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Newsletter of EVANGELICALS CONCERNED, INC Fall 2003 |
For I am persuaded,
that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor
things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of
God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 8 |
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| President Bush has responded to a coming-out letter from a Bush family
friend, Charles Frances, founder of the gay-straight Republican
Unity Coalition. Said the
President: “I knew you were gay.
I didn’t know how to bring it up.
Let me just say we’re better friends than ever.
Let me also say, I reserve the right to disagree with you on
some stuff.” According to another report, in U.S. News & World Report, the President made the following comment at a photo-op for the Log Cabin Republicans, a gay GOP group: “I know exactly who y’all are. I’m working so that people don’t have heartburn over your issue.” “The Bush Administration might as well hear it
straight, and hear it fast: Don’t you dare make a single tiny
concession on homosexual marriage.”
So warns publisher Joel Belz in
his Right-wing World
magazine. He goes on to
say that if the Bush Administration fails to heed this warning, the
Religious Right “will not support you in November of 2004.”
(See review, Summer,
2003 for a critique of Belz and World.) Lynne Cheney, wife of the Vice President and mother of their openly
lesbian daughter, had this to say when asked on CNN about the
recent Supreme Court decision knocking down laws against same-sex
relations in private: “Well, it seemed to me to be exactly the right
decision. I’ve been a
conservative for a really long time, and it has always seemed to me to
be a stretch – the idea that government has any place in
bedrooms.” Representative Dick Gephardt’s openly gay lesbian daughter is on the staff of his campaign for the Democratic Presidential nomination. She was featured in a front-page story in The New York Times, November 1. The congressman grew up as a devout Baptist in segregated St. Louis and says he’s had to come a long way on gay issues. As with most of his competitors for the Democratic nomination, he disagrees with his daughter’s advocacy of gay marriage. But, she says, “I’m working on him with this issue. And I can assure you he’s listening.” Says he: “You lear4n as you go through life. You meet people and if you listen to people … you can really learn.” “The fact of the matter is that gays and lesbians themselves do not threaten the institution of marriage. They should not be blamed or made scapegoats for the weakening of the fundamental institution of marriage. Men and women, husbands and wives by the millions, who care more for Mercedes-Benzes and four-car garages than for teaching their children values and helping with their homework, have done a fine job of that, thank you.” This is the opinion of former Republican Congressman Bob Barr, the primary sponsor of the antigay Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) signed into law by then President Clinton. Barr made his remarks in an interview in Atlanta this summer. “Our entire civilization will come tumbling down” if gay marriage
becomes legal. That’s
the warning of a coalition of anti-gay marriage crusaders – in the
words of Sandy Rios of Concerned Women of America.
Other groups who have joined together to make the
Constitutional Amendment against gay marriage the No. 1 issue in the
2004 election are Christian Coalition, the Southern Baptist
Convention, and Eagle Forum (whose founder’s son is openly gay) The pioneer of Canadian Christian television and host of “100 Huntley
Street” resigned to give his full attention to keeping marriage a
right for heterosexuals only. The
67-year-old David Mainse, sometimes called “the Pat Robertson of
Canada,” has turned over his television duties to his son, Ron, and
says he’s convinced it’s not too late to stop homosexuals from
marrying each other. Leading figures of the Religious Right are meeting to strategize against
gay marriage. Their
theme is “Marriage: One man and one woman.”
They represent Focus on the Family, Family Research Council,
the Southern Baptist Convention, Eagle Forum, Empower America and the
National Religious Broadcasters. .Activist Paul Weyrich says he’s
never seen such focused energy among these leaders.
But according to Glenn T. Stanton of Focus on the Family:
“We’re upset that [the Federal Marriage Amendment] doesn’t solve
the problem of the erosion of marriage.”
And conservative lawyer Paul Fein, writing in the Washington
Times, argued: “The amendment would enervate self-government,
confound the cultural sacralization of traditional marriage and
child-rearing, and clutter the Constitution with a nonessential.” “Families continue to be assaulted openly and viciously [with] gender being confused and traditional roles being repudiated,” according to Elder M. Russell Ballard of the Mormon’s governing Quorum. He was speaking of calls for same-sex marriage. Legislators in Canada, Taiwan and Poland are seeking to provide for
same-sex marriage. If
their proposed laws pass, these nations will join the ranks of the
Netherlands and Belgium in permitting same-sex marriage. The Swedish Lutheran Church, that country’s national church, has come closer to endorsing same-sex marriage, according to the church’s Archbishop K. G. Hammar. He says that more theological work must be done before a final decision is made next year. The Nigerian Anglicans have issued a statement condemning gay marriage
as of the devil. “We
totally reject and renounce this obnoxious attitude and behavior. It is devilish and satanic.
It comes directly from the pit of hell.
It is an idea sponsored by Satan himself and being executed by
his followers and adherents who have infiltrated the church.” The first openly gay man has
been consecrated a bishop of the Episcopal Church. The operative word is “openly.” He is V. Gene Robinson and he will be the new bishop of New
Hampshire. In the service
of consecration, held on November 2, He was handed the symbols of
office by people close to him: his stole and chasuble by his parents,
his gold miter by his daughters and partner, and his shepherd’s
crook by his predecessor. “Homosexuality, as we understand it as an orientation, is not mentioned in the Bible.” This comment was made by the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, Frank Griswold, responding in September to antigay members of the denomination. The London Guardian says the
Archbishop of York has told conservative Anglicans to “pipe down.”
Archbishop David Hope thinks they “should chatter less
and contemplate more. ,,,Where is what evangelicals used to call the
‘quiet time?’” A growing network of gay-supportive Pentecostal churches is reaching
out to Pentecostal Christians who have been rejected elsewhere within
the Pentecostal family due to their homosexuality. Reconciling Pentecostals International has affiliated
congregations in Arizona, California, Florida, South Carolina, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Texas, Arkansas, Kentucky and Indiana. RPI is headquartered at Reconciling Pentecostal Assembly in
Scottsdale, Arizona. The
charismatic flagship magazine, Charisma,
in its November issue, took note of the “increasing number of
‘welcoming’ churches that describe themselves as Spirit-filled.”
RPI is found at www.reconcilingpentecostals.com.
The United Methodist’s highest court has ruled that a lesbian pastor
must undergo a new investigation.
Though two lower courts had declined to press charges
against Karen Dammann, it appears that she will now face a church
trial for defying the denomination’s ban against gay and lesbian
clergy. She is, for now,
employed at the First United Methodist Church of Ellensburg,
Washington. “The Dalai Lama explicitly condemns homosexuality, as well as all
oral and anal sex. His
stand is close to that of Pope John Paul II, something his Western
followers find embarrassing and prefer to ignore.”
This is noted in a New
York Times Op-Ed piece by Patrick French, formerly with the Free
Tibet Campaign. He
reports that the Buddhist leader’s American publisher “asked him
to remove the injunctions against homosexuality from his book, Ethics
for the New Millennium, for fear they would offend American
readers, and the Dalai Lama acquiesced.” Israel will be the site of the Second World Pride celebration, scheduled
for 2005. The first
such event was held in 2000 in Rome and sponsored by Interpride.
There have been gay pride parades in Jerusalem in the last two
years. New York State Assemblyman Dov Hikind asks: “What’s next?
Do we legalize bestiality?
Do we legalize incest? We’re
moving in that direction. God
knows there are people out there who want to legalize bestiality and
incest.” Presumably,
the children of Adam and Eve married each other.
But are cats and cat lovers demanding a right to marry each
other? While this
long-time antigay Democrat makes his preemptive strike against incest
and bestiality by attacking gay marriage, his fellow politicos are
cautious in criticizing his “disappointing” remarks (Sheldon
Silver) with which I “couldn’t disagree more strongly,” (Charles
Schumer). But out-lesbian
(and Jewish) fellow Assembly member Deborah Glick, Democrat from
Manhattan, says she believes Hikind “understood how inflammatory his
language was. I don’t
believe he’s a stupid man. It
was self-evident that this is about getting headlines and not engaging
in debates.” Islamic planners of an interfaith conference cancelled a host after
discovering he’s gay. The conference, held in early October at
the University of British Columbia, was organized by the Ahmadiyya
Muslim Jama’at of British Columbia.
The cancelled host, Tim Stevenson, is a city councillor and an
ordained minister in the United Church of Canada. The First Conference on Homosexuality in Iranian Society was held at UCLA in November. Some of the topics discussed were: “Homosexuality and the Iranian Family,” “Homosexuality in Iranian Society and Culture,” “Voices of Middle Eastern Gay and Lesbian Immigrants in the U.S.,” and “Applying for Asylum in the United States.” The conference was sponsored by the Iranian GLBT association, UCLA’s GLBT Campus Resource Center, UCLA’s Office of Residential Life and the Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center. Sister Wendy Beckett is interviewed in the October issue of A&U,
a magazine focused on HIV/AIDS. Columnist
Ruby Comer ran into the PBS art series guide during a visit to the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art and asked her about her involvement with
the AIDS epidemic. “My
only involvement has been that of prayer.”
Asked what “advice about HIV prevention [she has for] young
kids who are coming of age today,” Sister Wendy replied: “I have
no advice that they have not already heard.
Advice does not get us far, compared with accepting
responsibility for what we do. No
one can live life for us, and the loneliness is an essential element
in growing into the courage and determination that mark one as
mature.” Dolly Parton graces the cover of A&U’s
July issue. Asked why
other country musicians have not been as supportive of the AIDS
community as she has been, Parton replies: “I think country
musicians, in general, have not been as involved in the fight because
many of them come from the country like I did.
Maybe there were [fewer people with AIDS] or … maybe those
who contracted it moved off to the city for care or to avoid family
conflicts over their lifestyle.”
She adds: “ ‘Gay’ isn’t something you do. It is something you are!
Of course, in the beginning everyone thought it was just a gay
disease, and it has taken too long to get everyone to understand
otherwise.” America’s “Bible Belt” has only a third of the country’s
population but more than 40 percent of AIDS cases.
The disease in the American South is increasingly “rural,
female, heterosexual, and African American,” according to the latest
epidemiological data. A
coalition of health officials in 14 Southern states concludes that
homophobia, racism and sexism plays “a huge role” in contributing
to the spread of HIV because of the stigma and heterosexual denial
associated with the virus in “the Bible Belt.” Most HIV-positive, sexually promiscuous men don’t tell their sex
partners of their HIV status. This
is the finding of a new Louisiana-based study at Tulane University.
Only one in four people tell their casual sex partners that
they are HIV-positive. Though
84 percent of the participants in the study were African Americans,
the lead researcher, Dr. Patricia Kissinger, says that the results are
consistent with other studies on a wider range of men in Los Angeles
and San Francisco. Elton John claims he shreds all the “Bibles sent to me saying,
‘Repent now.’” New York Post columnist quotes John’s saying: “I’m a mad
shredder!” “We came out of this [Exodus 2003] conference with many bills and
little means to cover those bills.”
So says Tim Sneed, Administrative Director of the
“ex-gay” Exodus network in the fall issue of the movement’s
newsletter. He blames the
conference’s unexpectedly low attendance for the short fall.
Meanwhile, the 2004 Exodus conference is announced for July at
Azusa Pacific University, just prior to the scheduled western EC
conference at Chapman University, also in Southern California, where a
former Exodus leader, Jeremy Marks, (no longer “ex-gay”) will be a
featured keynoter. Gay columnist Michelangelo Signorile says that “ex-gay” proponent
John Paulk phoned in to his radio show.
Paulk “did so, he said, because he was listening and
heard his name mentioned and just had to speak up.”
On the radio, Signorile was discussing the case of Michael
Johnston, yet another “ex-gay” who had “fallen.”
Signorile writes: “Johnson, who is HIV-positive, had been
exposed in Atlanta’s Southern
Voice of picking up men on the Internet and having unprotected sex
with them, even as he claimed he was no longer gay.”
Signorile mentioned Paulk’s having been caught in a D.C. gay
bar while in the city in connection with his “ex-gay” work with
Focus on the Family – where he’s no longer employed.
According to Signorile, Paulk “said he listens
regularly and enjoys [my] show. …
And, yes, he did admit that he fights sexual desires for men, and that
his feelings for men never went away, so in that sense he is not
‘cured.’” Signorile goes on: “He also admitted that Christian
conservatives weren’t being honest – that they don’t ‘love’
gay people and that they certainly are on a political mission more
than anything else. … All in all, it wound up becoming a bizarrely agreeable
discussion.” He was known around the Yale campus for spewing vitriol against
homosexuality. According
to the Yale Daily News, students met his “rants with mixed amusement and
disdain.” Now the
paper reports that “Brother Stephen,” as students knew him, has
been arrested for offering $20 for sex with a 14-year-old boy in West
Chester, Pennsylvania. Said,
Cyd Cipolla, a former coordinator of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Cooperative: “I feel sorry for this man and for the boy
who crossed his path.”
AND FINALLY: Fantasies about Jesus’ sex life have been in the news lately – of
both heterosexual and homosexual fabrication.
An ABC News special, Jesus,
Mary and DaVinci, capitalized on the popularity of Dan Brown’s
new book, The DaVinci Code,
an allegedly-historical conspiracy bestseller in which the Catholic
Church suppresses an old story that Jesus and Mary Magdalene had a
sexual relationship that produced a child.
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