Instinctively, we
all sense that the answer must be a resounding No!
Yet we live in a
time when many churches are leading the effort to deny gay and transgender
people equal protection under the law.
Just last year,
Indiana's legislature initiated a four-year process to amend our State
Constitution to ensure that gay couples never gain access to the same legal
rights as straight couples. This is the first time since the slavery era
that Indiana's legislature has singled out a specific
group of people for exclusion from Indiana's Equal Protection Clause. The practical effect of the proposed amendment would be to
deprive gay couples of basic rights — such as being able to visit each other
in a crisis in the emergency room or inheriting property from each other.
Since so many
churches are invoking the name of Jesus to justify their assault on the rights
of gay and transgender people, we invite thoughtful people everywhere to ask
this simple question:
What would Jesus do?
The answer is not
hard to find. One of the themes of Jesus' ministry was a recurring conflict
with the Pharisees, a powerful group of legalistic religious leaders. The
Pharisees were waiting for the Messiah to come, and they believed that would
happen only when their entire nation became righteous. So, in their minds,
anyone who failed to follow their particular set of rules was bringing down a
curse on their nation and worthy of contempt.
Sound familiar?
The list of
people despised by the Pharisees was long:
- The Samaritans
were considered religious heretics and ethnically impure.
- Sick
people were believed to be
sinners whom God was punishing.
- Women were deemed unworthy of discipleship.
- Tax
collectors and Roman soldiers
were regarded as the enemy.
- The
poor, who had neither the time
nor resources to maintain rigorous rites of religious purity, were thought
to be beyond God's grace.
Jesus emphatically rejected
each one of these prejudices.
You can read the stories yourself in your own Bible.
E.g.,
John 4:1-42; Luke 10:29-37; John 9:1-34; Luke 8:1-3; Matthew 11:16-19; Matthew
5:38-48; and Matthew 9:18-26.
A classic
example is provided in Matthew 8. There, a Roman solider asked Jesus to heal his "pais."
This is a Greek term often used in ancient times to refer to a servant who was
his master's same-sex partner. K.J. Cover, Greek Homosexuality (Harvard University Press,
Cambridge, 1978), p. 16.
When the soldier said, "Lord, my 'partner' is lying at home paralyzed, in
terrible distress," Jesus was immediately compassionate and spoke no words
of exclusion or condemnation. He simply said, "I will come and heal
him."
In the dialogue
that followed, Jesus commended this Roman solider for having more faith than
anyone he had ever met and assured him that he would sit down in the Kingdom of Heaven with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. By
this miracle of healing, Jesus preserved this loving same-sex relationship. (For
more information about the Greek term referred to above and how it should be
translated, see the book
recommended below under Action Item 3.)
The Gospels are
clear. Jesus refused to be bound by cultural prejudice. Repeatedly, he took up
the cause of the oppressed and defended them against narrow-minded religious
leaders.
A Call To Action
We call upon Christians of
goodwill to have the courage to follow the example of Jesus. Specifically, we call upon Christians
everywhere to take four key steps to end the Church's history of persecuting
gay and transgender people:
- We must renew our commitment to honesty.
"Thou shalt not bear
false witness." Exodus 20:16. This is one of God's most basic
commands. Too many Christians today are playing fast and loose with the
truth, making sweeping statements about gay and transgender people without
ever taking the time to investigate. For example, some confidently assert
that "gay people choose to be that way" and "gay people can
change their orientation if they want to" and "the gay and trans
lifestyle is inherently unhealthy." None of these statements have any
basis in science or reality. As Christians, God expects us to love the
truth, seek the truth, and tell the truth – even when it's not popular.
- We must educate ourselves by daring, like Jesus
before us, to become genuine friends of gay and transgender people.
Jesus set the example. He
was a genuine friend to all kinds of people, including those that his
contemporaries derisively referred to as "sinners." Anyone who
really wants to know the truth about gay and transgender people needs to
take the time to get to know them, have a meal with them, engage in a real
conversation with them.
- We must carefully reexamine what the Bible
teaches about same-sex relationships.
On many occasions in the
past, "accepted Christian wisdom" has been wrong. For centuries,
many in the Church vigorously opposed the right of women to vote,
condemned interracial marriage, and supported slavery – always insisting
that the Bible supported their point of view. Now we know better.
Given this history, we ought to be careful. Cultural prejudice is a
powerful force that often overwhelms our attempts to interpret the Holy
Scriptures objectively. We invite you to carefully reexamine what the
Bible says about gay and transgender people. We recommend:
Rev. Jeff Miner and John Tyler Connoley, The Children Are Free: Reexamining the Biblical
Evidence on Same-sex Relationships (2002).
- We
must stop using the law to hurt gay and transgender people.
Regardless what anyone
believes about gay and transgender people, there is no excuse for doing
them harm. Enacting laws that keep a dying gay person in an emergency room
from seeing his life partner in his final moments of life is not Christian
– it's plain cruel. Enacting laws that refuse to recognize the shared
property of same-sex partners, thereby forcing one partner to sell their
home when the other dies, is not Christian – it's just meanspirited.
The effort of some modern Christians to deprive gay families of basic
civil rights is shameful and must stop. Jesus would expect no less.
We the people of
the Metropolitan Community Churches wish to stand with Jesus in defense of
those who are being unfairly targeted – and we invite you to join us in doing
what Jesus would really do!
Options For Greater Involvement