parents' fight with AIDS and&#13;
her uncle's and godfather' s deaths from&#13;
AIDS. Jamie is not infected with the&#13;
AIDS virus.&#13;
She started giving AIDS presentations&#13;
when she was 8. Her legal guardian is&#13;
an AIDS educator and Jamie had accompanied&#13;
her to programs .&#13;
In her Caring Counts application, she&#13;
wrote; " I wanted to get involved because&#13;
I know what it is lik e. Not being infected&#13;
but being affected . I did not want&#13;
anyone to have to go through what I did&#13;
in order to learn about this disease."&#13;
Study finds connection between&#13;
men's self-esteem, unsafe sex&#13;
SAN FRA NCISCO - Young gay men&#13;
la cking self-e steem arc more likely to&#13;
fall prey to AIDS becau se they engage&#13;
in unsafe sex more often than other gay&#13;
men , a new study say s.&#13;
Th e Univer sity of Californi a study,&#13;
presen ted in June at the 12th World&#13;
AIDS Confer ence in Geneva , surv eyed&#13;
302 young gay me n in Santa Cruz ,&#13;
Santa Barbara and Eugene, Ore.&#13;
The participan ts, ages 18 lo 29, were&#13;
asked to res pond to three statem ents: I ·&#13;
am glad to be gay; My gay male friends&#13;
are good at helping me solve pers onal&#13;
problem s; and : At time s, I think I'm no&#13;
good at all .&#13;
Those who respond ed to the first two&#13;
ques tions affirmati vely, and negatively&#13;
to the third , were more likely to practice&#13;
safe sex , sai d Uni vers ity of Califo rnia,&#13;
San Fran cisco re searcher Craig Waldo,&#13;
who helped conduct the study.&#13;
Waldo said tha t am ong those men&#13;
"who accept themsel ves as gay the&#13;
most," 30 percen t bad engaged in unsafe&#13;
sex . That contra sted with 46 pe rce nt&#13;
amo ng those who '.'accept them selves&#13;
the leas t as gay," he said .&#13;
The conclusion drawn by Wald o:&#13;
Young gay men who are comfort able&#13;
with their sexuality are more psychologically&#13;
health y and more likel y to practice&#13;
safe sex.&#13;
" It's a good idea to help gay men&#13;
ac cept th emselves because it makes&#13;
them less risky sexual ly," be said. "As&#13;
time passes , if they get more support&#13;
for their identities, it will ultimate ly&#13;
have a favorable effect on their health ."&#13;
But some warn that high self-es teem&#13;
doesn't ensure the practice of safe sex .&#13;
, "My general impression is that it's a&#13;
lot more compl ex than tha t," said Ste phen&#13;
Le Blanc, an ac tivi st with ACT&#13;
UP Gold en Gate.&#13;
Le Blan c said he knows at least two&#13;
"ve zy we ll -e du ca ted, financiaJJ y we ll off,&#13;
prof essionall y successf ul gay men" who&#13;
have contr ac ted HlV via uns afe sex. In&#13;
·some cases , a partner doesn't real ize he's&#13;
ca rrying the vi rus ; in oth er s, a par tner&#13;
may be lying. .&#13;
"Th e ' par tner lying ' business I've&#13;
heard about many times from many people.&#13;
A lot of unsafe sex ~ urs in loving&#13;
relationship s," Le Blanc said.&#13;
In a separ ate but somewh at related&#13;
study conducted by UC researchers and&#13;
prese nted at the confere nce , the psychol&#13;
og ical well-being of HIV pat ients&#13;
was lin ked to their lik elih ood of&#13;
seriously treating the di sease .&#13;
In that study, 727 pa tients in seven&#13;
U.S. cities were survey ed. Patients who&#13;
felt they were part of a communit y and&#13;
invo lved in their own care were more&#13;
likely to take medication, k~ep medical&#13;
appointm ents and follow their caregi ver's&#13;
advice.&#13;
In con tras t, patients who fee l detach ed&#13;
from their sU1TOundings or depre ssed are&#13;
more apt to disreg ard medical trea tment,&#13;
the study found .&#13;
"The ps ychological well-being of HIV&#13;
patients plays a ro le in the ir adherence&#13;
to treatment," said Willi am Holzemer,&#13;
the study's lead investiga tor .&#13;
Holzemer's study surveye d a cross section&#13;
of HIV patients aero~ the country,&#13;
more than 75 percent of them men .&#13;
Among its other findings : Neithe r age&#13;
nor gender are factors in whether peop le&#13;
take their medicine.&#13;
LOS ANGELES - The Universal Fellow&#13;
ship of Metropolitan Community&#13;
Churches has receiv ed a $50,000 grant&#13;
from the Gill Foundation . The grant&#13;
will be used by the rapidly growing&#13;
organizati on for operational expcn ~es.&#13;
According to the Rev. Eld er Troy D.&#13;
Pe rry, found e r and moderator of&#13;
UFMCC , "We arc honored to receiv e&#13;
this grant from the Gill Foundation .&#13;
Th is grant comes at an important time&#13;
in the life of UFMCC as we prepare for&#13;
our 30th year of service , COJ1tinue to&#13;
expand our global technology base and&#13;
pr epare for the dedicati on of the&#13;
UFMCC World Cente r in 1999."&#13;
"We know tha t typi ca l first-time&#13;
grants from the Gill Foundation do not&#13;
exceed $ 15,000 ," said Perr y. "So this&#13;
first-time gr ant in the amou nt of&#13;
$50 ,000 speaks to the important work&#13;
UFMCC continues to carry out around&#13;
the world ." -&#13;
The Gill Fmwdation was founded in&#13;
1994 by Tim Gill, founder and chairper son&#13;
of Quark, Inc., a Denver-based com puter&#13;
softwar e company. The Gill Foundation&#13;
supports non-profit organi i.ations&#13;
which pu rsue ju stice and equality for&#13;
gay men and lesbians .&#13;
Church&amp;Or anizationNews&#13;
Gay friendly adult&#13;
care facili ty opens&#13;
Ari zo na Parac le te Ministr ies has&#13;
announced the ope ning of an adult care&#13;
facilit y th at is God -ce nter ed and gay&#13;
friendly. The fac ili ty open ed in May in&#13;
Phoenix al 1821 E. Avalon Driv e. The&#13;
home can accommoda te up to ten res idents&#13;
at a time. It offers a pleasan t&#13;
superv ised setting. The needs of those&#13;
who need some extra care but aren't&#13;
ready for n traditional nurs ing home are&#13;
addressed. The ministry is a member of&#13;
The Evangelical Network . For informa-&#13;
Events&#13;
American Baptists&#13;
Concerned&#13;
National Retreat&#13;
AUGUST 2-5, Isis Oasis in Geyserville,&#13;
Calif. is the setting for this retreat for sexual&#13;
minority Baptists and their supportive&#13;
friends for a time of fellowship, worship&#13;
and relaxation. Cost is $225. For information&#13;
con tact American Baptists Concerned,&#13;
P.O. Box 130792, St. Paul. MN&#13;
55113, (925)439-4672,&#13;
ambaptists@ao l.com.&#13;
Simply Divine: Rites of&#13;
the Gay Male Spirit&#13;
AUGUST 21-23, Ken White and John&#13;
Linscheid at Kir1cridge Retreat and Study&#13;
Center, 2495 Fox Gap Rd .. Bangor, PA&#13;
18013-9 359, 610-588-1793. Facilitators&#13;
say: ·we will gather again for the third&#13;
· lion contact Arizon a Paraclete Minis trie&#13;
s, Inc., P.O. Box 86758, Phoenix,&#13;
AZ ~-6 758, (602)265-0587.&#13;
Call for testimonies&#13;
Lead ers of Bethel Evangeli stic Ministries&#13;
are in the process of compiling a&#13;
book of lesbian/g a y Chris tian testimonies&#13;
and have issued a call for papers of&#13;
four to six pages. E.ach chapter will be a&#13;
- story of how a gay, lesbian, bisexual or&#13;
tran sge nderc d perso n came to know&#13;
Christ. For informati on, write to Bethel&#13;
Evangelis tic Mi nistries, P.O. Box&#13;
1778, Interl achen , FL32 148.&#13;
year to seek the divine in the midst of our&#13;
mountaintop gay community. We will&#13;
share our stories of gayness, of love and&#13;
illness, of dreams and aspirations, and of&#13;
personal or spiritual breakthroughs and&#13;
accomplishments. Creative protest, drag,&#13;
double entendre, camp - all testify to a rich&#13;
gay tradition of responding playfully to&#13;
both opportunity and oppression.• Led&#13;
by Ken White, Director of Continuing&#13;
Social Work Education at Temple University&#13;
and John Linscheid, a contributing editor&#13;
to The Other Side magazine. Both&#13;
have been helping gay friends create rituals&#13;
to mark significant passages in their&#13;
lives for the last ten years. Fee, $230.&#13;
Midwest SpiritQuest&#13;
SEPfEMBER 4-6, The Ramada Inn Conference&#13;
Center in LaPone, Indiana is the set-&#13;
SEE EVENTS, Page 20&#13;
PLGC celebrate years&#13;
of leadership&#13;
BY JOANNE HINES&#13;
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Snrrounded by&#13;
walls hung with hundreds of colorful&#13;
stoles, Presbyt erians for Lesbian and&#13;
Gay Concern s held their annual service&#13;
of reconciliation coinciding with the&#13;
General Assembly of the Presb yterian&#13;
Church (U.S.A.). Recognition and celebration&#13;
of the leadership of the organiza- ·&#13;
ti on was the agenda of the day.&#13;
After the introduction of the mostly&#13;
new board for the next year , speakers&#13;
Chris Glaser and Janie Spahr spoke&#13;
about how the past 20 years' di scussions&#13;
revolvin g around th e ordination of gay&#13;
and lesbian person s has affected their ·&#13;
mini stry .&#13;
While proclaiming that the 20 year&#13;
old ban on ordination has had a positive&#13;
effect ou the PC (U.S.A.) because more&#13;
light has been shed on the issue, both&#13;
spok e of their journey s of hurt and&#13;
hope.&#13;
Chris Glaser remembered that he had&#13;
been brought as a candidate for ordina tion&#13;
-exac tly 20 year s ago to the da y.&#13;
While understanding that in many ways&#13;
he has been identi fied as a professional&#13;
victim, he spoke eloque ntly that neither&#13;
his life nor his ministry ended with the&#13;
denial of his ordination. He is now a&#13;
successful author and the founder of the&#13;
Lazaru s Project. While determined to&#13;
work within the Presbyt erian Church for&#13;
change, he has proclaimed a "Eucharistic&#13;
fast," refusing communion ubtil change&#13;
comes about. He applauded the sacrificial&#13;
effort of unde rstanding parents and&#13;
friends and church es whose open hands&#13;
and arms embrace an open and inviting&#13;
membership.&#13;
Janie Spahr remember ed the time of&#13;
· early days in her famil y and in the&#13;
church . Ordained before 1978, she was&#13;
allowed to keep her ordination when she&#13;
came out, but could only serve in a specia&#13;
lize mini stry setting . She remain s&#13;
fervent in her determin ation to work for:&#13;
inclu sivity in the PC (lJ. S.A.) , that all&#13;
· may freely serve.&#13;
Both speak ers pleaded for all Presbyterians&#13;
to remember that lesbian , gay .&#13;
bise xual and transgender Presbyterians&#13;
are not "an issue," rather they are real&#13;
person s. _&#13;
The evening end ed with the presenta tion&#13;
of the Inclu sive Churc h Award to&#13;
Chris Glaser and Janie Spahr.&#13;
Names l\!Ial&lt;ln News&#13;
UCCL/GC&#13;
presents awards&#13;
The Southern California/Nevada Conference&#13;
Chapter of The United Church of&#13;
Christ Coalition for Lesbian, Gay,&#13;
Bisexual and Transgende red Conc erns&#13;
made the following award presentations&#13;
on June 13:&#13;
JOHN ELLINGTON , a seminarian at&#13;
The Cla remont Schoo l or Theolog y.&#13;
was presented with The MARGARET J.&#13;
JACOBY Scholar ship. Ellingtou is a&#13;
student -in-care of the Central Association&#13;
and the Clar emont Congregational&#13;
Church, UCC.&#13;
BILL and BE'ITY COLE received the&#13;
HOWARD and DONNA SELL Award .&#13;
The Co les were in strum ental in the&#13;
ado ption of the Open and Affirmi ng&#13;
Reso lution at First Con gregat ional&#13;
Church of Long Beach, and are longtime&#13;
supporters of the ONA program and&#13;
workers for justice for lesbian, gay,&#13;
bisexual and traosgendered persons&#13;
throughout the United Church of Christ&#13;
IRVINE UNITED CHURCH OF&#13;
CHRIST in Irvine, Calif .. received the&#13;
ELEONORE and OLIVER POWELL&#13;
AW ARD for demonstrating a visioo of'&#13;
• inclusi veness in livin g o ut lhei,- mis.&#13;
sion in the local communi ty.&#13;
.Pastor who led&#13;
:church's gay rights&#13;
efforts retires&#13;
THE REV. HAROLD PORT ER. 65,&#13;
preached his last sennon at Cinci1mati's&#13;
Mount Auburn Presby terian Church on&#13;
Jwte 7 and was scheduled to retire July&#13;
3 I. He is a Presbyt e rian minis ter&#13;
who led his chur ch to the forefront of&#13;
the de nomination' s ga y-rights move-&#13;
. meat.&#13;
Porter hopes to become a missionaryat&#13;
-lar ge , speakin g and lobbyi ng on&#13;
behalf of gay rights within the Presbyterian&#13;
Church (U.S.A.).&#13;
In the 15 years he has been senior&#13;
pastor at Mount Auburn Pres byterian,&#13;
Porter has become a oatiooal spokesman&#13;
for ordination of lesbians and gays.&#13;
About 20 percent of Mount Auburn&#13;
Presbyterian's UiO-member congregation&#13;
is gay. Under Porter's leadership, the&#13;
church bas refused to abide by the&#13;
denomination's ban on ordination of lesbians&#13;
and gays in clergy and lay leader ship&#13;
positions.&#13;
SF.C"'OND STONE 17&#13;
-·&#13;
One More River to c~&#13;
Onb eingb lacka ndg ay&#13;
Bool&lt;s&#13;
BY LARRY ROOD&#13;
KEITH BOYKIN can write! One More&#13;
River to Cross is both a candid, warm,&#13;
real personal memoir and a report of current&#13;
research and public policy on African-&#13;
American . g/l/b/t issues. The prose&#13;
is engaging and the research is fascinating.&#13;
fear from each other than from a raci st,&#13;
xenophobic, misogynist, and heterosexist&#13;
society."&#13;
If blacks and gays arc both oppressed,&#13;
is the oppression the same? Well, yes,&#13;
and no. By the time an AfricanAmerican,&#13;
has arrived at work in the&#13;
morning, she may well have confronted&#13;
clear expressions of racism two or three&#13;
times already. For gay and lesbian people,&#13;
such an unplea sant journey to work&#13;
is far less likely . We can choose when&#13;
and where to be out. However, for the&#13;
lesbian woman or gay man forced to&#13;
and gays. Soon after leaving the White&#13;
House Boykin was invited to speak to a&#13;
national gay organization. · When he&#13;
told them he had left the administration&#13;
and was writing a book on black/gay&#13;
issues, and that this is what he would&#13;
like to addre ss , he was uninvited . The&#13;
group didn't think black/gay issues were&#13;
of sufficient interest to warrant their&#13;
attention.&#13;
There is indeed massive homopho bia&#13;
in African-American communities.&#13;
However, in some recent surveys, there&#13;
is evidence that this is less prevalent&#13;
than in straight white America. The&#13;
■&#13;
gro ups, and individuals have shunn ed&#13;
black individuals and issues. Frequently,&#13;
white lesbians and gays do not feel&#13;
called upon to enlist in the fight against&#13;
racism. In fact, the cau ses are inseparably&#13;
linked . Either we all have justice,&#13;
or we don't. And unles s white lesbians&#13;
and gays can embrace racial ju stice as a&#13;
critical issne, we will continue our fragmentation&#13;
and weakness . We must&#13;
forge and maintain ac ti ve, working&#13;
alliance s.&#13;
Throughout One More River to&#13;
Cross, Boykin weaves his own mem oirs,&#13;
anecdotes from other black gay and&#13;
... there are clear differences,&#13;
but both racism and&#13;
heterosexism do fundamental&#13;
damage to their victims.&#13;
■&#13;
Boykin was a spe~ial assistant to the&#13;
president in Clinton's first administration&#13;
and now is executive director of the&#13;
National Black Gay and Lesbian Leadership&#13;
Forum. Since coming out as a 25-&#13;
year-o ld Harvard Law student, he has&#13;
been all over the country and gives the&#13;
reader a first hand report. He makes&#13;
clear that the so-called "family values"&#13;
coal ition has as its targets blacks, Hispanics,&#13;
women, and gays. " ... they hope&#13;
to divide these oppressed communities&#13;
by convincing us that we have more to&#13;
"live a lie," the experience is disempow- .&#13;
ering, dishonest, an d psychol ogically powerful tradition of the extended black&#13;
destructive. So, yes, there are clear dif- family means that individual s frequently&#13;
lesbian leaders, and academics, to make&#13;
an absolutely fascinating book . The&#13;
reader discovers the beaut y and truth of&#13;
being black and gay in America. II&#13;
deserves all five stars .&#13;
ferenees, but both racism and heterosex- arc not "shut out" and isolated because&#13;
ism do fwidamental damage to their vie- of sexual orientation. However , they&#13;
titns. also aren't supposed to talk about it.&#13;
There is considerable racism in the&#13;
Because skin color is always visible white gay community. Time after time&#13;
and racism is omnipre sent , many black Boykin documents instances where&#13;
Reprinted from Presf?yterians for&#13;
Lesbian/Gay Concerns' More light&#13;
lesbian women and gay men feel more white gay social gatherings, political Update.&#13;
comfonabl e among straigh t African - --------_-_-_-_-_-_- _-_-_-_-_-_--_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-__-_.." • "_•._ •__-•_-..__.. . _ ;;_. _______.;._ _.-. -._.-..,&#13;
Americans than among white lesbians&#13;
• ExcitingA rticles&amp; Features&#13;
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OURW ORLiDs t he recognizedm onthly&#13;
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travel in our 56-page, all-glossy format&#13;
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It's all here: from New York lo L.A.;&#13;
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OURW ORLDm agazineb eforyeo u go!&#13;
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Money-bade.,.- Finl..,. Nia in S WNb in plu, .....i,,p. . OulliclUo SA-, d USMS( auiiaooo)t U5'70 (1imln)&#13;
18 JULY • A U O lJ ST I 9 9 8&#13;
I The Erotic Contemplative&#13;
Reflections on the SpirituaJ Journey of the Gay/Lesbian Christian&#13;
By Michael B. Kelly&#13;
A Soc VOLUME STJMUL US FoR&#13;
LIVING, LOVING AND PRAYER:&#13;
I) Our Experience (75 min)&#13;
2) Revisioning Sexuality (80 min)&#13;
3) Exodus and A wakening (75 min)&#13;
4) The Desert and the Dark (88 min)&#13;
5) Libei-atiou (84 min)&#13;
6) The Road from Emmaus (63 miu)&#13;
Six volume video ser $199&#13;
Audio casserte tape set $99&#13;
Order through:&#13;
EROSpiritR esearchI nstitute&#13;
P. 0. Box 8340&#13;
New Orleans LA 70182&#13;
.. The Eroti c Cont empla!ive is the&#13;
most powerful and insightful study of&#13;
gay sph·ituality that I know of. I have&#13;
watched "The Road From Emmaus"&#13;
(tape G) three times and still find new&#13;
riches." •· JoHN J. McNEIL, PH.D.,&#13;
author of The Church and the&#13;
Homosexual.&#13;
'·In my theology classes , both gay and&#13;
straight seminarians benefit from&#13;
Kelly's integration of sexua lity with&#13;
Christian mysticism: · -· R OBERT Goss,&#13;
PH.D., author of Jesus Acted-Up.&#13;
"An excellent resou rce ... a worthw hile&#13;
investment." •• BoNDINGSa, publication&#13;
of New Ways Ministry.&#13;
"The Erotic Colllemplative video course&#13;
has h~lped gay men and lesbians who&#13;
grew up as Christians move toward&#13;
healing the wounds of the past." ••&#13;
JOSEPH KRAMER, M.Dtv., EROSpirit&#13;
Research Institute.&#13;
"This work should be considered&#13;
essentia l to anyone serious about their&#13;
sexua lity/spirit uality and mandatory for&#13;
anyone who in any way acts as a&#13;
spiritual director for gay and lesbian&#13;
people."-· More Light Update.&#13;
Mon: dculilcd information about each video is nvoilablc upon m1uesl . Also avnilnblc in Pal • the&#13;
Europeao/Austrathmfo rmal. Cnlifomin residents add 8.25% salc.s tW!. U.S. ship11inltc hnrge: S5.00.&#13;
lntcmn1ionul shipping charge: $35.00. I!) 1997. EROSpirir Rcscnrch lnstilulc.&#13;
Safety tips may&#13;
protect delicate&#13;
sensibilities&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
• I&#13;
To Bible -thwnpers who fear exposure&#13;
to gay people results in sudden conversion&#13;
to homosexuality. I offer the following&#13;
safety tips.&#13;
l. A void the mall or any specialty&#13;
shops (especially antiques stores, flea&#13;
markets and auctions) .&#13;
2. A void the ballet, concerts, museums,&#13;
festivals, pageants and the theater.&#13;
3. Avoid schools, restaurants, bars,&#13;
gyms and heaJlh clubs.&#13;
4. A void going to the movies or renting&#13;
a video.&#13;
5. A void hairdressers, fashion shows and&#13;
interior designers.&#13;
.LAMBETH,&#13;
FromPage15&#13;
ince of Southeast Asia not only&#13;
endorsed the statement but said that it&#13;
would not regard itself in communion&#13;
with any province that did not endor se&#13;
it. The ESA bi shops wrote to Archbishop&#13;
Moses Tay in May, "rejoicing in&#13;
the reports which have come out of the&#13;
recent mee ting of Anglican primates in&#13;
SECOND STONE Newspaper, ISSN&#13;
No. 1047-3971 , is published every&#13;
other month by Bailey Communications,&#13;
P.O. Box 8340, New Orleans,&#13;
LA 70182, secstone@aol.com. Copyright&#13;
1998 by Second Stone, a registered&#13;
trademark.&#13;
SUBSCRIPTI ONS, U.S.A. $19 per&#13;
year. Foreign subscribers add $10 for&#13;
postage. All payments U. S. currency&#13;
only.&#13;
ADVERTISIN G, For display advertising&#13;
information write to P.O. Box&#13;
8340, New Orleans, LA 70182 . Classified&#13;
advertising information is&#13;
found on the classified page. We&#13;
reserve the right to refuse any ad for&#13;
any reason.&#13;
EDITORIA L, Send letters, event&#13;
announcements, church and organization&#13;
news to Second Stone P.O. Box ·&#13;
8340, New Orleans, LA 70 182 or via&#13;
e•mail to secstone@aol.com. Manuscripts&#13;
to be returned should be&#13;
accompanied by a stamped, self&#13;
addressed envelope. Second Slone is&#13;
otherwise not responsible for the&#13;
return of any material.&#13;
SECOND STONE, a national ecumenical&#13;
and evangelieaJ Christian&#13;
newspaper with a specific outreach to&#13;
gay. lesbian and bisexual people.&#13;
PUBLISHER/EDITOR: Jim Bailey&#13;
6. Avoid health-care professionals or&#13;
anyone in a uniform.&#13;
7. Avoid professional ice shows, race&#13;
tracks , basketball, football, baseball,&#13;
etc.&#13;
8. Avoid listening to pop, jazz, classical&#13;
or any other type of music .&#13;
9. Avoid books , magazines, computers&#13;
and television.&#13;
10. Avoid your neighbors, the workplace&#13;
and your friends.&#13;
And one more lhing: Do be careful at&#13;
church.&#13;
Si11cerely,&#13;
UsaSmarr&#13;
This letter originally appeared in The&#13;
State newspaper.&#13;
Jerusalem" where "you made it abundantly&#13;
clear to the American primate&#13;
that you felt his province should be&#13;
expelled from tl1e world-wide Anglican&#13;
Communion should the Americ an&#13;
church fail to reverse its ipso facto&#13;
acceptance and endorsement of the ordination&#13;
of non-celibate homosexuals and&#13;
the blessing of same-sex unions."&#13;
Tb.cir foray has drawn counter fire&#13;
from several liberal bishops. most notably&#13;
from Bishop John Spong of Newark&#13;
who, in a paper sent last fall to all&#13;
Anglican prima~s . characterized conservati&#13;
ves as "uninformed religious people"&#13;
whose literal interpretation of the Bible&#13;
"has become one of embarrassment to&#13;
tl1e cause of Christ." His statements led&#13;
to a cau stic exchange of letters with the&#13;
Archbi shop of Canterbury George Carey&#13;
who scold ed Spong for his "hect oring&#13;
and intempera te tone." In return , Spong&#13;
took Carey to task for not being equally&#13;
criti cal of the host ile lan guage in both&#13;
the Kuala Lumpur and Dal las statements&#13;
whic h, he cont en ded, were " not j ust&#13;
intempe rate but offens ive, rude and&#13;
hosti le."&#13;
Thou gh Spo ng and Carey adopte d&#13;
more cor dial rhetoric in subsequent letters,&#13;
the prospec t of fire fights erupting&#13;
in the pl enaries and sectio n meetin gs&#13;
remains a serious concern for Bnchanan.&#13;
As cha ir of the Lambeth Conference&#13;
subsection dealing with human sexuality,&#13;
he will be responsible for refereeing&#13;
disputes, and ensuring that all views are&#13;
heard&#13;
"There arc some people who would&#13;
want to say that the question of homosexuality&#13;
is not fundamental to the&#13;
faith. Other people would say it is .. One&#13;
of my jobs at Canterbury is to try to&#13;
balance the whole lot of it," said Buchanan.&#13;
That will be a difficult assignment, he&#13;
admitted, given the impassioned stance&#13;
of both sides and the ambiguous evidence&#13;
each puts forward, whether from&#13;
science or scripture. The only way&#13;
through, he said, is to approach the&#13;
issue "with a degree of grace and love,&#13;
and be able to hear each other even if we&#13;
don't like what we are hearing ."&#13;
That is the process the Lambeth Conference&#13;
adopted 10 years ago when it&#13;
grappled with the issue of women's ordination.&#13;
Faced with potential schism&#13;
over the impending election and consecration&#13;
of women bishops in some&#13;
provinces such as the United States, the&#13;
bishops created a framework for maintaining&#13;
communion between provinces&#13;
on opposite sides of the issue. The&#13;
result was a monitoring group appointed&#13;
by Archbishop of Canterbury Robert&#13;
Runcie (named the Eames Commission&#13;
after its chair, Archbishop Robin Eames&#13;
of the Church of Ireland) that was&#13;
charged with ensuring that provinces&#13;
remain in communication with each&#13;
other and committed to a process of&#13;
open reception that str es ses courtesy,&#13;
tolerance and mutual respect.&#13;
Bishops and dioceses that support the&#13;
ordination of women need to recognize&#13;
"that within a genuinely open process of&#13;
reception there must be room for those&#13;
who disagree," stated the Eames Commission&#13;
in its final report to the Primates&#13;
Meeting in 1994. The approach&#13;
has been remarkably succe ssful according&#13;
to a study by the Eames Monitoring&#13;
Group, the successor to the Eames&#13;
Commission . All but four of the communion's&#13;
32 self-gov erning provinces&#13;
responded to the monitoring group's survey.&#13;
and all responses endorsed the principle&#13;
of open reception.&#13;
Some bi shop s are suggesting the&#13;
same process be applied to the equally&#13;
volatile iss ue of se xualit y - and Carey&#13;
has sent clear sign als th at he woul d&#13;
se ri ous l y co nside r such a move.&#13;
Whether the co nference chooses a study&#13;
process ove r an ex plici t doctrinal statement&#13;
like Kuala Lumpur will depend on&#13;
a co al ition of conse rvati ve U.S. and&#13;
Third World bishops. Several primates,&#13;
nota bly Tay of Southeast Asia and Maurice&#13;
Sinclair of the Southern Cone, have&#13;
made it clear they wilJ lobby for ~ge&#13;
of the Kuala Lump ur sta tement. Others,&#13;
including Archbishop David Gitari&#13;
of the Church of Kenya, are adopting a&#13;
more conciliatory posture.&#13;
Many African bishops regard the ordination&#13;
of gays and lesbians and blessing&#13;
of same-sex unions as a complete denial&#13;
of biblical truth, but acknowledge that&#13;
the Lambeth Conference as a whole&#13;
needs to study the issues in greater&#13;
depth, Gitari said. While he might support&#13;
a resolution on Kuala Lwnpur,&#13;
Gitari said he would also back the formation&#13;
of a commission to study sexuality&#13;
under the same guidelines used for&#13;
women's ordination.&#13;
An Eames Commission study also&#13;
has the support of Spong. His position&#13;
is not to force the rest of the Communion&#13;
to accept the ordination of gays and&#13;
lesbians, he said, but merely to prevent&#13;
the Communion from rendering judgment&#13;
on his diocese, where gay and lesbian&#13;
clergy are welcome. "I am seeking&#13;
the absence of a negative prohibition.&#13;
That is all I am seeking," said Spong.&#13;
The situation is analogous lo the&#13;
debate on polygamy at the last Lambeth&#13;
Conference, which largely reversed a&#13;
100-year-old ban on permitting polygamists&#13;
to join the church, he said . While&#13;
upholding monogamy as ordained by&#13;
God, the 1988 resolution allowed the&#13;
baptism and confirmation of polygamists&#13;
on the condition they not marry&#13;
again as long as their present wives&#13;
remained living.&#13;
Spong voted for the measure out of&#13;
pastoral concern for the women, be said,&#13;
who would have been divorced and&#13;
likely forced into prostitution if the ban&#13;
bad remained in effect. While willing to&#13;
make accommodations for the cultural&#13;
realities in east Africa, Spong isn't ready&#13;
to put polygamy on the same pJane as&#13;
ordaining gays and lesbians or blessing&#13;
same-sex unions.&#13;
"I think that polygam .y is a better&#13;
alternative for Kenya and Uganda than&#13;
the rigorously enforced Victorian&#13;
monogamy given the cultural realities,"&#13;
he said. "But I think those cultural real ities&#13;
ought to be addressed ."&#13;
For Gitari there is no comparison&#13;
given that the Bible acknowledg es and&#13;
acce pts polygam y in some inst ances&#13;
but doe s not condon e homose xuali ty.&#13;
Said Gi tari : "We don't say_ that having&#13;
more than one wife is ideal . We say it is&#13;
part of the fallen na ture of man, and we&#13;
app roach it from a pas toral point of&#13;
view."&#13;
If social sta bility is enough of a con cern&#13;
to warran t an acco mmod ati on of&#13;
po lygamy. Lambe th should show the&#13;
same tolerance to his diocese's ministry&#13;
to gays and lesbians, sa id Spong , highlighting&#13;
the issues of cultural differences&#13;
that under lie many Lambeth discussions.&#13;
"I am not going to say to the province&#13;
of Uganda that they have got to&#13;
take the same attitude toward gay people&#13;
that I talce," Spong said, "but they arc&#13;
not facing my reality." (ENS)&#13;
SE C-ON D STONE 19&#13;
...&#13;
BOOKS/PUBLICATIONS&#13;
"WONDERFUL DIVERSITY,• "Heartily&#13;
recommended,• "Philosophically intriguing,"&#13;
"Excellent.• Why do rev iewers&#13;
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QUARTERLY? Great articles and lively&#13;
columns make this bridge of dialogue between&#13;
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.EVENTS,&#13;
FromPage17&#13;
ting for this Labor Day Weekend gathering&#13;
hosted by New Life Community&#13;
Church of Hope. Organizers promise a&#13;
conference packed with wonderful speakers,&#13;
preachers, and singers bringing pertinent&#13;
subject matter and information use-'&#13;
ful to gay and lesbian Christians. There is&#13;
no registration fee. For information contact&#13;
New Life Community Church of Hope,&#13;
P.O. Box 9212, Michigan City, IN&#13;
46360-9212, (219)778-2803, (219)778- •&#13;
9332, innulife@netnitco.net.&#13;
5th Annual&#13;
NACDLGM Conference&#13;
SEPTEMBER 17-20 , To be held in&#13;
Rochester, NY, The National Association&#13;
of Catholic Diocesan Lesbian and Gay&#13;
Ministries sponsors its annual conference&#13;
'themed "Imaging Justice" for those in&#13;
ministry with gay/lesbian Catholics and&#13;
their families. Panelists include Bishops&#13;
Gabino Zavala and Matthew Clark with&#13;
presenters - Midge Miles and Fr. Richard&#13;
Peddicord . Twenty workshops will be&#13;
offered. For informati o n contact&#13;
NACDLGM, 433 Jefferson St., Oakland,&#13;
CA 94607, (510)46 5-93 44 , (716)465-&#13;
9344, NACDLGM@aol.com.&#13;
TRUTH,&#13;
From Page l&#13;
ove r the pas t three decades . Ancient spiritual&#13;
truths, libe ra ted from person al bias&#13;
and societ a) prej udice, can bring libera ting&#13;
freedom to all people, regar dl ess of&#13;
sexual orientation .&#13;
"The l ist of the ad's sponsors reads&#13;
like a 'Who's Who' of right-wing intol erance.&#13;
We should be reminded that no&#13;
group bas a lock on 'The Truth,' and&#13;
20 J lJ L Y • A U G U S T I 9 9 8&#13;
G~NERAL INT.EREST ,&#13;
THE NATIONAL CATHOLIC Church of&#13;
America offers an inclusive, gay/lesbian&#13;
affi rmin g spirituality and admission to&#13;
Holy Orders or incardination for qualified&#13;
men and women through non-residential&#13;
study. Valid apostolic lines, nontradit&#13;
ional relig ious life, emphasis on&#13;
establishment of parishes and missions.&#13;
Send letter of interest and $6.00 donation&#13;
(payable to "OSJD") to cover cost of our&#13;
40 page NCCA Handbook including canons&#13;
and other materials. Office of The&#13;
Primate, 166 Jay Street, Albany NY&#13;
12210. (518)434-8861. Email&#13;
NatCathCh@aol.com. NCCA Web Site&#13;
http://membe rs.aol.com /NatCathC h.&#13;
CANT GET TO CHURCH? We'll come to&#13;
you by audio cassette of our weekly worship.&#13;
Send request and donation to Holy&#13;
Spirit Fellowship, P.O. Box 91272, Long&#13;
Beach, CA 90809.&#13;
Affirmation:&#13;
Gay and Lesbian&#13;
Mormons Conference&#13;
SEPTEMBER 4-7, Affirmation, an intema-&#13;
1ional associalion or gay a nd les bia n Mor mons,&#13;
will hold its 20th annual conference&#13;
in Portland, Ore. Keynote speaker is&#13;
Chris Kimball, a law professor and multigeneration&#13;
Mormon with a genealogy that&#13;
includes past church president Spencer&#13;
Kimball. For information, write to P.O.&#13;
Box 80654, Portland, OR 97280-1654, or&#13;
call (503)288 -2037, or visit the organization's&#13;
web site at www.~ffirmation.org.&#13;
Open Door Conference&#13;
OCTOBER 30, Clergy, youth workers,&#13;
counselors, and others involved in ministry&#13;
may choose four from among 19 workshops&#13;
to be offered at Assisi Community&#13;
Center in Rochester, Minn . Keynote&#13;
speaker is Will Fellows, Author of "Farm&#13;
Boys: Lives of Gay Men from the Rural&#13;
Midwest.• A large resource fair will be&#13;
offered and the • Shower of Stoles" project&#13;
will be displayed. Sponsors include 12&#13;
national and regional religious organizations&#13;
and other s. For information call&#13;
(507)280-0648 o r e-mail:&#13;
opendoor conference@juno .com.&#13;
should be sk eptical of any group which&#13;
combine s th eir cl aim s of ' tru th' with&#13;
intolerance , shame. control and political&#13;
agendas.&#13;
"My atte ntion was especial ly draw n to&#13;
a line a t the bottom of the a&lt;l&#13;
which read, 'If you real ly love someone,&#13;
you'll tell them the tmt h. '&#13;
"We ll , here's the tmth for God's gay&#13;
_HOW TO READ R2R: Listings are&#13;
in alphab etical order by state, then&#13;
_by city . If a mailing address is&#13;
given in a listing the zip code&#13;
appears in the listing.&#13;
NNG = No name given. S=single,&#13;
C=committed . G=gay, L=lesbian,&#13;
T =tran sgendere d, B=bisexual,&#13;
S=straight. M=male, F=femal e.&#13;
Age, religiou s affiliation, occupation,&#13;
contact information.&#13;
CALIFORNIAD,O VVNEY&#13;
THEODORCER ANFORDS,G M,6 7, UFMCC,&#13;
RETIREDP,O B OX 13079, 0240-030576, 2-928-&#13;
4489.&#13;
CALIFORNIALO, NGB EACH&#13;
BRUCEB ENNIN,K SGM5, 1, CATHOLICJO, B&#13;
COACH/WAITE3R1,8 T EMPLEA VE# 7, 90814.&#13;
CALIFORNILAY, NWOOD&#13;
JOSEPHE STRADAS,G M3, 7, HOLYS PIRIT&#13;
FELLOWSHIHPO, MECARWEO RKERP,O&#13;
BOX5 2,9 02625, 62-626-17.7 6&#13;
CALIFORNIAP,A SADENA&#13;
BARRYD IXONS, GM4, 0, WORLDWIDCEH UA&#13;
GOD,T ECHNICAWL RITERd,e c4th@aol.com&#13;
FLORIDA, BRANDON&#13;
ROBERTM ORGANS,G M3, 6, PENTECOSTAU&#13;
APOSTOLICF,L IGHTA TTENDANT/MINISTER,&#13;
2023 CATTLEMADNR .,3 35118. 13-651-15.0 5&#13;
FLORIDA, INTERLACHEN&#13;
REV0. . RODGE,R CLF, 56, NONDENOMINATIONMAILN,&#13;
ISTE,R POB OX1 778,&#13;
32148.&#13;
REV. BARNIEW ENTWORTTHF,, 54,N ONDENOMINATION,&#13;
MAILNISTERP,O B OX1 778,&#13;
32148.&#13;
SR.Z ECHARIASHH, SC, LF,5 6, INDEPENDENTC&#13;
ATHOLIC HURCHP, RIESTR/ ELIGIOUSS&#13;
ISTERP, OB OX1 7783, 2148.&#13;
ILLINOIS, OAK PARK&#13;
CARLE RICS, GM,4 3, EPISCOPALI,A CNOMPUTERIN&#13;
STRUCTO3R1.5 S . LOMBARADV E.,&#13;
60302g, linda@usa.net&#13;
KENTUCKY.PADUCAH&#13;
G.G.,S GM,6 3, UNITEDM ETHODISRTE, TIRED&#13;
EDUCATO6R2,4 N. 34THS T., APT.E ,4 2001-&#13;
4275.&#13;
and lesbian children, and I'm no t afraid&#13;
to tell it God lo ves you as you are. God&#13;
created you as you are, and God' s crea tion&#13;
is go od . To deny the ess ence of&#13;
who you are , your gayn ess , leads only&#13;
to inne r turmoil and e moti onal co ufl ict.&#13;
To em bra ce yo urself ju st as Go d as&#13;
cr ea ted you is the path of ernotiona )&#13;
whol e ness and spiritual health . The true&#13;
message of the Holy Scrip tur es is&#13;
affi rming and accepti ng of gays and les bians.&#13;
"T hank God that in spite of the intolerance&#13;
shown by groups such as the&#13;
Christian Coalition, the American Fam _&#13;
il y Association. and the Family&#13;
LOUISIANAG,R ETNA&#13;
RICKEYP . HEBERT, SGM, 49, CATHOLIC,&#13;
MAILC LERK5. 162 NDS T., 70053.&#13;
NEW HAMPSHIRE, MANCHESTER&#13;
RODS, GM,4 2, INSURACNE UNDERWRIT,E R&#13;
hotnho925@8aol.com.&#13;
NEW JERSEY, RAHWAY·&#13;
REX BUTTERFIELSDG, M, 28, CATHOLIC,&#13;
WRITER/POELTO, CKBAG R2751240,7 065.&#13;
NEWY ORK, NIAGARAF ALLS&#13;
CHANCELLOCR. ROBERTS,S1G1,M ,3 4,&#13;
PENTECOSATU APOSTOLIC(NGPA),&#13;
PASTOM.EGAALS ST., 1646N IAGARAV E.,&#13;
143057, 16-284-45.0 9&#13;
NEW YORK, ROCHESTER&#13;
DAVID, SGM, 45, EVANGELICACLO, UNSELORP,&#13;
O BOX6 8005, 1461.8 716-234-0549.&#13;
NEWY ORKY, ONKERS&#13;
JOHN PRATHER, SGM, 71, EPISCOPALIAN,&#13;
COMPUTESRP ECIALIS, 7T BELLP L,. 10701,&#13;
914-964-0379.&#13;
RHODEIS LANDW, AKEFIELD&#13;
ELWYNT AYLORS, GM,6 3, BAPTIST,&#13;
CHURCHO RGANIS, T151P ONDS T,0 2879·&#13;
40334. 01-783-5072.&#13;
TEXAS.DALLAS&#13;
BRO.B ENJAMI+N0 .C.t.CGM4,4 , EACA,&#13;
SPIRITUAL FORMATION, DIRECTOR&#13;
BKINNOV@la.coom9, 72-271-0874&#13;
TEXAS, SAN ANTONIO&#13;
AL EISCHS, GM,5 3, CATHOLICS,O CIAL&#13;
SERVICESP,O B OX1 27547 8212,&#13;
MOCHICA@FLASH.NET&#13;
VIRGINIA , RICHMOND&#13;
EDH ARRISS, GM,6 3,C HRISTIANR,E TIRED,&#13;
WORKF ORN ON-PROFI3T1.5 STRAWBERRY&#13;
ST,2 3220-341820. 4-354-8804.&#13;
edbharrisj@juno.com.&#13;
MICHAEKLE ITHH ALL, SGM,3 9, BAPTIST,&#13;
PROGRASMU PPORT/SCREENWRI2T2E0R1,&#13;
FOURTHA VE., 23222.&#13;
WASHINGTON, SPOKANE&#13;
DIANES, F, 42, PROTETSANTC, LERICA, L&#13;
cabin@ior.com.&#13;
WISCONSINM,E NASHA&#13;
RICHARDR OLLERS, GM,6 2, CATHOLI,C&#13;
RELIGIOUBSR OTHER5,2 2S ECONDS T,&#13;
54952b. dikroller@aol.com.&#13;
Research Cowic il with their far righ t&#13;
political agendas, there are also thousand&#13;
s of houses of worship in ev ery&#13;
faith tradition whi ch welcome and affirm&#13;
gays, le sbia ns, bi sex ual s and tran sgen dered&#13;
persons .&#13;
"As a spiritu al lead er, I welc ome&#13;
inquiri es from gays and les bians see king&#13;
to integrate the ir spirituali ty and sex ual ity,&#13;
and who wish referra ls to GLBT frien&#13;
dly h ouses of wo rship . I will be&#13;
glad to provide referrals to all inquirers,&#13;
whether they seek accepting Chris tian&#13;
houses of worshi p as in my own faith&#13;
tradition, or seek other affinning faith&#13;
communities ."</text>
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              <text>SECOND STONE&#13;
PO Box 8340&#13;
New Orleans, LA 70182&#13;
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED&#13;
TIME DATED MA TERI.AL&#13;
ll,l,,,l,,ll,,,lll,,,1,1,,,,,111&#13;
. SERIALS DEPARTMENT .&#13;
GRADUATE THEOLOGICAL UNION LIBR&#13;
2400 RIDGE RO&#13;
BERKELEY CA 947~D&#13;
Bulk Rate&#13;
U.S. Postage&#13;
PAID&#13;
New Orleans LA&#13;
Permit No. 51 I&#13;
... · Visit a&#13;
Second Stone&#13;
Outreach Partner&#13;
See pages 12 and 13&#13;
for information about&#13;
our Outreach Partners.&#13;
Dislribwin11 1111h ese ci lies&#13;
provided h_vS eco11dS 1011'es&#13;
01ureachParmers:&#13;
Davton, Ohio&#13;
San Jl{r.;e,C alifornia&#13;
Kansas Cit, ·, Missl)uri&#13;
Williamsbu-rg; Yirginia&#13;
Michigan City, Indiana&#13;
San Diego, California&#13;
Memphis, Tennessee&#13;
Long Beach. California&#13;
lssue#58 UVI NG l NT HEEMBRA CE OFALo v 1NGA NDJ USTGO D ·May/J une 1998&#13;
Bishops issue pastoral letter on same-sex unions&#13;
Gay Methcrlisstes nd&#13;
m~etobis&#13;
. oral le tter&#13;
A PRAYER THAT THE United Meth- 111 a much-aw ait ed pas t&#13;
8&#13;
.&#13;
odist bishops and pastors co ntinu e to issued April 30, the Council of /5 h~ps&#13;
shepherd the whole flock was dispatc hed addr essed the pain Unit ed MCI iod•sts&#13;
Apri l 26 to tbe denomination's Council ac ross the country have expressed as a&#13;
of Bishops. resu lt of a rece nt chur ch trial over a&#13;
The message came from Affinnation, same -se,c union in Nebraska - They also&#13;
an unofficial United Methodist caucus said they will proclaim and defe nd the&#13;
doctrine, order and missi0 11 of the&#13;
church.&#13;
suppor ting lesbian, gay, bisexual and&#13;
transgcndcrcd concems. Affinnacion 's&#13;
national council met April 24-26 in&#13;
Miuneapolis.&#13;
In its greeting to the Council of&#13;
Bishops, who met during the last week&#13;
of Apri l in Lincoln, Neb., Affinnation&#13;
said, "We pray that the Holy Spirit will&#13;
continue to guide and inspire your deliberations&#13;
in the coming days, that you&#13;
may lead and nurture a church in which&#13;
all God's people arc truly welcome and&#13;
all pastors continue to shepherd all one&#13;
htuidred of the flock."&#13;
Morris Aoyd, Affirmation spokesper son.&#13;
said the council welcomes any&#13;
effort of the bishops "to find a path all&#13;
United Methodists can walk together,&#13;
despite important differences in under standing&#13;
God's will"&#13;
During their week long spring si:ssion,&#13;
the more than 100 active and&#13;
retired bishops from around the world&#13;
decided not to request a special ses~ion&#13;
of the denomin a tion' s top lawmaking&#13;
ho&lt;ly to deal with the issue of same-sex&#13;
unions .&#13;
On March 13, Nebraska pastor Jimmy&#13;
Creech was acquitte d by a jury of his&#13;
peers of being disobedien t to church law&#13;
after he perfonned a same-se){ union ceremony&#13;
at Firs t Un ited lvfethod ist&#13;
Chu rch in Omaha. A key questio n in&#13;
the trial was whether the Social Principles,&#13;
which include the prosc ription&#13;
against same-sex unions, were guidelines&#13;
or church law. The principles arc&#13;
contained in the denomination's governing&#13;
Book of Discip line. but they arc in&#13;
a differe nt section from the main body&#13;
of law.&#13;
After tlie verdict, several groups asked&#13;
the Council of Bishops to request a special&#13;
session of the General Conference&#13;
to make the church's policy against&#13;
same-sex unions enforceable law. The&#13;
General Conference is the highest legislati&#13;
vc body of the United Methodist&#13;
Church . It meets every four yeari;. and&#13;
its next gathering will be in the year&#13;
SEE MElHODISTS, Page 19&#13;
MCC won'th onors tate0 011&#13;
• ons ame-secxe remomes&#13;
BY JAY REEVES&#13;
OI Rr&gt;HN G II AM , Ala . - The U FM CC&#13;
affiliated church here will continue having&#13;
conunitm ent l:cremonies for gay and&#13;
lesbian couples , despi te the Legisla ture's&#13;
ban on same-sc:,. marri ages in Alabama.&#13;
Rev. Marge Ragona of Covenant&#13;
Metropolitan Community Churc h in&#13;
Binuingham said she perfonns 15 to 20&#13;
of the union ceremonies for gay couples&#13;
ruumally, and lawmakers' actions won't&#13;
stop her.&#13;
The Legislature, responding to a massi&#13;
\'c lobbying campaign b) dmrch&#13;
,:rroup .s. a .&amp;ri',-~1.I 1\1 1n l 27 lo 1&gt;1, u ., -au uc ~'-·~&#13;
marriages and 110 1 recognize 1ho,c f n, 111&#13;
olhcr sta les. even lhough no olhcr slate&#13;
c urre ntl y allows gay marr iages. Gov.&#13;
Fob James said he would sign the bill.&#13;
"I do n't think they have the right to&#13;
tell clergy what ntes they can do and&#13;
can't do," said Ragona, who has pi:rformcd&#13;
the ceremonies in Alabama for&#13;
SEE ALABAMA, Page 19&#13;
March on Washington&#13;
set for April 30, 2&lt;XX)&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Organizers for&#13;
the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered&#13;
community's fourth March on&#13;
Washington announced the event will be&#13;
held on April 30, 2000.&#13;
The March aims to articu late the con cems&#13;
of the gay and lesbian community&#13;
and focus the nation's attention on the&#13;
quest for equality in all aspects of life.&#13;
"We expect one million of my gay.&#13;
lesbian, bisexual. and transgendercd&#13;
sisters mid hrothers and our enlightened&#13;
allies to stand on the Mall and call uixm&#13;
our nation to live out the promise of&#13;
equality under the law." said 1111R: ev&#13;
Troy D. Perry. long -time gtl) activi :.t&#13;
and founder of the Uni versa! Fellowship&#13;
of Metropolitan Commwtity Churches.&#13;
Organizers have taken sti:ps to begin&#13;
incorporation of a non-profit entity to&#13;
handle planning, production and financial&#13;
arrangements. Efforts are underway&#13;
to make sure tltis is a democratic process&#13;
where all segments of thi: conununity&#13;
are represented.&#13;
'The Millennium March promises to&#13;
continue its bold commitment to all&#13;
people of color," said Martin Omelas Quintero&#13;
. e:\ccuti\·e director of the&#13;
Latino l..aliualo , Lesbian, Gay. Bisexu -&#13;
SEE MARCH, Page 17&#13;
• Prayer •The Bible •Words &amp; Deeds&#13;
~y gayC atholipcr iest&#13;
n:Ngntso p rotesht iss hunning&#13;
BY NANCY ARMOUR&#13;
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - When the invitations&#13;
to say Mass and hear confe ssions&#13;
stopped coming, the Rev. David Gani ck&#13;
didn't think anything was amiss. He was&#13;
on sabbatical, after all, and figured it&#13;
was simply an over sight.&#13;
But his reminders that he was still al&#13;
the Univ ersity of Notre Dame went&#13;
u'nanswered. Then, in the fall of 1996,&#13;
he discover ed his nameplate had been&#13;
removed from the confe ssional at the&#13;
Basilica of the Sacted Hean.on campus.&#13;
He was being shut out, and Garrick says&#13;
there could be only one reason:&#13;
He is an openl y gay priest. At a university&#13;
that has come to symboli ze the&#13;
Roman Catholic Church in tl1e United&#13;
States.&#13;
"I was devas tated. The word devastated&#13;
would not be too strong," Garrick said.&#13;
"I could not continue here under those&#13;
circumstances ."&#13;
In protest, he resigned his position as&#13;
an assistant professor of communic ation&#13;
and th e ate r, eff ect ive at the end of the&#13;
school year. Wi th that mo\·e, Garr ick&#13;
renewed the controve rsy at the university&#13;
over the rights and place of gays and&#13;
lesbians.&#13;
"I f cit tl1at I had a strong moral reason&#13;
for resigning in protest, and that more&#13;
good would come out of that than my&#13;
just trundling along pretending this&#13;
hadn't happened or saying, 'I'm pretty&#13;
upset about th.is,'" said Ganick, a Notre&#13;
Dame graduate who has been a full-time&#13;
professor since 1992. "I wanted to make&#13;
a public statement and get people's&#13;
auention."&#13;
The Rev. John Jenkins, religious&#13;
superior for the Holy Cross order at&#13;
Notre Dame, denies Garrick's duties&#13;
were limited in any way. Garrick was&#13;
never an official part of the Campus&#13;
Ministry staff, which handles most of&#13;
the priestly duties at Sacred Heart. Like&#13;
other Holy Cross priest s oo campus&#13;
who aren't part of Campus Ministry,&#13;
Garrick could volu111ecr for Mass at&#13;
Sacred Heart or hear e-0nfessious.&#13;
And Jenkin~ insists Garrick was never&#13;
2 MAY•JIINE 1998&#13;
discriminated against because of his sexu&#13;
al orientation, which Garrick&#13;
am1ounced in an April 1996 letter in the&#13;
school newspaper.&#13;
In fact, Jenkins sa id he and others&#13;
strongly urged Garrick not to resign.&#13;
"Fath er Garrick has alway s had and&#13;
- continues to have full facultie s to preside&#13;
at the Euchari st and hear confe ssions,&#13;
wherever he is invited ," Jenkin s&#13;
said in a written statement.&#13;
But Garrick said tl1e Rev. Richard&#13;
Warn er, dir ector of Campu s Ministry ,&#13;
advi sed him in Januar y of complaint s&#13;
about Garrick' s preaching. Warner, a&#13;
clo se adviser 10 Notre Dame's president&#13;
Rev. Edward Mall oy, has declin ed to&#13;
comment.&#13;
No matter what tbe truth, Garrick' s&#13;
resignation is a sign that the uni versity's&#13;
very public debate over homosex ualit&#13;
y is far from resolved.&#13;
Th e turm oil began in 1995, when&#13;
Gays and Lesbians at Notre Dame and&#13;
St. Mary' s Coll ege, a student group&#13;
fonned nine years ea rlier, was banned&#13;
from meeting on campus as an w1sanctio11ed&#13;
orga nizat ion. When the group&#13;
asked for offi cial recogni tion, administrators&#13;
refuse d, sayi ng its philosop hy&#13;
conni cted with church teachi ngs about&#13;
homosexuality.&#13;
In tl.1c wake of Garrick's resignation,&#13;
the Faculty Senate voted April 8 to&#13;
again ask administrators to modify the&#13;
university's nondiscrimination clause to&#13;
include sexual orientation . A similar&#13;
vote in May 1996 prompted the university&#13;
to publish a statement of inclusion.&#13;
yet stopped short of amending the nondiscrimination&#13;
clause.&#13;
"I had no way of knowing whether&#13;
this· would be a stone dropped into an&#13;
empty well or what. It turns out the&#13;
well is full, and it's made a splash,"&#13;
Garrick said. "That gives hope. People&#13;
arc paying attention . Smdents are conccmcd&#13;
. Faculty are conccmcd ."&#13;
As a private university, Nolfe Dame&#13;
has no obligation to include gays and&#13;
lesbians in it~ nondiscrimination policy&#13;
or do anythin g that would conflict with&#13;
church teaching . The Catholic church&#13;
continue s to teach that homo sexual&#13;
activity is wrong but some bishop s&#13;
recently admitted in a church document&#13;
tltnt sexual orientation is not a mallcr of&#13;
choice.&#13;
That's not tme, said Dc1mis Moore,&#13;
spoke sman for the uni versity. Garrick ,&#13;
he point ed out , preached at the Uasilica&#13;
several times after he came out and said&#13;
Mass at some residence halls recently.&#13;
Garrick isn't sure where he will go&#13;
when he leaves Notre Dame, but said he&#13;
That is why th~ univer sity should holds no bitterne ss toward the un.ivcrsihave&#13;
embraced Garrick, rather than shut ty. In fact , he is encouraged by the suphim&#13;
out, said John Blandford, a doctoral y ort he has received from student s mid&#13;
student and fonner co-chair l!J~3: w in1il1. y&#13;
cnt group . " fhe track record of the leader ship is&#13;
"David , in a sense, should -tie the : · very poor . I3ut the aw;ikcni ng conposter&#13;
child for the uni\'crsity because sGU)usness of the student s and fac ulty is&#13;
he embod ies chur ch tcaching /~~fi fJ '&lt;~lcfndcrful. Inspirin g: · he said .&#13;
acknowledging orientati on but living a "I believe it will help Notre Dame ,&#13;
chaste life," Blandford said. 'That' s basi- the Notre Dame tliat I know imd love, to&#13;
cally the sum and substanc e of church speak the truth about gay people.&#13;
_ leaching . What's intere sting is the uui- "You j ust need to go get some fresh&#13;
versity couldn't e\'en hanclle his oricnta - air ," he said. "So that' s what I'm going&#13;
tion ." , to do ."&#13;
Aged resn'tkeepw omanfr om&#13;
answerincga llt o,minister&#13;
BY SANDRA SUTTON&#13;
MIDLA ND, Mich. - At a time when&#13;
many people are thinking about slowing&#13;
down, the Rev. Dori s Lyon has found&#13;
her callin g.&#13;
At age 65, she decided to enter the&#13;
mini stry . Now, 2 1/2 year s later, she&#13;
lea~s Sunday w?rship at Pleasant Valley&#13;
· U1utcd Meth~1s t Church, as pastor.&#13;
It started w. ith a late -ru'glit conversation,&#13;
Lyon said.&#13;
"I went to bed and the Lo d . d&#13;
lk.i&#13;
,, r start e&#13;
ta · ng to_ me, she said . "It wasn't m&#13;
tl1oughts, 11 was a ,,oicc." Y&#13;
Lyon said she was told ·to b ecome a&#13;
minister a, nd le. ad a small rural ' h 1&#13;
1&#13;
c urc 1.&#13;
She wasn t eas1 y convinced.&#13;
"I said, ' Lord, you have got 10 be ki 1_&#13;
ding. I'm 65 years old.• But it didn't 1~1&#13;
me get to sleep until 2 in the momin o ..&#13;
She telephoned Janet Lamer, ,thc s:~ior&#13;
pastor at Gordonv ille United Methodist&#13;
Church, where she was a member.&#13;
With Ms. Lamer's guidance and the.help&#13;
of a supervi sing elder, Lyon bec~e a&#13;
minister. She serves in the Central District&#13;
of the West Michigan Conference.&#13;
She waited for an assignment. Lyon&#13;
asked for a church like tl1e one Ilic Lord&#13;
described to her. Eventually, she was&#13;
telephoned and told about Pleasant Valley&#13;
United Methodist Church. ·111e little&#13;
chapel, a few miles outside St. Louis,&#13;
was being served by the same pastor&#13;
who led a Methodist church in&#13;
Shepherd. But district administrators&#13;
had decided to break that relationship, so&#13;
a new pastor was needed for Pleasant&#13;
Valley.&#13;
Because the church has no parsonage,&#13;
the caller was concerned about how far&#13;
the chapel is from Lyon's home Her&#13;
eyes twinkle when she recalls 1hc con -&#13;
versation .&#13;
"I told her i t wa s probably IO or 11&#13;
miles (from home). No t that I was&#13;
e;,;cited, you \U\dets\an c\, but af\er \ bung&#13;
up, I got in the car . It's 13 112 mil es ,"&#13;
Lyon said .&#13;
The little white clapb oa rd church was&#13;
founded in 1895. and tho ugh s0111e&#13;
things have been upd ated during the past&#13;
centur y, much of the original stmcture&#13;
and its content s remai n.&#13;
The doors ins ide the vestibule are&#13;
original, as ar e the Gothi c-a rched&#13;
window ope nings and a few chairs with&#13;
deep ro se -colored uphol stery and elaborately&#13;
car ved frames. Th e pews have&#13;
detail s like de ntil moldin g an d hymnal&#13;
holder s that blend metal aud wood&#13;
scroll work.&#13;
When Lyon came to the church for&#13;
the firs t time , she felt right at home.&#13;
"My first reaction was one of awe," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Ple asan t Val ley Unite d Metl1odist&#13;
Church is in the middl e off arm cow1try.&#13;
The roadway is speckled with large&#13;
farm houses where desce ndants of the&#13;
community 's founders sti ll live.&#13;
It's just the type of church commtlll·&#13;
ity Lyon was seeking, the kind of place&#13;
were everyone knows everyone else.&#13;
Lyon finds the one-to-one contact at a&#13;
small congregation rewarding.&#13;
"If I have someone gone (from a worship&#13;
service), I know it and I can drop a&#13;
card or visit," Lyon said.&#13;
She also is pleased witb the bond she&#13;
aud church members arc developing .&#13;
"When I came in, 1 was 'Reve rend&#13;
Lyon,' then I bccmnc 'Pastor Lyon' imd&#13;
now I'm 'Doris,"' she said. "I prefer&#13;
being one of them.•·&#13;
SEE AGE, Page H!&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Call to Renewal says 'come to the table'&#13;
Groupo fferso p);X)rtuntoi tfyig ht! X)Verty iny ourc ommunity&#13;
BY JIM WALLIS&#13;
THE CALL TO RENEW AL Coordinating&#13;
Committee recently held a two-day&#13;
retreat to review-our activities over the&#13;
past two years and to discuss the next&#13;
steps ahead. We made a series of important&#13;
decisions that could significantly&#13;
foster the cooperation of churches on the&#13;
urgent agenda of welfare refonn and strategically&#13;
strengthen the voice and role of&#13;
the faith community in the public discussion&#13;
of how really to overcome poverty.&#13;
. Call to Renewal has successfully convened&#13;
new Christian Roundtablcs on&#13;
poverty and welfare reform, both at the&#13;
national and local levels. The "table"&#13;
has become the metaphor and the identity&#13;
of the Call; rather than creating a&#13;
new organization, Call to Renewal is a&#13;
new table around which many organizations,&#13;
churches, and individuals who&#13;
want to work in a common mission to&#13;
overcome poverty can come together.&#13;
Call to Renewal will not seek to&#13;
duplicate existing efforts. but to join&#13;
and extend all of our efforts in new and&#13;
effective partnership s.&#13;
To move millions of poor families&#13;
off of welfare and out of poverty will&#13;
require nothing less than new civic partnerships&#13;
involving every sector of our&#13;
communities, including congregations,&#13;
non-profit organizations, business, and&#13;
government on all levels. Elected officials,&#13;
in particular, are looking to the&#13;
faith commwtity to offer a central leadership&#13;
role. Religious congregations&#13;
and faith-based non-profits are well situated&#13;
to play that leadership role and&#13;
indeed, the gospel requires it.&#13;
Yet poverty is not only material - our&#13;
society also faces a poverty of the soul&#13;
for which renewal is needed. The following&#13;
covenant is based in our desire&#13;
for that renewal. We arc committed first&#13;
of all to personal renewal, to ground&#13;
ourselves in prayer and in the Word of&#13;
God. We are committed to congregational&#13;
renewal, to live and serve our&#13;
communities as the body of Christ. We&#13;
are committed to societal renewal. to&#13;
recognize our interdependence in seeking&#13;
the common good in our commtmitics.&#13;
We therefore covenant together to&#13;
work for a national and grassroots mobilization&#13;
to create the conditions, relationships,&#13;
networks. preparation. and&#13;
training for a faith-based movement to&#13;
overcome poverty. The moral crisis is&#13;
already mohili:,.ing people around the&#13;
country, but we believe a broader corporate&#13;
commitment is needed to fully realize&#13;
this opportunity. There is a new&#13;
openness in the churches for community&#13;
ministry, and a new willingness in our&#13;
society to hear tl1e voice of the church.&#13;
Our mobilization will have three&#13;
major components:&#13;
A national voice and message: In our&#13;
coming together, we can strengthen our&#13;
impact on our society by giving a unified&#13;
voice to our ministry.&#13;
National and grassroots organizing for&#13;
action: All across our country, churches&#13;
· and ministries are serving their communities.&#13;
We can unite these efforts for&#13;
joint action.&#13;
Policy development: There is a new&#13;
moment of opportunity to forge new&#13;
civic partnerships between govcmmenl&#13;
agencies, business, and the churches.&#13;
We can develop and implement new&#13;
policy ideas, including use of Ilic new&#13;
"charitable choice" provisions, to realize&#13;
IJ1ese possibilities.&#13;
The Call to Renewal will use a&#13;
"f cderatcd" structure, including:&#13;
A national board made up of national&#13;
constituency and church leaders, together&#13;
with regional representatives: The board&#13;
will offer strategic direction, common&#13;
goals . and events, and guidelines for&#13;
action.&#13;
A national roundtable made up of&#13;
national churches and organizations who&#13;
affiliate with the Call: As in our two&#13;
meetings in 1997, the national roundtable&#13;
will work to share infonnation and&#13;
coordinate the efforts of national&#13;
churches and organizations .&#13;
Local roundtables in each community&#13;
made up of the local churches and organ izations&#13;
who chose to affiliate: These&#13;
local roundtables will have great flex iJ?&#13;
ility to determine their own strategics&#13;
and actions consistent with the national&#13;
direction.&#13;
Individuals who join Call to Renewal:&#13;
We will develop a "pledge to help overcome&#13;
poverty" by which individuals can&#13;
become members; pledging themselves&#13;
to prayer, giving of time and resources,&#13;
judging economic and political choices&#13;
by h,ow they impact those in poverty.&#13;
At all levels, we commit ourselves&#13;
to:&#13;
Renewal and revival: Recognizing&#13;
that ''unless the Lord bui(ds the house,&#13;
those who build it labor in vain" (Psalm&#13;
127: 1), we believe that renewal is fundamental&#13;
to our efforts. For example. we&#13;
discussed the creation of a Call to Renewal&#13;
"School of Evangelism," which&#13;
would work to train and educate young&#13;
evangelists with a concern for the poor.&#13;
Education leading lo action: Education&#13;
and training, the sharing of resources&#13;
and tools, between and among our various&#13;
ministries can inform and&#13;
strengthen our individual and joint&#13;
actions.&#13;
Local initiative and action: We&#13;
· believe that the best solution s to problem&#13;
s are usually found in initiatives&#13;
closest to the problem. We are therefore&#13;
committed to initiating and strengthening&#13;
community mini stries at the gras sroots&#13;
level.&#13;
Communication and networking: We&#13;
will communicate throughout the federated&#13;
network through the Call to Renewal&#13;
newsletter, web site, action alerts,&#13;
policy papers, and other means to share&#13;
ideas and successes.&#13;
National policy action: There may be&#13;
times when a wufied national action by&#13;
the network is necessary, in relation to&#13;
governmental actions, corporate abuses,&#13;
or other issues. We will provide the&#13;
infonnation and coordination for that&#13;
action.&#13;
In all of our work, we will develop&#13;
tangible, measurable goals that are:&#13;
preachable, practical, understandable, and&#13;
doable . We want to make a difference in&#13;
the lives of families and communities in&#13;
real, measurable ways.&#13;
A beginning goal will be to sharpen&#13;
our focus on welfare and poverty, committing&#13;
ourselves and our congregations&#13;
to help families move from welfare to&#13;
work with dignity in community. During&#13;
1998 and 1999, we will commit to&#13;
engage thousands of congregations and&#13;
church-based organizations is assisting&#13;
tens of thousands of families lo move&#13;
off welfare into work, dignity, and community.&#13;
Through our covenant together, we&#13;
will work toward that day when our&#13;
society can proclaim, as Acts 4:34 tells&#13;
of the first church, "There was not a&#13;
needy person among them."&#13;
For information contact Call to Renewal,&#13;
2401 15th St. NW, Washington&#13;
DC 20009, (202)328-8842,&#13;
Call_to_Renewal@convene.com.&#13;
Martin Marty leads discussion on&#13;
religion in a pluralistic society&#13;
BY SHEILA MULROONEY ELDRED&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS - Most of the hundred&#13;
Minnesota leaders who gathered in late&#13;
April for a symposium on faith in a&#13;
pluralistic society agreed with theologian&#13;
Martin Marty that religion merits&#13;
more public discussion.&#13;
"I've studied people killing people in&#13;
the name of God,'' said Marty, au&#13;
ordained Lutheran minister aud longtime&#13;
professor at the University of Chicago.&#13;
"Given thal , it's better to bring religion&#13;
out of the shadows. Most Americans&#13;
make moral decisions based on religion."&#13;
The event brought leaders from various&#13;
disciplines togeth er to debate what&#13;
role religion should play in the arts.&#13;
business. education. govenuueot, heallh&#13;
care, law, media, nonprofit orga nizations&#13;
and advertising.&#13;
Responses were consistently in favor&#13;
of more religious discussion in the public&#13;
realm: In a computerized survey conducted&#13;
during the symposium, 63 percent&#13;
said they thought religion should&#13;
be a greater part of public debate. And&#13;
85 percent said religious beliefs should&#13;
afTccl business decisions.&#13;
Among participants who identified&#13;
their religious affiliation, 34 said they&#13;
were Protestant, 18 were Roman&#13;
Catholic, four were Jewish and 21 said&#13;
lhey were "other," including atheist. - -&#13;
The symposium was design ed by&#13;
Marty and Minnesota Public Radio as&#13;
part of Marty's three -year Public Religion&#13;
Project, fw1dcd by the Pew Charitable&#13;
Tmsts in connection with the University&#13;
of Chicago Divinity School.&#13;
Marty, father of Mim1csota DFL gubernatorial&#13;
caudiclate John Marty, promotes&#13;
efforts to bring religion "out of the&#13;
shadows" and into public discussion,&#13;
mostly through publishing.&#13;
Even in areas where separation between&#13;
church and state bas been clearly&#13;
defined, like education and tl1e law. participants&#13;
said they hoped to promote&#13;
more discussion of religion.&#13;
"It's critical to accelerate dialogue and&#13;
build an enviromnent where we can talk&#13;
about religion in schools," said Jeanne&#13;
Kling, president of the State Board of&#13;
Education. She said she hopes such discussion&#13;
would avert destruction that can&#13;
result when talk is stifled.&#13;
Chuck Samuelson, executive director&#13;
of Minnesota Civil Liberties Union,&#13;
said he opposes organized religion in&#13;
public life. fearing religious wars. But&#13;
he said public discussion talking about&#13;
religion could be beneficial. (AP)&#13;
SECOND STONE 3&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
'PromiseK eqxT' couplek eepsi nternebt uzzing~ th gcxxnl ewsf or gays&#13;
BY DEBBIE WOODELL&#13;
THEY ARE, Barbar a Purdom notes,&#13;
what a petfect Promise Keepers family&#13;
should be.&#13;
Husband , stay-at-home mom , two&#13;
children . White. Middle -class . Protes tant.&#13;
And in a world where so much&#13;
preached in the name of God brims with&#13;
hate, they are a godsend to the gay community&#13;
.&#13;
When many in the publi c, including&#13;
medi a, still equate religion with conservative&#13;
politics , Barbara and Chris Purdom&#13;
are spreading the gospel that a Liberal&#13;
reli giou s tradition embrace s gay&#13;
men and lesbian s and welcome s. them&#13;
fully into the religio us communitie s of&#13;
their choice.&#13;
The two are the key forces behind the&#13;
local Interfaith Working Group, a looseknit&#13;
coalition of religiou s organizati ons&#13;
and indiv iduals that advocates and demonstr11tes&#13;
for gay rights.&#13;
The Purd oms pretty much do every thing&#13;
out of their own home, and out of&#13;
the goodness of their hearts .&#13;
"We' ve real ly heard some horror stories&#13;
[from gay peopl e] , relating their&#13;
church experience s," Barbara recalls.&#13;
''Those people have been stung by&#13;
organized religion."&#13;
The Purdom s, members of Tabernacle&#13;
United Church, became devout supporters&#13;
of the gay rights movement after&#13;
congre gational discussions in the early&#13;
1990s about becoming a More Light&#13;
congregation, a designatio n that marks a&#13;
church as welcoming of gay men, lesbians,&#13;
bisexuals and transgendered people.&#13;
''Telling people , 'You can't serve your&#13;
church because you're gay' was something&#13;
we didn't want to buy into," Barbara&#13;
said.&#13;
"We' re not going to restrict who can&#13;
ser ve the church they love and they go&#13;
to."&#13;
For Chri s, ga y right s was not&#13;
something he gave much thought to.&#13;
"I think a lot of tim e, if you 're&#13;
straight, yon don 't hear those gay pas sages&#13;
[in the Bible] ," he said.&#13;
"When we started talkin g about it ~t&#13;
Tabernacl e, I thought of it as a fre espeech&#13;
issue - you can be ordaine d if&#13;
you don't talk about [being gay] ."&#13;
Subsequent di scussions led him to&#13;
conclude that a chur ch that had been part&#13;
of the Sanctuary movement to provide a&#13;
haven for Cen tral Amer ican re fugees&#13;
should not be dri ving away other peo-&#13;
. ple .&#13;
'The idea that the chur ch would kick&#13;
■&#13;
"The idea that&#13;
the church&#13;
would kick&#13;
people out was&#13;
unbelievable."&#13;
■&#13;
people out was unbeli eva ble, " he said.&#13;
From such modest beginnin gs have&#13;
come a growi ng pr es ence - at le ast&#13;
loc ally - in tl1e deb ate o ver God and&#13;
gays .&#13;
Scripturatrla, nslatioonpse ne x-atheist''ws indowto Christ' T he IWG ha s held press confer ences&#13;
and prov ided spe aker s on such issues as&#13;
dome stic partn er benefits for c~ty workers&#13;
. IWG hel ped run a sessio n on gay&#13;
marria ge and has part icipa ted in gay&#13;
pride events and marches .&#13;
BY JOSEPH ROSE&#13;
CLE ELUM, Wash. - When he wants a&#13;
smoke, George Blaisdell· rolls his own&#13;
cigarettes.&#13;
When he reads the Book of John, the&#13;
process is somewhat the same.&#13;
Blaisdell prefers to translate the New&#13;
Testamen t's fourth Gospel from Greek.&#13;
He tl1en jots down his own observations&#13;
of what the text says abo ut the life ,&#13;
death and resurrection of Jesus Chri st.&#13;
"You can't go too slow," said the 53-&#13;
year-o ld lock smith and forme r atheist.&#13;
who learne d Greek in co ll ege ... Every&#13;
word is a window lo Christ."&#13;
Many early Bible trans lators were&#13;
great reform ers who laid down their&#13;
lives to give the Scriptures to the public&#13;
. But with all due respect, Blaisdell&#13;
finds English versions "tenibl y supetfi cial."&#13;
It took the great precisio n of Greek,&#13;
the ancient language in which the New&#13;
Tes tamen t was first composed, to stir&#13;
Blaisdell's soul. He found Jesus in the&#13;
words.&#13;
"It was, simply, awesome," he said.&#13;
"I felt the winds of the Spirit moving&#13;
over my waters."&#13;
Jack Chan, this mountain communi ty's&#13;
Presbyterian pastor, once studied the&#13;
New Testament in Greek. He understands&#13;
its power.&#13;
"When you get into the original languages&#13;
of the Bible ... you get a broader&#13;
understanding of what the Scriptures are&#13;
saying," Chan said. "You begin to think&#13;
the way the people thought iu that day&#13;
and age."&#13;
Take, for example, the opening verse&#13;
'1 MAY•JUNE 1991!&#13;
in the King Jame s version of John's&#13;
Gospel: "In the begin ning the Word&#13;
alreadywas." .&#13;
Blaisdell spent days contemplating the&#13;
sentence. referring to Greek-Hebrew dictionarie&#13;
s and praying for guidance. He&#13;
came up with this: "Within the Godhead&#13;
the divine intelligence has always been ."&#13;
"Godhea d," Blaisdell said. "T hat could&#13;
symboli ze the Trinity . But I think it&#13;
involves much more , lik e ange ls and&#13;
miracles."&#13;
Looki ng back, Blaisdell believes God&#13;
guided him to tl1e Book of John .&#13;
Blaisdell was educated in Greek and&#13;
philosophy at San Diego State Univer sity.&#13;
Over the course of several years, he&#13;
constantly "bumped into" referen ces to&#13;
the Gospel in literature and in conversation&#13;
.&#13;
Last year, he search ed out a copy of&#13;
the Greek versi on of the New Tes tament.&#13;
"I wanted to see for myself what John&#13;
bad to say," he explain ed . "Along the&#13;
way, I discovered I was a Christian."&#13;
Akin to spiritu al poetry, translating&#13;
the Scripture often requires Blaisdell to&#13;
stop and think hard.&#13;
In many ways, he shows the dedication&#13;
of a monk. His monastery is a&#13;
house built on what used to be a junk&#13;
yard in a woodsy area north of Cle&#13;
Elum. Against a backdrop of aging&#13;
books in the house, beat-up Subarus&#13;
outside and a small zoo of domestic animals&#13;
everywhere, Blaisdell spends hours&#13;
at a time with his study guides and&#13;
Greek New Testament.&#13;
"The key that unlocks many of the&#13;
words is prayer," he said, "for God alone&#13;
gives meanin g."&#13;
One verse can res ult in seve ral pages&#13;
of hand -sc ribbled inte rpret atio n in his&#13;
spiral notebook.&#13;
"For th us lov es the Fat her the&#13;
cosmos," he recited. 'That's 'For God so&#13;
loved the world."'&#13;
Four Greek words mean love .' The&#13;
mos t com mon in the Book of John :&#13;
"phil os," broth erly love , and "agape,"&#13;
div ine love - pronounced a-ga-pay.&#13;
The first hal f of the book deal s with&#13;
wate r , the secon d half with blood . "I&#13;
love the metaphors ," Blaisde ll said.&#13;
The Book of John, be said, is as relevant&#13;
as anything else to human need&#13;
and aspiration . At the same time,&#13;
th0 ugh, he has begun exploring the&#13;
Greek versions of the New Testament 's&#13;
other books.&#13;
. Despite the renewed sense of spiritual tty&#13;
• Blaisdell said he still does n't know ·&#13;
wheth er to spit or swa llow w·hen it&#13;
come s 10 organi zed religio n . For too&#13;
lo ng. Chri Slians were merely Bibl e&#13;
lhumper s and hypocri tes in his eyes.&#13;
"I've j ust awake n from an cxtrao rdi?,&#13;
3;"ly dar~ period of my life," he said.&#13;
1 m n_iov10g toward the social aspect.&#13;
But with my atheis tic background I'm&#13;
shy about churches." •&#13;
Until he finds a church tha t feels&#13;
right, Blaisde ll considers himself a&#13;
"Bible Christian."&#13;
"I'm realizing the Spirit blows where&#13;
it will," he said. "We'll see what&#13;
happens."( YakimaH erald-Republic)&#13;
All along tl1e way, IWG knocks down&#13;
barriers.&#13;
'T he media [are] very much into rbc&#13;
concept of the religiou s right and ever;bod&#13;
y else," Chri s said . ''The y never&#13;
showe d anybo dy pra ying on tl1e other&#13;
side." .&#13;
Adde d Bar bara: 'Th ey need ed this&#13;
dichotomy ."&#13;
The Purdoms also have toppl ed some&#13;
barri ers betwe en the gay and religious&#13;
communities.&#13;
Chris wa s viewed with suspicion&#13;
when he attended Fight the Right Network&#13;
meeting s otherwi se popul ated large&#13;
ly by memb e rs of ACT UP a_nd&#13;
Gra ssroots Que ers and other gay aclivists.&#13;
"But tho se susp icio ns eve ntually went&#13;
away," he said .&#13;
IWG 's newslett er , "Kee ping the&#13;
Faith, " is four pages j ammed with informa&#13;
tion about the ga ys-an d-religion&#13;
struggle gleaned fro m the "hundreds" of&#13;
articl es Chris has access to eac h day.&#13;
About 330 people, clergy and lay,&#13;
rece ive the newsletter, which also lists&#13;
key upcoming events and suggests plans&#13;
of action to co unt eract an tigay religious&#13;
forces.&#13;
But beyon d the strong sense to do&#13;
·good, the Purdoms have a bit of a&#13;
selfish motive to their work .&#13;
"We're trying to raise our kids," Barbara&#13;
said, "and make it a better world for&#13;
them ."&#13;
So far. they've kept their promise.&#13;
(Philadelphia Daily Nl}Ws)&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Technologhye lpsc htrehes&#13;
interactr,e acho ut&#13;
BY JILLCALLISON&#13;
, SIOUX FALLS, S.D. - Missionaries&#13;
can now e-mail fami l y members from&#13;
thousands of miles away and receive an&#13;
almos t instant response.&#13;
Parishioners no longer write out a&#13;
check for the offe ring plate but rely on&#13;
au tomatic withdrawal from a bank&#13;
account to fulfill church pledges.&#13;
Members of a church bitten by the flu&#13;
bug don't have to miss the Sun day&#13;
morning service. They can watch their&#13;
pastor deliver the sermon over their&#13;
computer.&#13;
Techno logy is changing the way&#13;
churches interac t with thei r members&#13;
and reach out to others. Record-keeping&#13;
is handled e.Jcctronical ly. Contac t is&#13;
made through e-mail. Bible studies are&#13;
online, providing not only information&#13;
for tl1e user's personal growth but also a&#13;
list of contacts for churches.&#13;
"In a little more than a month, we've&#13;
had 1,300 peopl e stop by," pastoral&#13;
intern Dan Wollman said , ref erring lo ·&#13;
computer "hits" on the homepage he&#13;
oversees at Our Savior's Lutheran&#13;
Church in Sioux Falls .&#13;
There arc blips along the way. For&#13;
one thing, technology comes slow in&#13;
the church - because of a lack of computer&#13;
skills and a general reluctance to&#13;
change.&#13;
And even the most devoted fans of&#13;
technology acknowledge that cyberhookups&#13;
would never replace the fellowship&#13;
that comes from being surrounded&#13;
by other worshipers in a sanctuary .&#13;
"God says go to church, and it's a&#13;
commandment, and people are in sin if&#13;
they don't," said Jeff Gilbert, who puts a&#13;
North Dakota church service on the&#13;
Internet each week. "What we do across&#13;
the Internet is help those who cannot&#13;
make it or want another service, but&#13;
we're not a repla cement for church.&#13;
Absolutely not. "&#13;
Gilbert set up the system that pennits&#13;
every service offered by Dakota Baptist&#13;
Church in Minot , N.D., to be broadcast&#13;
over the Internet. People at home can&#13;
see the pastor in a 3- by-4- inch box on&#13;
the compu ter screen and hear him speak.&#13;
The church deci ded to prov ide the&#13;
audio and video broadcast for members&#13;
who were ill or those who had moved to&#13;
an area where tl1ere was no chwch.&#13;
"We strongly advise that if someone&#13;
has a church in that area, and they can&#13;
make ii there, they do not log on," Gilbc:&#13;
rt said "My pastor is not their pastor.&#13;
If they have a local church, they should&#13;
attend it."&#13;
Randy Sorenson of Connecting Point&#13;
in Sioux Falls helped Dakota Baptist set&#13;
up the audio-visual site. He said technology&#13;
offers churches a variety of ways&#13;
to reach out, but many churches aren't&#13;
up to date.&#13;
"Pas tors and church sec retaries are not&#13;
accus tomed to using the technology like&#13;
they are in schools," said Sorenson , a&#13;
professional network engineer.&#13;
At Our Savior's Luthe ran, Wollman&#13;
started an online Bible study late last&#13;
November, in time for Advent.&#13;
"The goal was first of all to provide&#13;
an online devotional presence, trying to&#13;
target an audience that wouldn 't normally&#13;
com_e to Bible study in a home or&#13;
at church," said Wollman, a student at&#13;
Luther Seminary in St. Paul.&#13;
At a Huron business, techno logy is&#13;
making it easier for missionaries in&#13;
other countries to correspond with&#13;
fanulies, with church sponsors and with&#13;
each other. Marvie Tschetter of&#13;
Basec.N et is establishing a Web site,&#13;
Mission]. dedicated to missionaries .&#13;
More churches are getting involved&#13;
with the Internet. Tschetter said. When&#13;
searching for appropriate domain sites,&#13;
she typed in the word "missionaries" and&#13;
received more th.an 1.1 million responses.&#13;
In anotlter area of computer technology,&#13;
Christ the King Catholic Church&#13;
has been offering automatic withdrawal&#13;
for parishioners' offerings since last&#13;
September.&#13;
Office manager Lynda Wuebben said&#13;
she isn't sure how many of the 1,100&#13;
members are using the service, but it's&#13;
growing in acceptance.&#13;
"People were excited about it," she&#13;
said. "We get a couple of new people&#13;
every month who register at the church,&#13;
and they think it's a wonderful idea ."&#13;
Wuebben said some people are hesitant&#13;
to use the service because they are&#13;
concerned about the appearance of not&#13;
putting an off ering in the collection&#13;
plate. One man said he wants his contribution&#13;
to be a reminder to others that&#13;
they should be giv ing to the church ,&#13;
too.&#13;
Tschette r also knows churchgoe rs&#13;
who arc skeptic al of technology. She&#13;
think s that the Internet has gotten more&#13;
negative press than positive .&#13;
"But as it becomes more and more&#13;
availa ble and more common, the&#13;
churches will see this as a good&#13;
avenue," she said. (Sioux f-alls Argus&#13;
Leader)&#13;
Since 1988a, friend&#13;
for the·journey.&#13;
Subscribe toda','!&#13;
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SEC'OND STONI::. 5&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Forg aysi n theB lackc hurch,i t's 'Don'ta sk,d on'tt ell.'&#13;
BY DONNETTE DUNBAR&#13;
TO SOME, IT counts for naught that&#13;
some of the most dynamic and influential&#13;
ministers and gospel musicians produced&#13;
by African-American churches&#13;
have been gay. Or lhat gays and lesbians&#13;
have -emerged nationally as a political&#13;
and social force. Or that, traditional-&#13;
1 y, black churches actively support&#13;
causes related to human rights.&#13;
In black churches, the approach&#13;
regarding homosexuality often mirrors&#13;
lhc military's policy of "Don't ask, don't&#13;
tell."&#13;
While not monolithic, black churches&#13;
by and large consider homo sexuality a&#13;
sin. Gay members occupy an ambiguous&#13;
position in their congregations.&#13;
They often are the leading musicians and&#13;
soloists, yet acknowledgment of their&#13;
sexuality is taboo.&#13;
"h's a cultural thing for us," said Merrit&#13;
Smilh, a black entrepreneur who volunteers&#13;
as an HIV/AIDS educator. "The&#13;
issue is so complex for us, because our&#13;
sexuality has always been degraded. It's&#13;
a sensitive subject.''&#13;
Now, however. in part because of the&#13;
impact of AIDS on the African American&#13;
community, there is a nationwide&#13;
push for black church es to begin&#13;
talking about sexuality . Nationwide,&#13;
though black s make up only 12 percent&#13;
of the U.S. populati on, they account for&#13;
35 percent of AIDS cases, according to&#13;
the Federal Center s for Disease Control&#13;
in Atlanta.&#13;
There still exist s in hlack cullure a&#13;
perce ption that AIDS is God's punishment&#13;
for homosexuality. And in March,&#13;
more than a dozen black churches were&#13;
among the sponsors of an advertisement&#13;
in The Omaha World-Herald that condemned&#13;
same-sex unions, citing several&#13;
verses from the Bible.&#13;
The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, senior&#13;
pastor at Trini ty United Church of&#13;
Christ in Chicago, in a widely circulated&#13;
scnnon titled "Good News for Homosexual&#13;
s," cau tioned black ministers&#13;
against tl1e misuse of scripture.&#13;
"Racists tried to use or misuse certain&#13;
texts taken out of context to justify&#13;
holding black folks in chattel slavery,"&#13;
he said. "Just as we study those scrip tures&#13;
carefully and put them up against&#13;
the whole cowiscl of God. we need to do&#13;
the same with the Scriptures on homosexuulity&#13;
. Whether they are in Leviti cus,&#13;
Cori nthians. Romans or Genesis,&#13;
we need to study tbe text in context ."&#13;
Some black minister s said they stnigglc&#13;
to find the right spiritual and theological&#13;
position on homosexuality .&#13;
6 MAY•J U NE 1998&#13;
"I'm not so naive as to think that&#13;
every person in my church is a heterosexual,"&#13;
said the Rev. 1-1C. harles Farris,&#13;
pastor of Bethel AME Church. "But I&#13;
ca1mot go against the will or the word&#13;
' ofGod."&#13;
Bryan, 37, said God made him who&#13;
be is. "I didn't ask for this (to be gay).&#13;
I'm a child of God, and I shouldn't be&#13;
condemned for who I am."&#13;
Steve, anoth er black gay male, said he&#13;
feels the same way. That's why he&#13;
stopped going to Salem Baptist Church,&#13;
one of Omaha 's largest African :&#13;
■&#13;
But he labeled as hypocritical churches&#13;
that "attack homosexuality and excuse&#13;
fomication ."&#13;
But as long as a person doc s not&#13;
admit to or boast about being a homosexual,&#13;
he or she can function in a lcadershi&#13;
p position at the Seventh-day&#13;
Adventist Omrch, Roundtree said.&#13;
Not at Pilgrim Baptist Church, where&#13;
the Rev. Nigel McPher son is pastor. "If&#13;
I knew about it," he said, "they couldn't&#13;
serve in any responsible position ."&#13;
The Rev. Larry Mcnyweathcr-Woods,&#13;
pastor of Mount Moriah Baptist&#13;
"Racists tried .to use or misuse certain&#13;
texts taken out of context to justify&#13;
holding black folks in chattel slavety ...&#13;
Just as we study those scriptures&#13;
carefully and put them up against&#13;
the whole counsel of God, we need&#13;
to do the same with the scriptures&#13;
on homosexuality ... "&#13;
American congregation s. He now&#13;
attends Fir st Central Congregational&#13;
United Church of Chri st.&#13;
wrhe message from the pulpit was&#13;
that it (homosexuality) was an abomination&#13;
in the eyes of God , that if people&#13;
who were gay didn't repent we would all&#13;
go to hell," Steve said.&#13;
Steve said black churches and AfricanAmericans,&#13;
of all people should be sympath&#13;
etic to lesbians and gays. "I think&#13;
it's a case where the oppressed have&#13;
become the oppressor," he said.&#13;
Unlik e Steve, Brian , conti nues to&#13;
attend St. Jolm AME Church.&#13;
''We all have sins, and no 011c here is&#13;
perfect," Brian said. "Sexuality is a private&#13;
affair. I don't think it's an issue the&#13;
church needs to discuss. because what&#13;
people do in their bedroom is their own&#13;
business ." •&#13;
Some black ministers now say homosexuality&#13;
is no more sinful I.ban stealing.&#13;
lying or adultery . That positio n,&#13;
however, runs counter to what other&#13;
clergymen - and many church members&#13;
-bel ieve.&#13;
For example, the Rev. Reuben&#13;
Roundtree Jr., of Sharon Seventh-day&#13;
Adventis t Church, said that the homosexual&#13;
who wants to repent is embraced.&#13;
■&#13;
Church, has stmggled with the issue of&#13;
homosexuality for several years.&#13;
"The hypocrisy of the church," said&#13;
Menyweather-W oods , "is not being able&#13;
to deal with who we are and the reality&#13;
that in spite of ourselves , God can still&#13;
use us . I' ve seen God use gay people&#13;
j ust as he has heterosexuals."&#13;
But , Men yweather-Woo ds said,&#13;
'Th ose who I minis ter to view it as&#13;
wrong. An d I must deal with my congrega&#13;
tion until ano ther leve l can be&#13;
reached."&#13;
Some clergy. such as Mcnyweat herWoods,&#13;
say accepta nce by ehurch mcmbers&#13;
will never arrive unless black&#13;
churches begin to address issues of sexuality&#13;
in general.&#13;
"Sexuality ought to be addressed, but&#13;
we still ha\ •e some social and theologi cal&#13;
hang-ups that we have to overcome "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
Harvard professor and theologian Cornet&#13;
West said dealing with issues of sexuali&#13;
ty is a challenge for black church es&#13;
today.&#13;
"Black folk have been dcfiued by&#13;
means of our bodies and (by) the percep tion&#13;
of us as primarily bodily," West&#13;
said in a speech lhrcc years ago 111 a&#13;
training and leadership confer ence on&#13;
HIV /AIDS at Howard University in&#13;
Washington. D.C. "Attack s 011 black&#13;
beauty and black intelligence made it&#13;
very difficult for us to be able lo organize&#13;
arollJld issues relating to the body .&#13;
So we would hide it and conceal it and&#13;
let it flow and keep the focus on the&#13;
source - that white supremacy."&#13;
Pemcssa Seale , director of The Balm&#13;
in Gilead Inc .• in New York City, an&#13;
AIDS organization that takes its name&#13;
from a spiritual hymn about healing,&#13;
said hlack churches have never failed to&#13;
speak out on other political or social&#13;
issues before .&#13;
"The black church is the center of&#13;
communication in the black community,&#13;
and because the church has been silent,&#13;
it must take some responsibility for&#13;
the epidemic of this disease (HIV /&#13;
AIDS)," Scale said. "Wh at would have&#13;
happened if the church had mobilized&#13;
itself 15 years ago? The ignorance of&#13;
some black churches is fueling the epidemic&#13;
in our communities."&#13;
It also creates hatred, Bryan said .&#13;
"Black people arc more deeply rooted&#13;
in religion," he said. "They cling 10 old&#13;
values more than any other group. And&#13;
we tend lo be more unforgi"ing ."&#13;
And, Bryan said, because black&#13;
church es have a disproportionate membership&#13;
o[ women, he believes tl1ere is a&#13;
lot of resentment toward gay men .&#13;
"Many black women have diffi culty&#13;
finding African -Americ an men, and&#13;
when they see a gay man it's ju st one&#13;
more person who is not avail able ," he&#13;
said. "So it' s one more str ike agai nst&#13;
us ... The black chur ch will be the last&#13;
lo embrac e gays, if ever."&#13;
But Scale said lhe gay revolution has&#13;
already started in black churches.&#13;
'Th e hlack church will have to address&#13;
this iss ue," she said. "It won't happen&#13;
overnig ht. It will be a revolution&#13;
within the pew. Gays active in the&#13;
church will begin to stand up and say to&#13;
the churc h that it mus t embrace them&#13;
for who they are. Aud the church will&#13;
have to say , 'Yes, this person is gay,&#13;
but look at the contributions they have&#13;
made to my church.'&#13;
"There is only one body of Christ,&#13;
period," Scale said. "And that body is&#13;
made up of all of us - Caucasians, Latinos&#13;
and gays . Black churches that condemn&#13;
homosexuality are no t being tn1e&#13;
to the ministry and the truth of Jesus&#13;
Christ."&#13;
Menywealher -Woods snid he is hope ful&#13;
as well .&#13;
"I believe," he said. "we will reach a&#13;
point where the black church can teach&#13;
without hesitation and reservation on&#13;
scxuality ." (C)mnha World-1-lcmld)&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Case dismissed for lack of evidence&#13;
Nop roofg iventh att heB ible.c ondemngsa yr elationships&#13;
BY DR. REMBERT S. TRULUCK&#13;
SINCE MY WEB SITE on "Steps To&#13;
Recovery From Bible Abuse" at&#13;
http://www.truluck.com was published&#13;
on the Internet on September 14, 1997,&#13;
I have received e-roail letters almost&#13;
every day e:itpressing appreciation for&#13;
help that people have received .&#13;
I also regularly receive mail asking&#13;
me to give the proof or the evidence that&#13;
the Bible does not condemn gays and&#13;
lesbians.&#13;
My careful response is to say that the&#13;
question is backwards . The real issue&#13;
is: "Where is the proof that the Bible&#13;
condemns gays and lesbians?"&#13;
Perhaps a more basic question is:&#13;
"What does Jesus say about homose:ituality?"&#13;
Nothing! Jesus is the ultimate&#13;
authority for Christians about everything&#13;
. If Jesus had nothing to say that&#13;
condemns homosexuals, there is no reliable&#13;
Bible witness against gay, lesbian ,&#13;
bisexual and trans se:itual people. That&#13;
should settle the issue. Why doesn't it?&#13;
Careful and honest examination of the&#13;
six Bible passages used to cond emn lesbians&#13;
nnd gays are fow1d not to be talking&#13;
nbout homo sexuals but about heterosexuals.&#13;
There is no hint of homosexual&#13;
orientation or same sex romantic&#13;
love in any of the passages.&#13;
Ther e is not enough room here to&#13;
give the det ails, but you can find U1e&#13;
basic arguments in my web site and in&#13;
the books by John Boswell, Daniel A.&#13;
Helminiak , and others.&#13;
1 did not include material to answer&#13;
the "clob~r passages " again st gays in&#13;
the web site at first. Many oilier people&#13;
alre~dy have done a fine job of demonSlratm~&#13;
the truth about these passages.&#13;
~ y marn c?ucem in all of my ministry&#13;
m the le sbian and gay comm unity has&#13;
been to focus on tile positive message&#13;
of God's unconditional love for all people&#13;
as revea led in Jesus Christ. All of&#13;
us need encouragement and a boost to&#13;
our self es teem . E:itperiencing God's&#13;
love helps us to feel good about ourselves.&#13;
And tliat is good news !&#13;
The basic facts in the Bible case&#13;
against lesbians and gays are based on&#13;
passages in Genesis 19, Leviticus 18&#13;
and 20, Romans l :26-27, I Corinthians&#13;
6:9, and I Timothy 1: 10. No passage is&#13;
taken from the four Gospels to base&#13;
charge s against homosexuals on the life&#13;
or teachings of Jesus. Charges against&#13;
homosexuals based on the teaching s of&#13;
Jesus must be dismi ssed for lack of evidence.&#13;
The Genesis 19 story depends on a&#13;
distorted interpretation of the Hebrew&#13;
word "know" to build an anti-gay case.&#13;
The word means "know" and docs not&#13;
mean "have sex wiili" as some translations&#13;
insist. No Jewish teachers said&#13;
that the sin of Sodom was homose:itnality&#13;
or even sexual until after tile time of&#13;
Christ.&#13;
The tru.e message of tile story of&#13;
Sodom is that a small minority of peo-&#13;
■&#13;
No passage&#13;
· is taken&#13;
from the&#13;
four Gospels&#13;
to base&#13;
charges&#13;
against&#13;
homosexuals&#13;
on the life&#13;
or teachings&#13;
of Jesus.&#13;
■&#13;
pie who are different and have to be hidden&#13;
behind clo sed doors ("the closet") for&#13;
prot ection from an ignorant , fearful&#13;
01omophobia), angry (like fw1damentalist&#13;
attacks on gays) mob are God's true&#13;
messengers (angels) and need and receive&#13;
God's prot ection . The real meaning of&#13;
the story is the rever se of what&#13;
homophobi c bible bashing preachers and&#13;
teachers have made of it.&#13;
More people hav e cond emned me&#13;
beca use of my teac hings on Lcviticns&#13;
than any 0U1cr passage. The use: of Leviticus&#13;
and U1e label of "abomination" as a&#13;
weapon against gay and lesbim1 people&#13;
becomes ludicrous and absurd when the&#13;
whole body of lega l req uirements in&#13;
Levi ticus is e:itrunined objec tively and&#13;
honestly. Nobody today tries to keep&#13;
even a fraction of the legal requirements&#13;
laid down in Leviticus. Jesus has&#13;
brought an end to tile Law as a means of&#13;
pleasi ng God. as Paul said in Romans&#13;
I0:4 and in many other places. In Leviticus&#13;
as elsewhere, tile law is aimed at&#13;
heterosexual s who engage in cullic ritual&#13;
se:it act s and not al homosexuals&#13;
who love each other and express that&#13;
love in physical affection and se:it.&#13;
Romans 1:26-27 is the ne:itt favorite&#13;
weapon against gays after Leviticus.&#13;
The passage is filled with difficulties in&#13;
translation. Words are used here that&#13;
Paul does not use anywhere else and&#13;
familiar words are used in unusual and&#13;
unclear ways. The conte .xt of the passage&#13;
makes it clear that Paul is talking&#13;
about some kind of idolatrous worship .&#13;
What we know about the "mystery religious"&#13;
in and around Corinth at the time&#13;
tliat Paul wrote Romans from Corinth&#13;
fits the description in Romans 1:26-27.&#13;
Paul did not write about homosexuals&#13;
or about se:itual orientation in any of his&#13;
letters . Romans 1:26-27 is about heterosexuals&#13;
who enter into tile sexual religious&#13;
frenzy of fertility cult worship and&#13;
demonstrate tliat Uiey have abandoned&#13;
God and God's purpose for their Ii ves.&#13;
The final two passages in I Corintlrians&#13;
6:9 and I Timothy 1: 10 use a&#13;
word that is "male bed" in Greek and is&#13;
of uncertain origin and tmclear meaning .&#13;
It was not translated as "homose xual" ·&#13;
until the Revi sed Standard Version in&#13;
1946. It does not mean homo sexual.&#13;
We are 1101 sure what ii means. My personal&#13;
opinion is that it refers 10 male&#13;
pro stitute s with female customers,&#13;
which was a common custom at the&#13;
time, but tliat is a guess .&#13;
The word tran slated "effeminate" literally&#13;
means "soft" or "pliable" or&#13;
"without courage and weak ." It has no .&#13;
sexual implicati on in tl1e original language&#13;
and is not used with any sexual&#13;
significance in the rest of the New Testament.&#13;
Clear eviden ce that the Bible condenms&#13;
homosexual sexual orientation or&#13;
rej ects homos e:itual s simpl y docs not&#13;
exist.&#13;
How did so many relig ious people&#13;
st.ray so far from the truth about gays&#13;
and lesbians? Where did fundamentalist&#13;
homophobic Bible study jump off the&#13;
tracks of tn 1th and love? When Jesus&#13;
ceased to be tile guide to w1derstaucling&#13;
and usi ng the Bibl e! Jesus showed&#13;
many times tliat the Bible had been distorted&#13;
and incorrectly used to hurt and&#13;
condemn people.&#13;
Jesus touched, ate with, and called as&#13;
disciples the very people that the religious&#13;
leaders called unclean&#13;
("abomination" accorcling to Leviticus) .&#13;
Jesus offers no evidence at all against&#13;
gays and lesbians as the true children of&#13;
God . The whole religious arseuaJ of&#13;
oppr essiv e and destructiv e weapon s&#13;
hurled at gays and lesbians is separated&#13;
from Jesus and the Spirit of Jesus and&#13;
has no valid place in honest and objec:&#13;
live Bible study .&#13;
Where is tile Bible proof that God&#13;
condemns, hates and rejects homose:ituals?&#13;
There is none. The whole elaborate&#13;
homophobic system of condemnation&#13;
and rejection is based on "smoke&#13;
and mirrors" that have created "evidence"&#13;
that docs not reaJly exist. I don't have&#13;
to prove that the Bible docs not condcnm&#13;
homosexuals, because the biblical&#13;
charges against homosexuals do not&#13;
stand up under careful and objective&#13;
examination and are "dismissed for lack&#13;
of evidence."&#13;
I encourage you to go to my web site&#13;
at http://www.truluck.com and read tile&#13;
section on the "Six Passages Used&#13;
Against Lesbians and Gays," print it&#13;
out, study it, and pass it on to others.&#13;
Read .and study the entire web site. It&#13;
contains a great wealth of information .&#13;
It will take time and discipline to cover&#13;
all of it.&#13;
The author may be reached at&#13;
rembert@slip.net or at PO Box 24062,&#13;
Oakland, CA 94623.&#13;
- -..-....~ - 'K K-IRI&lt;ffiEEI The "picket. pray and play " pl ace&#13;
wiLh ecumenlcity at its heart.&#13;
Gay, Lesbian and Christian:&#13;
Many Rooms&#13;
Virginia Ram ey Moll enkott ,&#13;
John McNeill, Christin e&#13;
Smith and Melvin Deal&#13;
June 11 - 14&#13;
Fathers and Their Adult&#13;
Sons and Daughters&#13;
Sidn ey B. Simon&#13;
June 26- 28&#13;
Victims No Longer :&#13;
A Men's Abuse&#13;
Recovery Weekend&#13;
Mike Lew&#13;
July 17 - 19&#13;
Simply Divine :&#13;
I Rites of the Gay Male Spirit&#13;
John Linscheid&#13;
and Ken White&#13;
August 21 - 23&#13;
f"orf urther information cun1t1.:c 1&#13;
KIRKJUDGE&#13;
2495 Fox Gap Rd.&#13;
Bangor, PA 18013&#13;
(610) 588 · 1793&#13;
www.klrk.rldge.org&#13;
\&#13;
u mlltd 1111t ht bt11tuiful Kitwtlnny Ridge of&#13;
tll.ftern PA. 85 mi.fm m NYC 1111Pdh ilu.&#13;
SECO i'ID S iO NE 7&#13;
MANNA&#13;
BY REV. DONNA E. SCHAPER&#13;
f,&#13;
· why a simple hands grace, from the.&#13;
children's first Sunday School, suffices&#13;
to praise the nameless for our food and&#13;
our evenings. "God, be above us. God&#13;
below us. God be inside us. God be all&#13;
The alltliority to&#13;
know God&#13;
, around us. And God be with our&#13;
friends." Normally what happens next&#13;
. ' '&#13;
WE CAN KNOW GOD by tradition. \ · works . It works by transformation. .&#13;
Or experience. Or reason. -Or all thr\e i Warren 's hope is much less dialecti- .&#13;
I prefer the combination and the blend. cal. Or fluid. For him, what we do is ·&#13;
That 's why I, who love Jesus the , getdecperontothebandofGod'shistor- ·&#13;
Christ, married a Jew, who doubts that \ ical activity. We move from disobeJesus&#13;
is Christ. His religious authori-&#13;
1&#13;
dience to obedience. We become more&#13;
ties and mine often engage in personal i ourselves or more our "better" selves. I ·&#13;
warfare. I often don't ha.ve the energy for that self .&#13;
I may say that everything is going to I .. centering in history righteousness. He&#13;
turn out alright and he may say the I · rarely has the courage of the tomb. Of :&#13;
same thing: we rarely say the same course, we surprise each other. I have&#13;
thing at the same time. My faith is seen him transform overnight in :.&#13;
often based in the future, his in the past. response to the suggestion of a doctor; I ·&#13;
My hope is often based in a serious, have sruci:-~;~ healso hard ~ -it is he ·&#13;
death dueli~g transf~rmation, hi~ is who prays that great prayer "pry her off ..&#13;
often based m becommg more stauon - dead center ." Still, the authorities and ·&#13;
ary. more obedient. His faith is often i the way we know God are fundamentally .&#13;
based in stubborn rigidity, mine in 1 different&#13;
flighty fluidity. One is not better than. the other so ·&#13;
. is a long theological conversation about&#13;
who our friends are. This is the Jewish&#13;
part. I find the dialogue most amusing .&#13;
Usually one of the kids will offer that&#13;
so and so may once have been a friend&#13;
but is no longer. Warren then advocates ·&#13;
maintenance of the relationship and I ·&#13;
advocate change.&#13;
The grace is simple, as graces should&#13;
be. It is also a good compromise. The&#13;
motion of the grace is its grace for me. I&#13;
don't need the name of Jesus but I am&#13;
desperate for the sense of motion which&#13;
comprises my faith. Warren's sturdiness&#13;
is exemplified in the word, "Be" - which&#13;
is probably why we taught them 10 the&#13;
children in the first instance.&#13;
Theological analysis of one's table&#13;
grace is near enough to the absurd to&#13;
manage what is going on in our family&#13;
with God. We are trying not to fight.&#13;
We are blending. We are mixing. We&#13;
are compromising what many think&#13;
can't be compromised. We are leaning&#13;
on different authorities of experience:&#13;
I call these civil wars "the battle of&#13;
the world views." He insists I am&#13;
overly pessimistic and (his favorite&#13;
word) "apocalyptic." I insist that he is&#13;
overly pessimistic and "cynical." I don't&#13;
see his hope; he doesn't sec mine . I see&#13;
his hope as in sufficiently strong to.&#13;
wage war with my despair. He sees ·&#13;
miue the same way. If Jesus did not die .&#13;
on th.e cro ss and raise on the third day,&#13;
of course, be would see my tran sform ing&#13;
pushes as umeliable . My favorite ·&#13;
definition of the gospel is that it is the&#13;
permission and commandment to enter ,&#13;
difficulty with hope, borrowed from the&#13;
Canadian theologian , Douglas Hall. We&#13;
go into a kind of tomb. We come out of&#13;
a kind of tomb. That's how hope&#13;
: and reason, and tradi ti.on to know the&#13;
much as thoroughly different from the sameGod.&#13;
other . When we fight, as couples do, '&#13;
we fight the battle of the world views. I&#13;
advocate change or immersion in the dif-.&#13;
ficulty as gateway to .renewal. He advocate&#13;
s more deeply entering the experi- .&#13;
ence and staying there and surviving .&#13;
We also pray differently than I ever&#13;
thought I could pray . We have to stay ·&#13;
clear of the edge s and incorporate the&#13;
overlaps. If God is both present as a&#13;
transforming and lransfonned one, as a&#13;
Messiah and as an historical moving,&#13;
living, acting being, one whose mark&#13;
we are not to miss, then we must pray&#13;
to a kind of totally stable, totally chang- .&#13;
ing God at the same time.&#13;
Long ago it became clear that in my&#13;
home, I could not pray to Jesus. That's&#13;
I never thought Jesus would want&#13;
me to hang on too tight. That's the&#13;
gospel I hear from him, consistently.&#13;
We can have what we let go of. We can&#13;
be rich if we can be poor. We give to&#13;
get. We lose our life to gain it.&#13;
We relinquish, not hold.&#13;
8 MAY•JUN E 1998&#13;
Along the way, we are marrying a&#13;
Jewish historian and a Christian apocalyptic:&#13;
the one believes in a radical&#13;
eternal, the other in a radical discontinuity.&#13;
Both may tell the story of God .&#13;
Christians find that comforting; Jews do&#13;
not.&#13;
I would be lying if I said this battle of&#13;
the world views was easy. It is not. It is&#13;
. ofte.n horrifying . , What we think about&#13;
God and where God can be found is such&#13;
a life forming pattern that intimates can&#13;
find plenty lo quarrel about anywhere.&#13;
Their paths can di verge. When paths&#13;
diverge, we are oddly on our own with&#13;
· our God. We are out in left field while&#13;
our friend is out in right field, defending&#13;
our God. Alone.&#13;
Would this isolation cause me to recommend&#13;
that we marry our "own kind?"&#13;
No. That would be too easy. God&#13;
would be shrunk. But are different&#13;
authorities among intimates hard on !he&#13;
• intim acy? You bet. Harm is not done&#13;
to God; oddly we search more vigorously&#13;
for God when we differ with our&#13;
best friend on where God can be found.&#13;
But it is bard to remain friends without&#13;
constant confirmation of one's world&#13;
view. The very absence of that confir mation&#13;
can help religious authority&#13;
along: we must develop our own spirit ual&#13;
and intellectual muscles. In the&#13;
nearly constant self-explanation that&#13;
.• occurs within an interfaith marriage, a&#13;
new authority develops that is simultaneously&#13;
dialogical and independent.&#13;
Religious authority is aided by the&#13;
modesty afford ed it by the knowledge&#13;
that there is a right field - and that you&#13;
have no idea how to gel to it. Religi ous&#13;
authority is aided by knowing thal&#13;
God speaks differently to different people.&#13;
When someone we love and respect&#13;
constantly emerges in a different place,&#13;
we have no choice but to reverence that&#13;
place. It is not us. It is different. It is. genuinely&#13;
different.&#13;
We become religious open-.ended-ness&#13;
- right but not completely right. This&#13;
open-ended-ness, this lack of a closed&#13;
universe, Ibis rubbed raw door at the&#13;
bottom of our heart, becomes our religious&#13;
authority. It is not relativism -&#13;
because what happens in interfaith settings&#13;
is not relativism at all. It is&#13;
instead the nearly constant and flawed&#13;
move to win points for your side. To&#13;
show the virtue and benefit of transformation&#13;
over continuity. for example .&#13;
We fight for these things because we&#13;
believe in them. We fight intim1,1tely,&#13;
llol on a soapbox. The opening in our&#13;
heart, our cosmos, our worl~ view ~els&#13;
rubbed raw - and it also lets m the wmd.&#13;
It scabs over from ti.me to time only to&#13;
get rubbed raw again. As Wendel~ Ben:&gt;'&#13;
s s about marriage itself, mamage is ~!w illingness to gel Jost i.n tJ_ief orest&#13;
!lnd the necess1 ·ry to go out into tbe&#13;
clearing again. Even after you have&#13;
become afraid of the light.&#13;
J. F rbes of The Riverside C. hurch&#13;
lDl o . . k bo t&#13;
. N y orlc City tells the JO e a u&#13;
lll cw . "Do you&#13;
. bis father ridin~ an . rurplan~ and hold&#13;
really believe this thing can y .&#13;
?" "I'll tell you !he truth, son, I&#13;
you up• • h d n on&#13;
never d1.d Pu t all my we. 1g. t owt h •&#13;
,.__ 1 e " When rehgiou s au on- t.J.Wl p an . . .&#13;
ties war intimately . we become b 1e ~sdl&#13;
and mercifully incapable of putUng C y .&#13;
all our weight down on our own ce.rb -&#13;
tude. .f&#13;
Downcast Mainers tell us that 1 you&#13;
want 10 sink fast you should hang on to&#13;
the anchor. And that is how I feel about&#13;
my Christ. I never thought Jesus would&#13;
want me to hang on too tight. That's&#13;
the gospel I hear from him, consistently.&#13;
We can have what we can let go of.&#13;
We can be rich if we can be poor. We&#13;
give to get. We lose our life to gain it.&#13;
We relinquish, not hold. Thus, my very&#13;
absolute faith in letting go and being&#13;
open, in not putting my weig ht down&#13;
too fully anywhere. The gospel. in my&#13;
little kernel of it, is the freedom to&#13;
float And float, I do.&#13;
In my experience, change is inevitable&#13;
but growth is optional. Like many other&#13;
modem people, I have noticed that what&#13;
used to be call the cert ainty of the components&#13;
of the atom are no longer so at&#13;
CONTINUESN EXTP AGE&#13;
MANNA&#13;
The authority to know God&#13;
From Previous Page&#13;
all. These things are, furthermore, not a&#13;
still or fixed point but rather a motion,&#13;
a bit like what I imagine the trinity. An&#13;
interrelationship of moving matter.&#13;
Why would I need the authority of a&#13;
fixed God? Would that not be blaspheming&#13;
the atom and the golden rule,&#13;
simultaneously? (Yes, I do accuse my&#13;
spouse and best friend often of blaspheming&#13;
the atom.)&#13;
The authority of my religious experience&#13;
is an experienced place. I call this&#13;
place the wowided door, or opening, or&#13;
crack where the air and light comes.&#13;
That wounded door is the religious&#13;
authority of me confronting the other&#13;
and myself, simultaneously. At that&#13;
ne,ms or node, I experience Jesus and&#13;
who and the way he was.&#13;
A simple experience may help. One&#13;
day I was on the podium of an extraordinarily&#13;
tedious, yet joyful church service&#13;
in which the local clergy had been&#13;
gathered by the local African-American&#13;
church to give God orders on the abolishment&#13;
of racism. We called these&#13;
orders "prayers." Another policeman&#13;
ha~ shot another black teenager "by&#13;
accident." We had to gather. We had to&#13;
pray. We couldn't help ourselves for&#13;
turning our prayer s into orders. We&#13;
didn't trust God so much as need God.&#13;
Our need snuck into our language.&#13;
One after another of us prayed. Then&#13;
we sang. Then we prayed some more. I&#13;
had _a feeling that most of the 500 people&#13;
1n the congregation were still with&#13;
us. All of a sudden I got this great&#13;
~ge to leave. Just leave. I had already&#13;
given God my orders, done my part,&#13;
lamented my lament. I was no longer&#13;
needed _except as another pair of ears.&#13;
My chair 011 the podium was in the back&#13;
row. I might not be noticed .&#13;
So I left. I walked out the side door&#13;
behind the organ and behind the altar. It&#13;
was dusk. What the poet John Keats&#13;
called the luxury of twilight enveloped&#13;
me: I was part of pu!llle air. Even better,&#13;
I was part of clear air as opposed to&#13;
the dank air of scared prayer.&#13;
I was wearing my black liturgical&#13;
robe which seemed appropriate to the&#13;
occasion. I w1buttoned the black robe&#13;
once I got outside. No one was there&#13;
but me. The parking lot was full, the&#13;
church was rocking to another hymn,&#13;
but I was free. I was alone. I was out.&#13;
I ran to my car with the robe, waving&#13;
beyond me and had the feeling that I&#13;
might have just escaped God. I might&#13;
be free of God. I might be free.&#13;
These are the only few minutes in my&#13;
life that I might have been free of God.&#13;
Otherwise God has been a constant companion,&#13;
nndge, heart beat, iil!!er voice,&#13;
best friend. The strangeness of my little&#13;
escape startled me.&#13;
In the startle and the twilight, I realized&#13;
how I feel about church as religions&#13;
authority. Church has not always contained&#13;
God for me. More often, God has&#13;
been in the streets, or the garden, or literature.&#13;
God has been in laughter and&#13;
liberations, like skipping the meeting&#13;
that was pompously discussing God.&#13;
But God has never been "not there."&#13;
That night in the parking lot I experienced&#13;
the God who was not there as freeing&#13;
- only to learn later that it was the&#13;
church that was driving me crazy. Like&#13;
the authority of the temple, the church's&#13;
authority had begun to shrink God. I had&#13;
no doubt that God had become free, had&#13;
squeezed out, but I had real doubts about&#13;
whel.berI could know God within religious&#13;
structure alone. That night, God&#13;
came in the luxury of the twilight. In&#13;
the racing robe. In the absence of God.&#13;
New revelations are needed. I have&#13;
In the startle and the twilight, I&#13;
realized how I feel about church as&#13;
religious authority. Church has not&#13;
always contained God for me. More&#13;
often, qod has been in the streets,&#13;
or the garden, or literature. God&#13;
has been in la ugh ter&#13;
and liberations ...&#13;
no problem looking for them in the&#13;
parking lot. Or in the eyes of my puzzled&#13;
Jewish husband. I have this urge to&#13;
look "elsewhere" for God rather than by&#13;
rounding up the usual suspects. That&#13;
urge is an urge for authority . It is&#13;
something that feels deeper (watch Warren's&#13;
faith enter) than even magnificent&#13;
African-American worship or great table&#13;
prayers , each of which are sites where I&#13;
can usually count on God. When I rush&#13;
to the openings, I am looking not just&#13;
for God but for more God, for deeper&#13;
God, for God eternal.&#13;
I know God because I an, an escape&#13;
artist. I work the raw openings. Most&#13;
people find this kind of flexibility infuriating.&#13;
For me, it gives pennission to&#13;
skip out of services. My faith is in the .&#13;
hallway as much as the sanctuary.&#13;
My fluidity is directly related to the&#13;
fundamentalism of my youth. It&#13;
grounded me enough to fly. Fundamentalism&#13;
gave·me religious ground, religious&#13;
equity. From there, I have religious&#13;
experience.&#13;
Religious authority comes from reason&#13;
and experience and tradition. Reasoning&#13;
through my experience as I stand&#13;
in left field and my best friend stands in&#13;
right has often brought me to God.&#13;
Surely religi ous institutions have also&#13;
brought me to God. I have asked God&#13;
more tl1an once how long I have to stay&#13;
in the institutional church which drives&#13;
me nuts. The answer has this odd ring.&#13;
"Seventy times seven." It is the same&#13;
answer Jesus gave when asked how&#13;
often we have to forgive our neighbor.&#13;
I am stuck, in the church, standing at its&#13;
door. I am stuck in in interfaith marriage,&#13;
waving at my partner from right&#13;
to left. There is no center field in this&#13;
game. God comes in experience at the&#13;
open door. God comes as we pass&#13;
through , waving.&#13;
The Rev. Donna E. Scltaper is Associate&#13;
Conference Minister wit11 the&#13;
Massachusetts Conference of tlze&#13;
United Church of Christ. Her new&#13;
book is "Tlte Sense In Sabbatl1:A&#13;
Way To Have Enough Time," In11isfree.&#13;
The Un Time-Management Book&#13;
Sabbath&#13;
Sense&#13;
This is your&#13;
invitation to pack&#13;
your spiritual baggage&#13;
and move to the&#13;
neighborhood called&#13;
ENOUGH - enough&#13;
time, enough rest,&#13;
enough play. The&#13;
reality of "sabbath" as&#13;
a day of rest and been&#13;
SpHm,al&#13;
\111,.1 • .,&#13;
lost amidst our to-do lists, day-organizers,&#13;
and endless errands, but the sense of sabbath,&#13;
as spiritual leisure, is very much needed in&#13;
our time-starved world .&#13;
• Turn not-enough time into ENOUGH time:&#13;
• Unify fragmented time through Rl1VALS:&#13;
•Weave a pattern of SACREDNESS into your life:&#13;
• DJ:"CLl/TfE"Rs, implify. and slow down.&#13;
A&#13;
Spiritual&#13;
Antidote&#13;
for the&#13;
Overworked&#13;
by Donna Schaper&#13;
$11.95 paperback&#13;
6X9&#13;
ll8 pages&#13;
ISBN 1-880913-lS-9&#13;
Available in&#13;
bookstores&#13;
or call&#13;
lnnisfree Press&#13;
1-800-367-58 71&#13;
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spiteo f acquittal&#13;
OMAHA, Neb. - The Methodist min ister&#13;
who performed a lesbian marriag e&#13;
and then survived accusation s he had&#13;
broken church rules must look for a new&#13;
job.&#13;
The Rev. Jimmy Cree ch was told&#13;
May 5 he would not be reappointed after&#13;
his stint a t Fir st Unit ed Methodi st&#13;
Church in Omaha ends in June.&#13;
Creech said Bishop Joel Martine z told&#13;
him he has been unable to lead his con gregatio&#13;
n, which has lost a "signi ficant&#13;
number" of parishioners who opposed&#13;
the union cerem ony he perfo rmed in&#13;
September.&#13;
"He felt that I am not going to be&#13;
able to bring about a reconcil iation,"&#13;
Creech said.&#13;
According to Chris Weedy. Creech • s&#13;
wife and co-work er, the bishop cited&#13;
several reason s for not reapp ointing&#13;
Creech : the con tinuing deterio ration at&#13;
First UMC, Creech's inabilit y to reconcile&#13;
difference s with the peopl e who&#13;
op~sc d lhe commitm ent ceremony, not&#13;
follo wing the bishop' s guidan ce (in&#13;
doing the covenant ceremony and in not&#13;
acce pting the conditi ons offered befo re&#13;
the trial) , and finally the "deteriora tion&#13;
in the Nebraska conference."&#13;
Mar tinez reportedly offered Creech&#13;
three alterna tives: that Creech ask for&#13;
another appointm ent in the NE confer ence,&#13;
that he find ano ther appointme nt&#13;
in another couf erencc, or that he take a&#13;
leave of absence.&#13;
Creech said he had not made plans&#13;
regarding his fu ture. Methodist clergy&#13;
are appointed for one year at a time.&#13;
(Liz Gauger, AP writ~r, and Mel White)&#13;
Hundredss ign newspapera d&#13;
in support of Creech&#13;
OMAHA, Neb. - More than 300 people&#13;
• inclu ding U.S. Sen . Bob Kerrey, DNcb.&#13;
- signed a newspaper advertiseme nt&#13;
lihowing support for Rev. Jimmy&#13;
C:reech's ministry at First United Meth-&#13;
1:&gt;dsit Church .&#13;
Members of the church took out the&#13;
&lt;Id in the April 11 editions of the Omaha&#13;
\Vorld-Herald. Those who signed the ad&#13;
illso included several ministers and rabbis.&#13;
The ad appeared two weeks after more&#13;
than 100 Omaha-ar ea churches con demned&#13;
same -sex unions in a WorldHerald&#13;
adveniscme nt .&#13;
"This was planned before we ever&#13;
heard about that," said church membcf&#13;
Deb Kenney, who organized the ad. "We&#13;
wanted to show we're not a one-i ssue&#13;
church, and to demonstrate that we have&#13;
lots of program s and activities." (AP)&#13;
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10 MAY•JUNE 1998&#13;
Lutheranc hurchwidoef fice&#13;
hasg ayd iversityw eek&#13;
CHICAGO - "Gay, Lesbian and Straight&#13;
People: Working Toget her" will be the&#13;
theme at the churchwide off ices of the&#13;
Evangelical Luth eran Church in Amer ica&#13;
during five days in June. The staff&#13;
will focu s on reflecting divers ity in an&#13;
inclusi ve workplace .&#13;
The effort is organized by the ELCA's&#13;
Inter -unit Staff Team on Div ersity .&#13;
Evelyn B. Soto, co-coo rdinator, said the&#13;
goals are to celebrate the gifts of gay&#13;
and lesbian people iu the church and to&#13;
edu cate the staff on the history of lesbian&#13;
and gay people.&#13;
Another goal. is "to demonstrate that&#13;
the churchwide office is a welcoming&#13;
and safe place in the spirit of the resolution&#13;
pa ssed at the 1995 Chur chwide&#13;
Asse mbly ." Th at action affirins "that&#13;
gay and lesbian pe opl e, as individu als&#13;
created by God, are welcome to partici -&#13;
, pa te fully in the life of the cong regations"&#13;
of the ELCA.&#13;
The week will includ e worship and&#13;
lunchtim e speakers, book discussions&#13;
and video presentations. Topic s will&#13;
include defining tem1s of gender identity,&#13;
minis try with gay and lesbian people,&#13;
bibl ica l and theolog ical impli calions,&#13;
issues for the fam ilies an d friends&#13;
of gay an d les bian people, and welcoming&#13;
gay and le sbian peo ple in cong regational&#13;
life, Soto said .&#13;
"We are part of a church that is working&#13;
on being welcomin g ," said the Rev.&#13;
Robert N. Bacher , exec utive for administration&#13;
. "Our chur ch is engaged in&#13;
conversation and dialogue. These activities&#13;
are a part of our commitm ent to&#13;
cont inuin g to discuss issues related to&#13;
human sexuali ty, inclu ding homo sexuality&#13;
," he said.&#13;
The Rev. H. Geo rge Anderson, presiding&#13;
bishop of the ELCA, told the March&#13;
6 meeting of tl1e Conference of Bishops,&#13;
"We are planning some time toge ther in&#13;
June under tl1e theme .Q f workin.o .to o.e.t her,&#13;
lookin g at our rel ations hips with gay&#13;
and lesbian co-workers."&#13;
Anderson said the plans reflect a Im&#13;
Churchwide Assembly action expressing&#13;
supp ort for the Emplo yme nt NonDiscrimination&#13;
Act and affinn iug the&#13;
churc h's advocacy "in support of Jaws&#13;
barring discrimina tion against indivi duals&#13;
on the basis of the ir sexual orientation."&#13;
(ELCA News Service)&#13;
New owners of controversial&#13;
landmark allow MCC service there&#13;
BY DIANA WALSH&#13;
AFfER YEARS OF controver sy. the&#13;
103-foot Mount David son cross was&#13;
ilhuni natcd on the evening of April 11&#13;
for the firs t time under its new owners .&#13;
More than 300 people tumed out for&#13;
Easter eve service s under the concret e&#13;
cross.&#13;
Church member s illu mina ted it in&#13;
rainbow colors at sunset, then switch ed&#13;
to the soft white lighting requested by a&#13;
group of Armenian Americans, the new&#13;
owners who bought the cross last year.&#13;
" fh ey said they wauted every one to&#13;
use this cross and they kep t their word,"&#13;
sai d the Rev. Jim Mitulski of the Metropoli&#13;
tan Community Church, who presided&#13;
over the hillt op services. 'Th.is is&#13;
our rainbow light over San Francisco."&#13;
Last year the U.S. Supreme Court&#13;
upheld a lower cour t rul ing tliat found&#13;
tliat ci ty ownership of the cross violated&#13;
the California Constitu tion, which prohibits&#13;
giving prcfcreuee to any religion.&#13;
The Council of Armenia n American&#13;
Organizations of Northern California&#13;
then bought the cross and a 011e-U1ird&#13;
acre patch of land that surrotl1lds it for&#13;
$26,000.&#13;
Under tem1s of the lcgal settlement&#13;
with the American Civil Liberties&#13;
Union and the American Jewish Congress,&#13;
tl1c cross, which stands atop San&#13;
Francisco 's hig hes t mount ain . can be&#13;
illumina ted on ly two night s a year.&#13;
After it was dedicated by Franklin&#13;
Roo sevelt in 1934. the cross had been&#13;
ill uminated ev ery night until 1974.&#13;
From 1974 tl1rough the late I 980s, it&#13;
was lit only Easter week. Faced with&#13;
growing legal problem s over tl1e cros s,&#13;
tl1e city recreation and park departm ent&#13;
eventually cut back to lighting the cross&#13;
j ust a few hours 011 Eas ter befo re pulling&#13;
tl1e plug alto ge ther in 1990.&#13;
TI1e muni cipal monwne ut had been&#13;
dark eve r y nig ht since - excep t one.&#13;
Shortl y after the Supreme Court ml ing&#13;
and the cros s' fa te seemed uncert ain.&#13;
Mitulski's Metropo lit an Community&#13;
Church defie d city policy by li ghting&#13;
the cross in rainbo w colors on Easter&#13;
eve last year .&#13;
Thi s year Mitulski seemed thrilled to&#13;
have the bless ing of the cross' new owners.&#13;
"Our concern was that this cross&#13;
wouldn't really be available to eYeryone,&#13;
includ ing gay peop le," be snid.&#13;
The landmark's legal problems, however,&#13;
arc not complete ly over. A group&#13;
of atheists who want the cross torn&#13;
down have fifed another suit agninsl The&#13;
City and the new owners. (San Frnncisoo&#13;
fa:aminer)&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
Gay~ byterians reactt o affirmatioonf OOoiln g ayc lergy&#13;
NEW YORK - The nation's largest&#13;
Presbyterian denomination has rejected a&#13;
proposal to overturn a 10-month-old&#13;
church law that effectively bars ordination&#13;
of open gays and lesbians, The&#13;
New Y ode Times reported.&#13;
The controversial Amendment B,&#13;
adopted last June, states that any person&#13;
ordained as a minister, elder or deacon&#13;
must refrain from sexual activity outside&#13;
marriage.&#13;
In a series of votes since October, a&#13;
majority of the 2.6 million-member&#13;
Presbyterian Church (USA)'s regional&#13;
bodies turned down a broader statement&#13;
that would have asked ministers, elders&#13;
and deacons to "demonstrate fidelity and&#13;
integrity in marriage or singleness and&#13;
in all relationships of life," church officials&#13;
told the newspaper.&#13;
"W c are truly disappointed, but not&#13;
surpri sed that Amendment A has failed,"&#13;
said Scott Anderson, Presbyterian s for&#13;
Lesbian and Gay Concerns comoderator&#13;
. "Amendment A was a much&#13;
needed theological and polity correction&#13;
of the so-called "fidelity and chastity "&#13;
requirement for ordination and leadership&#13;
with the PCUSA. Our disappointment&#13;
arises out of a profound concern for our&#13;
denomination."&#13;
"We recognize that what is taking&#13;
place within our denomination is similar&#13;
to the takeover of the right wing&#13;
conservatives within the Southern Baptist&#13;
denominatiou," said Rev. Laurene&#13;
M. Lafontaine, PLGC co-moderator.&#13;
"The reality is that Amendment A&#13;
would not have changed the denominational&#13;
policy on gay and lesbian ordination,&#13;
yet opponents of Amendment A&#13;
made it out as a referendum for gay and&#13;
lesbian ordination which was simply _&#13;
not true, yet rallied the votes."&#13;
Gay cleric is nominated to replace&#13;
Newark Episcopal bishop&#13;
BY ROBERT D. McFADDEN&#13;
AN OPENLY GAY cleric bas been chosen&#13;
as one of five nominees to succeed&#13;
the Rt. Rev. John Spong as bishop of&#13;
the Episcopal Diocese of Newark, N.J.,&#13;
djocesan officials said.&#13;
If eventually elected, he would be the&#13;
first openly gay bjshop of the 2.5 millio&#13;
n-member Episcopal Church in&#13;
America.&#13;
The nominee , the Rev. Gen; Robinson,&#13;
50, has been a top official of the&#13;
Diocese of New Hampshire for more&#13;
than a decad e, is a founder of and coun selor&#13;
for AIDS organizations and sup port&#13;
groups for gay and lesbian youths.&#13;
and has led racism-educa tion projects and&#13;
raised funds for low-income housin g.&#13;
Robinson is Canon to the Ordi nary of&#13;
New Ham pshire and exe cutive secretary&#13;
of the Province of New England . He&#13;
was nominat ed by a commi ttee that considered&#13;
70 candidates to succeed Spong,&#13;
who is schedul ed to reti re in less than&#13;
two years.&#13;
Bishop Douglas Theuner of New&#13;
Hampshire said of his executive assistan&#13;
t: "He has worked for me for nearly&#13;
12 years. His colleagues in New&#13;
Hampshire have great confidence in&#13;
him . He is a very worthy candidate, and&#13;
I am delighted with his nomination.«&#13;
In a statement to the diocesan n01niruiting&#13;
committee, Robinson noted that&#13;
he was the divorced father of two daughters&#13;
aud lived in Wear e, N.H ., with a&#13;
partner , Mark Andrew . a program manager&#13;
for the New Hampshire Department&#13;
of Health and Human Services.&#13;
Asked what risks he had taken for his&#13;
fnith, Robinson wrote: ftl answered&#13;
God's call to acknowledge myself as a&#13;
gay man. My wife and I, in order to&#13;
keep our wedding vow to 'honor each&#13;
other in the name of God.' made the&#13;
decision to let each other go. Risking&#13;
the loss of my children and the exercise&#13;
of my ordained ministry in the church&#13;
was the biggest risk I've ever taken, but&#13;
it left me with two unshakable things :&#13;
my integrity and my God ."&#13;
Spong has led movements to bring&#13;
blacks, women, gays and lesbian s into&#13;
the full life of his church. and the choice&#13;
of successor is widely regarded as critical&#13;
to the future of the diocese and the&#13;
. church.&#13;
The process of selecting a succe ssor&#13;
to Spong is to be lengthy and complex..&#13;
In Jun e, a 600 -member convention of&#13;
clerics and lay lea ders will be held to&#13;
elect a successor, but lhe person selected&#13;
must be approv ed by majoriti es of the&#13;
standing committees and bishops of the&#13;
110 Episco pa l dioceses across the&#13;
nation.&#13;
The pe rson selected would be con secrated&#13;
bishop coadjutor next Nov. 21.&#13;
The title confers th e rank of top assistant&#13;
10 the bis hop with an automa tic&#13;
right of succession. Spong, long&#13;
regarded as a maverick in his church,&#13;
was elected coadjutor in 1976 and&#13;
became the diocesan bishop in I f/79. He&#13;
has said he will retire on Jan, 31. 2000.&#13;
Reports from throughout the denomination&#13;
indicated that the alternative proposal,&#13;
Amendment A, had failed by a 2-&#13;
to-l ratio in balloting by the denomination's&#13;
173 presbyteries .&#13;
The Rev. Jack Haberer, a Houston&#13;
minister who is moderator of the Presbyterian&#13;
Coalition, which supports&#13;
Amendment B, said the voting showed&#13;
the "center of the church" believed that&#13;
"sex . belongs inside a marriage, and we&#13;
want our leaders to model that."&#13;
Despite the current climate within the&#13;
PCUSA denomination, More Light&#13;
Churches Network and Presbyterians&#13;
for Lesbian and Gay Concerns are joining&#13;
their efforts. "At our re spective&#13;
board meetings in February both organizations&#13;
decided to merge and form a&#13;
stronger and more unified organization,"&#13;
said Rev. Dick Lundy , co-moderator of&#13;
MLCN. "By January 1999, we will&#13;
have hired a staff person to do organizing&#13;
and education within local Presbyteries&#13;
throughout the denomination. We&#13;
are very ex.cited about the possibilities."&#13;
PLGC and MLCN will continue to&#13;
work for the full inclusion of gay, lesbian,&#13;
bisexual and transgendered persons&#13;
within the Presbyterian Church (USA).&#13;
"We recognize that this is a lifelong justice&#13;
movement to which we are committed,"&#13;
said Rev. Lafontaine. "This church&#13;
cannot truly be the church of Jesus&#13;
Christ until there is the full inclusion of&#13;
all God's children ."&#13;
Church court will rule on ordination&#13;
of gay Presbyterian deacon&#13;
FORT LAUDERDALE, Ha. - Second&#13;
Presbyterian Church of Fort Lauderdale&#13;
is dubbed "The Sanctuary" by its members.&#13;
These days it's a battleground in a&#13;
nation al fight between factions of the&#13;
Presbyterian Church U.S.A. splil O\'er&#13;
the ordination of homosexuals.&#13;
The Fort Lauderdale church. which&#13;
has a history of championing civil&#13;
rights and women's ordination, stepped&#13;
into the debate when it ordained Dr. Ray&#13;
Whetstone as an eld.er. Elders are elected&#13;
officers who govern the church.&#13;
Whetstone is a 39-year-old&#13;
optometrist and committed Christian&#13;
who sings in the choir, quotes Scripture,&#13;
visits the sick and organizes his&#13;
life around his church. He's also gay and&#13;
in love with the church worship director&#13;
.&#13;
That has pitted him again st fellow&#13;
Presbyt erian, retired Navy Lt. Cmdr .&#13;
Ron Wier, 64. who is so outrag ed that&#13;
Second Presbyterian ordai ned an openly&#13;
gay man that he's taking his congregation's.&#13;
leaders hip to church court .&#13;
"Our Genera l Assembl y has said&#13;
'Tho u shalt not ordain a homosexual'&#13;
and they did it anyway," said Wit:r, a&#13;
divorced former elder at Second Presbyterian.&#13;
"Bottom line: You follow the&#13;
rules or you're breaking them ."&#13;
To Whetstone, the matter isn't that&#13;
simple.&#13;
"For a long time I thought God&#13;
couldn't love me because I was gay,"&#13;
said Whetstone. "Eventually. I realized I&#13;
was putting up the barrier, not God. I&#13;
know Jesus loves me .... I'm not going&#13;
to back down now for anything. "&#13;
The legal case is set to go before the&#13;
supreme court of the Presbyterian&#13;
Church U.S.A. on August 7.&#13;
Whetstone lives with his longtim e&#13;
partner, Wesley Pennington, a classically&#13;
trained pianist. owner of an ad&#13;
agency, and worship director of Second&#13;
Presbyterian .&#13;
The two moved to Fort Lauderdale in&#13;
1990 and immersed themselves in&#13;
church choirs, committees and spaghetti&#13;
fund -raisers . Friends at church knew&#13;
they were a couple, but Whetstone and&#13;
Pennington kept their relationship lowkey.&#13;
Whet stone was ordained without controversy&#13;
as a deacon, a service job . But&#13;
when, in December 1995, he sought to&#13;
become an elder and help govern the&#13;
congregation , Wier balked.&#13;
He cast the lone dissenting vote when&#13;
elders voted on ordaining Whetstone.&#13;
A South Horida Presbyterian judicial&#13;
commi ssion, acting on Wier's appeal ,&#13;
ruled last year , in a 4-2 decision, that&#13;
Whet stone's ordination was '' irregular"&#13;
but that they lacked the auth ority to&#13;
overturn it.&#13;
Wier appeale d, and a regional ju dicial&#13;
commission for Presby terians in Aorida,&#13;
Georgia and Alabama reached the&#13;
same conclusion in November.&#13;
Wier's ap,pea l now goes to the&#13;
church's high est court.&#13;
''We shoul dn't be ordaining people&#13;
who live in what we call sin. and that&#13;
goes for bomoseimals, adulterers, robbers&#13;
and the whole bit," Wier said.&#13;
T~ Presbyterian Church U.S.A . is&#13;
headquartered in Looisville, Ky. (AP)&#13;
SE COND STONE 11&#13;
Welcome!&#13;
IF YOU FOUND this copy of Second&#13;
Stone at a gay pride event , a P-FLAG&#13;
meeting. or some other event or loca tion,&#13;
there 's a Second Stone Outreach&#13;
Partner in your area . The y arc a Chri stian&#13;
church or organi za tion with a spe cific&#13;
outreach to gays and lesbian s. \Ve&#13;
encourage you to visit them for their&#13;
next se.rvicc or meeting . In the mean time,&#13;
you may be asking some questions&#13;
like the ones that follow .&#13;
When I told my church&#13;
pastor I was gay, I was&#13;
referred to an ex-gay&#13;
program. What's that&#13;
all about?&#13;
An ex-gay program cannot change your&#13;
sexual orie ntation. Ex-gay pro grams&#13;
may be effective in redir ect ing a heterosexual&#13;
perso n who has expe rim ented&#13;
with homosex ual activi ty back to he terosexual&#13;
rela tions hip s. For n gny or les bian&#13;
perso n, howeve r, an ex-gay minis -&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
We can make a world of&#13;
DIFFERENCE!&#13;
Society of the Fra ncisca n&#13;
Servants of the Poor&#13;
(Ecummical1l,1 c/1v1es)i&#13;
113 Pavoni a Ave. - 335&#13;
Jersey City NJ 07310&#13;
E-mail: sfsp@bellatlant ic.net&#13;
Near ly 35 million Americans live in&#13;
hungry or " food insecure" househo lds ...&#13;
There is sti ll no cure for AIDS ...&#13;
Homosexuality remains a "hot- bu tton"&#13;
issue in many churches ...&#13;
St. Fra ncis wro te in h is r11le of 1221&#13;
"Al l the brothers are to preach by their works"&#13;
Consider joining us as an Associate&#13;
or Vowed Member ... and help make&#13;
a difference!&#13;
WILLIAMSBURG , VIRGINIA&#13;
BEA VEN'S TABLELAND.&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
of WilliamsburgV, rrginia&#13;
P.O. Box 2674&#13;
WilliamsburgV, irginia2 3187&#13;
(757) 887-3719&#13;
rcvadcUcOaol.""'1&#13;
http://mcmbm.aol.com/RcvAdell•IHTC.blm&#13;
Services held: Sunday at 1:30 P .M&#13;
Williamsburg Regional Library&#13;
Please call for further information.&#13;
ALL ARE WELCOME AT TH.E&#13;
LORD'S TABLE.&#13;
12 MA Y • J UN E I 9 9 8&#13;
OUTREACH PARTNERS&#13;
try can only teach one how to "net as if'&#13;
hetero sexual, often with painful results.&#13;
Remember that most ex-gay church&#13;
counselors are heterosexual and cam1ot&#13;
speak from the experience of being gay.&#13;
Also , any psycho logi st or psyd1iatri st&#13;
who offers " trcauncnt" for homosexuality&#13;
is not following guidelines established&#13;
hy the Ameri can Psychologi cal&#13;
Associ ation or the American Medical&#13;
Associat ion.&#13;
After all the rejection&#13;
I got from my church,&#13;
why should I even&#13;
care about God?&#13;
Your church may have rejected you, but&#13;
God never has. God • s nature is lo draw&#13;
you closer to Him, not to rejec t you.&#13;
The church is admi nistered hy pastors,&#13;
bisho ps, lay peop le , co mmittee s; peop le&#13;
like you and me - someti mes com1ected&#13;
with God at work among us, and sometimes&#13;
not. Sometim es the people who&#13;
run the church, beca use of fear , selfi shness&#13;
or othe r reasons, are not able to&#13;
fo llow as God leads. In the pas t, the&#13;
church failed to speak out agai nst the&#13;
Holocaus t and slavery . At some poin t&#13;
in the futur e, the church' s prese nt failure&#13;
to affinn gay and lesbian people and its&#13;
failure to speak out against the homophobia&#13;
that leads lo disc rimina tion and&#13;
violence will be seen as a terri ble&#13;
wrong.&#13;
Does this mean I&#13;
shouldn't go to church?&#13;
Absolutely not! (It mean s the chur ch&#13;
needs you probably more than you need&#13;
the chur ch.) lltere is a place for you in a&#13;
church in your neighborhood . Th ere are&#13;
man y Christian church es and organizations&#13;
around the country that have a spe cific&#13;
ministry to gay and lesbian peopl e.&#13;
Even in the mainstream denomination s&#13;
gay and lesbian people have promin ent,&#13;
althou gh sometim es clo seted , place s in&#13;
the chur ch as pa stors. youth leaders .&#13;
choir mas ters, Jay leaders, and so on.&#13;
Many main stream churches across the&#13;
co untry have moved in to pos itions of&#13;
welcoming and affinniog gay and lesbian&#13;
peo ple .&#13;
How do I know that God&#13;
doesn't reject me?&#13;
Even if you've neve r set foo t in a&#13;
church or tho ught much about God, you&#13;
were created by a loving God who seeks&#13;
you out. If there's a barri er between&#13;
yourself and God , it is not God's&#13;
respons ibility . .Blackaby and King in&#13;
"Expe riencing God" say there are seven&#13;
realit ies of a rel ationship with God : I.&#13;
God is always at work around you. 2.&#13;
God pursues a continuing Jove relationship&#13;
with you that is real and personal.&#13;
3. God invites you to become involved&#13;
with Him in His work. 4. God speaks&#13;
Distribution of Second Stone in some&#13;
con1n1unitics is sponsored by our&#13;
Outreach Partners. We invite you to&#13;
visit the1n for worship.&#13;
DAYTON, OHIO&#13;
COMMUNTIY&#13;
GOSPELC HURCH&#13;
P.OO. OX16 34• D\YION0, 0 45401&#13;
DISCOVERY. OURD ESTINY!&#13;
AU ARE WELCOME&#13;
JlleelS: 546 Xenia.Ave.&#13;
Qlyton,alio&#13;
SurmylOam.&#13;
E-MAIi.; RevSamuell&lt;@oolL'Om&#13;
Visit our Web Sill'.!&#13;
htq:x/,/w\\w~&#13;
937-252-8855&#13;
RI::V. SAMUEL KADER,&#13;
PASTOR&#13;
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI&#13;
Come share your ministry with us&#13;
at._.&#13;
~&#13;
Abiding Peace Lutheran Cbur~h&#13;
5090 NE Chouteau Trafficway&#13;
Kansas City, MO 64119&#13;
(816) 452-1222&#13;
Caring for People and Creation&#13;
(Nc:r1ho f the Riffl')&#13;
Sunday Worship: 10:30 am&#13;
Sunday School: 9:00 am&#13;
http ://www.soundnet/---pickle&#13;
hy the Holy Spirit throu gh the Bible,&#13;
prayer , circmn stmtces, and the chur ch to&#13;
reveal Him self, Hi s purpo ses, and His&#13;
ways. S. God 's invitation for you to&#13;
work with Him alway s lea ds you to a&#13;
cri sis of beli ef that requir es faith and&#13;
ac tion . 6. You mu st make maj or adj ustments&#13;
in your life to j oin God in what&#13;
He is doing . 7. You com e to kn ow God&#13;
by expe.rience as you obe y Him and He&#13;
accompli she s His work t.hrough you.&#13;
But can I really be gay&#13;
and Christian?&#13;
Sexual orien ta tion - eith er gay or&#13;
stra ight - is a good, God-g iven part of&#13;
your being. A homosex ual orient a tion&#13;
is not a sinful state. ll1 e Bible does con demn&#13;
some sex ual activi ty; when&#13;
someone gets used or hurt ra ther than&#13;
IO\•ed , and when a covenan t with a loved&#13;
. one is broken ,thro ugh infidelit y. The&#13;
CONT INUES Next Page&#13;
MICHIGAN CITY. INDIANA&#13;
Pastor Randy Dwican&#13;
SIDlday Service: I I :30 am&#13;
... A caring church far a hurting world&#13;
,.,hen EVERYONE 1s we/came l&#13;
• Full Gospel&#13;
• Christ centered&#13;
• Bible based&#13;
P.O. Box9212&#13;
Midtig11nC ity, IN 46360-92t 2&#13;
(2 I 9) 778-2803 • (219) 778-9332&#13;
Email: innulife@netnitco.net&#13;
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA ~.,_.,._&#13;
~ \&#13;
l His • • ·es\ I 3960 Park D d, Suite E l&#13;
J San Diego,CA 92103 f&#13;
6t9-542-1ss1 I&#13;
Sunday Wonhip: 10:00am -&#13;
Thunday Study: 7:00pm&#13;
FROM Previou s Page&#13;
Dible support s commitment and fidelity&#13;
in loving relation ships .&#13;
Doesn't the Bible&#13;
say homosexual&#13;
activity is a sin?&#13;
The word "homosexual" did not even&#13;
appear in any translation of the Bible&#13;
prior to 1946. Daniel Helminiak in his&#13;
book What the Bible Really Says About&#13;
Homo sexuality says: The sin of Sodom&#13;
was [not homos exuality .] Jude condemn&#13;
s sex with angels, not sex between&#13;
men . Not a single Bible text clearly&#13;
refe rs to les bian sex ... Only five tests&#13;
surel y refer to mal e-male sex, Leviticu s&#13;
18:22 and 20 : 13, Roman s 1:27 an d I&#13;
Corinthi ans 6:9 and I Timothy l: 10.&#13;
All those texts are concerned with&#13;
so methi ng other tha n homosexuality&#13;
ac tivit y itse lf ... If people would still&#13;
seek to know outri ght if gay or lesbian&#13;
sex in itself is good or evi l... the y will&#13;
have to look elsew here for an answ er ...&#13;
The Bible ne ver addre sses that question.&#13;
More than tha t, the Bible seems deliberate&#13;
ly unconcerned about it.&#13;
I would Hke explore further&#13;
. What can I do now?&#13;
While the re are man y good book s and&#13;
videos available, there's somethin g&#13;
powe rful in bein g "where two or more&#13;
are gathered." You may wan t to check&#13;
out a mini stry in your area with a specific&#13;
outreach to gays and lesbians,&#13;
incl uding Second Stone's Outreach&#13;
Partne r. The worship style may not be&#13;
what you're used to, but the point is to&#13;
connect with gay and lesb ian Christians&#13;
with whom you can have discussions&#13;
about where you are. Or you may want&#13;
to try a variety of churches in your&#13;
neighborhood, even those of other&#13;
MEMPHIS , TENNESSEE&#13;
HOLY TRINITY&#13;
COMMU NITY&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
Sunday Christian Education- I 0:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday Wonhlp &amp; Holy Communlon-&#13;
11 :00 a.m.&#13;
Wednesday Proaram-7:00 p.m.&#13;
Come Join us at the lord's ublewen&gt;&#13;
saving ii seilt for You!&#13;
1559 Madison Ave. tMemphls, TN 38 I 04&#13;
901/726 ·9443&#13;
e•mall: holyn1nlcycc@Juno.com&#13;
The Rev. Timothy Meadows, M. Div., Pastor&#13;
OUTREACH PARTNERS&#13;
denominations. ([here is no "one true&#13;
church.") There are gay and lesbian people&#13;
in almost every church and God,&#13;
who is alwa ys at work around you, will&#13;
connect you to the people you need to&#13;
know - if you take the first step.&#13;
Wouldn't it just be&#13;
.· easier to keep my&#13;
sexual life a secret?&#13;
Some gay and lesbian people who arc&#13;
Tobecome aSecondStone&#13;
Outreach Partner in your&#13;
comm unity, call (504)899-4014,&#13;
e-mail secstone@aol.com, or&#13;
wri te to P.O. Box 8340,&#13;
N ew Orleans LA 70182&#13;
SAN JOSE . CALI FORN IA&#13;
Come&#13;
Celebrate&#13;
With Us&#13;
The New&#13;
life In&#13;
Je,us!&#13;
(wu/S:11)&#13;
Non-Denominational • Bible Cent.red&#13;
Sunday Servlc.es- 10:30 am&#13;
at The BIiiy Defrank Center&#13;
175 Stockton Ave .• San Jose. CA&#13;
Pastor David Harvey • (408} 345-2319&#13;
http://www.lodesys .com/celebrate/&#13;
happy, whole and fully integrated may&#13;
have to be silent about their sexuality&#13;
because of their job or other circumstances.&#13;
(fu e day will come when that&#13;
is no longer the case .) But a gay or les bian&#13;
person who cannot integrate their&#13;
sexualit y with the rest of their being&#13;
faces a difficult struggle indeed . To&#13;
deny one's sexuality to oneself while in&#13;
church or at work or with straight&#13;
friends , and then to engag e in periodic&#13;
sexual activity is not a self-lo ving ,&#13;
esteem -building experien ce . An inabilit y&#13;
to weave your sexuality into the fabric&#13;
of your life in a way that make s you&#13;
feel good about yourself and allo ws you&#13;
to develop relationships with others is a&#13;
cause for concern and should be discussed&#13;
with someone skilled in gay and&#13;
lesbian issues.&#13;
NATIONAL LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA&#13;
So[ufarity Sunday&#13;
October 4, 1998&#13;
FIRST CONGREG:ATIONACLH URCHi~&#13;
LONG BEACH&#13;
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST · ._ _,.l&#13;
An Open and Affirming Congregation&#13;
"Let us work together to end&#13;
verbal and physical gay bashing!"&#13;
Solidarity Sunday - P. 0 . Box 701592&#13;
San Antonio, TX 7827 0-1592&#13;
BruceSJ@AOL. COM&#13;
We wefcom~ you t? worship in a&#13;
nurtunn9 environment.&#13;
241 Cedar Ave • Long Beach CA 90802&#13;
562) 436-2256 • Fax (562) 436-301&#13;
http ://u sers. ao\.com( revmek/ind ex..html&#13;
May/June 1998&#13;
Outreach Partner Fund Report&#13;
Second Stone's Outreach Partner program helps local ministries make Christ&#13;
known in their communities . Participating ministries are assisted, when&#13;
needed, by the Outreach Partner fund. As of April 18, 1998, the Outreach&#13;
Partner fund:&#13;
1998 EXPENSES&#13;
Jan /Feb issue - 622.50&#13;
Mar/Apr issue - 768.50&#13;
May/June issue:&#13;
Abiding Peace Lutheran Church - I 15.00&#13;
Society of the Franciscan Servants of the Poor - 60.00&#13;
Heaven's Tableland Church - 60.00&#13;
His Life Ministries - 60.00&#13;
Commun ity Gospel Church - 60.00&#13;
Holy Trinity Community Church - C,0.00&#13;
New Life Community Church of Hope - 87.50&#13;
Celebration of Faith Praise and Worship Center - 115.00&#13;
First Congregational Church of Long Beach • ll5.00&#13;
Total 1998 Expenses - 2123.50&#13;
1998 CONTRIBlff IONS&#13;
Balance forward - 1133.99&#13;
Abiding Peace Lutheran Church - I 15.00&#13;
Anonymous subscriber contributions - 55.00&#13;
Patricia V. Long - 2S.00&#13;
Society of the Franciscan Servants of the Poor - 60.00&#13;
Abiding Peace Lutheran Church - 115.00&#13;
Holy Trinity Community Church - 60.00&#13;
His Life Ministries - 30.00&#13;
Celebration of Faith Praise and Worship Center . 235.00&#13;
Community Gospel Church • 30.00&#13;
New Life Community Church of Hope - 60.00&#13;
Total 1998 Contributions 1918.99&#13;
RJND BALANCE (204.51)&#13;
SECO ND ST O NE 13&#13;
-.&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
Utahs ociawl Olkerdsi scourag'ere μirat:ivteh' erapy&#13;
SALT LAKE CITY - Some therapists&#13;
contend "unhappy" gays and lesbians&#13;
can abandon their "lifestyle" through socalled&#13;
reparative or conversion treatment,&#13;
but a Utah social-work group&#13;
says they shouldn't try.&#13;
In a unanimous affirmation of a 2-&#13;
year-old stance by its parent group, the&#13;
Utah chapter of the National Association&#13;
of Social Workers has adopted a&#13;
policy discouraging reparative therapy.&#13;
The group's state·-board found there is&#13;
insufficient scientific data supporting&#13;
the treatment.&#13;
"Social stigmatization of lesbian, gay&#13;
and bisexual people is widespread and is&#13;
a primary motivating factor in leading&#13;
some people to seek sexual orientation&#13;
changes," the policy states. "Discomfort&#13;
about working with this population&#13;
may lead to inappropriate, ineffective&#13;
and even damaging interventions by&#13;
social workers."&#13;
Board president Joanne Yaffe said the&#13;
action came after it received an anonymous&#13;
complaint, redirected from the&#13;
national committee.&#13;
"They told us they knew of Utah&#13;
social workers who were practicing&#13;
reparative therapy and asked us what we&#13;
were goingt o do abouti t," she said.&#13;
The state chapter's action was criticized&#13;
by such groups as Evergreen International&#13;
and LDS Social Services. ··&#13;
"The church's licensed professional&#13;
counselors take the position that there is&#13;
substantial evidence that individuais can&#13;
diminish their unwanted homosexual&#13;
attraction and make changes in their&#13;
Jives," said Mormon church spokesman&#13;
Don Lefevre. "The church and these&#13;
professionals are supportive of a person's&#13;
right to seek assistance in doing&#13;
so."&#13;
The American Psychological Association&#13;
in August also passed a resolution&#13;
opposing reparative therapy.&#13;
Reparative or conversion therapy&#13;
attempts to change homosexuals to heterosexuals,&#13;
and has existed for more&#13;
than a century. F.arly practices incorporated&#13;
electric shocks, castration, lobotomies&#13;
and aversion therapy. Today, therapists&#13;
instead use psychoanalytic, cognitive&#13;
or behavioral therapy techniques to&#13;
attempt to diminish same-sex attraction.&#13;
Critics contend the therapies have a&#13;
60-70 percent failure rate, but suppcrters&#13;
insist there is ample proof that homosexuals&#13;
can change, or at least curb their&#13;
behavior.&#13;
NASW board member Shirley Coit, a&#13;
Brigham Young University social-work&#13;
professor and Evergreen International&#13;
board member, said there is a distinction&#13;
Celebrate Solidarity Sunday, October 4, 1998.&#13;
Wear the ribbon. Take the pledge.&#13;
lavite your &amp;ieads and loved ones to join with us.&#13;
Th e Solidarity Pledge&#13;
I will work for civil and human rights for all people, including gays, lesbians,&#13;
bisexuals and transgenders. Civil rights are not special rights.&#13;
I will seek to stop jokes and unkind language about anyone, including gays, lesbians,&#13;
bisexuals and tran sgenders when spoken in my presence. Words that hurt and bigotry&#13;
are not Fwmy. ·&#13;
I will speak out against any slander, debasement, lies or dehumanization of anyone,&#13;
including gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenden1, including when spoken by political&#13;
or religious leaders. Violent speech leads to physical viole nce.&#13;
I will work to stop physical violence against anyone, including violence against gays,&#13;
lesbians, bisexuals or transgenden1. Violenc e against aaypenon is violen ce against&#13;
all peo ple .&#13;
Let us work together to end verbal and physical gay bashing!&#13;
For Infonnation on how to participate:&#13;
Solidarity Simda.y -A pro j ect of Di gni ty /1.JSA&#13;
P 0. Box 701592, Sao Antonio, Te1u 78270-1592&#13;
Brucr6.Jlil·•aol. com, MTDudd\-r.i•aol,com. Fas - {210) 545-6906&#13;
Notional Coordinators- Marianne Dudd.y ond Bruce S. Jsrstfcr, MD&#13;
Ofgnly/USA&#13;
1500M assachulltAtl ve. NW. Suite1 1, WaahingtonO, C 20005&#13;
....... .d l!Jlil)u&lt;a.11r1f e-mailD: ltnll)--'""'°l.cn111&#13;
Tt!Ophooe· (202) 881--0017o(r8 00) 877-8797&#13;
14 MAY • JUN E 199 8&#13;
to be made between reparative therapy&#13;
and what she calls "lifestyle-change"&#13;
therapy.&#13;
"Reparative therapy assumes people&#13;
are broken and in need of repair. I don't&#13;
believe that," she said. "But I will help&#13;
people who want to live as heterosexuals.&#13;
They have a right to choose."&#13;
Evergreen E,~ecutive Director David&#13;
Pruden said NASW made itself&#13;
"vulnerable when, as an organization,&#13;
they become the arbiters of lifestyle&#13;
decisions . What happens if something&#13;
goes wrong because they have affirmed a&#13;
certain lifestyle?"&#13;
Pruden said about 40 percent of the&#13;
people served by his organization report&#13;
they abandon homosexuality activity&#13;
entirely and about 30 percent report they&#13;
diminish their sexual behavior. (AP)&#13;
Toriy Campolo: Gays and&#13;
lesbiansm ust choosec elibacy&#13;
BY DA v1o ·w. VIRTUE&#13;
TONY CAMPOLO, sociology professor,&#13;
international evangelist and author,&#13;
urged gays and lesbians to choose celibacy&#13;
at a gathering of United Methodists&#13;
in West Chester, Penn., recently.&#13;
The 62-year old evangelical social&#13;
activist and pastor to President Bill&#13;
Clinton, told an audience at West&#13;
Chester United Methodist Church that&#13;
he would never forget Roger, his gay&#13;
West Philadelphia High School class~&#13;
mate who was tawited so ruthlessly by&#13;
hisp eersth at he finallyh anged himself.&#13;
"If 1 was a Christian, I would have&#13;
stood with Roger , I wou.ld have&#13;
befriended Roger. In the end that's why&#13;
they hung Jesus on the cross, you&#13;
know, because he loved the wrong&#13;
people."&#13;
But Campolo's story doesn't mean he&#13;
condones gay se~. In fact, he believes&#13;
it's a sin, and quotes Scripture to back&#13;
that up. He urges his gay and lesbian&#13;
friends to choose celibacy.&#13;
"We do not choose our orientation,&#13;
but we do choose our behavior," he said,&#13;
adding: "Being a Christian is not always&#13;
easy."&#13;
Campolo's wife, Peggy, disagrees&#13;
with him strongly. She interprets Scripture&#13;
differently, and believes the key to&#13;
attracting gays to the church is to accept&#13;
them as they are. "People Jive in closets&#13;
because they're afraid to admit who they&#13;
are," she said shortly after Campolo&#13;
gave his speech.&#13;
The Campolo's came to West Chester&#13;
not so much to debate gay acceptance&#13;
as to show a potent issue and still stay&#13;
happily married. Like the Campo~os.&#13;
the Eastern Pennsylvania Mctbodi! 15&#13;
hope to stay united while openly discussing&#13;
how to minister to gays and lesbians&#13;
in their midst.&#13;
"I don't know of a denomination that&#13;
isn't being tom apart on this issue."&#13;
Campolo says. "This upsets . me,&#13;
because I believe people can have differing&#13;
opinions without divorce . And we&#13;
haven't gotten a divorce - yet," he added,&#13;
to laughs.&#13;
Campolo suggested that Christian&#13;
gays sb.ould approach homose,mality&#13;
much as Alcoholics Anonymous members&#13;
have approached alcoholism: not as&#13;
a shameful label but as an inclination&#13;
that must be struggled with one day at a&#13;
time.&#13;
Cathedral of Hope MCC target&#13;
of internet bomb threat&#13;
DALLAS - The Cathedral of Hope&#13;
Metropolitan Community Church. the&#13;
world's largest predominantly gay and&#13;
lesbian congregation, was the target of a&#13;
bomb threat posted on the hltemet.&#13;
The threat, received shortl y before&#13;
Holy Week by The Dallas Morning&#13;
News, is being investigated by the FBI.&#13;
The Rev. Mike Piazza, senior pastor&#13;
of the congregation , said the church&#13;
. would continue to operate oonnally.&#13;
"Our stance is that we need to release&#13;
this infonnation so our members know&#13;
(and) cau make their choice. We're going&#13;
to have services, but people have a right&#13;
to know what they arc coming to," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Piazza also noted th.at last year's&#13;
bombing of an Atlanta gay bar and more&#13;
recent bomb attacks on abortion clinics&#13;
have forced the church to view all&#13;
threats witl1 concern.&#13;
The threats have affected attendance,&#13;
but all services are being held as scheduled.&#13;
SEE BOMB THREAT, Page 17&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
Formerp residenot f statec onventionle avesB aptisct hurch&#13;
COLUMBIA. S.C. - Flynn Harrell says&#13;
turning his back on the South Carolina&#13;
Baptist Convention which he headed a&#13;
decade ago was not really a case of him&#13;
leaving the denomination. Rather, he&#13;
says, the Bapti sts left him .&#13;
Harrell, the convention's pre sident in&#13;
1987, said his move to the Presbyterian&#13;
faith CaJDC after more than a year's strug gle&#13;
and almost 20 years of observing the&#13;
Baptists ' political shift .&#13;
That shift toward more conservative&#13;
views created what Harrell call s an&#13;
atmo sphere of "extremist secnlar politicization"&#13;
that he no longer could over look.&#13;
"In good con science I can no longer&#13;
remain a Southern Bapti st," Harrell said.&#13;
"My denomination has left me in doctrine&#13;
, in wor ship , in exclu sion of other&#13;
Chri stians , in deni al of the gifts of&#13;
women in mini stry ."&#13;
At le ast one national Bapti st leader&#13;
said Harrell's decision is part of a trend.&#13;
"I have said from time to time that I&#13;
think the most overlooked dimension of&#13;
the takeov er of the Southern Baptist&#13;
Convention has been the hemorrhaging&#13;
of Baptists out of the denomination, "&#13;
said Stan Hastey, executive director of&#13;
the Alliance of Bapti sts.&#13;
The Alliance , based in Washing ton,&#13;
D.C., is one of several moderate groups .&#13;
fonned since the conservativ e takeover&#13;
of the Southern Bapti st Convention in&#13;
the early 1980s.&#13;
" It signal s an enormous loss for the&#13;
Bapti st movement in general when people&#13;
like Flynn and (bis wife) Anne make&#13;
decision s such as the one they've made&#13;
recently," Hasley said.&#13;
Harrell , who served for 21 years as the&#13;
st ate Baptist s' first finance offi cer ,&#13;
announc ed his deci sion in late January .&#13;
He no long er was working for the stale&#13;
convention when he made his deci sion,&#13;
Baptists urged to preach abstinence,&#13;
against homosexuality&#13;
' BY BRIAN HICKS&#13;
CHARLESTON, S.C. - It was a seminar&#13;
basically abou l the joy of 0 0 1 having&#13;
sex.&#13;
The Southern Bapt ist Convention's&#13;
EUucs and Religious Liberty Commission&#13;
met here during the first week of&#13;
March, asking its members to go into&#13;
their communities and preach the values&#13;
of abstinence and the sins of homosexu ality&#13;
.&#13;
"We live in a wicked, wicked society,"&#13;
Michael Johnston, who mi1ustcrs&#13;
to people "struggling wilh homosexual ity,"&#13;
told the group. His proof: He is a&#13;
"fonuer homosexual," and has HIV.&#13;
Perhaps as draniatic as the message is&#13;
tl1e widerlying struggle of a fiercely conservative&#13;
religious group trying lo get&#13;
out its anti-gay message while fighting&#13;
an image of intolerance and extremism.&#13;
"We want to be compassionate&#13;
people," said Dwayne Hastings, communications&#13;
director for the commission.&#13;
"While the Bible speaks very&#13;
strongly against homosexuality , we're&#13;
not saying we don't like people. It's a&#13;
hate the sin, love the sinner sort of&#13;
thing. We don't want it to come out in a&#13;
hc.m10phobic way."&#13;
But walk into this seminar at tbe&#13;
wrong second and its purpose could be,&#13;
well, misconstmed . For instance, lhere&#13;
Wa8:&#13;
A- "formet" homosexual" talking&#13;
ab o ut atte ndi ng services a t n ch u rch&#13;
where the pas tor was a "well -known&#13;
homophobic bigot."&#13;
A magazi ne distrib uted by the commission&#13;
featured a back page advertisement&#13;
with two Mickey Mouses holding&#13;
hands and hawking a video on the evils&#13;
of Disney and its "homosexnal agenda ."&#13;
A slide show about sexually transmitted&#13;
diseases that includ ed graphic&#13;
photographs of geni talia.&#13;
While the seminar addressed pomogrnphy,&#13;
premari tal sex and sexually transmitted&#13;
diseases , the main topic was&#13;
homosexuality. Johnston, who now is&#13;
host and producer of a radio show that&#13;
monitors homosexual activity, said that&#13;
instead of coode1111ungth e practitioners,&#13;
introduce them to Jesus.&#13;
It is a recurring theme for tllis semi nar.&#13;
co11ve11th e sinners.&#13;
Johnston s,ud that to treat people any&#13;
otl1er way than as lost souls is hypocritical.&#13;
"Dear Christian ladies, you can't look&#13;
a homosexual in U1e eye aud tell them&#13;
they are in sin when you are sitting&#13;
home watclling your soap operas that&#13;
glorify fonucation and adultery," Johnston&#13;
told about 150 people. "Dear&#13;
Christian men, you can't look a homosexual&#13;
in the eye and tell them lhcy arc&#13;
in sin when you have your dirty littfo&#13;
magazines and videos hidden away in the&#13;
closet, or your secret lilllc Intcmct site."&#13;
(Cluirlcstou Post and Courier)&#13;
and had not worked there for several&#13;
years.&#13;
He also has been a president of lhe&#13;
Southern Bapti st Histori.cal Society and&#13;
chairman of the Southern Baptist Business&#13;
Officers' Conference . His wife is&#13;
the only woman elected as presid ent of&#13;
the state Baptist Historical Society.&#13;
Harrell said he is convinced his decision&#13;
to leave was the right one for his&#13;
spiritual life . He said he and his wife&#13;
have been warmly accepted into her&#13;
former denomination and membership al&#13;
Shandon Presbyt erian Church (U.S.A.)&#13;
in Columbia .&#13;
"Everything that I have received has&#13;
been supportive, " said Harrell, who now&#13;
works as a con sultant on separation of&#13;
church and sta te issues. "F or the most&#13;
part, other Baptists ... they understand ."&#13;
Carli sle Drigger s: executive director&#13;
and treasurer of the stale Bapti st Convention&#13;
, said he met with Harrell before&#13;
his public announcemen t.&#13;
"We prayed together," Drigg ers said.&#13;
"I wished him well , of course , but he&#13;
has to make his own decision as everybody&#13;
does about where to go to church ."&#13;
"I have many ~ond erful memories of&#13;
Baptist people and churches ," Harrell&#13;
said . "Until the day I die , I will have a&#13;
sadness for what happened to the Baptist&#13;
denomination ." (AP)&#13;
SoutherBn aptisttsa keo n&#13;
Monnons'c laimt o ·Christianity&#13;
BY KRISTEN MOULTON&#13;
SALT LAKE CITY - The decades-o ld&#13;
debate 'o ver Mormonism 's claim to&#13;
Christianity is gai ning decibels as the&#13;
Southern Baptist Convention prepa res&#13;
to brin g 20,000 members inl o lhe Mor mon&#13;
heartland.&#13;
The Baptis ts say they hope for polite&#13;
discuss ion when they gather here for&#13;
their annual meeting in Jwie. But they&#13;
have launched a campaign beforehand to&#13;
educa te their members about the doctrinal&#13;
underpinnings of The Church of&#13;
Jesus Ouist of Latter-day Saints.&#13;
Mormons, the Baptists claim, share&#13;
family and ethical values with mainstream&#13;
Christianity, but their fundamental&#13;
doctrines are beyond the Christian&#13;
pale. And the Baptists have produced a&#13;
videotape and companion workbook to&#13;
butl!Cesst he argument. .&#13;
For their part, Monnon church leaders&#13;
arc taking unusual pains to stress the&#13;
faith's Christian bonafides as they steel&#13;
their own flock for the invasion.&#13;
They decline to comment on the video&#13;
or be interviewed about the tl1eological&#13;
jousting. But twice in February Mormon&#13;
apostles delivered what were billed&#13;
as "major addresses" defending the&#13;
church as explicitly Christian.&#13;
The speeches by Elders Boyd K.&#13;
Packer and M. Russell Ballard to Mormon&#13;
college students were unusually&#13;
pointed, though consistent with the&#13;
modem church's apparent push for au&#13;
acknowledged place in mainstream&#13;
Christianity.&#13;
Those who would make films about&#13;
Mormon beliefs, Packer said, are&#13;
"uninformed and unfair" if they portray&#13;
Latter-day Saint s as outside the Chris tian&#13;
fol d. He did not refer to the Southern&#13;
Baptist video - "The Monnon Puzzle"&#13;
- by name.&#13;
Ballard, speaking at Utah State Univer-&#13;
sity . off e red a po in l-by -poiot rcbullal&#13;
10 !hose "w ho claim we are n o r Chri stian&#13;
s beca use of our belief in these&#13;
revealed truths."&#13;
At issue are Mormonism's fowidation&#13;
beliefs: That church founder Joseph&#13;
Smith was visited in the 1820s by God&#13;
and Jesus Christ, who told him that all&#13;
existing churches were apostate; that&#13;
Christ restored bis true gospel through&#13;
Smith, together with propheti c and&#13;
priesthood authority to perform ordinances&#13;
necessary lo full salvation.&#13;
Smith's fourteen successors in the&#13;
Mormon presidency down to current&#13;
President Gordon B. Hinckley have continued&#13;
to claim they hold the earthly&#13;
keys to that authority .&#13;
Bible-based Christian groups also&#13;
contend Mormons are not Christian&#13;
because they rely on works of scripture&#13;
besides the Bible . Chief io the Monnon&#13;
scriptural canon is lhc Book of Mormon,&#13;
which Smith said he translated by&#13;
divine inspiration from ancient gold&#13;
plates given him by an angel.&#13;
"Either Joseph Smitl1 was the Lord's&#13;
instrument by which the restoration of&#13;
the gospel of Jesus Chris! in its fullness&#13;
was accomplished. or he is 001." Ballard&#13;
said. "There is no possible compromise&#13;
of this doctrine ."&#13;
Other points of differenc e concern&#13;
Monuon beliefs that God and Jesus are&#13;
r,&#13;
SEE MORMONS, Page 17&#13;
SECOND STONE 15&#13;
..,.&#13;
Priest fears breakup&#13;
of Anglican Church&#13;
BY BOB HARVEY&#13;
A NEW BRUNSWICK priest has&#13;
launched a national grassroots campaign&#13;
to save the Anglican Church of Canada&#13;
from what he fears will be a breakup&#13;
over the ordination of gays and lesbians.&#13;
Rev. George Eves, one of the organizers&#13;
of the church's growing and conservative&#13;
Essentials movement, says "all&#13;
hell will break loose" if liberal bishops&#13;
such as Bishop Michael Ingham of Vancouver&#13;
follow through on hints that&#13;
they will ordain practicing gays and lesbians.&#13;
In "Two Religions, One Church," a&#13;
new book published with the help of his&#13;
congregation in Saint John, Eves says&#13;
the real problem is not homosexuality&#13;
but the growingg ulf betweenc onservatives&#13;
who believe in what they see as&#13;
the Bible's prohibition on homosexuality&#13;
and liberals such as Bishop Ingham&#13;
who place more emphasis on reason and&#13;
experience, seeing ordination of gays as&#13;
a matter of justice. The issue could split&#13;
the church, he said.&#13;
"People like Michae l Ingham call&#13;
people like me a bigot, and people like&#13;
me are calling him a heretic," Eves said.&#13;
"We have two competing religions.&#13;
That's what's controversial. It's not a&#13;
very nice thing to say, but we can't just&#13;
sleepwalk into the next millennium."&#13;
Eves blames the church's growing liberalism&#13;
and what he sees as its disregard&#13;
of the Bible for many symptoms of&#13;
crises in his denomination: falling attendance.&#13;
aging congregations, the&#13;
"feminization" of the church and resulting&#13;
lack of young male Anglicans and&#13;
the growing gap between a socialist-&#13;
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leaning hierarchy and a conservative laity.&#13;
He published the book himself with&#13;
the aid of $12,000 in loans from members&#13;
of his congregation and has sent&#13;
copies to Anglican bishops, theological&#13;
students and all 300 delega tes to the&#13;
denomination's coming national synod&#13;
meetings in Montreal.&#13;
. 1994 Essentials meeting, which drew&#13;
700 evangelical, charismatic and other&#13;
conservative Anglicans to Montreal to&#13;
restate their adherence to traditional&#13;
beliefs. ·&#13;
The book is also being dis tributed&#13;
through Anglican bookstores.&#13;
Inclu ded with the book is a tear-out&#13;
letter to be mailed to synod. delegates ,&#13;
urging them to_ take three steps: Support&#13;
bishops in their current ban on homosexual&#13;
ordinatio n and the blessing of&#13;
same sex unions; call an inquiry into&#13;
the crisis in ~e church and find ways to&#13;
resolve it; and restate the church's&#13;
adherence to the traditional Christian&#13;
beliefs set out in the Bible.&#13;
Eves hopes delegates will receive hundreds,&#13;
if not thousands, of letters before&#13;
the meetings. The book has only been&#13;
out since mid-March, but he says he has&#13;
already been charged with trying to&#13;
hijack the agenda of what looked like a&#13;
dull meeting. But he says his hope is&#13;
only that Anglicans will "start being&#13;
honest with each other, and admit we&#13;
have a problem.&#13;
"This is a defining moment in our&#13;
history. Either we deal with the crisis or&#13;
we will just fade away."&#13;
Eves was the founding chairman of&#13;
Barnabas Ministries. a national outreach&#13;
to evangelical Anglican priests across&#13;
the country. J:Ie also helped organize the&#13;
Eves said that conference was aimed at&#13;
the church 's elite. He says his book is&#13;
aimed at the rank and file, who have&#13;
been intimidated from participating in&#13;
what, until now, has been primarily an&#13;
academic theological debate.&#13;
So far, the reaction to Eves' book has&#13;
been cautious.&#13;
. It includes liUlited e1idorsemeuts by&#13;
his current bishop, George Lemmon,&#13;
and Archbishop Harold Nutter of Fredericton.&#13;
Both stop short of endorsing all&#13;
Eves' views, but commend him for challenging&#13;
the church .&#13;
Rev. Tom Robinson, the current&#13;
chairman of Barnabas Ministries. says&#13;
he was surprised by the book's humor,&#13;
but agrees with Eves' analysis of the crisis.&#13;
"A lot of people will choke on it,&#13;
but others will say 'thank goodness&#13;
somebody has written this thing."'&#13;
The Very Rev. Peter Coffin, dean of&#13;
Christ Church Cathedral in Ottawa, is a&#13;
delegate to the general synod, and said&#13;
he received the book but has not read it.&#13;
But he said it is "ludicrous " to say there&#13;
are two different religions within the&#13;
denomination .&#13;
"We're not going to split over homosexuality&#13;
. It's not going to be like the&#13;
United Church. We're going to be really&#13;
guarded in our conversations," Dean&#13;
Coffin said. (1be Ottawa Citizen)&#13;
Scotland: Primus says agree&#13;
to disagree on gays&#13;
THOSE WHO DISAGREE with ordaining&#13;
gays and lesbians shouid not oppose&#13;
those who do agree with it, the Bishop&#13;
of Edinburgh, the Most Rev. Richard&#13;
Holloway, has said.&#13;
In an interview published in the Lesbian&#13;
and Gay Christian Movement's&#13;
spring newsletter the bishop said, "I&#13;
would not force people to accept my&#13;
attitude, for instance, to the possibility&#13;
of ordaining gay people in stable sexual&#13;
relationships. If they say, 'I just can't&#13;
get my head, and my heart, and my&#13;
mind round it,•, then I say. Peace.&#13;
"But please do not oppose those of us&#13;
who can get our heads, and our beans,&#13;
and our minds round it. Let's try and&#13;
live in some kind of balance here.&#13;
"And I think one of the ways social&#13;
evolution happens is by precisely reaching&#13;
that kind of tolerance ."&#13;
The bi shop , who is Primus of the&#13;
Scottish Episcopal Church. predicts that&#13;
the Lambeth Conference this swnmer&#13;
will achieve a "holding operation , in&#13;
which we will appoint some kind of&#13;
long-tenn study group to look at the&#13;
issue, which tuight be the very best&#13;
thing."&#13;
He would welcome as a result the setting&#13;
up of a "genuine ly representative&#13;
commission that included gay people,&#13;
gay tbeologians, some of the more fluent&#13;
and open-minded conservative theologians."&#13;
be said. Dut it would have to&#13;
exclude "the absolute intransigents,&#13;
because they by definition don't think&#13;
there's anything even to negotiate."&#13;
There was "nothing really in scripture&#13;
ahout the gay issue," the bishop said ,&#13;
"but it is a big issue for people who&#13;
have almost nbsoluti i.cd scripture ."&#13;
(Anglican Communion News Scr\'icc )&#13;
Mormon faith yet an9ther 'puzzle' for Southern Baptists&#13;
FromPagelS&#13;
separate within a godhead that includes&#13;
the Holy Ghost , that both have bodies&#13;
and that grace and good works are necessary&#13;
for salv a tion. Mormons also&#13;
believe that men and women eventually&#13;
can become "gods and goddes ses."&#13;
Traditional Christianity believes in&#13;
the Trinity - that God, Jesus and the&#13;
Holy Spirit arc one god; tliat God is&#13;
spirit; that grace alone leads to salvation&#13;
and that men cannot become gods. Most&#13;
believe the route to heaven is through&#13;
Jesus, not thro9gh a single church.&#13;
Monnon church spokesman Arnold&#13;
R. Augustin said Ballard and Packer&#13;
chose their own topics, and wanted to&#13;
equip members with ways of responding&#13;
to those who deny Mormons' claim to&#13;
Christianity.&#13;
The church has no plans to focus&#13;
resources on the Southern Baptists'&#13;
scheduled convention, Augustin said.&#13;
But the fact that top Mormon leaders&#13;
would publicly discuss the argument&#13;
both swprised and delighted Baptists and&#13;
others who want the doctrinal differences&#13;
laid bare.&#13;
"I've not seen this level of response&#13;
before," said John Constance, an evangelical&#13;
Chri stian and owner of Intermountain&#13;
Book in Salt Lake City.&#13;
Demandfo r "The Mormon Puzzle"i s&#13;
on lbe rise - Constance just ordered 50&#13;
more copies - and he sees the summer&#13;
convention as an opener for a debate&#13;
many main stre am Chri stian s in Utah&#13;
have longed for.&#13;
"It ought to create some intere sting&#13;
di scussions ," Constan ce said . "The&#13;
vide o has spar ked something that is&#13;
going to be useful in the dialogue ."&#13;
Other denomination s, too , ha ve chal leng&#13;
ed Morm ons' claim to Chri stianity .&#13;
In 1995 , the Pre sbyt erian Chur ch in&#13;
Ameri ca issued guid eline s saying Mormons&#13;
are outside the "hi storic apostolic&#13;
tradition of the Christian Church ."&#13;
About 45,000 c.opies of "The Mormon&#13;
Puzzle" video have been sold since&#13;
July, nearly 38,000 of them for distribution&#13;
to Southern Baptist churches, said&#13;
Philip Roberts, director of tJ1e lnterfaith&#13;
Witness Team for the convention's&#13;
North American Mission Board, which&#13;
hacked ll1e video production.&#13;
Roberts said Southern Baptists wanted&#13;
an objective look at the differences between&#13;
Monnonism and Bible-based&#13;
Christianity . That's why they used religion&#13;
experts from Mormon-owned&#13;
Brigham Young University and faithful&#13;
Monnon families to explain U!e faith's&#13;
tenets.&#13;
"We're not antagonistic toward Mormon&#13;
people, but they have more than&#13;
50,000 Mormon missionaries, many&#13;
targeting Baptist people every week of&#13;
the year in all parts of the world,"&#13;
Roberts said. '&#13;
Sandra Tanner, an ex-Monnon who&#13;
appears on the video, said she bas sold&#13;
hundreds of copies of the video through&#13;
her Utah Lighthouse Ministry in Salt&#13;
Lake, which also sends out newsletters&#13;
critical of Utah's predominant faith.&#13;
For years , many Christian denominations&#13;
have had a "li ve and let live" atti tude&#13;
toward Mormonism, she said, but&#13;
the video "has refocused attention that&#13;
yes, that are some differences. It's helping&#13;
both sides think through how to&#13;
articulate their beliefs better."&#13;
Tanner said public discussion is necessary&#13;
because in the past 20 years, the&#13;
Mormon church has increasingly moved&#13;
toward mainstre am Chri stianity while&#13;
minimizing it_s unique difference s.&#13;
She points to the 1978 revelation lift ing&#13;
a controver sial ban that had pre vented&#13;
black men from holding the Mormon&#13;
priesthood and changes in 1990 ridding&#13;
the Mormon temple ceremony of&#13;
BOMB THREAT,&#13;
From Page14&#13;
The Interne t threat contained condemnat&#13;
io ns of lesb ians and ga ys and&#13;
claimed, "You think Oklahoma City&#13;
was bad, wait until you see this."&#13;
The Rev. Troy D. Perry, Mod.erato r of&#13;
the Universal Fellowship of Metropoli tan&#13;
Community Churches, to which&#13;
Cathedra l of Hope MCC belongs, said&#13;
"We strongly condemn these threats to&#13;
our consti tutional rights to worship and&#13;
free assembly. Over the past 30 years ,&#13;
more than 20 Metropolitan Community&#13;
Church congregations have been target s&#13;
of the hate crimes of arson or firebomb ing,&#13;
and many more have faced threats&#13;
to both worshipers and property.&#13;
"I cal l upon all peopl e of goodwill lo&#13;
uphol d the Rev . Mike Piazza and the&#13;
congreg ation of Cathedral of Hope Metropo&#13;
litan Community Church with their&#13;
love and prayers during this time," Perry.&#13;
added . "I salute the church for keeping&#13;
its doors open to gay, lesbian , bisexual&#13;
and transgendered persons. The Scrip tures&#13;
declare that 'perfect love casts out&#13;
fear .' Through their boldness and love,&#13;
our members and friends in Dallas are&#13;
communicating the message that we&#13;
don't have to be afraid anymore."&#13;
reference s to other religions being led by&#13;
Satan .&#13;
Tanner sees the current debate this&#13;
way: "The. church is not being honest to&#13;
the world about its real theology ... and&#13;
the Southern Baptists are calling them&#13;
on it."&#13;
Mike Gray, pastor of Southeast Baptist&#13;
church in Salt Lake City. said it is&#13;
necessary for Southern Baptists to confront&#13;
the issue because Mormons&#13;
believe they have a lock on religious&#13;
truth.&#13;
"If we give them the title Christian,&#13;
MARCH&#13;
From Pagel&#13;
al, and Transgender Organization. "I am&#13;
hearing from Native Americans, Asians,&#13;
African Americans, Latinos and Pacific&#13;
Islanders who arc ecstatic about participating."&#13;
Organizers also expressed their support&#13;
for the "F,quality Begins at Home" .&#13;
actions on all 50 state capitals set for&#13;
1999.&#13;
'The F,quality Begins at Home actions&#13;
enjoy the full and enthusiastic support&#13;
of the organi zers of the Mill ennium&#13;
March," said Elizabeth Birch, executive&#13;
director of the Human Rights Cam paigu&#13;
. "It's imperative that we focus our&#13;
energies as a movement at both the state&#13;
and federal level. These two events will&#13;
complement each other as together we&#13;
build the momentwn to achieve equality&#13;
in the next century ."&#13;
"I am glad to see both of these events&#13;
moving towards a more collaborativ e&#13;
proce ss," said Jubi Headley, executi ve&#13;
director of the National Black Lesbian&#13;
and Gay Leader ship Fomm . 'Thi s is a&#13;
positive sign of progress ."&#13;
"Our greatest hope as a movement&#13;
lies in our commitment to work&#13;
togethe r for social chang e. Our passion&#13;
for ju stice and our pledge to lift up&#13;
ever y voice has th.e potential to transform&#13;
town hall s, state houses, and our&#13;
nation's capit ol," said Kerry Lobe l,&#13;
exec utiv e direc tor of the National Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Task Force.&#13;
"I remain hopeful that the Equality&#13;
Begins at Home actions and the Mi11enuium&#13;
March will help build our grassroots&#13;
movement at the state, local and&#13;
national level," said Dianne Hard-Garcia,&#13;
executive direc tor of the Lesbian Gay&#13;
Rights Lobby of Texas and co-chair of&#13;
the Federation of Statewide Lesbian,&#13;
Gay, Bisexual and Transgendcred Organizations.&#13;
"I believe that working&#13;
together these actions can strengthen the&#13;
slate and federal organizations that fight&#13;
daily to end discrimination ."&#13;
-then they take it and it's theirs. Where&#13;
does it put the rest of us?"&#13;
He said Monnons can't have it both&#13;
ways - to claim, as Joseph Smith did,&#13;
that other religions arc abominations,&#13;
and yet now claim to be part of that&#13;
Christian community.&#13;
"It's sort of a woe-is-me attitude,"&#13;
Gray said. "It's almost like , 'Ignore our&#13;
history and ignore our teachings, wrap&#13;
your arms around us.•&#13;
"The lines are very, very clear and&#13;
they drew them." (AP)&#13;
"Now that there is a growing consensus&#13;
to gather in Washington, DC, in&#13;
April, 2000, let's decide how that time&#13;
can be used, not just to inspire each otl1-&#13;
er, but to change the 1ninds and hearts of&#13;
friends and foes alike," said Dr. Mel&#13;
White, noted author and UFMCC's&#13;
Minister of Justice. "Let's use the 'soul&#13;
force' teachings of Gandhi and King to&#13;
guide us. Their co1amiunent to the principles&#13;
of militant nonviolent resistance&#13;
lo injustice gave moral authority to the&#13;
civil rights movements that they led .&#13;
What a wonderful opportunity we have&#13;
to rediscover !hose principles as we prepare&#13;
for this new miJJennillln ."&#13;
THE OTHER&#13;
Side Strengftohr t hejo urney&#13;
Books on topics of interest&#13;
to you are available by&#13;
mail from The Other Side.&#13;
Browse our catalog ~-or&#13;
special order just what you&#13;
are looking for. We&#13;
deliver!&#13;
l -800-700-9280&#13;
www.theotherside.org&#13;
SEC'OND STONE 17&#13;
AIDS activist's&#13;
life was a lesson&#13;
BY DA VE CUMMINGS&#13;
PLYMOlITH, N.H. - Among the hundreds&#13;
of greeting cards on Louise Traunstein's&#13;
dining room table in Plymouth&#13;
recently was a manila envelope. Inside&#13;
the manila envelope was a stack of&#13;
papers. On the first of those papers was&#13;
a short note from one of the thousands&#13;
of people whose life Steve Traunstein&#13;
touched before. April 24, when Louise's&#13;
son died of AIDS 10 years after discovering&#13;
he had the HN virus.&#13;
"To tell the truth, I'm glad I got to&#13;
meet you," wrote the high school student.&#13;
"You ... look normal, not weird."&#13;
The first reaction upon reading, perhaps,&#13;
is a chuckle, or maybe a scowl in&#13;
response to words that might seem trite,&#13;
meaninglessu,n enlighteneodr just plain&#13;
juvenile.&#13;
Bnt in the world of Traun stein, who&#13;
lived his final years in Gilford, words&#13;
like these were his triumph.&#13;
"Rea ding this probably made him&#13;
realize be was accomplishing his goals,"&#13;
said Leslie Traunstein, her brother's&#13;
elder by a year . "Teachers can stand in&#13;
front of a classroom and lecture forever,&#13;
but there's no way we can get the message&#13;
across like that. Here was Steve ,&#13;
who seemed to be healthy with everything&#13;
going for him, and in reality he&#13;
was about to die.&#13;
"Kids think that nothing can hann&#13;
them, that they don't have to be careful&#13;
with drugs and sex, but he was able to&#13;
get across the message that tl1ey really&#13;
do."&#13;
Traunstein lived a part of his 47-year&#13;
life as a heroin addict and one who practiced&#13;
unprot ec ted sex, habits that&#13;
ultimately served as his death sente,. ~&#13;
But he also served as a messenger - of&#13;
hope, of strength, of faith, of spirituali ty,&#13;
of life - and that will surely serve as&#13;
his legacy.&#13;
"He always had time to spend speak ing&#13;
with me about my situation, even&#13;
when he was at odds with his own mortality,&#13;
" said Jo Donna Sherman, a 37-&#13;
year-old North Carolina disc jockey who&#13;
met Traunstcin 24 years ago , when he&#13;
wa:J o counselor at a drug rehab in Con-&#13;
18 MA Y •JUNE I 9 9 8&#13;
necticut.&#13;
"He went through hell, but he was&#13;
always able to find heaven for someone&#13;
else."&#13;
Traunstein' s battle began in his teenage&#13;
years, and by the age of 17 al Boston&#13;
English High School, he was&#13;
addicted to heroin. At the age of 21, he&#13;
approached his parents and told them&#13;
they needed to be made aware of what&#13;
was happening in the world around&#13;
them.&#13;
"He told us about a storefront in&#13;
Brighton (Mas s.) where people were&#13;
meeting to give lectures on drug education,"&#13;
Louise Traunstein said. "He told&#13;
us we needed to go out and learn ."&#13;
'.fhose storefront educators would soon&#13;
turn into the counselors at Project Turnabout,&#13;
a residential drug rehabilitation&#13;
center in Hingham. Not long after his&#13;
conversation witl1 mom and dad, Traw1-&#13;
steiu chec ked himself in, tltus beginning&#13;
a pattern of helpin g and being helped&#13;
that would last for the rest of his life .&#13;
While at Turnabout, he became a&#13;
cowiselor . A year later, he checked himself&#13;
into another trea tment center,&#13;
Vitam, in Norwalk, Conn., and he was&#13;
again a cmmselor by the time he left.&#13;
"Each time he went into a rehab situation,&#13;
he would eventually talce on the&#13;
role of therapis t," Louis e Traunstein&#13;
said.&#13;
Traunstein seemed to have reached a&#13;
spiritual plateau by the time he reached&#13;
Plymouth State College in March of&#13;
1973. While there, he opened I!. home&#13;
for transcende ntal meditation before&#13;
gradua ting summa cum laude with a&#13;
psychology major and minors in philosophy&#13;
and political science.&#13;
"He was absolutely at peace," said his&#13;
mother .&#13;
But it wouldn't last long. Traunstein&#13;
slipped back into recreational drug use&#13;
that would eventually lead to his rock&#13;
bottom. Despite the slippery slope of&#13;
destruction he was on, he continued his&#13;
work at Vitam and led as constructive a&#13;
life as possible.&#13;
· But by the spring of '86, he was Iiv•&#13;
ng in a dumpster in Boston.&#13;
He made television that winter .&#13;
"We got a call from a friend who said&#13;
they'd seen Steven on tl1e news," Louise&#13;
Traunstein said. "His quote was, 'It's&#13;
hell ·to be homele ss at Christm as.' Our&#13;
friend just said, 'Steven' s safe."'&#13;
The family was as supportive as possible,&#13;
and eventually , Traunstein came&#13;
around . He checked himself back into&#13;
Turnabout in 1988, graduating in March&#13;
of 1990 after successfully completing&#13;
the 18-month program.&#13;
That was th.e good news . The bad was&#13;
that he'd tested positive for HIV.&#13;
But Traunstein refused to let the virus&#13;
win. After one more slip into substance&#13;
abuse in early 1991. he fotu1d the clean&#13;
and sober life for good in March of that&#13;
same year . That' s when the mission ·&#13;
really began in earnest.&#13;
• Traunstein, who had since moved to&#13;
the Lake s Region, teamed up with&#13;
another HN -infected man, Blake Morris&#13;
of Brndford, Vt., and together they&#13;
founded LIFESPAN - Living lnfonned&#13;
Frees Everyone Support Positive Action&#13;
Now - and began to spread tlteir message&#13;
to anyone who would listen .&#13;
''The . message was that AIDS is a dis~&#13;
ease of tu1derlying causes," said friend&#13;
Dick Utell, a co-developer of the Challenge&#13;
Course, an early intervention substauce&#13;
abuse program . "It's a disease&#13;
founded on our own behaviors and tlte&#13;
choice s we nialce. If we know that,&#13;
there's certainly the possibility for us to&#13;
prevent being exposed to tl1e vims."&#13;
"The pr ogram was about getting students&#13;
to love and cherish themselves so&#13;
they wouldn't put themselves at risk&#13;
with the virus," said Sue Walsh, assistant&#13;
director of Plymouth State's Office&#13;
of Counse ling aud Hwnan Relation s.&#13;
"They really loved his prese ntation s.&#13;
They could really relate to him."&#13;
By the end of 1992, LIFESPAN had&#13;
completed 87 programs at nine colleges&#13;
and 16 school districts . But there was&#13;
other work to be done . Traun stein&#13;
worked close ly with Utell on the Chai-&#13;
AGE,&#13;
FromPage2&#13;
Lyon said the people at Pleasant Valley&#13;
United Methodist had been told that&#13;
the larger Shepherd church was breaking&#13;
away, and the future of the smaller&#13;
chapel was injeopardy.&#13;
"I'm sure (Pleasant Valley members)&#13;
kuew it was a case of 'Ei ther you take&#13;
this gal or you lock the door.' What I&#13;
realized when I came here is the door&#13;
doesn't need to he locked - the area needs&#13;
to be worked," Lyon said.&#13;
She believes the potential exists to&#13;
build an active, if small. congregation&#13;
whose viability won't be questioned in&#13;
the future . That's her goal .&#13;
Not a lot of new ministers arc women&#13;
in their 60s, and Lyon said it has posed&#13;
some challenges. One engaged couple&#13;
wanted to be married at Pleasm1t Volley ,&#13;
. but didn't want a woman to pcrfonn the&#13;
lengc Course, eventually incorporating&#13;
an clement dealing specifically with&#13;
HIV and AIDS . He worked as a student&#13;
assistance counselor at Inter-Lake s High&#13;
School, earning himself an entire: page&#13;
in tlte I 997 yearboo k for his guidance&#13;
after the di seas e forced him to retire in&#13;
the spring of I 996.&#13;
Wrote one former Inter-Lak es student,&#13;
"AIDS took Steve's health . His body&#13;
doesn't fit our image of him, but as you&#13;
all know, nothing can kill Steve Traunstein's&#13;
spirit. His spirit is in all of us, it&#13;
is in me, I CAN FEEL IT!"&#13;
And even while a pa tient at Lakes&#13;
Region General Hospital, where he&#13;
spent much of his final 14 months,&#13;
Traun stein served as a counselor for&#13;
those with substance abuse problems.&#13;
By all accounts , be was an inspiration.&#13;
"He made the choice to live with&#13;
AIDS, as opposed to just dying with&#13;
it," said Utell.&#13;
Next to the pile of cards on that same&#13;
Plymonth tabletop was a&#13;
recently-publi shed book of poetry called&#13;
" Harvest of Seasons " by Russ Traunstein,&#13;
Steve's father. Inside that book,&#13;
on page 7 1, is a poem entitled,&#13;
"Lament ," which Russ wrote in 1996,&#13;
anticip-atin g that he would outlive his&#13;
son.&#13;
The final stanza reads :&#13;
Wind clatters though stalk and brittle&#13;
limb.&#13;
Like us, it sobs: We are stripped and&#13;
num b,&#13;
and wonder whetlter spring will eve r&#13;
come. .&#13;
Russ died last August following&#13;
unexpect ed comp licatio ns during heart&#13;
surge ry. His son saw him once during&#13;
his hospital stay in Hanov er - the day&#13;
before Russ died.&#13;
The father died three month s sober in&#13;
Alcoho lics Anonymous. (Concord&#13;
Monitor)&#13;
·ceremony. They asked if a male 1ninister&#13;
could be broug ht into the church for&#13;
their wedding . Lyon refused.&#13;
'1 have been assigned tlte church with&#13;
all the authority that comes witlt that,"&#13;
Lyon said.&#13;
Fellow pastors stood behind Lyon.&#13;
The couple went to another church to&#13;
say their vows.&#13;
But Lyon said others who may have&#13;
been leery about tlteir church being led&#13;
by a woman have softened. "One man&#13;
took me aside one day ... and whispered&#13;
in my ear, 'You're a keeper,"' she said .&#13;
Before becoming pastor, Lyon was&#13;
told Pleasant Valley had an average&#13;
attendance of 10 at Sunday worship&#13;
services. That average has increased to&#13;
17 since Lyon was a'lsigncd pastor .&#13;
(Midland Daily News)&#13;
Gay Methodists send message to bishops&#13;
From Page1&#13;
2000 .&#13;
In light of the bishop s ' statement,&#13;
Nebra ska Bishop Joel Martin ez said he&#13;
would act against any minister who per fonued&#13;
a same-sex cer emony, just as he&#13;
did in tl1e Creech case.&#13;
Contact ed by telephone , Creech said&#13;
he was plea sed the bishop s did not bow .&#13;
to pre ssure to call a special Gen eral&#13;
Conf erence, but instead chose to wait&#13;
until the Judici al Council had mled on&#13;
legal issues raised at his trial.&#13;
Creech , who contend s that t11e prohi bition&#13;
against same-se x union s is not&#13;
binding on Methodi st pastor s, also said&#13;
the bishops showed "lack of leadership"&#13;
by not speaking out again st "the persecution&#13;
of gay s, lesbians and bisexuals."&#13;
The Rev. Doug William son, a&#13;
ALABAMA,&#13;
From Page l&#13;
more than a decade . "As far as I'm con cerned&#13;
it's business as usual. We' ve got&#13;
three this month ."&#13;
Th e legislation does not contain any&#13;
criminal pen altie s for clergy or jud ges&#13;
who solemni ze gay relationships. But a&#13;
leader of lhe Gay and Lesbian Allian ce&#13;
of Alabama said be was saddened hy the&#13;
Senate's 30-0 vote for final approval.&#13;
"It's not going to change a thing. It's&#13;
just going to make gay and le sbian people&#13;
fee l like they're second-glass ci t.izcns,"&#13;
said David White, Birminghamarea&#13;
coordi nator for the organ.iz.ation.&#13;
The sponsor of the bill agreed the&#13;
Legis lature cannot stop a gay relati onship.&#13;
"Dul we can keep it from becom ing&#13;
the moral , right way ," said Rep .&#13;
Phil Crigl er, R-Irvington .&#13;
Sen. Bill Armist ead, R-Columb iana,&#13;
has been trying to pass ilic legislation&#13;
for three years. He credited its passage to&#13;
court decisions in oilier states iliat may&#13;
clear the way for legali zation of samesex&#13;
marriages and to a huge lobby ing&#13;
effort by church grou ps, particularly the&#13;
Mormons, to stop such vows from having&#13;
legal standing in Alabama. The&#13;
church groups ran ads in Sunday newspapers&#13;
and spent tl1e wee kend before the&#13;
vote calling legislato rs before they met&#13;
for the final day of ti1e lcgislati ve session.&#13;
So far. no state has legalized same-sex&#13;
marriages , and lesbians and gays in Ala bama&#13;
have not been pushing for official&#13;
recog nition of such relat ionships . But&#13;
Repu blican legis lators and religious&#13;
groups have been conccmed because the&#13;
U.S. Constitution says marriage s per fonned&#13;
in oue state must be recognized&#13;
in all.&#13;
1n 1997 . Con_gre:rn passed - and ilie&#13;
Nebra ska Wesleyan Univer sity religion&#13;
p.-ufes sor who repre sented Creech at tl1c&#13;
trial, prai sed the bi shops for their&#13;
restraint. "They're trying to steer (the&#13;
church) away from what I call a panic&#13;
mode," he said.&#13;
The bishops said that, in anticipation&#13;
of a rulin g by the denom ination's&#13;
supreme court, tl1ey deemed it w1wise to&#13;
call a speci al se ssion at this point.&#13;
Moreover, they said, "as we respond to&#13;
the crisis in tl1e world , especially among&#13;
children and tl1e impov erished ... a special&#13;
sess ion might further distrac t us&#13;
from our central mission .&#13;
the church "to remain focu sed on the&#13;
mission of God and our unity in Christ&#13;
and to set prioriti es accordingly." The&#13;
bi shops affirmed that the church' s&#13;
aut11ority and unity arc "inextricably&#13;
bound to our sharing of Christ's ministry&#13;
and prcseuce among those whom&#13;
Jesus called 'the least of these." '&#13;
The pain United Methodi sts are feeling&#13;
because of ilie homos exuality and&#13;
same -sex issue is a "call " for renewed&#13;
commitment to doctrinal foundations ,&#13;
ilic bishops said. "We solicit your prayers&#13;
and support as toget11cr we seek to&#13;
anchor the church more finnly in our&#13;
biblical and theological fouudations."&#13;
Backlash over same-sex union&#13;
The bishops said tl1ey will confront&#13;
matters of tension with pati ence and&#13;
hope. They likewi se called on the entire&#13;
United Metlioclist Church to deal with&#13;
matters concerning homo sexuality and&#13;
same-sex union "with faithfuln ess&#13;
rooted in tlie love of Christ, as revealed&#13;
in Holy Scripture ·."&#13;
Becaus e of the divisivene ss of the&#13;
homosexualit y issue, the bishops intend&#13;
to develop a teaching resource tlrnt will&#13;
identify "critical doctrinal and ecclesial&#13;
foundations for addressin g current and&#13;
oilier issues ." (UMNS and Lincoln Star&#13;
Journal)&#13;
In the lett er, the bishop s acknowledged&#13;
the impor tance of the issues surrounding&#13;
homosexuality and the&#13;
church's ability to maintain discipline,&#13;
order and unity. They al so challenged Methodist high court&#13;
calls special session&#13;
president signed - the Defen se of Marriage&#13;
Act to deny federal recognition of&#13;
same-sex marri ages and allowing states&#13;
no t to recognize same-sex union s&#13;
licensed in oilier states.&#13;
Alabama is the 30th state to ban&#13;
same-sex unions, Armistead said. The&#13;
legislat ion would replace au execulive&#13;
order that the govern or signed two years&#13;
ago to deny rec ognition to same -sex&#13;
union s. (AP)&#13;
SEATTLE - The United Metliodist&#13;
Church's highest judicial body has called&#13;
a special session for Aug. 7 and 8 in&#13;
Dallas to consider ilie meaning of language&#13;
related to ilie denomination' s prohibition&#13;
of same-sex unions.&#13;
A ques tion about the languag e was&#13;
submitted April 8 to the United Methodist&#13;
Judi cial Counci l by the College of&#13;
Bishop s or the South Central Juri sdiction,&#13;
one of five such geographic areas&#13;
in tJ1e United States.&#13;
"We may well hear other petitions&#13;
concerning the same subject and related&#13;
ones from other parties ," the council&#13;
said in an April 22 statement.&#13;
South Cen tral bishops have asked for&#13;
a declarat ory decision from the council.&#13;
Th ey want to know whether it is a&#13;
chargeable offense if a mini ster violates&#13;
tl1e denomination 's prohibitions against&#13;
performing "ceremonies rhar cclcbr a rc&#13;
homos e xual unions" and conductin g&#13;
· such ceremoni es in United Meiliodi st&#13;
churches. ·&#13;
"Great Is God's ·Faithfulness"&#13;
Evangelicals ConcernedW esternR egionC onference&#13;
July 2-5 - Chapman University - Orange, CA&#13;
Christionr econciliationf or the Goy, Lesbian, Bi-Sexula, Tronsgender&#13;
communitiesa, nd for our supportivef riends.&#13;
Ke~ote Speakers&#13;
cha r ie Shedd&#13;
Proud father of two gay sons.&#13;
Author of "Lette rs to Phillip",&#13;
•Letters to Ka ren" , and&#13;
"I'm Od d, Thank You God"&#13;
Ma ry Borhek&#13;
Founder , San ctuary - a safe plac e&#13;
for 9oy ond lesbia n Christian s.&#13;
Author of *Comini O ut To Parents•&#13;
and "My Son Eric '&#13;
Dr. Rolph Blair&#13;
Founder , Evangelicals Concerned .&#13;
Author, psychotherapist and co nsulta nt to&#13;
C&#13;
0&#13;
n&#13;
n&#13;
co n n EC ti o n&#13;
t&#13;
• I&#13;
Registration&#13;
Co nnECtion '98 - July 2-5&#13;
$275 (includes room, board ,&#13;
workshops , and fireworks!)&#13;
Women's Retreat - July 1-2&#13;
$30 (with ConnECt ion '98)&#13;
$50 (Women's Retreat only)&#13;
Scholarships ava ilable .&#13;
Call ECWR for more informa tion .&#13;
Pa~ent Methods&#13;
ch~ payabl e to ECWR&#13;
Visa or Mas terCard&#13;
(include number a nd exp. date)&#13;
Go y, Lesbian , AIDS, and Christian organ izatio ns.&#13;
Women~ Retreat: July 1 ·2&#13;
0&#13;
n&#13;
'98&#13;
Send Fee, Name, Address , Phone to:&#13;
Letha Daws on Scanzo ni&#13;
S~ ker and au thor of "All We 're Mea nt To Be"&#13;
a nd "Is The Homosexu al My Neig hbor?"&#13;
We&amp;site: www. ecw r.org&#13;
ECWR Con nECtion '98&#13;
PO Box 66906&#13;
Phoenix, AZ 85082-66906&#13;
For more information ca ll: (602)893-6952&#13;
SFCOl'1D ST O N E 19&#13;
--.&#13;
.....&#13;
-- ..... - .. ---- ....... _____ ···-&#13;
Church&amp;Or anizationNews&#13;
MCC in the Valley&#13;
celebrates 25 years&#13;
NORTH HOLLYWOOD - The San Fernando&#13;
Valley's only congregation in the&#13;
Universal Fellow ship Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches has celebrated its&#13;
25th anniversary, after surviving threats&#13;
that had a former pastor wearing a bulletproof&#13;
vest and the deaths of 80 members&#13;
from the AIDS epidemic .&#13;
The 115-member North Hollywood&#13;
church was congratulated by the San&#13;
Fernando Valley Interfaith Council and&#13;
the denomination' s founder , the Rev.&#13;
Troy Perry.&#13;
The Metropolitan Commun ity&#13;
Church in the Valley pride s itself on&#13;
having pushed U1e once male-dominated&#13;
denomination into more concern with&#13;
women's issues.&#13;
'T his was o ne of the fir s t congr eg a tions&#13;
in the UFMCC to strongly&#13;
advocate an equal role for women in&#13;
churc h life... as well as place ju st as&#13;
much emphasis on women's hea lth&#13;
issues as we do on AIDS/HIV," said the&#13;
Rev. Jeffrey Pulli ng, pastor.&#13;
Pulling, 48, is one of many UFMCC&#13;
. .&#13;
Ecumenical &amp; Inclusive&#13;
We are a Christ ian community of men&#13;
and women from various Catholic and&#13;
Protestant traditions involved in minslries&#13;
of love, compassion and reconcili ation&#13;
. We live and work in the world,&#13;
supporting ourselves and our ministri es&#13;
and are inspired by the spirit of St.&#13;
Franc is and St. Clare. We are not&#13;
canc,nicall y affiliated with any denomination.&#13;
For more infonna tion or a copy of our&#13;
news letter, Footsteps, please write us:&#13;
Voca tion Dir6Ctor&#13;
PO Boit 8340&#13;
New Orleans, Li\ 70182&#13;
Mercy of God Community&#13;
20 MAY•JlJNE1998&#13;
minister s who were educa ted at a mainstream&#13;
Christian seminary but eventuall&#13;
y joined the clergy ranks of the&#13;
UFMC C.&#13;
"I was the first openly gay seminarian&#13;
at Andover Newton Theo logical School&#13;
near Boston in the early 1970s," Pulling&#13;
said . When it came to the requirement&#13;
that he serve a part-lime internship at a&#13;
local church , he said, "they didn't quite&#13;
know what to do with me ... I found an&#13;
MCC co ng regation by that point and&#13;
was able to do mr field education there."&#13;
The North Hollywood church has&#13;
long been active in the San Fernando&#13;
Valley Interfaith Council , participat ing&#13;
in the council 's annual winterti me&#13;
homele ss project, cler gy council and&#13;
Martin Luther King birthda y observ ances&#13;
as well as tl1e North Hollywood&#13;
Food Pantry .&#13;
Des pit e th e hard-won ac ce ptance in&#13;
tl1e religious commu nity, tl1e congreg ation&#13;
has had to contend with outside&#13;
dangers.&#13;
The Rev. Sherre Boothman, who pastored&#13;
the church from 1989 to 199- 3,&#13;
"used to wear a bulletproof vest because&#13;
her life was threatened seve ral time s,"&#13;
Pulling saidl.&#13;
The congregation, which had 300&#13;
members at its height in the early&#13;
1980s, later saw its male ranks deci mated&#13;
by the 'AIDS virus . "Fun erals&#13;
were being held here every week during&#13;
the height of the AIDS cri sis ," Pulling&#13;
said.&#13;
"We're still dealing with accumul ated&#13;
grief." (John Dart. Los Angeles Times)&#13;
• lesbian and gay&#13;
New&amp;s Enetrtainmnte&#13;
for New Orleans since 1977&#13;
Travel MovieP olice&#13;
Theatre Gay History&#13;
WickeSd tage Directory&#13;
LesbiaVn oices Politcis&#13;
QuarteSrc enes Books&#13;
&amp; more&#13;
g;iym·tllfimpocuicws.com&#13;
www.impectncws.com&#13;
Events .&#13;
Announcements in this sectio11 are provided&#13;
fr ee of charge as a service to&#13;
Christia11 orga11izatio11s. To have an&#13;
event listed, send information to Second&#13;
Stone, P.O. Box 8340. New Orlea11s,&#13;
LA 70182, FAX to (504)899-4014, email&#13;
secstone@aol.com.&#13;
More Light C.hurches&#13;
Conference&#13;
MAY 22-24, "197 8-1998 : Honor the Past!&#13;
Transform the Futu re!" is the theme for the&#13;
1998 More Light Chu rches Co nferen ce, to&#13;
be ho sted by McKinl ey Memori al Ch urch&#13;
in Champ aign , Illinois. Keyno te speaker&#13;
will be Rev. Dr. Beverly Harrison, on the&#13;
faculty of Union Seminar y (New York&#13;
City), who was a witnes s at the 1978 Gene&#13;
ral Assemb ly. Durin g lhe confere nce,&#13;
McKinley Mem orial Church will be dedi&#13;
·cating a new sta ined glass window with&#13;
the theme of inclu sivity, co mplete with&#13;
pink triangl es and oth er sy mb~l s. '.or&#13;
information , or to request a reg istration&#13;
form, co ntact Richard Spro tt, 5 10-2 68 -&#13;
860 3 , ra s pr o tt @i x .n e tc om.co m o r&#13;
ric hard_ spro11@pcusa.o rg (MLCN Steering&#13;
Committ ee) or Tim Shea, 217 -~5 5-&#13;
34 13, tms2@juno.c om (Local Comm11_1e c&#13;
Chair). Or che ck th e MLCN web sit e:&#13;
htt p://www.mlcn.o rg&#13;
Gay, Lesbian and&#13;
Christian: Many Rooms&#13;
JUNE 11- 14. Jo hn McNei l!. Vir gi nia&#13;
Ra,ncY Mollenk oll, Chris tine Smith and&#13;
Melv in Deal at Kirkridge Retreat and Study&#13;
Center, 2495 Fox Gap Rd., Bango r, PA&#13;
180 13 -9359, 6 10-588 -17 93. T hi s even t&#13;
will provide the gay, les bian, bisex ual&#13;
co mmunit y an o pp o rtu n ity lo sh are&#13;
express ions of our uniqu e ei1periences of&#13;
God's g race and love. Led by John&#13;
McNeil!, Catholic priest , psychot her apist,&#13;
co-founder or Dign ity and -•~n • ~f&#13;
gay ev ent s at Kirkridge be ginning •~&#13;
1977; Virgini a Ramey Moll enkoll , femini&#13;
st theo lo gian and author of 10 books;&#13;
Chr isti ne Smith , Pro fesso r of Preac hing&#13;
and Worship at Unit ed Theo log ical Seminary&#13;
in Minne sota; and Melvin Deal, lay&#13;
leader in the Unit y Fellows hip , Washington,&#13;
DC and founder of The African Heritage&#13;
Dance Center. Fee is $300.&#13;
GLAD Alliance Gathering&#13;
JULY 16- 19, the Gay , Lesbi an and Affirming&#13;
Disciples Alli ance (GLAD Alli_a~ce)&#13;
will galher for retreat, respite , and v1S1oning&#13;
al their annual GLAD Event. The setting&#13;
will be the Benedict Inn, a retrca~ center&#13;
in Beech Grove , Indiana , ju st outside of&#13;
Ind ianapol is. Th e eve nt is open to ~II&#13;
inte rested per sons, espec ially to folks m&#13;
the Chri st ian Chur ch (Di scip les of&#13;
Chri st). T he facili tator will be the Rev.&#13;
Melanie Morrison. co•director of Leave n.&#13;
a no n-p rofi t o rgani zation that provides&#13;
edu catio n and resources in lhe areas of&#13;
sp iritua l deve lopment. feminism. antiracism.&#13;
and sexual j us lice. She is also&#13;
author of 1he book "The Ur.ice or C'oming&#13;
Home: Spiritualily , Sexua lily, and 1h~&#13;
. Strugp.le for Justice• published in ! 99S by&#13;
The Pilgrim Press. Morrison i5 ,111&#13;
o rdained mini ster of th e Unilcd Churc h of&#13;
C hrist and lea ds retrea ts for wo me n and&#13;
me n acros s lhc chu rc h. For addi tiona l&#13;
inf o rmat ion . co ntac t GLA D Allia nce at&#13;
P.O. Box 19 223 , Ind ianapo lis, JN 462 19-&#13;
0223.&#13;
Brethren / Mennonite&#13;
gathering:&#13;
Dancing In The South wind&#13;
JULY 24-2 6, Th e Sup po rtiv e Co ngrega tio&#13;
ns Networ k announ ces Da nc ing In T he&#13;
Southwind : Weav ing An Incl usive Spir it,&#13;
an int ernational gathe ring of Me nn o nite&#13;
and Church of the Brethren congregat ions&#13;
and indivi dual s who se ek to welcome gay.&#13;
le sbian and bi sex u a l mem bers . T he&#13;
gath ering will occ ur in Wichita , Kan sas.&#13;
T he conf eren ce will build on the last SCN&#13;
inlcrnali o nal galhcrin g, which became a&#13;
home of lhc S pirit fo r two da ys -- an&#13;
ex perien ce which e nab led many of tho se&#13;
who gath ered there lo live on in coura ge&#13;
and in faith . Thi s gatheri ng will be a lime&#13;
10 foc us on worshi p of the Spirit o f incl usio&#13;
n held in Brethr en/Mennoni te faitli traditions&#13;
. Joinin g th e cele bral ive worsh ip,&#13;
will be time lo d iscuss curren t pol itica l&#13;
rea llie s of co ngregatio ns and indi vidu als&#13;
who have been cen sured or disc iplined due&#13;
lo their stance of welcome for lesbian , gay&#13;
and bisex ual perso ns in the ch urch. For&#13;
more info rmation abou t Danc ing In ~he&#13;
Soulhwind or SCN , co ntac t the Sup portive&#13;
Co ngreg ati o ns Netwo rk, P.O. Box 6300.&#13;
Minn eap o lis. MN 55-J06. Pho ne (61 _2~&#13;
722 - 690 6. . Or by e-m a i l.&#13;
SCNe two rk@aol.com .&#13;
Simply Divine: Rites of&#13;
the Gay Male Spirit&#13;
AUGUS T 2 1-23. Ken Wh ile a nd Jo hn&#13;
Linsch eid al Kirkridg e Ret reat and Sludy&#13;
Cen ter, 2495 Fox Gap Rd ., Ban ~~r, PA&#13;
1801 3 -935 9. 6 10-588 - 1793 . Fec 1htat~rs&#13;
sa y: •we will gather aga in fo~ lhe third&#13;
year to seek the divine in th_e midst of o~r&#13;
mo un taint op gay co mmunit y. We will&#13;
share our sto ries of ga yness , of love and&#13;
illne ss, of dream s and aspir ation s. and of&#13;
perso nal or spiritu al break throughs and&#13;
acco mpli shmen ts. Crea tive pro test , drag,&#13;
double entendre, camp - all testify lo a rich&#13;
.gay traditi on of respondi ng playf ully to&#13;
bo th o ppo rtun ity and o ppres s ion.• Led&#13;
by Ken White, Di rec tor of Conti nui ng&#13;
Social Work E.ducalion at Temp le University&#13;
and Jo hn Linscheid, a con tributi ng editor&#13;
10 The Other Side maga zine . Both&#13;
have been helping gay friends create rituals&#13;
to mark signifi cant passages in their&#13;
lives for the last ten yea rs. Fee, $ 230.&#13;
Marsha Stevens&#13;
concert dates&#13;
MAY 23 &amp; _24, Christ United Evangelical&#13;
Church, Co lumbus, Ohio&#13;
MAY 30 &amp; 31. MCC of lhe Hudson Valley.&#13;
Albany, New York&#13;
JUNE 6 &amp; 7, Open Arms MC(' ,&#13;
Rochester , New York&#13;
JUNE 13 &amp;14 , New Creations MCC ,&#13;
Columbus, OhllJ&#13;
JUNE 20 &amp; 21. J\pp ,1h1d11un MCC,&#13;
&lt; 'harlcslun. West \' i1gin111&#13;
CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY. NEWS&#13;
Prominent authors featured&#13;
Evangelicals Concerned to hold annual gathering&#13;
ORANGE, Cal. - Nationally renowned&#13;
authors in the Christian community&#13;
will address attendees at the annual&#13;
Evangelicals Concerned Western Region&#13;
"ConnECtion" Conference to be held&#13;
July 2-5, and the Women's ConnECtion&#13;
Retreat July 1-2 al Chapman University&#13;
in Orange, Calif. Authors Mary Borhek,&#13;
Charlie Shedd, and EC founder Dr.&#13;
Ralph Blair will be keynote speakers.&#13;
Letha Dawson Scanzoni will address the&#13;
ammal Won1en' s Retreat which precedes&#13;
the main conference.&#13;
The conference will focus on providing&#13;
support and guidance for gay and&#13;
lesbian Christians, their friend s and&#13;
families. In addition to the promised&#13;
speakers, ConnECtion '98 will feature a&#13;
variety of educational workshops.&#13;
inspirational music, and Fourth of July&#13;
entertainment. Attendee s will have an&#13;
opportunity to meet hundreds of gay and&#13;
lesbian Christians from around the&#13;
country.&#13;
Keynoter Mary Borhek, author of&#13;
"Coming Out To Parents" and "My Son&#13;
Eric" has been an activist for acceptance&#13;
of gays and lesbians in the Christian&#13;
community. She is the founder of&#13;
"Sanc tua ry," a gay and lesbian group&#13;
within the Moraviru.1 church.&#13;
Charlie Shedd , a long time Presbyterian&#13;
minister, is a senior spokesperson&#13;
in the Christian community in support&#13;
of openness and inelusivity. The father&#13;
Church&amp;Or anizationNews&#13;
Gay and lesbian&#13;
Mormons to m,eet&#13;
in Portland&#13;
PORTLAND, Ore. - Affirmation: Gay&#13;
and Lesbian Monnons will meet for its&#13;
20th annuaJ conference in Portland, Oregon&#13;
Sept. 4 - 6 at the Lloyd Center&#13;
Doubietrec Hotel.&#13;
A Wide variety of speake rs will lead&#13;
fun and informative workshops, including&#13;
events focused on gay youth , seniors,&#13;
trans gender . and parents of gays&#13;
and lesbi ans. Also participating will be&#13;
rep resentatives from Family Fe llowship,&#13;
an organization of Monnon par ents&#13;
of gays and lesbians, as well as&#13;
Gamofit es, a suppo rt group for gay&#13;
Mormon fathers.&#13;
Specific workshops planned for the&#13;
conference includ e: A Psychiatrist's&#13;
Response to Reparative Therapy. Marriage&#13;
and Homophobia, Women's&#13;
Issues, Alternative Paths to Spirituality,&#13;
Getting Beyond Internalized Homophobia,&#13;
Countering the Religious Right.&#13;
and a panel discussion on Making Relationships&#13;
Work.&#13;
There will also be an opportunity to&#13;
attend an AIDS memorial service, where&#13;
the Affirmation AIDS Quilt will be displayed,&#13;
and a spiritual devotional at a&#13;
nearby church.&#13;
Any Monn.on event would be incomplete&#13;
without festivities, organizers say,&#13;
so conference attendees will be treale~ to&#13;
"lots of outrageous entertainment, song.&#13;
and games. nll , of course, with its own&#13;
special brand of gay Mormon humor."&#13;
For additional infom1atiun on this&#13;
event, contucl Affirmation. (.503)288-&#13;
2037, rllun@northwest.com, www.affirmation.&#13;
org, P.O. Box 80654, Portland&#13;
OR 97280-1654.&#13;
UFMCC pastor to&#13;
be recognized by&#13;
Queen Elizabeth II&#13;
THE REV. NEIL THOMAS, pastor of&#13;
MCC Bournemouth (Bournemouth,&#13;
England), has been invited to a Royal&#13;
Garden Party at Buckingham Palace on&#13;
July 14. Thomas will be recognized by&#13;
Queen Elizabeth II for bis mini stry to&#13;
the homeles s, the abused. and the marginalized.&#13;
He has been invited to attend&#13;
as an openly gay UFMCC minister ,&#13;
along with his partner, Miles Bingham .&#13;
Thomas , who will celebrate 10 years&#13;
as Pastor of MCC Bournemouth in&#13;
February 1999, has also been honored&#13;
by the local town of Bournemoutl1.&#13;
Members of bis church nomin ated&#13;
him as Volun teer of the Year for his&#13;
contributions to community. Thomas,&#13;
the first fully co mpen sated UFMCC&#13;
pastor in the European District, gives a&#13;
titl1e of his time to the local community,&#13;
serving on local boards and charities&#13;
including the Rape. Abuse and Incest&#13;
Line and other local projects that serve&#13;
both the lesbian. gay, bisexual and&#13;
transgendered commwlities and heterosexual&#13;
community.&#13;
Pastor Thomas said, ''These honors&#13;
are received not for myself but for every&#13;
person who has touched my life and&#13;
made it what it is today. I receive these&#13;
honors in recognition of God's influence&#13;
and the wonderful ministry that each nnd&#13;
every one has contributed to life aud&#13;
work of Metropolitan Community&#13;
Church of Boumemouth. "&#13;
of two gay sons, he has pushed beyond&#13;
the boundaries of traditional interpretations&#13;
held within the church without&#13;
compromising his evangelica l stance .&#13;
He is the author of "Letters to Philip"&#13;
and "Letters to Karen ," and a new book,&#13;
"I'm Odd, Thank You God."&#13;
Le tha Dawson Scanzoni is the coauthor&#13;
of "Is the Homosexual My&#13;
Neighbo r?" and "All We're Meant To&#13;
Be," a book about biblical feminism .&#13;
She is also the editor of the&#13;
" Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's&#13;
Caucus Update," and is an adjunct&#13;
faculty member at Old Dominion University.&#13;
Dr. Ralph Blair , founder of Evangelicals&#13;
Concerned, Inc., has supported the&#13;
integration of evangelical Christian faith&#13;
and homosexuality since the mid-&#13;
1960' s. A psychotherapist in New&#13;
York, Blair edits two national ly distributed&#13;
publications, the " Record" and&#13;
"Review." He currently serves as a consultant&#13;
to leaders of national gay, lesbian,&#13;
and HIV /AIDS organizations .&#13;
Evange li cals Concerned is a nonprofit&#13;
Christian organization positively&#13;
uniting the gay, lesbian , bisexual, and&#13;
transgender communities . It's missiou&#13;
is to provide a safe place to deal with&#13;
issues of reconcil!ation, integration , and&#13;
· maturation of spirituality and sexuality.&#13;
EC has member groups in citie-s including&#13;
Seattle, Portland, San Francisco,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Diego, New York.&#13;
Philadelphia, and other smaller communities&#13;
around the country . EC groups&#13;
hold weekly Bible studies and socials,&#13;
and annually host regional retreats as&#13;
well as the annual ConnECtion conference.&#13;
The fee for those who preregister for&#13;
this conference is $255 which includes&#13;
room, board, all workshops and keynotes,&#13;
and a fireworks extravaganza .&#13;
Registration at the door is $275, with&#13;
confirmation required prior to the event.&#13;
The registration fee for the Women's&#13;
Retreat is an additional $30 when attending&#13;
the maiu conference, $50 as a single&#13;
event. Scholarships are available for&#13;
those in need.&#13;
For additional information , contact&#13;
ECWR ConnECtion, P.O . Box 66906.&#13;
Phoenix AZ 85082-6906, (602)893-&#13;
6952, www.ECWR.org .&#13;
Retreat center for gays opens&#13;
A 22-ACRE RANCH transformed into&#13;
an ecumenical spirilllal retreat for gays&#13;
and lesbians - thought to be the only&#13;
one in the country - opened in Leona&#13;
Valley. Calif., by ho sting the first&#13;
known national multidenominational&#13;
conference of Christian ministries to the&#13;
lesbian and gay populace.&#13;
The retreat center - developed by&#13;
Catholic laymen James L. Colburn and&#13;
Kevin S. Reese, partly as a tribute to&#13;
their previous partners lost to AIDS -&#13;
has been received benignly by this small&#13;
ran.ch and farming community northeast&#13;
of Santa Clarita, they said . Aud they&#13;
surmise that the more culturally conservative&#13;
Antelope Valley to the east may&#13;
be unaware of their center's existence.&#13;
The message of tl1e Rancho AmMccer&#13;
Retreat Center and its inausural conference&#13;
is aimed at countering what is&#13;
experienced as an antagonistic climate in&#13;
the gay community, where "we have felt&#13;
constrained to apo logize for being&#13;
Christian," said Colburn, the retreat's&#13;
principal founder and a fom1er set decorator&#13;
for television.&#13;
In a keynote talk. Episcopal priest&#13;
Malcolm Boyd spoke out for the first&#13;
time against "a minority of antireligious&#13;
zealots in the gay movement"&#13;
who have created a distorted publi c&#13;
image in most media "of gays as nonspiritual,&#13;
anti-religionist hedonist s."&#13;
Gays who are moral churchgoer s are&#13;
being maligned, Boyd said during his&#13;
remarks. "Our profession of faith within&#13;
the gay movement has too often led to&#13;
our being treated as second-class citizens&#13;
and falsely stereotyped as hypocrites and&#13;
accomplice s in social oppression." said&#13;
Boyd, author of 25 books and poet in&#13;
residence at Los Angeles' Episcopal&#13;
headquartel'S.&#13;
Colburn and Reese said that Rancho&#13;
Amanecer (amanecer means "dawn" in&#13;
Spanish) will provide a comfonable setting&#13;
for gays and lesbians. "They can be&#13;
themselves," Reese said. "Their se~ual&#13;
orientation is a nonissuc."&#13;
Recalling his arrival in Leona Valley.&#13;
Colburn said he tried to be as inconspicuous&#13;
as possible. "I thought I covered&#13;
my tracks pretty well for the fust&#13;
year and a half," be said. But he later&#13;
learned that a number of townspeople&#13;
knew be was gay even before he completed&#13;
purchase of the property .&#13;
"One time the postmistress. an older&#13;
lady, took my hand and said, 'It's so&#13;
nice to have you boys in the Valley. "'&#13;
he said. (John Dart. Los Angeles Times)&#13;
SE :"'OND &lt;:TO NE 21&#13;
Rev. Jimmy Creech&#13;
interview on video&#13;
.&#13;
Videos&#13;
FOR THOSE who would like, to know&#13;
more personally the straight Methodist&#13;
pastor who dared perform a same-sex&#13;
commitment ceremon y in spite of a&#13;
warning not to from his bishop , Rev,&#13;
Mel White has produced a video about&#13;
Omaha's First United Methodist Church&#13;
pastor Jimmy Creech .&#13;
On March 11, Creech was placed on&#13;
trial to determine if he had violated the&#13;
integrity of the church for blessing with&#13;
God's grace the relationship of two&#13;
women in his congregation who had&#13;
shared their vows of love and fidelity&#13;
with one another.&#13;
"I have to tell you," Rev. Creech&#13;
explained, "that the integrity of the&#13;
church was violated when the church&#13;
decided to prohibit the celebration of the&#13;
love and fidelity of two people regardless&#13;
of their gender , regardle ss of their&#13;
sex."&#13;
Just weeks before the trial, on February&#13;
12, lesbian and gay Americans celebrated&#13;
Freedom To Marry Day, to help&#13;
rai se public awareness of the 1,047&#13;
rights and protection s withheld from&#13;
same-sex couples who are denied the&#13;
rights of marriage by their nation and&#13;
the rites of marriage by their church .&#13;
At a national press conference in Los&#13;
Angeles on that day, Jimmy Creech&#13;
shared the deeply personal story behind&#13;
his evolutionary journey from neutrality&#13;
to full support and total acceptance of&#13;
God's lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgenderedchildren.&#13;
The costly convictions of Jimmy&#13;
Creech expressed in this deeply moving&#13;
pretrial interview with White will help&#13;
change minds and hearts in the current&#13;
I&#13;
/ The Erotic Contemplative&#13;
Reflections on the Spiritual Journey of the Gay/Lesbian Christian&#13;
By Michael B. Kelly&#13;
A SDC VOLUME STIMULUS FoR&#13;
LIVING, LOVING AND PR.AYE R:&#13;
1) Our Experi ence (75 min)&#13;
2) Revisioning Sexuality (80 min)&#13;
3) Exodus and Awakening (75 min)&#13;
4) The Desert and the Dark (88 min)&#13;
5) Liberation (84 min)&#13;
6) The Road from Emmaus (63 min)&#13;
Six volume video set $199&#13;
Audio cassette tape set $99&#13;
Order through:&#13;
EROSpirit Research Institute&#13;
P.O. Box ~40&#13;
New Orleans LA 70182&#13;
"The Erotic Contemplativ e is the&#13;
mos t powerful and insightful study of&#13;
gay spirituality that I know of. I have&#13;
watch ed "The Road From Emm aus"&#13;
(tape 6) thr ee tim es and still find new&#13;
riches." -- Jm1N J. M o'IEIL, PH.D. ,&#13;
author of The Church and the&#13;
Homosexual.&#13;
"In my theology classes, both gay and&#13;
straight seminarians benefit from&#13;
Kelly's integ~ation of sexuality with&#13;
Christian mysticism." •· ROBERT Goss,&#13;
PH.D., author of Jesus Acted-Up.&#13;
"An excellent resource ... a worthwhile&#13;
investment." •· B oN DJNGS, a publication&#13;
of New Ways Ministry.&#13;
"The Erotic Colltemplative video course&#13;
has helped gay men and lesbians who&#13;
grew up as Christians move toward&#13;
healing the wounds of the past." ••&#13;
JOSEPH KRAMER, M.D1v., EROSpirit&#13;
Research Institute.&#13;
"This work should be considered&#13;
essential to anyone serious about their&#13;
sexuality/spirituality and mandatory for&#13;
anyone who in any way acts as a&#13;
spiritual director for gay and lesbian&#13;
people." - More Light Update.&#13;
l ~ore 1lc1uilcd" '. fo;ma1mn ubout c:ich vid.:o i~ availab.lc upon requc&gt;t Aho avai_loblicn Pal - _the&#13;
f.uropcan/Au_ , tralhm for=i Co.hfomm reside nts add 8.25% sales tax U.S. ~luppmg charge ~5.()0.&#13;
lntcrnwional ~hipping ch:trgc-~ 35.00. ~ 1~7. ER~~ I Kc~:_0rch ln1111utc. _ _&#13;
22 MAY•JUNF.1998&#13;
/&#13;
controversy over same-sex marriage that&#13;
is dividing churches, homes, and&#13;
f arnilies across tl1e nation.&#13;
"The Trials of Jimmy Creech," a 28-&#13;
mi oute video int erview with this&#13;
remarkable man is available from Soulforce&#13;
Videos. ($10, P.O. Box 4467 ,&#13;
Laguna Beach, CA 92652,&#13;
RevMel@aol.com, www.rnelwh.ite.org,&#13;
www.soulforce.org)&#13;
Mel White and his life-partner, Gary&#13;
Nixon, work together in an interfaith&#13;
justic e ministry based on the prin ciples&#13;
of militant nonviolent re sistance to&#13;
injustice taught by Gandhi and King. In&#13;
1997, White re ceived the ACLU's&#13;
National Civil Libertie s Award for his&#13;
efforts to apply these "soul force " principles&#13;
to the struggle for ju stice for sexual&#13;
minorities .&#13;
The production and low cost distribution&#13;
of videos like "The Trials of&#13;
Jimmy Creech" 'is an educational outreach&#13;
of White and Nixon's interfaith&#13;
justice ministry. The donation requested&#13;
for their not -for -profit videos barely&#13;
cover the costs of duplicating, packaging,&#13;
and mailing.&#13;
Other Soulforce videos include:&#13;
"The Rhetoric of Intolerance," a prizewinning&#13;
28-minutc open letter video to&#13;
Pat Robertson in which White reviews&#13;
and responds to almost 40 of Robertson's&#13;
most misleading statements, not&#13;
just about lesbians and gays, but about&#13;
the Constitution, the Bill of Right s,&#13;
separation of church and state , Muslim&#13;
and other minority Americans. It is a&#13;
frightenin g look, with a calm, thoughtful&#13;
response , to the false and inflamma tory&#13;
rhetoric of America's leading fundamentalist&#13;
Chri stian .&#13;
"How Can I Be Sure That God Loves&#13;
Mc, Too?, " a 24-minute video taped live&#13;
before an amazing congregation in&#13;
Spring Lake , Michigan. Thi s is White' s&#13;
response to those who would misuse the&#13;
Biblical record to condemn lesbian, gay,&#13;
bisexual , and transgender ed people.&#13;
Patrick Bristow, who played Peter on&#13;
ABC's Ellen, said of this video: "This&#13;
simple, brilliant, theologically grounded&#13;
sennon may do more for gay rights than&#13;
many political actions have done. I&#13;
mshed to show it to my mother."&#13;
Gay chorus reconfs Kawarsky's&#13;
'Prayerfso rB obby'&#13;
Music&#13;
BY KEN KEUFFEL, JR.&#13;
IN 1982, A 19-year-old gay man from&#13;
suburban San Francisco leaped from a&#13;
freeway overpass into the patll of an 18-&#13;
wheel truck.&#13;
For four year s, Bobby Griffith had&#13;
struggled to reconcile his homoseiLuality&#13;
with his fami ly's conservative religious&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
It was not to be. To the bitter end,&#13;
Griffi th's moth er, Mary, prayed to God&#13;
to "cure" her son of his "i llness."&#13;
All Bobby ever wanted was accept ance&#13;
. Instead, he developed feelings of&#13;
self-loathi ng over not fitting in. Those&#13;
feelings inevita bly drove him to suicide.&#13;
In time, Bobby's story - and his&#13;
mother's attem pt to come to terms with&#13;
it - attracted the attention of Leroy Aarons,&#13;
a former reporter and editor who&#13;
founded the National Lesbian and Gay&#13;
Journalists Associatio n.&#13;
Bobby had kept voluminous joumals,&#13;
and Aarons twned them and interviews&#13;
with Mary into a 1995 book titled&#13;
"Prayers for Bobby."&#13;
This book. now in paperback.&#13;
received favorable reviews in such publi&#13;
cations as The New York Tim es, the&#13;
Washington Post and the San Francisco&#13;
Chronicle .&#13;
As so often happens , one work&#13;
inspires another in a different medium .&#13;
J.A. Kawarsk y, a gay Pennsylvani abased&#13;
composer, was looking arotmd for&#13;
material on which to base a future vocal&#13;
work . In "Pray ers for Bobb y ," he and&#13;
librettist Kendel J. Killpack found it.&#13;
"Praye.rs for Bobby : For Love and for&#13;
Life" is making its way throu gh the&#13;
large and growing network of this country's&#13;
gay and lesbian choruses.&#13;
It's been performed in such ci ties as&#13;
Tampa, Fla., Columbu s, Ohio, and San&#13;
Jose, Ca lif. It's been recorded by the&#13;
New Jersey Gay Men's Chorus and the&#13;
Cha mber Choir of the Gay Men's&#13;
C'borus in Washington, D.C.&#13;
The music reflects 1970s pop styles&#13;
tllat Bobby would have heard as a child.&#13;
Narrations are accompanied by faint&#13;
sounds of hymn hmcs Mary Griffith&#13;
might have sung.&#13;
"In the last 15 years, we (gays) have&#13;
been worrying about AIDS," said&#13;
Kawarsky . "Our art's reflected that. But&#13;
we've ignored a significant part of the&#13;
population: teenagers coming out."&#13;
(f hc Arizona l)aily Stur)&#13;
Imagining what Huck would say&#13;
Ecclesiastical&#13;
homophobia&#13;
BYL EONS ATTERFIELD&#13;
RIGHT BEFORE HUCK Finn decid es&#13;
he'll go to hell rath er than tum Jim in&#13;
as a nmaway slave, he says something&#13;
deliciously ironic:&#13;
"Well, I tried the best I could to kinder_&#13;
soften it up somehow for myself by&#13;
saying I was bmng up wicked, and so I&#13;
waru't so much to bl a me· but somethm&#13;
· g ·1 us·1 de of me kept say' ing, 'There&#13;
was the Sunday-school, you could 'a'&#13;
gone to it; and if you'd 'a' done it tl1ey'd&#13;
'a' le amt you there tliat people iliat acts&#13;
as I'd be . · en acuno about [Jim] goes to&#13;
everlasting fire."' 0&#13;
theR eaEd ing th. e passage 134 years after&#13;
belie lllancipafion, hardly anyone&#13;
his ~es that Huck is frying in hell for&#13;
re usal to betray Jim. It's Twain's&#13;
·w_a~o f reminding us that in t11e preCIVIi&#13;
War South, slavery was ju stified.&#13;
from chw:ch pulpit s as being divinely&#13;
SECOND STONE Newspaper, ISSN&#13;
No. 1047-3971 , is published every&#13;
other month by Bailey Communications,&#13;
P.O. Box 8340, New Orleans,&#13;
LA 70182, secstone@aol.com. Copyright&#13;
1998 by Second Stone. a registered&#13;
trademark.&#13;
SUBSCRIPTIONS, U.S.A. $19 per&#13;
year. Foreign subscribers add $10 for&#13;
postage. All payments U. S. currency&#13;
only .&#13;
ADVERTISING, For display advertising&#13;
information call (504)899-&#13;
4014 or write to P.O. Box 8340, New&#13;
Orleans, LA 70182. Classified advertising&#13;
information is found on the&#13;
classified page. We reserve the right&#13;
to refuse any ad for any reason.&#13;
EDITORIAL, Send letters, event&#13;
announcements, church and organization&#13;
news to Second Stone P.O. Box&#13;
8340, New Orleans, LA 70182 or via&#13;
e-mail to secstone@aol.com. Manuscripts&#13;
to be retumcd should be&#13;
accompanied by a stamped, self&#13;
addressed envelope. Second Stone is&#13;
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SECOND STONE. a national ecumenical&#13;
and evangelical Christian&#13;
newspaper with a specific outreach to&#13;
gay, lesbian and b1scxunl people&#13;
P!JBL!SI lbRJEDITOR .hm Bailey&#13;
'&#13;
sanctioned by Biblical autl1ority.&#13;
The Bible teaches us lots of Good&#13;
Things, many of them disregarded by its&#13;
most enthusiastic believers . What&#13;
comes immediately to mind is tl1e Sermon&#13;
on the Mount in which Je sus&#13;
wams against judging others and against&#13;
praying 'in public so everyone can&#13;
admire our piety .&#13;
But tl1e Bible has been used to promote&#13;
SOllle Bad Thing s - like slavery, like&#13;
keeping women subservient to men,&#13;
like running electricity through hlllllan&#13;
bodies t1ntil tlic heart stops beating and&#13;
tl1e skill starts smoking.&#13;
And, of course , it's been used to ju stify&#13;
our collective homophobia.&#13;
A selective reading of the Bible can&#13;
rcinforee almost any hangup we have.&#13;
W c all pick and choose those parts that&#13;
support What we're already convinced of.&#13;
A recent letter to tlte editor points out&#13;
verses in chapters 18 and 20 of Lcvitic~&#13;
s condemning males who lie down&#13;
with other males.&#13;
My own favorite Leviticus injunction&#13;
comes in chap ter 19 where we're told -with&#13;
equal finnness, "Thou shalt not let&#13;
thy cattle gender witli a diverse kind;&#13;
thou shalt not sow thy field with min- .&#13;
gled seed; neitlicr shall a garment mingled&#13;
of linen and woolen come upon&#13;
thee."&#13;
But how long's it been since you've&#13;
seen pickets outside a church accusing&#13;
tlie minister of being soft on crossbred&#13;
cattle, hybrid seed corn or garments&#13;
c.~ Pontius' Puddle&#13;
mingled of linen and woolen?&#13;
Now, though, there's hope that Sweet&#13;
Reason cmshcd to earth may rise again&#13;
in Nebraska. Not that we're going to&#13;
persecute tl1osc who violate chapter 19&#13;
of Leviticus, but that we may be letting&#13;
up on those who violate chapters 18 and&#13;
20.&#13;
The United Methodist Church refused&#13;
earlier this year to find tlie Rev. Jimmy&#13;
Creech guilty for performing ·a union&#13;
ceremony between two lesbian members&#13;
of his congregation in Omalia.&#13;
Oh sure, you're saying . They're&#13;
Metl1odists and Metl1odists are so full of&#13;
affable good will that they're theologically&#13;
suspect . They've got so many&#13;
social concerns you can't always tell&#13;
tliem apart from those dirty rotten secular&#13;
hum~sts who hang out at tlie Unitarian&#13;
Church.&#13;
So Methodists aren't your really hardline&#13;
Christians. Not like we used to be&#13;
in the Baptist church of which I'm an&#13;
alwn.&#13;
But listen to this: Even Baptists are&#13;
turning to toleranc e. And they're Baptists&#13;
in Texas! Yes!&#13;
Not all of them, of course, but some.&#13;
The University Baplisl Church in&#13;
Austin got kicked oul of the Baptist&#13;
General Convention of Texas for heing&#13;
too friendly to gays and lesbians . The&#13;
. congregation had even ordained a gay&#13;
deacon - and the estimate is tbat 10 percent&#13;
of the church's 200 active members&#13;
are out of tlie closet.&#13;
The church's pastor says "We embrace&#13;
homosexual persons as persons beloved&#13;
of God."&#13;
Imagine a God like that.&#13;
And it's not just the work of young&#13;
bomb-throwing anarchists in the church.&#13;
A 76-year-old longtime member, Vera&#13;
Lee, was quoted by the Associated Press&#13;
as saying "tlie people involved are some&#13;
of tlic nicest young men and women&#13;
you'd want to know."&#13;
She went oq: "This is a situation&#13;
we're all going to have to face - not&#13;
only University Bapti st, but all denominations&#13;
in all churche s - becau se it's a .&#13;
reality . Someone always has to be&#13;
first. II •&#13;
It's probably loo much to expec t that&#13;
the humane good sense of Nebraska&#13;
Methodists and Austin Baptists will&#13;
soon be imitated by hard-line&#13;
homophobes . Still, it's a hopeful sign.&#13;
And maybe sometime in tlie sweet by&#13;
and by - well into the Millennium, I&#13;
imagine - it'll be possible for a later day&#13;
Huck Finn to point out tl1at "There was&#13;
the Sunday-school, you could 'a' gone to&#13;
it:; and if you'd 'a' done it tl1ey'd 'a' leamt&#13;
you tli.cre that gays and le sbians ain't no&#13;
more likely to go to everlasting fire&#13;
ilian tliem rascals that cro ssbreed cattle,&#13;
grow hybrid com and wear linen nnd&#13;
wool."&#13;
At which time, I invite all of you -&#13;
religious folks and dirty rotten secular&#13;
humanists alike - to join me in a rousing&#13;
rendition of t1ie Hallelujah Chorus.&#13;
This commelllary originally appeared&#13;
i11t he Linco/11( Neb.) Journal Star. English&#13;
professor Leon Satlerjield writes "to&#13;
salvage clarity from his co11Jusio1"1 .&#13;
We welcome your&#13;
letters and opinions&#13;
Write to Second Stone. All letters 11111st&#13;
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PO Box 8340. New Orleans l.A 70182,&#13;
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~~ E~TRE.t'\'E&#13;
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JOST A ~\-\A.SE&#13;
WE'RE C:,,OIMG-TH&#13;
ROUC:r\..\ ·&#13;
MORTALlTY .&#13;
SECOND STONE 23&#13;
....&#13;
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"•, ,:,v - • - - -• ...~ - -~ _._: •~c~.., ••&#13;
%iii%.ti~l,:l,:~ ~:r··; ·l~t;:ii;.;dl'i~}li.:.;.Ri eaae·r·· ······ ·\(::::~:::::~~:/:i:f~i: ~~:::;~:;:;::.;i::::~i::~t~ to; ER eide r recomm ended." "Philosophica lly intri- Box-a, Bellefont e PA 16823. All&#13;
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QUARTERLY? Great articles and lively A section of profiles of active s u bscribers who want to meet other gay !&#13;
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CALIFORNIAD,O WNEY&#13;
THEODORCER ANFORD, SGM, 67, UFMCC,&#13;
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BOX5 2,9 0262,5 62·626-n1s .&#13;
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FLORIDAB, RANDON&#13;
ROBERT MORGAN, SGM, 36, PENTECOSTAU&#13;
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2023C ATTLEMNA DR,. 335118. 13-651-1505.&#13;
FLORIDAIN, TERLACHEN&#13;
REV. D. RODGERC,L F,5 6, NONDENOMINATIONMAILN,&#13;
I STERP, OB OXm a.&#13;
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DENOMINATIONMAILN,I STERP, OB OXm a.&#13;
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STRUCTO3R1.5 S . LOMBARADV E.,&#13;
60302g, linda@usa.net&#13;
IOWAW, ATERLOO&#13;
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CHOLOGIS. 4T12M OIRS T., 50701, 319-236-&#13;
2614.&#13;
KENTUCKY.PADUCAH&#13;
G.G., SGM6, 3, UNITEDM ETHODISTR, ETIRED&#13;
EDUCATOR6, 24N . 34THS T., APT. E, 42001·&#13;
4275.&#13;
LOUISIANAG,R ETNA&#13;
RICKEY P. HEBERT, SGM, 49, CATHOLIC,&#13;
MAIL CLERK. 516 2ND ST., 70053.&#13;
NEWH AMPSHIR, MEANCHESTER&#13;
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WRITER/PEOT,L OCKBAGR 2751240,7 065.&#13;
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CHANCELLOCR. ROBERT.ISI, SGM, 34,&#13;
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14305, 716-284·4509.&#13;
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JOHNP RATHERS,G M,7 1, EPISCOPALIAN,&#13;
COMPUTERS PECIALIST7 ,B ELLP L.,1 0701,&#13;
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CHURCHO RGANIST, 151 PONDS T.0 2879-&#13;
4033.4 017· 83-5072.&#13;
TEXASS, ANA NTONIO&#13;
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SERVICESP,O B OX1 27547 8212,&#13;
MOCHICA@FLASH.NET&#13;
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ST. 23220-341. 8204-354·880.4&#13;
edbharrisj@juno.com.&#13;
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WASHINGTOSNP, OKANE&#13;
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cabin@lor.com.&#13;
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RICHARDR OLLERS, GM6, 2,C ATHOLIC,&#13;
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              <text>SECOND STONE&#13;
PO Box 8340&#13;
New Orleans, LA 70182&#13;
ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED&#13;
TIME DATED MATERIAL&#13;
Bulk Rate&#13;
U.S. Postage&#13;
PAID&#13;
New Orleans LA&#13;
Permit No. 511&#13;
Issue #57 UVJ NG INTHEEMBRA CEOF A LoVJ NGAN DJUSTG OD March/April 1998&#13;
Pastor suspended for performing same-sex&#13;
commitment ceremony returned to pulpit Milestone&#13;
UMC victory&#13;
KEARNEY, Neb - Rev. Jimmy Creech,&#13;
suspended from his duties as pastor of&#13;
First United Methodist Church in&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska, for perfonning a&#13;
same-sex commitment ceremony, was&#13;
victoriously back in his pulpit Sunday,&#13;
March 15, after being acquitted of&#13;
violating the Order and Discipline of the&#13;
United Methodist Church. Although&#13;
found "guilty" of pcrfom1ing the samesex&#13;
union, the jury found lhat he was&#13;
not in violation of church doctrine.&#13;
For the 400 people in altendance as&#13;
the trial ended and as the verdict&#13;
was read, tears of joy flowed freely.&#13;
Had he been found guilty by the jury&#13;
of fellow ministers, Creech could have&#13;
lost his position as senior pastor of&#13;
Omaha's largest United Methodist&#13;
Church and be stripped of his&#13;
ministerial credentials.&#13;
The jury filed back into the Keamey&#13;
United Methodist gym on Friday, March&#13;
13 at 6:40 p.m. A statement from the&#13;
jurors was read by the Rev. Grant Story,&#13;
foreman of the group: "We gathered iu&#13;
prayer , in silence , and in respectful&#13;
dialogue . Our vote reflects the difficulty&#13;
lhc ( iencraJ Conference has exi"1Crie11ccd&#13;
with this issue. We have struggled - no,&#13;
agonized - together in a spirit of Jove,&#13;
and our hope is that United Methodists&#13;
everywhere will receive our verdict in&#13;
that same spirit of love and respect."&#13;
Then the j ury foreman read the numbers.&#13;
The jury announced a vote of guilty&#13;
of pcrfonning a same-gender service and&#13;
then: "On the charge (that by&#13;
performing the covenant ceremony for&#13;
two women, Jimmy Creech had violated&#13;
the Order and Discipline of the Uni led&#13;
Methodist Church], 8 guilty, 5 not&#13;
guilty."&#13;
"Seconds passed, no one moved," said&#13;
Mel White, justice minister of the&#13;
Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches . "Then,&#13;
together, we did the math. The United&#13;
Methodist Book of Discipline requires&#13;
nine votes to convict. Jimmy had been&#13;
found 'innocent' by a single vote."&#13;
CNN broadcast that moment live. As&#13;
his people sang. Pastor Creech told !he&#13;
nation quietly, "This is a victory for&#13;
both sides. No one loses here."&#13;
Bishop Leroy Hodapp declared the&#13;
SEE MEfflODISTS, Page 8&#13;
'I can only account for my own conscience'&#13;
GayL utheraJnx) Stsoari dre ing&#13;
honeswt asμ ut ofhisc allign&#13;
AMES, Iowa - The Rev. Steven Sabin&#13;
p roud ly po int s to the han d iwork of his&#13;
busy. growing congregation - hand-made&#13;
children's banner s telling the story of&#13;
Noah's ark, pictur es of fifth-graders&#13;
clowning at Sunday school, a mission&#13;
statement welcoming those from all&#13;
walks of life. He talks about openness&#13;
in his church, located in this community&#13;
of 50,000 - some 30 miles north of&#13;
Des Moines - that is home lo Iowa&#13;
State University and is considered fairly&#13;
liberal.&#13;
But now , Sabin's fut u re :u Lo rd of&#13;
Life Luth e ran Chur ch is un ce rta 111. A t&#13;
the moment , he is co ntinuin g his&#13;
church duties as usual despi te a disciplinary&#13;
committe e's decisio n lo remove&#13;
him from the clergy roster for living in&#13;
a relationship with another man.&#13;
"I've got a Jot of work to do around&#13;
here," Sabin said. "It's great to have the&#13;
SEE LUTHERAN, Page 9&#13;
'Disaffiliation' of University Baptist Church&#13;
Gaym ember':A vezy&#13;
encouraginsgte pi ntot hef uture'&#13;
DALLAS - Because of Uni\•crsity Baptist&#13;
Church's active support of gays and&#13;
lesbians, the 180-membcr c;,;ecutive&#13;
board of the statewide Baptist General&#13;
Convention of Tex.as voted Feb. 24 to&#13;
''disassociate" itself from the Austin&#13;
church.&#13;
It was a move that many Texas Baptist&#13;
insiders say has more to do with an&#13;
ongoing feud between moderates and&#13;
fundamentalists than UBC' s ministry&#13;
with the gay and lesbian community.&#13;
"W c cannot approve of churches&#13;
endorsing homosexual practice as bibli&#13;
ca.lly legitimate ," said Fort Worth pastor&#13;
Charles Davenport, head of lhe committee&#13;
that dr.ifted the motion.&#13;
UBC's pastor's address to the board&#13;
was hailed by gay and lcsbiau Baptists&#13;
who allended the hearing.&#13;
"A more effective aud eloquent&#13;
prophet could not have been cho~~n f~r&#13;
this hour than Larry Bethune, said&#13;
Brian Burton. president of Honesty /&#13;
Tex.as. "The eight minutes he addressed&#13;
the 250 people packed in that room&#13;
could only be described as holy. Larry&#13;
radiated so much Jove and conviction&#13;
thal his countenance glowed in that&#13;
room where so much negative energy&#13;
SEE DISAFFILIATION, Page 9&#13;
•Prayer •The Bible •Words &amp; Deeds&#13;
Foundero f Evangelicals&#13;
Concernedan activist&#13;
.sincet hem id-'OOs&#13;
BY JIM BAILEY&#13;
IT WASN'T UNTIL the closing years&#13;
of the so -called "sexual revolution '' of&#13;
the '60s that gay and lesbian people&#13;
staked their claim in the turbulent, free thinking&#13;
decade that permanently&#13;
changed many longstanding beliefs and&#13;
attitudes. By the end of lbat decade, 1he&#13;
rage had reached a flashpoint at Stone wall&#13;
, gay and lesbian Catholic s had&#13;
begun me eting in a group they called&#13;
Dignity and Troy Perry had held his first&#13;
worship servi ce in Los Angeles . Prior&#13;
to tha t tim e, the courag eous voi ces&#13;
advocatin g for gay and les bian people&#13;
were few and eve n fewer those challenging&#13;
Chri stianit y's ostracism of gay and&#13;
lesbian people of faith.&#13;
It was durin g the 1964-65 school year&#13;
at the University of Pcm1sylvania that&#13;
Ralph Blair spoke out as an advocat e for&#13;
gay and lesbian peopl e . Ile was serving&#13;
on the lnterVa rsi ty Chri stia n Fellowship&#13;
staff when he offered a be lief&#13;
shocki ng to many at the time : tha t&#13;
homosexua li ty isn' t inco mpa tib le&#13;
with Christian faith. Becau se of this&#13;
and his suppor t of gay and lesb ian&#13;
Chris1ian s, Blair was not reapp ointed to&#13;
the staff.&#13;
Undaunted and even challenged by the&#13;
snuh, 1:3a1ir emerged as an early pioneer&#13;
in the Christian movement affi rmin g&#13;
gay and lesb ian peop le. He is the&#13;
founder of E\'a ngclicaJs Co ncemcd, a&#13;
nalional eva ngelical Christian minis try&#13;
with a specific outreach to gay and lesbian&#13;
people.&#13;
1:or over twenty years. Blai r has&#13;
taught a weekly Bihle study and edi ted&#13;
F:vangct ica ls Concerned' s quarterlies,&#13;
"Review" and "Record." He is a ps)c hothcrnpist&#13;
in pri\·ate practice in l\lanhat tan.&#13;
A native Ohioan. Blair is a graduatl' ol&#13;
Bowling (jrccn Slate I lnivcrsity a11d lhl·&#13;
Uni vcrsily of Southern (.'ahfonua. I le&#13;
2 M A I~ (' 11 • ,\ P I.: I I. I 9 •1 M&#13;
earned his doctorate at Pem1 State in&#13;
1971, where he wrote his disserlatiou on&#13;
homosexuality. Before that he attended&#13;
Dallas Theological Seminary and Westminster&#13;
Theological Seminary in Piiiladclphia&#13;
.&#13;
After serving as the Director of Coun seling&#13;
at New York City Community&#13;
College, Blair founded the Homo sexual&#13;
Community Counseling Center in New&#13;
York in 1972 and has done individual&#13;
and group coun seling with gay men ever&#13;
since.&#13;
As the founding editor of "The Homosexual&#13;
Coun seling Joumal" in the ea rly&#13;
'7 0s, he sponsored day-long seminar s&#13;
arow1d the nation to increa se under standing&#13;
among mental health professionals&#13;
of the needs of gay/le sbian people . It&#13;
was at one of these work shops that Blair&#13;
and an evang elical lead er began talking&#13;
about the special nee ds of evangelical&#13;
gay and lesbian Chri stian s. In 1975, be&#13;
founded Evan gelica ls Con cern ed to&#13;
addr ess tl1ose needs and to better educate&#13;
lhe wid er eva ngeli cal com munit y in&#13;
understanding homosex uality and Christian&#13;
faith .&#13;
E VANGELICALS CONCERNED is&#13;
one of the few national Christian organiza&#13;
tions serving gay and lesbian people&#13;
that isn't mired in church politi cs and&#13;
denomin a tion al issue s such as ordin ation&#13;
of gays and les bians, which frees&#13;
the orga niza tion to co nccntral e its&#13;
ene rgy on the sp iritua l needs of i.ts&#13;
mcmhcrs.&#13;
"T he min istry of Eva ngelica ls Concerned&#13;
is hasicHlly a Cluis tian ministry&#13;
with a membership that happens to be&#13;
mos 1ly gay and lesbian people," Blair&#13;
said. "We do Hiblc slmlies and have conferences&#13;
where the focus is not particularly&#13;
on gay and lesbian issues "&#13;
Evangelicals &lt; 'onccmed emphasizes&#13;
that a g:1y or lc~bian C ·1iris1ian would do&#13;
well to intcgrntc thl'ir sexual identity&#13;
into their spirituali ty as opposed to the&#13;
other way around .&#13;
"I think a lot of gay and lesbian&#13;
Christian groups have the tail wagging&#13;
the dog. What I see for EC is to address&#13;
the needs of being Christian," Blair said.&#13;
"It' S not h,omoscxt~~ty a!hal we Ii vc our&#13;
lives a.rouhd~ n3'ttiore than heterosexuals&#13;
Jive their li~es a.round tliat."&#13;
For people who believe homosexuality&#13;
casts anyone Q\l~ip~ the embrace of&#13;
God, Blairis adaman' t:&#13;
"Homosexuality doesn't have anything&#13;
to do with it ," he said. "We ' re&#13;
saved by the grace of God and that grace&#13;
extends to everybody regardless of their&#13;
sexuality ... and everybody, regardless of&#13;
their sexuality, is a sim1er."&#13;
Though issues such as ordination of&#13;
gays and lesbians arc irrelevant to EC,&#13;
Blair offers that the approach to such&#13;
denominational st rugg les seems to be&#13;
reversed.&#13;
"I've always thought tl1at zeroing in&#13;
on ordination is the wrong emp hasis,"&#13;
he said. "You are dealing with people&#13;
who question the legitimacy of homosexua&#13;
lity in gene ral , and then you ask&#13;
them to ordain a homo sexual. The&#13;
emphasis should be on full membership&#13;
and participation in congregational life .&#13;
It seems to me that if a denomination is&#13;
queasy about homosexuals in tl1e pews&#13;
they' II be even more queasy about a&#13;
homosexual in the pulpit."&#13;
AJt11ough recent high publicity cases&#13;
such as one involving a pastor who was&#13;
put on trial for performing a same-sex&#13;
commitment ceremony and another pastor&#13;
who may lose his pulpit for being in&#13;
a relationship with another man are&#13;
making it more widely known that gays&#13;
and lesbians are becoming more and&#13;
more involved in the church at all levels,&#13;
the message . also seems to say that&#13;
gay and lesbian people are not welcome.&#13;
That mes sage can be changed, Blair said,&#13;
as we work not only in the church but&#13;
in the community at large to change&#13;
how gay and lesbian people are understood.&#13;
"I think that the more the general&#13;
population can see that gay and lesbian&#13;
people are like everybody else, except&#13;
that gay people fall in love with people&#13;
of the same gender, the more people&#13;
understand that they' re not dealing with&#13;
aliens, the more they. a.re accepted," Blair&#13;
said. "The more people know us as who&#13;
we are otl1erwise, ther e's a much easier&#13;
cntrce for communica _tion an~ accept-&#13;
ance. "&#13;
ONE AREA IN which Evangelicals&#13;
Concerned and its chapters have done&#13;
extensive work and offer some of the&#13;
SEE BLAffi, Next Page&#13;
Dr. Ralph Blair, founder of Evangelicals Concerned&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Blaira pioneeirn Christian&#13;
movementto affinng ays&#13;
From Previous Page&#13;
very best material avail able is on e:,i;-gay&#13;
ministries - organizations that falsely&#13;
claim to be able to change the sex ual&#13;
orientation of a gay or lesbian person :&#13;
Most people who experience an ex-gay&#13;
mini stry ju st delay reckonin g with their&#13;
sexual identity, according to Blair.&#13;
"Ex-gay programs are an ever present&#13;
problem because people are ignorant of&#13;
what the hi story has been," Blair said.&#13;
'They present themselve s as a ministry&#13;
of changing people from homo sexual to&#13;
heterosexual but the fine print does not&#13;
acknowledge that. Th ere 's a lot of disillusionment&#13;
among people who have&#13;
tried ex-gay program s, and many&#13;
churches are di sillu sioned as well."&#13;
AJthou gh well funded by the religious&#13;
right, ex-gay ministries are not growing&#13;
as rapidly as they could be, according to&#13;
Blair. ·&#13;
"As one ex-gay mini stry falls apart, a&#13;
new one rises up," said Blair. "All of&#13;
the lead ers of the early days are gone&#13;
now. Some of the material from early&#13;
on is still out there but lhc people who&#13;
developed it have long si111:c lert the&#13;
movement."&#13;
Many in the gay community thought&#13;
the so -called "rcpara ti vc therapy" used&#13;
by ex-gay programs would lose a lot of&#13;
steam when the Ame1ica11 Psycholog ical&#13;
Associ ation declared late last year that&#13;
homo sexuality is not a mental disorder&#13;
and does not call for treatment. Not so,&#13;
said Blair.&#13;
. ':'he people who want the ex-g ay&#13;
m111s1tn es to be succ es sful are people&#13;
who di smiss new thou ght in psychology,&#13;
althou gh their late st material is full&#13;
of inform ation from ea rly psychology ."&#13;
So where docs the ex-gay myth end?&#13;
"The more the general public and the&#13;
church experience gay and lesbian people&#13;
as simpl y their own family members&#13;
and their own church members and&#13;
neighbor s - and see that there is no difference&#13;
- is what will put the ex-gay&#13;
myth to rest," Blair said . "Ex-gay ministries&#13;
can survive as long as peop le sec&#13;
gays and lesb ians as ·t hem· and and not&#13;
'us' - and a lot of self-a ppointed gay&#13;
leaders hip tends to sec gay and lesbian&#13;
peop le tha t way too."&#13;
AMONG EVANGELICALS Concerned'&#13;
sprinted material, and often seen&#13;
cl~ewhcre. is ii brochure entitled "What&#13;
Jesus had to suy about homosexuality ."&#13;
Nothing - according to the brochure, as&#13;
the reader opens it up to an empty page .&#13;
But in Mauhew 19:4, Jesus describes a&#13;
marria ge sce nario between a man and a&#13;
woman . How are we to interpret that?&#13;
"The anatomy is not the important&#13;
thing," said Blair. "In Jesus' &lt;lay people&#13;
did not have the underst anding of sexuality&#13;
we have today. We look in vain for&#13;
anything about homosexual orientation&#13;
in scri pturc."&#13;
Once reconciled that a homo sexua l&#13;
orientation is not condemn ed by scripture&#13;
there is the enduring question of&#13;
how a gay man or le sbia n is to live a&#13;
life of Christian faith that fully&#13;
embraces their sexuality.&#13;
The building and maintaining of&#13;
intimate relation ships is possible ,&#13;
though difficult in our culture in general&#13;
and in the gay community in particular,&#13;
according to Blair.&#13;
The "Homosexual Revolution" panel in the Open Panel series at Penn State&#13;
University, 1965-66, created and moderated by campus chaplain Ralph&#13;
Blair, center of photo, and including Clark P. Polak, founder of the early&#13;
homophile organization, The Janus Society, far left.&#13;
"The need for connec tion with auotl1er&#13;
individual is a deep human need . But in&#13;
our entire popular culture , we&#13;
never really see sexual relationships between&#13;
people other than people who have&#13;
just met. We sec that kind of model&#13;
more and more as equal to the desire to&#13;
sustain an ongoing and deepe ning sexual&#13;
relationship ."&#13;
Considering that half of all heterosexual&#13;
marriage s end in divorce and in a&#13;
high percentage of those still intact&#13;
mates say they have cheated on their&#13;
spouse , is a heterosexual model of marriage&#13;
the best we can do in defining our&#13;
■&#13;
near impo ssible to sustain a rel ation ship.&#13;
Anything that can help to stabilize&#13;
ll1e relationship is valuable. r vc been a&#13;
psychotherapist all my life and I can say&#13;
that homo sexuality really is about falling&#13;
in love with someone of the same&#13;
gender, and anything that can aid in that&#13;
relationship goes to what the heart of&#13;
homoscxua li1y is:·&#13;
Perhaps early during the new millennium,&#13;
gay and lesbian couples will have&#13;
the right to enter into a civil marriage.&#13;
The burden then will be on gay and lesbian&#13;
couples to stay married .&#13;
"Any relationship, gay or straight , is&#13;
about commitmen t, not just going to&#13;
the chapel. The couple needs to under stand&#13;
the nature of sexual intimacy .&#13;
Both gay and straight peop le put the&#13;
"I think a lot of gay and lesbian Christian&#13;
groups have the tail wagging the dog. What&#13;
I see for EC is to address the needs of being&#13;
Christian. It's not homosexuality that we&#13;
live our lives around - no more than&#13;
heterosexuals live their lives around that."&#13;
own way of living in relationship with&#13;
someo ne we love?&#13;
"I don't think it's fair to call it a heterosexual&#13;
model," Blair said . "Of course&#13;
it doesn' t make sense to model anything&#13;
that is a bad examp le. Couples must be&#13;
able to Ii vc up to the ideals of marriage,&#13;
but that docRn' t mean the answer lies in&#13;
throwing out the ideal. There arc&#13;
influences in the 7.citgcist that make it&#13;
■&#13;
emphasis on a wedding when it's all&#13;
re all y about the ma rriage." Blair&#13;
reca lled C. S. Lewis· comparing love to&#13;
a pool : "When you fall in love, you&#13;
take a dive. Once in the water the job is&#13;
to swim. What often happe ns is that&#13;
when th e dive is over. we look for&#13;
another poo l.•·&#13;
Afler over three decades of a1:tivism,&#13;
docs Blair have any concern that the&#13;
Christian movement in the gay and lesbian&#13;
community can be strangled by the&#13;
rh etoric and politics of the religious&#13;
right? "I don't ll1iuk so," Blair said.&#13;
"U nlik e times in history when gay&#13;
m')vements have been silenced, we have&#13;
a free press and ready access to inf onnation&#13;
on the intem et.&#13;
THE OTHER&#13;
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to you are available by&#13;
mail from The Other Side.&#13;
Browse our ~atalog -- or&#13;
special order just what you&#13;
are looking for. We&#13;
deliver!&#13;
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www .theotherside.org&#13;
SECOND STONE 3&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Forgivintgh eu nforgivabcleh allengefsu itho fo rdinaryμ :uple&#13;
BY DAVID BRIGGS&#13;
A FATHER MOURNS a son slain by a&#13;
drug addict. A daughter turns her back&#13;
on a violent, alcoholic mother. A&#13;
young man is haunted by the image of&#13;
his grandmother stabbed to death . A&#13;
husband thinks of killing himself or the&#13;
wife who abandoned him.&#13;
A mini ster, a mother , a steelwo rker.&#13;
and an attorney - ordinary people who&#13;
lived in unendurable pain .&#13;
Until they stopped it with an extraordinary&#13;
act: forgivene ss.&#13;
They are part of a national trend&#13;
refl ected in an increa se in religiou s&#13;
revivals and best-selling books extolling&#13;
the virtues of forgivenes s. But their&#13;
stories reveal the road to forgiveness is&#13;
dilTcrent for each individual .&#13;
None forgave easily or quickly . Each&#13;
got there in differ ent stages, sometime s&#13;
even when their tormentor s were unrepentant.&#13;
But none regrets it.&#13;
"The anger has total ly gone away,"&#13;
said Jim, the newly divorced man. "God&#13;
had a plan. I still don't understand the&#13;
plan. But it' s got to be something good&#13;
after all he's put me through."&#13;
The Rev. Walter Everell's shock al&#13;
the murd er of his son, 24- yea r -old .&#13;
Scott, turn ed to rage when the killer&#13;
plea -bargained his way to a five-ye ar&#13;
sentence.&#13;
When rle1 killer, a drug addictu amcd&#13;
Michael Car lucci , was sentenced, he&#13;
said that although they must sotmd like&#13;
empty words to the Everetts, he was&#13;
sorry for wbat he had done.&#13;
Evueu 's fri ends dismi sse d the&#13;
rcmon.e as a ploy [or leniency , but&#13;
Everett himself, a United Methodist&#13;
minister in Hartfo rd , Conn ., was&#13;
moved.&#13;
On the anniv ersary of his son's death,&#13;
he compo sed a letter to Carlucci in&#13;
which he talked of his family's suffering&#13;
- "the pain is almost unbe arable al&#13;
times" - and said he could not accept&#13;
oue person having so lillle rega rd for&#13;
anotJ1er.&#13;
And then he wrote : "Although words&#13;
seem so trivial in some ways (yet they&#13;
are all that we have now), I do accept&#13;
your apology, and, ns hard as the se&#13;
words arc to write, I add: I forgive you."&#13;
Those words. the bearded minister&#13;
would later recall , were a turning point. ·&#13;
"I felt a burden lifted from my shoulders&#13;
. It was the beginning of healing for&#13;
llll! .1&#13;
'&#13;
But ii was not the l'lld. llis marriage&#13;
would fail: his wife could 1101 understand&#13;
t1is forgiveness When he went lo&#13;
ti II.I /1. It ( . l I • /1. P R I l- I 9 9 8&#13;
visit Carlucci a few months after writing&#13;
the letter, he was enraged anew to&#13;
find that the murderer had already been&#13;
tran sferred from a maximum- to a&#13;
medium -security prison.&#13;
"Healing doesn't come immediatel y.&#13;
It come s in stage s. It's a proc ess that&#13;
goes on through one's life," Everett&#13;
said.&#13;
At that first meeting, Everett was&#13;
making small talk about Carlu cci' s&#13;
weight when the prisoner, who had&#13;
never been forgiven by anyone before ,&#13;
reached over and embraced him. Both&#13;
broke down in tears.&#13;
Everett and Carlucc i would become&#13;
friends . It was Everett's testimony that&#13;
helped Carlu cci win early rele ase from&#13;
pri son, and it was Everett whom Carlucci&#13;
would visit while on prison furlough.&#13;
In 1994, E\'erett officiated at&#13;
Carlucci's wedding . They still see each&#13;
other regularl y.&#13;
Everett will never forget his murdered&#13;
son. But if you are going to love your&#13;
enemies, as Christ commanded, you&#13;
first have to for give them, Eve rett&#13;
believes.&#13;
"When I look at Mike, I don't see a&#13;
man who injured my son," Everett says.&#13;
"I see a man who is forever changed by&#13;
God. And I celebrate that."&#13;
When her husband told her he had&#13;
invi ted his morher- io -Jaw to stay wirh&#13;
diem for Oui stmas , Kate was fonous.&#13;
When Kate was growing up in poverty&#13;
in a small Canadi an town , her alcoholic&#13;
mother regularly heat her and left&#13;
her alone to ca re for six youn ger&#13;
siblin gs.&#13;
No amount of brnises on Kate's face&#13;
the following morning would elicit any&#13;
remorse from her mother, who accused&#13;
her daughter of lying when confro nted&#13;
with the truth.&#13;
When Kate started her own family 111&#13;
age 20, she never looked back. But after&#13;
the birth of their fourth child, her husband&#13;
made the Christmas attemp t at reconciliation.&#13;
The visit was a fonnal one . Kate&#13;
sen sed her moth er was oft en on the&#13;
verge of telling her something, but she&#13;
was cletennined not to give her mother&#13;
the opportuni ty. Kate refused to accompany&#13;
her to the airport with her husband&#13;
" It was j ust at the moment of her&#13;
walking out the door, and she said , 'Can&#13;
you ever forgive all those years?' And&#13;
that was all I needed to hear," said Kate,&#13;
now 48, but still in tears as she relives&#13;
the moment. "That point was the hegi11-&#13;
11ing of a healing process that was ;in&#13;
absolute miracle. "&#13;
Kate had f~mnd peace in a Hutterile&#13;
religious community, where all seek to&#13;
live like the early Christians, but hatred&#13;
had burdened her. Given the chanc e, she&#13;
discovered she wanted to forgive .&#13;
"It only took me about 30 seconds to&#13;
respond to it becau se in a way this was&#13;
■&#13;
"When I look at&#13;
Mike, I don 't see a&#13;
man who injured&#13;
my son ... I see a&#13;
man who is forever .&#13;
changed by&#13;
God. And I&#13;
celebrate that."&#13;
■&#13;
what I had been struggling with for&#13;
years," she said.&#13;
Still , forgi vene ss came slowly . It&#13;
took her years to trus t her mother to&#13;
babysit her own childr en.&#13;
"Th e fir st time she ever genuinel y&#13;
wanted to hug me, afterw ard I just&#13;
ten sed up beca use the physical contact&#13;
be{Qfehabde t10111lyY iolttJI ..&#13;
Forgivin g is not forgetting, and Kate&#13;
would not want it an y other way.&#13;
"I don't think I could ever forget," she&#13;
said . Otherwise "I could not remember&#13;
the miracle of forgiveness."&#13;
Jim was a modern-day Job, the bibli cal&#13;
embodi ment of the divine mystery&#13;
of why bad things happe n to good people.&#13;
When the '90s began, he had a succes&#13;
sful law practice, kids in college or&#13;
prep schoo l, a vacation home in Ver monr.&#13;
Then he lost his mother to a long illness,&#13;
and his father was kill ed in an&#13;
auto accident. His business collapsed,&#13;
and he lost his house.&#13;
Two years ago his wife of 28 years&#13;
threw him out with the dog.&#13;
Like Job, Jim cried to the heavens. "I&#13;
blamed God. God's given me a bad set&#13;
of cards. I'd be belier off killino ,:,&#13;
myself."&#13;
Ile became consumed by "pure t111ad11l&#13;
tcrntcd anger. to the point I even&#13;
thought of killing her," the stocky ex Marine&#13;
told hi~ sup port group of&#13;
divorced and separated C'atholics in&#13;
Hamden, Conn .&#13;
What changed his life was prayer, and&#13;
the realization, after his wife vehemently&#13;
objected to court-ordered counseling&#13;
se ssion s, tha.t his marriage was&#13;
lost. At that point, "it became very easy&#13;
for me 10 forgive," he said.&#13;
"My anger went down by volumes&#13;
that were ju st incredible," said Jim, 54.&#13;
"It's given me a real inner peace ."&#13;
He could sleep at night. The fury he&#13;
carried with.in rum was repl aced by a&#13;
sense of serenity. These days , when&#13;
another driver cuts him off on the highway,&#13;
he laughs it off.&#13;
He went around to other people , asking&#13;
forgivene ss for injuries he had done&#13;
to them . He has a new job coun seling&#13;
ex-addicts.&#13;
With a smiling thumbs -up , Jim&#13;
describe s the point at which he knew he&#13;
was a changed man : when be could be&#13;
polite to his ex-wife's boyfriend, whom&#13;
she brought to t11eir son's wedding not&#13;
long after lhe divorce.&#13;
"I know where I am," be said , "and I&#13;
know where I am with God and that 's&#13;
all that matte rs."&#13;
Four girl s lookin g for mone y for&#13;
arcade games ended Bill Pelke 's life as&#13;
he knew it May 14. 1985.&#13;
On t11e pretex t of askin g for Bible&#13;
lessons. the teen s got in vited into the&#13;
home of Ruth E. Pelke, 78 , of Gar y,&#13;
Jnd. TbeY bit J,er over the bead with a&#13;
vase, stabbed her 33 tiiμes and fled, taking&#13;
her car and $ JO.&#13;
Bill Pelke's memories of his grand mother&#13;
were reduced to images of her iu&#13;
11 pool o_f blo od iu the \i.\!\\\'i t% \\\&#13;
wh~rc Ins fnmi\y wou\d gather for&#13;
Chn stmas or Eas ter.&#13;
When Paula Cooper, the most brutal&#13;
of the four, was sentenced to death, Bill&#13;
Pelke ha d no prob lem at firs t. But four&#13;
mont hs later, as he was wo rkino the&#13;
over head crane at Bethle hem Steei, his&#13;
mind suddenly flashe d back to the 15-&#13;
year -old girl at her sentenci ng, tears running&#13;
down her cheeks, and her grandfather&#13;
wai ling, "They 're going to kill my&#13;
baby. Th ey're going to kill my baby."&#13;
Then , he says, he imagined his late&#13;
grandmo ther wee ping for Paula Cooper,&#13;
and Jesus on the cross, forgivin g his&#13;
tom1en tors. At that mom ent, Pclke&#13;
made his decis ion to forgive.&#13;
And from then on, he says , he no&#13;
longer was to nue ntcd by pictures or his&#13;
butchered granchnother.&#13;
"Now I could picture her as who she&#13;
wus," he said.&#13;
SEE FORGIVENESS, Page 17&#13;
FAITH IN DAILY LIFE&#13;
Girlw hoo ncep retendetdo&#13;
• be a priestn owi so ne&#13;
BY STEPHEN J LEE&#13;
,GRAND FORKS, N.D. - When she&#13;
was 12, Page Towne slipped up to the&#13;
altar in the Episcopal cat hedral and&#13;
played a priest , going through the com mun&#13;
ion liturgy for her confirma tion&#13;
classmates while the priest was away.&#13;
In Decembe r , she was at the altar of&#13;
St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Grand&#13;
Forks, celebrating Holy Communion as&#13;
a priest for real.&#13;
"That Sunday when I celebra ted my&#13;
first Eucharist, on my own, it seemed&#13;
like I had been doing it all my life ," she&#13;
said. "It was kind of an epiphany for&#13;
me: You know you are doing what you&#13;
are supposed to be doing. It feels clean."&#13;
Her first time through the ancien t&#13;
liturgy, circa 1960 in Burlington , Vt.,&#13;
ended badly.&#13;
The priest, who was dean of the cathedral,&#13;
caught her at it and was outraged&#13;
that she, a young girl, should mock the&#13;
sacrament by pretending to be a priest.&#13;
'Times have changed," she said.&#13;
"Girls cou ldn't even serve as aco lytes&#13;
back then ."&#13;
She wasn't doing ii then in a mocking&#13;
way, and she aidn't actually handle lhe&#13;
bread ai1d wine, Towne said. "But I&#13;
knew all the words of the liturgy from&#13;
sitting up in junior choir all those&#13;
years. And I had this sense that this is&#13;
what I'm supposed to be doing," she&#13;
said.&#13;
It has been a Jong trip from then to&#13;
now for Tow ne, fonner general manger&#13;
of the Grand Forks Symphony, and for&#13;
her family.&#13;
The Eucharist and the traditional&#13;
Christian understanding that it is a&#13;
sacred moment remain a1 1hc center of&#13;
her faill1.&#13;
Towne's assignment by Bishop&#13;
Andrew Fairfield of th e Episcopal&#13;
Diocese of North Dakota is as assistant&#13;
pastor at St. Paul's , assisting the rector,&#13;
the Rev. Laddie Tlucek. Towne, who&#13;
has been on the payroll at the congrega tion&#13;
since Sept. 1 as a deacon, now can&#13;
add the functions of a priest.&#13;
St Paul's decided only recently to&#13;
stay in its .SO-year-old bui lding down town,&#13;
despite extensive flood damage in&#13;
the lower levels.&#13;
"We're not only looking at our building,&#13;
but also at our mission in the community&#13;
and the needs of the people ,"&#13;
Tlu cek said. "Page will be helping on&#13;
llwt."&#13;
·me diocese has received nearly a quarter&#13;
of a million dollar s in flood -related&#13;
donations from across lite cou ntry, Fairfield&#13;
said. Much of lltat will go to people's&#13;
needs and to bui lding costs, and&#13;
some will pay for Towne's position .&#13;
Towne is the first woman ordained at&#13;
St. Paul's and only lite fourth member&#13;
from lite parish raised to the priesthood,&#13;
members say. The congregation is&#13;
thrilled to have Towne ordai ned, having&#13;
been with her for years, said Sal ly Clayburgh,&#13;
senior warden, or president , of .&#13;
St. Paul's .&#13;
"She is an eternal optim ist, a very&#13;
nurturing person," Clayb urgh said. "She&#13;
is very good at help ing people discover&#13;
what their gifts are, and at mentoring&#13;
people ."&#13;
St. Paul's, with about 350 member s,&#13;
is one of the larges t of about two dozen&#13;
Episcopal cong regation s, totaling about&#13;
2,000 member s, in North Dakota .&#13;
Towne will spend a fourll1 of her time&#13;
traveling the northea st region of the&#13;
state, developing lay leader ship to help&#13;
the severa l small parishes without resident&#13;
priests.&#13;
"AH I can say is, given her personality&#13;
and her gif1s. ii didn' t come as a surprise&#13;
to me." said her husband , Gary.&#13;
"Her ordination gives her the acknowl edgement&#13;
of the gifts she already had."&#13;
The Towne s moved to Grand Forks in&#13;
1988, when Gary took a job as profe ssor&#13;
of music at the Uuiver sity of North&#13;
Dakota. He also is St. Paul's organist&#13;
and played at Page's ordination service.&#13;
They have two sons.&#13;
Towne is on the cutting edge of&#13;
changes in th eo logi ca l educa tion,&#13;
Bishop Fairfie ld said.&#13;
"We are going from a model of the&#13;
expert training in the ivory tower who&#13;
comes to a parish and does ministry. to&#13;
a model of a parish as a mission base&#13;
for evangelism and service, honoring the&#13;
gifts of the members and utilizing a&#13;
broad range of members for ministry,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Towne has worked willt abused child ren,&#13;
taught music in public schools and&#13;
worked the night shift in a factory putting&#13;
her husband through grau,1atc&#13;
school.&#13;
She said she pushed God away much&#13;
of her life, angry at him for the suffer ing&#13;
in her life. Now, she said, she&#13;
knows more of what suffering is about,&#13;
and feels she can empathize better.&#13;
She also has credentials as a hospital&#13;
chaplain . "I really feel called to help&#13;
others explore God's grace in their&#13;
lives," she said . (AP)&#13;
Since 1988a, friend&#13;
for the journey .&#13;
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secstonc@aol.com SecoSntdo ne THE STONE THAT THE BUILD ERS REJECTED&#13;
BECAME THE CORNERSTONE- Mark 12:10&#13;
SEC O ND ST ONE 5&#13;
M·A·. · N .··N ·· .: ·----~A·:--,:·;·&gt;. ~ .:&#13;
. . . • 1~. J .•&#13;
. .' . '&#13;
. . ,- ,. ' ,·· ... .·· , ·. . ' .... . . . ' . ·•· ....... .,. .•. -. .-·-,.~~•-a-JI t . ' . ..,. •·-;_'l..:l ,t."!JI ~. .... - .. ,~~ death on the cross . Debt is canceled in&#13;
BY REVD. ~SCHAPER ·. · ' new life.&#13;
. Jl . -~&#13;
Easter:&#13;
Canceled debts&#13;
The only reason not to cancel the debt&#13;
of the two/thirds world is the hoarding&#13;
and false self-interest of the already rich .&#13;
The reasons to cancel it are hundre ds of&#13;
thousands of childr en around the world&#13;
whose parents did no,t engage the debt&#13;
their cl1ildrcn will be buried in. Most&#13;
debt was contract ed by.authorit arian or&#13;
military regime s: the people now paying&#13;
the debt did not sign up for their&#13;
monthly fees. They are not respon sible&#13;
for the debt they cannot, at any rate.&#13;
pay.&#13;
EASTER IS OTTEN dangerously misinterpret&#13;
ed as merely a spiritual event.&#13;
Many prefer the far-away "transcendent"&#13;
God; very few worship a God who gets&#13;
close. Jesus was a close God: He Jived,&#13;
died, was buried, and Jives again.&#13;
Where? In poor children, and weary&#13;
mothers, in jails, and in the long corridors&#13;
of nursing homes. In rich people&#13;
who are poor inside. Jesus lives in the&#13;
leftover people, the ones who are missing&#13;
the living of their lives.&#13;
If Jesus were to rise today, he would&#13;
rise in global debt resolution. He would&#13;
resolve global debt, both metaphorically&#13;
and actually. He would forgive debt so&#13;
that Ugandans could pay $17 per person&#13;
on health care and $3 per person on foreign&#13;
debt, instead of the exact opposite,&#13;
as they do today. He would rise from&#13;
the death of debt. If Jesus were to rise&#13;
today, he would rise in the forgivene ss&#13;
of sills. Tl1oswe hof ailt o takep ersonal&#13;
responsibilityf or theirl ivesw ouldf ind&#13;
a ready forgiveness . They would rise&#13;
from the death of their debt. Resurrec tion&#13;
is both theological resolution and&#13;
then a physical and actual one.&#13;
New life is very rea1 to those who&#13;
know the cancellation of debt. Visit&#13;
AA any night of the week, in any com munity&#13;
in Ameri c a . You will hear th e&#13;
Right-sizing:&#13;
stories of cancel ed debts . These debts&#13;
arc not imagined ; they arc real. So is&#13;
the resurrection.&#13;
The resurrection of Jesus is co1U1cctcd&#13;
to Israel· s Y car of Jubilee as a practical&#13;
solution lo the sins of the world. Every&#13;
seven years the land would be redislributed.&#13;
Jubilee frees hopeles sly indebted&#13;
people the way bankmptcy frees au individual.&#13;
It creates new land and new&#13;
time. Freeing hopeles sly indebted countries&#13;
from all debt without condition is&#13;
what Jesus claims to have done by his&#13;
Restmcturiug Third World debt could&#13;
tum the world from death to life, over&#13;
night. Resurrection could be measured&#13;
out in teaspoons of percentage points,&#13;
nation by nation. How? Tum towards&#13;
life . Christ the Lord is risen today .&#13;
Think of the Alleluias!&#13;
C. S. LEWIS pictured Chrisr as a lion&#13;
In Christianity, there is&#13;
an unsevered relationship&#13;
between liturgy and&#13;
political community ...&#13;
Pax Christi swears that the&#13;
ritual of not eating meat on&#13;
Friday probably diq. more&#13;
for the poor than any&#13;
soup kitchen ever has.&#13;
named Asian in his famous Namm&#13;
chil dren' s seri es. Asian is not a tame&#13;
lion. He has a way of bursting out of&#13;
the spirit ual closets in which we lock&#13;
him . He shows up in ghetto s and in&#13;
banks.&#13;
In Chris tianity , there is an unsevcred&#13;
relat ionship betwe en liturgy and political&#13;
communit y. Th e bread and the wine&#13;
are not just symbol s. Pax Chri sti, the&#13;
Catholic org an ization , swears that the&#13;
ritual of not eating meat on Friday probably&#13;
did more for the poor than any&#13;
soup kitchen ever has . The heart and&#13;
the soul are not di sco1mected from the&#13;
body, nor is politic s even slightl y separated&#13;
from rel igion .&#13;
I think of the way E.B. White&#13;
described his beloved Katherine as she&#13;
aged but still knelt to plant bulbs in the&#13;
November wind. "As the years went by&#13;
and aoe overtook her, there was some thint&#13;
comical in her bedraggled&#13;
appearance - the small hunched -over figure,&#13;
her studied absorp tion in the&#13;
implausible notion that there would be&#13;
yet another spring, oblivious to the endino&#13;
of her own days. which she knew&#13;
rl"ectly well was near at hand, sitting&#13;
::ere witli her detailed chart under those&#13;
dark skies in the dying October . calmly&#13;
plotting the resurrection."&#13;
Another writer ask ed recently whether&#13;
Mary was really mistaken about Jesus&#13;
inth e garden: "When Mary Magdal ~ne&#13;
nu.s too k Jesus for the gardener. d. w a s she 1. h&#13;
altogether wrong? " If two /~lur so t e&#13;
world cowitries were to nu stakc Jesus&#13;
for canceled debt, would they be entirely&#13;
wrong either?&#13;
The new deck on the old house&#13;
I REMEMBER WHEN I still hoped I&#13;
migh t have those magical Marilyn&#13;
Monroe numbers - 38, 24, 36. I also&#13;
remember when a size 12 seemed enormous.&#13;
Now I live deep and large in the&#13;
Zen of measurements - downsizing,&#13;
rightsizing, resizing.&#13;
I am obsessed with getting to the&#13;
right size. Whatever blue jeans I wear. I&#13;
want them to fit just right. Getting to&#13;
the right size has a lot to do with getting&#13;
over the past or the way things&#13;
used to be. Getting to the right size has&#13;
a future as well as a past .&#13;
Listen to my deck tell you why. The&#13;
deck itself is inconsequential • hut what&#13;
6 MARCH•APRIL 1998&#13;
it represents is not.&#13;
A heavy snow fooled April first last&#13;
year, the day af ter Easter . It was so&#13;
heavy that it knocked down the old&#13;
arbor, built on the base of the old barn,&#13;
which had constituted the old deck.&#13;
Crash. The insurance people said we&#13;
were only able to collect $3000 or so to&#13;
repair what was clearly a $6000 project.&#13;
For months, we rung our hands . Wha t&#13;
to do? We looked all spring at the mess&#13;
of ancient wisteria wowid around rotted&#13;
poles , yellow rose bushes unable to&#13;
make their annuaJ climb, for want of a&#13;
hand : ;.&#13;
All of a sudden the idea came : tl1e new&#13;
deck could easily be half the size of the&#13;
Getting to the right size has a lot&#13;
to do with getting over the past&#13;
or the way things used tG be.&#13;
old deck. Also half the price. W c didn't&#13;
have to put it on th e bas e ·of the old&#13;
bam; we could elevate it above the base&#13;
of the old baru . Our trusty contractor&#13;
agreed and designed a new deck that&#13;
snuggles the back of the house as&#13;
tho ugh it was part of the or iginal&#13;
design. People stop to ask who built it,&#13;
so nicely does it fit. And we have a&#13;
morality play in our back yard: downsiz ing.&#13;
desigued well, may be the best&#13;
thing to do in the year one turns 50. Or&#13;
any year .&#13;
Half lhe size could be as beautiful as&#13;
SEE RIGHT-SIZING , Next Page&#13;
When God&#13;
comes close&#13;
THEOLOGIANS LIKE Karl Barth&#13;
argue that our language about God&#13;
should begin with language about&#13;
Christ. For Hispanics, the inc arna tion&#13;
exemplifies the ultimate mestizaje, the&#13;
juncture of divinity and humanity. Both&#13;
the Gennans and the American Hispanics&#13;
argue for Christ in a way that many&#13;
do not. They wanted a God close up and&#13;
personal. That's what Easter gives us.&#13;
Humanity cmcified, humanity saved.&#13;
Bloody tmth. Christ on a cross. A real&#13;
cross.&#13;
According to Orlando Cos tas, the&#13;
incarnation forces us to "plop" and contextualize&#13;
God's activity within history,&#13;
preventing us from turning God into an&#13;
abstract being removed from human&#13;
experience.&#13;
Unfortunately, American Protestants&#13;
have been more than capable of turning&#13;
God into a static and abstract notion&#13;
removed from the immediacy of human&#13;
experience.&#13;
Many of us find tJ1e closene ss of God&#13;
the opposite of comfort . The very&#13;
intimacy of GodWithUs or Emmanuel&#13;
makes us nervous. We might agree&#13;
with Rilke in his poem "Where" and&#13;
say, "Who is this Christ, who interferes&#13;
in everything?"&#13;
This matter of God being both close&#13;
and far away, this matter of God showing&#13;
up on earth, is not easy 10 understand.&#13;
Kathleen Norris said she understood&#13;
most everything about Christianity&#13;
except Christ. "I often felt a void at&#13;
the center of things: Christianity with&#13;
the center missing."&#13;
Norris uses the ima ge of quark lo&#13;
explain her understanding of the Trinit y:&#13;
She appeals to the central notion of&#13;
community and interrelation ship within&#13;
the Trinity and says that only quark s&#13;
could show us the dance of such communal&#13;
interrelationship at the heart of&#13;
God. She shows us how God could be&#13;
both very near and very far away . She&#13;
shows us how God could live and die&#13;
and live again.&#13;
Norris says that it is Tcrtullian, the&#13;
ancient curmudgeon, who brought her&#13;
religious energy into the outer planetary&#13;
rings of Trinitarian faith . His image is&#13;
that of the Trinity as a plant , with the&#13;
Father as a deep root, the Son as the&#13;
shoot that breaks forth into the world.&#13;
and the Spirit as that which spreads&#13;
beauty and fragrance, "fructifying the&#13;
earth with flower and fruit."&#13;
When God comes close, we need not&#13;
beafraid.&#13;
When God dies, we need not be afraid.&#13;
When God lives , we need not be afraid.&#13;
RIGHT-SIZING,&#13;
From Previous Page&#13;
twice the size. And twice the size could&#13;
be as beautifnl as half the size. Measurements&#13;
arc a matter of the mind as well&#13;
as the scale or ruler. &amp;iougb is enough.&#13;
The scu lptor Giacomctte plays with&#13;
size as well, when he describes his tiny&#13;
figures in this way: Wfhe smal ler I make&#13;
them, the bigger they get."&#13;
In this year of the new deck snuggling&#13;
the old house, I also beard a rumor&#13;
about the Hubb le Telescope. If you&#13;
gave each star in the sky a grain of sand,&#13;
and counted them all, the sand of that&#13;
count would flt into a cup. If you took&#13;
all the grains of sand in the Milky Way,&#13;
you'd fill up a big bowl. If you used&#13;
the Hubble Telescope, you'd have to use&#13;
up all the sand in the world, from every&#13;
beach , to accommodat e each star's need&#13;
to be counted and included .&#13;
My deck may be smaller but the&#13;
world is larger this year. So is my perspective,&#13;
my subjectivity, my changing&#13;
life and self and subjectivity - what I&#13;
can see may not be all there is to t11c&#13;
matter. Or to matter.&#13;
My therapist joins a new movie in&#13;
humorous measurement, "Don't sweat&#13;
the small stuff; by the way, it's all&#13;
small stuff."&#13;
Measurements matter - and they&#13;
change. It all depends on how we see&#13;
what we sec. ·&#13;
The Rev. Donna E. Schaper is Associate&#13;
Conference Minister with the&#13;
Massachusetts Conference of the&#13;
United Cllurcl, of Christ. He,· new&#13;
book is "Tlie Sense In Sabbath: A&#13;
Way To I-lave Enough Time," Innisfree.&#13;
ThematterofGod&#13;
being both close&#13;
and far away,&#13;
this matter of&#13;
God showing up&#13;
on earth, is not&#13;
easy to understand.&#13;
The Un Time-Management Book&#13;
Sabbath&#13;
Sense&#13;
This is your&#13;
in vitation to pack&#13;
your spiritua l baggage&#13;
and move to the&#13;
neighborhood called&#13;
ENOUGH - enough&#13;
time, enough rest,&#13;
enough play. 'lbe&#13;
reality of "sab bath" as&#13;
a day of rest and been&#13;
- ·- ·--- -- ·-·----&#13;
A&#13;
SJNrnMI&#13;
\• h d•tc&#13;
r., ,w&#13;
n.-, ....&#13;
lost amidst our to-do lists, day-organizers,&#13;
and endless errands, but the sense of sabbath.&#13;
as spiritual leisure, is very much needed in&#13;
our time-starved world.&#13;
• Turn not-enough time into ENOUGH time;&#13;
• Unify fragmented time through Rnt.JALS;&#13;
• Weave a pattern of SACRED!vESiSn to your life;&#13;
• DECLUTTER, ,simplify, and slow down .&#13;
A&#13;
Spiritual&#13;
Antidote&#13;
for the&#13;
Overworked&#13;
by Donna Schaper&#13;
Sll.95 paperba ck&#13;
6X9&#13;
128 pages&#13;
ISBN 1-880913-ZS-9&#13;
Availabl e in&#13;
bookstores&#13;
or call&#13;
lnnisfree Press&#13;
1-800-367-5872&#13;
to order .&#13;
l Press lnnisfree&#13;
-&#13;
SEC'O ND STONE 7&#13;
Methodist jury returns&#13;
Creech to his pulpit&#13;
FromPage1&#13;
trial ended. The audience gave Rev.&#13;
Creech and his defense team , Doug Williamson&#13;
and Mike McClellan, a standing&#13;
ovation and members of Creech' s&#13;
congregation, wearing "Support Jimmy"&#13;
buttons and matching sweatshirts, stood&#13;
in a large circle, grabbed hands and&#13;
began to sing, "Hallelujah. Hallelujah."&#13;
Following his acquiual, Creech was&#13;
immediately reinstated as senior pastor&#13;
of the Omaha church by Nebraska&#13;
Bishop Joel Martinez. The bishop said&#13;
be plans to ask the College of Bishops&#13;
of the eight-state South Central Jurisdiction&#13;
to ask the church's Judicial Council&#13;
to rule on the language in the Book of&#13;
Discipline related to the trial. The ninemember&#13;
council is the denomination's&#13;
supreme court.&#13;
''The church has spoken, 11 Martinez&#13;
said. "We trust and honor the process.&#13;
Rev. Creech is an cider in good standing&#13;
with the United Methodist Church, and&#13;
his appointment is to First United&#13;
Methodist Church in Omaha. His suspension&#13;
is lifted."&#13;
The case was the first challenge to&#13;
United Methodist policy on same-sex&#13;
marriage, and the jury's decision could&#13;
shape how the 9.5 million -member&#13;
denomination interprets mies goveming&#13;
its treatment of gays. The jury was&#13;
made up of four women and nine men,&#13;
all ministers from Nebraska.&#13;
Creech testified that be was simply&#13;
serving the spiritual need s of two&#13;
I The Erotic Contemelative&#13;
Reflections on the Spiritual Journey of the Gay/Lesbian Christian&#13;
By Michael B. Kelly&#13;
A SIX VOLUME STIMULUS FOR&#13;
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4) The Desert and the Dark (88 min)&#13;
5) Libe ra tion (84 min)&#13;
6) The Road from Emmaus (63 min)&#13;
The six volume video&#13;
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Order through:&#13;
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author of The Chur ch a11d the&#13;
Homosex ual.&#13;
"In my theology classes, both gay and&#13;
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PH.D., author of Jesus Acted-Up.&#13;
'"An excellent resource ... a worthwhile&#13;
investment." •· B ONDINGS, a publication&#13;
of New Ways Ministry.&#13;
"The Eroric Co11te111pivlaer video course&#13;
has helped gay men and lesbians who&#13;
grew up as Christians move toward&#13;
healing the wounds of the past." ••&#13;
JosEPH KR AMER, M.D1v.. EROSpirit&#13;
Research Institute.&#13;
"'This work should he considered&#13;
esscn11al to anyone serious about their&#13;
sexuality/spirituality and mandatory for&#13;
anyone who in an; way acts as a&#13;
spiritual director for gay and lesbian&#13;
people." -- More Light Update.&#13;
l Mo~c tlcluilcd mfom. m11in1 ahou1 ~ach \'itlco is ava1lahlcu pon rcquc~I Al ~n ,1vninlhlc in Pnl • 1h,·&#13;
Eurupcun/1\sutrulian lorm.,t l' ahfum,a n:,1dc111, ntl,I R 25% ,a le, lax (J S. ,h1pp1g1 1charge: S5.00.&#13;
-l-ntcrnn11011,all1 p1p11g1 chnrgc Sl5 00 (I) 1997. EROSpir-i1 Rcscnrch ln~1i1urc-. - -&#13;
8 M ,\ JU ' 11 • J\ P R I L I 9 9 K&#13;
. women church members.&#13;
The Rev. Loren Ekdahl of Lincoln ,&#13;
who argued the church's side, said&#13;
Creech went wrong by conducting the&#13;
ceremony as if it were an official rite.&#13;
"We're not talking aboul a simple prayer&#13;
or blessing here," he said.&#13;
In Crecch's defense, lhe Rev. Douglas&#13;
Williamson of Nebraska Wesleyan University&#13;
argued that the church's Social&#13;
Principles, amended in 1996 to prohibit&#13;
"ceremonies that celebrate homosexual&#13;
unions," arc merely guidelines.&#13;
The Methodist case was being closely&#13;
watched by gay rights activists and others.&#13;
"A decision against the church's rules&#13;
will not alter the rules, but it certainly&#13;
will raise the level of discussions in&#13;
church circles," said the Rev. Bill&#13;
Lawrence, a Duke University profes sor&#13;
who studies U.S. Methodists.&#13;
Creech's backers included President&#13;
Clinton's pastor, who testified on the&#13;
closing day of the lrial.&#13;
"We have to find a way to be suppor tive&#13;
of these committed relationship s,"&#13;
said the Rev. Phil Wogaman, pastor at&#13;
Foundry United Methodist Church in&#13;
Washington. "The church also speaks in&#13;
many voices.&#13;
"Gay and lesbian Christians are&#13;
already in our churches if we would only&#13;
open our eyes and see them," Wogaman&#13;
said. "Their commitments to each oilier&#13;
, to Christ, and to our Church are&#13;
authentic . They number among our&#13;
finest leaders. They fit nonnally and&#13;
actively. They only want to be affinued&#13;
for what they are ."&#13;
Joe Leonard of the National Council&#13;
of Churches, which represents 34 Protestant&#13;
and Orthodox churches in the&#13;
United States, said many congregations&#13;
of various denominations are conducting&#13;
same -sex ceremonies, "but often they&#13;
have to do it in defiance of their denomination's&#13;
policies ."&#13;
"Something happened today in Kear ney,&#13;
Nebraska, that made me feel hope&#13;
again," said Mel Whit e. "Hope that&#13;
truth will triumph, that old prejudi ces&#13;
will die, that ignoranc e is lo sing its&#13;
powerful hold, uot just here but across&#13;
the nation and around the world. But it&#13;
cannot happen without us."&#13;
As the gymnasiwn- tume&lt;l-courtroom&#13;
was emptying, a young , gay, African.&#13;
American from t.he Midwest who has&#13;
been a victim of rel igious racism and&#13;
homophobia all his life hugged Creech .&#13;
TV cameras broadcast the scene. "You&#13;
did it, Jimmy," the black youth said&#13;
grinning up at his pastor in complete&#13;
disbelief. "We did it, Roy," Jimmy&#13;
replies, "together."&#13;
For a moment, Jimmy Creech just&#13;
held the young man. Tears streamed&#13;
down both faces. Their smiles lit up&#13;
the room. Then Rev. Creech added quietly,&#13;
"Now the work begins ."&#13;
Creech pcr fom1ed the lesbian covenanting&#13;
ceremon y on Sept. 16, after&#13;
Martinez told him not to. Creech said he&#13;
felt the church's prohibition on such&#13;
unions was "discriminatory and unjul:,t"&#13;
and "because I felt it was my responsibility&#13;
as a pastor to support the&#13;
couple."&#13;
The names of the lesbian couple, who&#13;
came to Creech in April requesting the&#13;
ceremony, have never been made public.&#13;
The issue divided the 1,900-mcmber&#13;
church and galvanized United Mell1odists&#13;
across tl1e state and around the country.&#13;
Creech was suspended from pastoral&#13;
responsibilities from Nov. IO through&#13;
March 13. He initially was suspended&#13;
for 60 days by Martinez. W11c1l1lr nt suspension&#13;
expired in January, Martinez&#13;
extended it.&#13;
Creech said he believes the statement&#13;
in the church's Social Principles adopted&#13;
in 1996 that prohibits homosexual&#13;
union ceremonies is contrary to the biblical&#13;
teachings of Christ.&#13;
He contends that his actions were&#13;
"consistent with the gospel of Jesus&#13;
Christ and with my calling as a pastor&#13;
of the United Methodist Church."&#13;
Creech perfonned more than a dozen&#13;
such ceremonies for gay and lesbian&#13;
couples while a pastor at Fairmont&#13;
United Methodist Church in Raleigh,&#13;
N.C. All those ceremonies occurred&#13;
several years before the J 9% General&#13;
Conference of Ilic UMC passed the ban,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Creech said be and his wife, Chris&#13;
Weedy, married in 1992 in a courthouse&#13;
marriage ceremony followed by a covenant&#13;
ceremony in the church that did not&#13;
include marriage vows as a statement of&#13;
solidarity to what gays and lesbian s&#13;
face . "We did it to be in solidarity with&#13;
gay men and lesbians who arc denied the&#13;
right to have their relation ship rec ognized&#13;
as legal," he said .&#13;
In part because of It.is activism on gay&#13;
issues, Creech lost his position at Fairmont&#13;
UMC, was unemployed for six&#13;
months, then served as a social lobbyi st&#13;
for the North Ca rolina Coun ci l of&#13;
Churches for five years before coming&#13;
to Nebraska.&#13;
Creech said he will continu e fighting&#13;
for the right to perf on n commi tmen t&#13;
ceremonies for gays and lesbians.&#13;
A Nebraska Committ ee on Investigation&#13;
recommended on Jan . 23 that he&#13;
face a church trial .&#13;
"Disobe dience to the Order and Discipline&#13;
of The United Mell1odist Church,"&#13;
is one of 10 offenses for which a United&#13;
Methodist clergy member may be tried&#13;
in a church court.&#13;
The primary issue Creech wanted the&#13;
trial to resolve is whe ther the church's&#13;
Social Princ iples are enforcea ble law or&#13;
simp l y guidance for con duct and deci sion-&#13;
making . Although the trial could&#13;
h;ive been closed, Creech cal led for an&#13;
open trial .&#13;
(United f'vkthodist News Service, Associated&#13;
Press. Mel Whil e, and other&#13;
reports)&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
'Disaffiliation' of University Baptist Church&#13;
From Pagel&#13;
and darkness abounded ."&#13;
Honesty /Texas and their supporters&#13;
were seated in the back of the room during&#13;
the debate and vote, surrounded by&#13;
members of the Convention.&#13;
"A covey of fundamentali sts huddled&#13;
in the row behind us looking dour and&#13;
bitter," Burton said.&#13;
Afterwards, Honesty unfurled its banner&#13;
in the lobby and was swarmed by&#13;
reporters .&#13;
Burton said he sees new hope for gay&#13;
and lesbian Baptists in spite of the vote.&#13;
"The fact that there was a two-sided&#13;
debate that went 90 minutes represents&#13;
progress for the movement ," he said. "I&#13;
counted around 20-25 votes against the&#13;
recommendation . I wonder if the BGCr&#13;
was surprised that it wasn't a quick discussion&#13;
and a unanimous vote?''&#13;
After Rev. Bmce Prescott of Houston&#13;
failed in an effort to soften the recom -&#13;
1~1endation by amendment, several Bapl.&#13;
tst women stood and spoke against the&#13;
reconunendation.&#13;
Church was shunned&#13;
50 years ago for&#13;
inviting blacks&#13;
MEMBERS OF UNIVERSrrY Baptist&#13;
Church compare this battle to past&#13;
moral fights.&#13;
In 1948, the church was disavow ed by&#13;
the Austin Baptist Conven tion when it&#13;
allowed blacks to sit in the same pews&#13;
with whites. In the early 1970s, it was&#13;
criticized forordaining female deacons.&#13;
Hans Venable, a gay mm1 whose ordination&#13;
as deacon at University Baptist&#13;
helped lead lo the action, said biblical&#13;
argu ment s also were made against&#13;
blacks in the church.&#13;
"I do see this as a very similar issue "&#13;
Venable said. '&#13;
But Venable said he found hope in&#13;
debate that preceded the board vote.&#13;
"I have to say that there are a lot of&#13;
positive outcomes," he said. "It's just&#13;
been such a wonderful opportw1ity to&#13;
talk about our ministry and spread the&#13;
debate further about how gays and lesbians&#13;
can be safe in church, where they&#13;
can be loved and participate fully."&#13;
David Stahl, a church member and&#13;
Venable's partner of 15 years, said the&#13;
expulsion could actuaJly help the gay&#13;
and lesbian cause .&#13;
"From what I heard ... this debate is&#13;
going to continue in the BGCT&#13;
churches," StaliJ said. ··They're going to&#13;
go back to their home churches aud talk&#13;
ahout this, and know what's right. It&#13;
was a very encouraging step into the&#13;
funire."&#13;
The motion supported by the board&#13;
asks University Baptist to remove any&#13;
claim of affiliation with the convention&#13;
from its literature and Internet site. The&#13;
convention also will no longer accept&#13;
money donated from the church for missionary&#13;
progrmns.&#13;
The vote arose when top group officials&#13;
learned in January that the University&#13;
Baptist Web site mentions its convention&#13;
affiliation .&#13;
The church has had a tenumL~ relationship&#13;
with the convention since it&#13;
ordained Venable in 199-l. The church&#13;
also drew fire for sponsoring and inviting&#13;
gays mid lesbians to participate in&#13;
. Open Circle, a ministry for gays and&#13;
lesbians .&#13;
Co1iventio11 leaders insisted their vote&#13;
was not a condemnation of the church's&#13;
acceptance of gays.&#13;
.. We commend the church for their&#13;
ministry, and we feel that churches&#13;
should minister (to homosexuals)."&#13;
Davenport said ... But ministering to is&#13;
different than an affinnation of, and we&#13;
interpret (the church's activities) to be&#13;
an affinnation of."&#13;
Bethune said he doesn't undersiand the&#13;
distinction .&#13;
"I don't feel very c_ommcuded as a&#13;
church for our ministry to gays and lesbians&#13;
today," Bethune said. "The convention&#13;
has an odd way of showing it."&#13;
Bethune .said he believes the congregation&#13;
will likely respect the wishes of the&#13;
convention in removing any reference to&#13;
thf! group from their Web site and literature.&#13;
Several convention members decried&#13;
the motion as a threat to the traditional&#13;
independence of Baptist churches.&#13;
Some church members think they'll&#13;
eventually be welcomed back into the&#13;
convention.&#13;
"The time will come when we will be&#13;
invited back in because the world will&#13;
catch up with us and the world with&#13;
catch up with our understanding of what&#13;
is the Christian gospel." said deacon&#13;
Carter Wheeland.&#13;
Victim of 'political&#13;
football,' says pastor&#13;
THE CONVENTION'S administrative&#13;
committee voted unanimously in early&#13;
February to recommend the expulsion of&#13;
University Baptist Church.&#13;
Prior to the vote Davenport denied&#13;
that the convention was trying to expel&#13;
the church. The convention wanted to&#13;
,.distance itself' from the church. he&#13;
said.&#13;
Bethune said the disassociation of the&#13;
congregation seems to say that God discriminates&#13;
again st gays and lesbians.&#13;
.. Gays and lesbians and their families&#13;
are dmnagcd once again by hearing that&#13;
God hates them," he told the Austin&#13;
American-Statesman.&#13;
'They hear that the way an African&#13;
American would hear. ·Love the soul&#13;
and hate the color,· or a woman would&#13;
hear, 'Love the woman but hate the&#13;
gender.···&#13;
The administrative committee contended&#13;
that any church accepting of&#13;
homo sexuality is defying biblical. teaching&#13;
and cannot be accepted in fellowship&#13;
with other Southcm Baptist churches.&#13;
SEE BAPTISTS, Page 17&#13;
GayL uthera{nX lStsoari dr eing&#13;
hone5wt as~ ofh isc alling&#13;
From Pagel&#13;
congregation behind me."&#13;
On Feb. 3, a panel of nine church&#13;
members and miD.i"stesr dedd ed after a&#13;
two-day hearing to remove Sabin from&#13;
the official clergy roster saying he violated&#13;
policy of the Evangelical Lutheran&#13;
Church in America. The committee said&#13;
it admires the job Sabin has done as&#13;
pastor, but it could not allow Sabin's&#13;
"gifts of mini stry either to outweigh or&#13;
excuse" his policy violation.&#13;
Either side can take the case on lo a&#13;
disciplinary appeals committee, which&#13;
would have the final say. Church officials&#13;
declined to comment throughout&#13;
the trial and did not make themselves&#13;
available for interviews.&#13;
Philip Hougen, bishop of the church's&#13;
Southeastern Iowa Synod, brought lhc&#13;
charge against Sabin in November. During&#13;
a meeting with Sabin in January&#13;
1996, Hougen had questioned the pastor&#13;
about his rel ationship with Karl von&#13;
Uhl. Sabin said they were in a committed&#13;
relationship. and Hougen unsuccessfully&#13;
sought his resignation.&#13;
In annow1cing ti1e decision against&#13;
Sabin, Bishop Hougen said he has&#13;
"pastoral concern" for Sabin, his partner.&#13;
and his congregation.&#13;
"I know that all concerned will appreciate&#13;
your prayers," said Hougen. "I continue&#13;
to pray for God's guidance and for&#13;
continuing dialogue on the issue of&#13;
homosexuality within the Evangelical&#13;
Lutheran Church iu America."&#13;
Hougen said that he feels caught between&#13;
the traditional teachings of the&#13;
church and a "sense of compassion for&#13;
people who feel very excluded or very&#13;
hurt or denigrated by the church policy ."&#13;
But he called it necessary and important&#13;
for the church to set and uphold stan dards&#13;
for its pastors.&#13;
While others in similar positions&#13;
have generally admitted to violating&#13;
church policy and argued that it is&#13;
flawed, Sabin did not admit to any violation.&#13;
He argued that the church policy&#13;
is vague, violate s its own script ural&#13;
teachings and does not explain what it&#13;
means to be a practicing homosexual.&#13;
'The que stion is not •wink, wink,&#13;
nod, nod.• what we think this is about,&#13;
what this situation is," he said. "The&#13;
question is, what docs the policy say.&#13;
and whether or not the ELCA and&#13;
Bi.shop Hougen, specifically , have&#13;
pro, •en that I am in violation of the&#13;
clear statements of the policy. It is my&#13;
belief rhal Ibey did nor dcmonstrnlc&#13;
that.'·&#13;
Sabin said he doesn't plan to transfer&#13;
to a new denomination that accepts gay&#13;
ministers or change professions when he&#13;
is officially ousted from the clergy&#13;
roster April 15.&#13;
"I can't really imagine being anything&#13;
else but a pastor," Sabin said.&#13;
The Lord of Life congregation supported&#13;
its pastor through the trial, but&#13;
no decision has been made to retain him&#13;
in defiance of lhe national church.&#13;
.. I am not surprised, but disappointed&#13;
with the decision," said Thomas&#13;
Chacko, president of the Lord of Life&#13;
congregation ... At this point. neither the&#13;
church nor the congregation has had the&#13;
time to sort through the events of the&#13;
past few days . The council will be&#13;
meeting to decide on the next course of&#13;
action."&#13;
Chacko said the congregatiou has&#13;
many factors to consider before its pastor&#13;
is officially removed from the&#13;
church.&#13;
.. We have to decide what's good for&#13;
Pastor Sabin and what's good for the&#13;
ELCA," Chacko said.&#13;
..I feel that our clergy should be given&#13;
the same rights as the members of our&#13;
congregations, " said Nancy Lewis , a&#13;
member of Lord of Life since it started&#13;
SEEL UTHERANP, age 16&#13;
SE CO ND STO NE 9&#13;
NATIONAL NEWS&#13;
UFMCC, HRC joint sponsors&#13;
March on Washington slated for April, 2000&#13;
WASHINGTON, DC ·_ The nation's&#13;
largest gay and lesbian political organization&#13;
and the nation's largest gay faithbased&#13;
movement announced plans to&#13;
sponsor a march on Washing ton in the&#13;
spring of the year 2000. The event will&#13;
be produced by veteran march organizer&#13;
Robin Tyler who brought the organizations&#13;
together to fonnulate plru.uung.&#13;
This will be the fourth equal rights&#13;
march on Washington by the gay, lesbian,&#13;
bisexual and transgendercd communities&#13;
in the last 20 years - and is&#13;
expected to the largest U.S. gay rights&#13;
· march ever held .&#13;
The Human Rights Campaign and the&#13;
Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches ar!! exploring&#13;
dates in spring 2000 for the&#13;
"Mi llemuum March on Washington for&#13;
Equal Rights," the heads of both organizations&#13;
said. Several prominent organizations&#13;
have signed on as endorsers,&#13;
including the National Black Gay and&#13;
Lesbian Leadership Forum, the National&#13;
Latino/a Lesbian and Gay Organiuition,&#13;
the National Center for Lesbian Rights,&#13;
the Gay and Lesbian Alliru.1ce Against&#13;
Dcfan1ation, the National Youth Advocacy&#13;
Coalition, Parents, Families and&#13;
To prctesUt niversityd'sfr isicnto allow~ ~x ceremonies&#13;
Methodist church withholds money&#13;
from North Georgia Conference&#13;
MARIEfT A, Ga. - One of the state's&#13;
largest United Methodist congregations&#13;
has withhe ld its an annual $230,000&#13;
donation to the North Georgia United&#13;
Methodist Conference after expressing&#13;
concem about a decision to allow samesex&#13;
marriages at Emory University.&#13;
Leaders of the First United Me1hodist&#13;
Churcb of Marietta met wit11 conference&#13;
officials to discuss concerns that&#13;
included the Emory decision, said the&#13;
Rev. Jamie Jenkins, superintendent of&#13;
the conference's Atlanta -Marietta dis-.&#13;
trict.&#13;
"Homosexuality is a hot-button issue&#13;
iu churches today and it is a relevant&#13;
issue for us to discuss," he said.&#13;
The church's bulletin said the deci sion&#13;
lo withhold funds was prompted by&#13;
declining membership in the conference&#13;
and said the money will be withheld&#13;
until a church committee studies the&#13;
matter.&#13;
The Rev. Charles Sineath, the 5,000-&#13;
member church's pastor, was out of&#13;
town as tliis story was written and other&#13;
church leaders declined to discuss the&#13;
matter.&#13;
Lindsay Davis, bishop of the North&#13;
Georgia United Methodist Conference,&#13;
is one of the Emory lrustees who participated&#13;
in making tl1e decision to allow&#13;
same-sex maniages if they are performed&#13;
by au approved campus minister.&#13;
Methodist churches in the conference&#13;
pay into a $ 14.4 million budget to sup port&#13;
administration costs, church devel opment&#13;
, foreign missions and education.&#13;
(AP)&#13;
Weathers tymiesg ayc ruisea, nswering&#13;
Bahamiabni shop'ps rayer&#13;
BY JESSICA ROBERTSON&#13;
NASSAU, Bahamas - Bad weather prevented&#13;
a cmise ship with gay men on&#13;
board from landing in the Bahamas, and&#13;
clerics who opposed the visit said the&#13;
stom1 was an answer to their prayers.&#13;
The Norwegian Cruise Line already&#13;
h,nd been refused permission to dock in&#13;
the Cayman Islands with some 900 passengers&#13;
who have chartered its vessel,&#13;
the Leeward, 0111 of Miami.&#13;
Then the Bahamas government&#13;
8tcppcd in with an invitation . But 1111:&#13;
stonn quaHhed that.&#13;
"The weather wa~ a great factor&#13;
10 MAIH"H•APRII. 199 1!&#13;
beca use the government made it abundantly&#13;
clear to us that they were going&#13;
to allow that ship to come," said Baptist&#13;
Di shop Harcourt Pinder. president of the&#13;
Bal1amas Christian Council. "But I still&#13;
feel that prayer is the weapon we should&#13;
use to figh t a lot of the ills about us.&#13;
Prayer fails not and history has proven&#13;
that"&#13;
Church leaders had taken part in a&#13;
demonstration in downtown Nassau to&#13;
protest tl1e visit. Another Baptist pastor,&#13;
the Rev. Simeon Hall, said he got threatening&#13;
telephone calls nftcr the protest.&#13;
(AP)&#13;
Friends of Lesbians · and Gays, the&#13;
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force&#13;
and the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund.&#13;
Representatives from these organizations&#13;
and others will be sought to participat&#13;
e on au organizing committee&#13;
whlch will help facilitate the organization&#13;
and presentation of the event.&#13;
"This march will set a new tone for a&#13;
new century," said Elizabeth Birch,&#13;
executive director of the Human Rights&#13;
Campaign. "Full equality under the law&#13;
will be our achievement in the new millennium&#13;
."&#13;
"Together, we will solidify_ the gains&#13;
we've made over the past decades and&#13;
call upon our nation to live out its&#13;
promise of 'liberty and justice for&#13;
all,"'said the Rev . Troy Perry, founder&#13;
of the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan&#13;
Community Churches. "This&#13;
march will set the pace for social ju stice&#13;
and human rights ."&#13;
Not 'effective' for business&#13;
The organizations are working closely&#13;
with Tyler to produce the event. Tyler&#13;
was an instrumental organizer/producer&#13;
of the past three marche s on Washington&#13;
dating back to 1979.&#13;
"Robin's depth of experience, commmuty&#13;
commitments and unstoppable&#13;
energy uniquely qualify her to lead I.he&#13;
organizing efforts for this historic&#13;
event, "said Birch and Perry.&#13;
"This is a historic time in our movement.&#13;
Although we have much greater&#13;
visibility and a measure of cultural&#13;
acceptance, we must not be lulled into a&#13;
false sense of security,' .' Tyler said.&#13;
"This march will once again show the&#13;
self esteem, strength and unwavering&#13;
determination of the lesbian, gay. bisexual&#13;
and transgender community."&#13;
The last march was April 25, 1993&#13;
and attracted more than I million participants,&#13;
according to the organizers.&#13;
Covey apologizes for appearance&#13;
at anti-gay-marriage event&#13;
SALT LAKE CITY - Stephen R. Covey,&#13;
author and co-chainnall of Franklin&#13;
Covey, bas apologized to several businesses&#13;
about his appearance at a $100-aplate&#13;
fund-raising even t in Hawaii to&#13;
gppose gay marriag e, The Salt Lake&#13;
Tribuue said.&#13;
In letters elated Jan. 29, Franklin&#13;
Covey Vice President Greg Link told&#13;
the companies that Covey's "appearance&#13;
at the event was in fact an unfortunate&#13;
departur e from our ongoing policy and&#13;
we express our regrets. We especially&#13;
regret that Dr. Covey's appearance at&#13;
this event put you and your organi1.ation&#13;
in an w1comfortable position. "&#13;
Link, quoted in a copyright story in&#13;
The Tribune, said that the apology had&#13;
been sent 10 a handful of clients who&#13;
"exp ressed interest in whether we were&#13;
going 10 become active in politic s."&#13;
Covey, author of ''T he Seven Habits&#13;
of Highly Effective People," spoke&#13;
Nov. 21 to Save Traditional Marriage&#13;
'96, au organization working to pass a&#13;
ballot measure in 1998 that would&#13;
amend the Hawaii Constitution to give&#13;
legislators the power to detennine who&#13;
may marry.&#13;
The Honolulu Star-DulJetin and The&#13;
Tribune reported Nov. 22 that Covey&#13;
told the gathering that marriage is nol&#13;
for same -sex couples. "To me, that is n&#13;
k!nd of natural principle for a natural&#13;
law," Covey said. "And that's why I am&#13;
behind this kind of movement."&#13;
Link said Covey's remarks were taken&#13;
out of context in a rapid-fire exchange&#13;
with a reporter before his formal&#13;
remarks to the gathering, which he said&#13;
were limited lo principles espoused in&#13;
"'The Se\'en Habits of Highly Effective&#13;
Families," published iu October.&#13;
Still, he said, "Our bottom line is we&#13;
shouldn't have been there. That really is&#13;
not our place . Our presence at a political&#13;
event gave rise to the concern we were&#13;
departing from that approach , and throw ing&#13;
ours elves into heavily polit ical&#13;
issues, which we are not."&#13;
Human Rights Campaign communications&#13;
director David Smith said a transcri.&#13;
pt of the evening's address shows&#13;
Covey "wholeheartedly" took a political&#13;
stand against same-sex marriag e and&#13;
"knew exactly whom he was speaking&#13;
to, offering advice on how to handle the&#13;
opposition."&#13;
The Human Rights Campaigu asked&#13;
for an apology in December. The group&#13;
said that some of Covey 's clients have&#13;
gay-friendly company policies.&#13;
That led lo the letters of regret, Smith&#13;
said. "Clearly Mr. Covey realizes (the&#13;
dinner appc!llmnce) was a mistnke mid we&#13;
appreciate the apology," he said. (AP)&#13;
Alaska&#13;
PALMER (907)&#13;
Ch .. ch ol the Cownanl P.O. Box 2888. 99645. 746-1009 . HoMlld H.&#13;
Bess.p astor.A Welcominga ndA ffirmingA mericanB aplistC ongegatin&#13;
Arizona&#13;
PHOENIX (602) .&#13;
CasaD e Cristo EvangelicaCl hurch,1 029E . Turney,8 5014.2 65-&#13;
2831.&#13;
EvargilicalsC oo::emedW R,P OB ox6 6906. (303)657-3593.&#13;
Olive Tree Ministries, PO Box 47787, 85068-7787. 861•3424.&#13;
http'JfJV.cllxl xn/olivetre. e&#13;
TUCSON (5211)&#13;
CornerstoFneel lowship2, 902N .G eronimo8, 5705. 622-4626S. unday.&#13;
9 a.m., 10:30a.m., Wed"esday7, p.m.P rayers ervicel astS un.o r&#13;
the month6, p.m.R adaS chaff,l l'!StorC. HRISTFORALL@juno.oom.&#13;
First ChristianC hUlch,7 40 E. SpeOONa8y5, 719. 624-869.5 Surt,&#13;
8:15a.m.. 10:30amP. asu NctliK aneko.&#13;
FAYffi EVILLE (501)&#13;
OUIl aOfo r Guaclalo.pC1a tholicC hurchP, O Box8 32, 72702-083. 2&#13;
444-960.7 Sal, 5:30p.m. at St Martin'sE piso::paSl tudenCt enter,&#13;
814 W. Maple. Fr. Joseph Paul Smhh. pastor.&#13;
California&#13;
IRVINE (714)&#13;
IrvineU nitedC hurcho f Chris~4 915A ltonP kwy., 92714. 733-0220.&#13;
An Open&amp; Alf~mingC ongegilion, proudlyp rO!J'esSi,v inetenlionaDy&#13;
inctusrie.&#13;
LA CRESCENAT ( 626)&#13;
EvangllicalsC oncernedW omen's MinistryP, O Box9 4302,P asaoona,&#13;
CA 91109. 568-4803.e csocal@aoloo.m Wee~ Bl:lles ludies,&#13;
m onthlyp otlucka ll:f raps essions.&#13;
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                <text>Second Stone #57 - Mar/Apr 1998</text>
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