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Newsletter
of EVANGELICALS CONCERNED, INC Spring 2004 |
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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Opposition
to same-sex marriage is bipartisan.
Both President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry oppose
marriage for gay couples. They
each support a constitutional amendment to ban such marriages (Bush
supports a proposed Federal ban and Kerry supports a proposed
Massachusetts state ban.) But
each also says that he favors some other legal arrangements to benefit
gay couples. In his
1906 State of the Union address, President Theodore Roosevelt proposed
a constitutional amendment on marriage and divorce.
He did so in the
aftermath of Nevada’s easy divorce laws and Mormon polygamy.
(Nevada is now one of two states with an anti-gay marriage
state constitutional amendment in effect.) New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof notes yet another proposed Constitutional amendment on marriage – this one from 1912. Rep. Seaborn Roddenberry of Georgia proposed that “intermarriage between Negroes or persons of color and Caucasians … is forever prohibited.” He called interracial marriage “abhorrent and repugnant … debasing, ultrademoralizing, un-American and [an] inhuman leprosy.” Kristof quotes Roddenberry’s warning: “At some day, perhaps remote, it will be a question always whether or not the solemnizing of matrimony in the North is between two descendants of our Anglo-Saxon fathers and mothers or whether it be of a mixed blood descended from the orangutan-trodden shores of far-off Africa.” Kristof points out that orangutans come from Asia, not Africa. More Roddenberry: “This slavery of white women to black beasts will bring this nation to a conflict as fatal and as bloody as ever reddened the soil of Virginia.” Kristof’s column appeared on March 3. A full-page ad in support of a Federal amendment to ban same-sex marriage ran in The New York Times on February 29th. It was signed by some of the country’s leading Fundamentalists, including Joel Belz (see current REVIEW), Jerry Falwell, R. Albert Mohler, Jr., James Dobson, Louis Sheldon, and D. James Kennedy. Other Right wing activists such as Gary Bauer, Bay Buchanan, and Paul Weyrich also signed on. More moderate Christians were represented by Franklin Graham and Michael Novak. Some of the signatories represent their denominations: The Assemblies of God, The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel, The International Pentecostal Holiness Church, The Church of the Nazarene, The Church of God (Holiness), and the Evangelical Presbyterian Church. They’re “domestic terrorists!” They’re “a new threat to US border security!” That’s what the Religious Right’s Concerned Women for America called a newly-married gay Canadian couple that tried to enter the United States. According to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, such hysteria is on a par with CWA’s saying that same-sex partners of those killed on 9/11 were “trying to hijack the moral capital of marriage.” The Web site of the Christian Civic League of Maine solicited “tips,
rumors, speculation and facts” about state officials’ sexual
orientation until a public outcry forced an apology.
CCLM head, Michael Heath, said that “in the midst of fighting
for something I feel very strong about [i.e., a state constitutional
ban on marriage for gay couples] I wrote and said things that I should
not have written and spoken.” He
said he felt “terrible” for “besmirch[ing] the fine reputation
and important ministry” of the CCLM. “Why can’t we have marriages between people and pets?”
Driving a wedge between Christians and gay people, Nicholas
DiMarzio, Roman Catholic Bishop of Brooklyn (and Queens), was mocking
marriage for gay couples and pushing for a government ban. Speaking on
the radio, he went on: “I mean, pets really love their masters and
why can’t we have a marriage so they could inherit the money?” “If the KKK opposes gay marriage, I would ride with them.”
So said a black Baptist minister, Gregory Daniels, at a
Chicago meeting. The
pastor of Empowerment Temple African Methodist Episcopal Church in
Baltimore explains that gay men in the black church “took on that
posture or their spirit because they never saw a man in church worship
God. They only saw women
praise God. So, they
began to clap like their mamas, shout like their grandmothers and took
on an effeminate spirit.” Only 27 percent of black Democrats in the state of New York agree that gay couples should be allowed to marry. This contrasts with 47 percent of the state’s white Democrats. In religion terms, agreeing that gay couples should be allowed to marry, are 34 percent of Protestant Democrats, 34 percent of Catholic Democrats, 56 percent of Jewish Democrats and 73 percent of Democrats with no religious affiliation. These findings are based on interviews with 1,420 Democratic primary voters conducted for The Associated Press and five television networks on March 2. “I’m a pastor and I don’t support gay marriage, but I resent people playing political football with our religious beliefs.” Georgia State Representative Ron Sailor, Jr. thus explained his vote in March in opposition to a state constitutional ban on same-sex marriage. He was one of the African-American legislators who all voted against the antigay bill. According to Rep. Georganna Sinkfield: “What I see in this is hate. I’m a Christian, but if we put this in the Constitution, what’s next? … You’re opening the floodgates for people to promote their own prejudice.” But Rep. Earnest Williams objected to comparisons between the black civil rights movement and same-sex marriage: “You can make a choice of who you want in your bedroom, but you can’t choose your skin color.” Others pointed out that nobody chooses his or her sexual orientation. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has apologized for antigay remarks made in a King Day observance. Sheila Koger, speaking at the Bethlehem Baptist Church in Columbia, South Carolina had asserted: “Martin Luther King was not talking about gay rights. He was talking about rights to have liberty.” “In Fight Over Gay Marriage, Evangelicals Are Conflicted.”
The headline in The New York Times (February 28) signaled news of pro-gay
evangelicals in Western Michigan (‘what amounts to a small Northern
Bible Belt”). “We
have bigger things to worry about than whether two men or two women
want to get married,” as it was put by a Republican member of Ada
Bible Church in a Grand Rapids suburb.
A “minority of evangelical churchgoers and even pastors …
expressed ambivalence about the amendment” that’s been proposed to
ban marriage for gay folk. A February 27th editorial in The Lariat, Baylor University’s student newspaper, came out in
support of marriage for gay couples.
“Just as it isn’t fair to discriminate against someone
for their skin color, heritage or religious beliefs, it isn’t fair
to discriminate against someone for their sexual orientation.
Shouldn’t gay couples be allowed to enjoy the benefits and
happiness of marriage, too?” The
editorial was approved by the editorial board, 5 to 2. Andrew Sullivan says: “When people talk about gay marriage, they miss
the point.” “In more than 20 years of pastoral ministry, I have seen many threats to marriage, but these threats haven’t come from gay men and lesbians.” Lutheran seminary professor Barbara K. Lundblad, in a letter to The New York Times, protesting a federal ban on same-sex marriage, continued: “I’m certain that a survey of pastors, priests and rabbis would confirm that adultery, abuse and addictions are far more destructive.” She added that the ban “would do grave harm to many and nothing to protect marriage.” Trinity United Methodist Church in Kansas City (MO) will no longer perform weddings for heterosexual couples so long as a denominational rule forbidding same-sex union services remains in effect. According to the pastor, Sally Haynes, 30 to 40 percent of the congregation’s membership of 275 is gay or lesbian. Her bishop, Ann Sherer, says she supports her right to make “worship decisions.” The gay man who envisioned the popular Good News for Modern Man translation of the Bible has died. The former general secretary of the American Bible Society, Laton Holmgren, was retired in California when he passed away on January 25 at age 88. He was a graduate of Asbury College and Drew University. Christianity Today noted his death and published his portrait but did not note, as his New York Times obituary did, that he is survived by the man who was “his companion,” Kiyoshi Hagiya. “An open belief in God, beyond a generic spirituality is considered the most extreme form of bad taste” in many lesbian and gay circles. This is as Eric Gutierrez sees it in the January issue of Out, a magazine for gay readers. He objects to the fact that gay Christians are so often expected to keep their faith in the closet around other gay people. He calls these Christian gay folk “a new caste of queer untouchable.” Gutierrez concludes: “We must not only confront the hostility of religion toward us but also the hostility of [gay] culture toward religion.” The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cincinnati is supporting the repeal of a local anti-gay amendment. A 1993 city charter amendment that prohibits the Cincinnati City Council from passing any legislation protective of gay people is being reconsidered. In the February issue of the local Catholic Telegraph, Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk called the antigay amendment morally wrong and “detrimental to the public good.” He added, though, that he believes “homosexual behavior” should not be as “legally acceptable as heterosexual behavior.”. Students at Notre Dame University are seeking official recognition for their gay student group. The group is also asking that sexual orientation be added to the University’s nondiscrimination clause. A minister in the Church of the Brethren has moved his ordination to the United Church of Christ after his home denomination invalidated his credentials when he came out as gay. Matthew Smucker of Kalamazoo, (MI) says he’s “physically drained” by the controversy over his being the first openly gay minister in the Brethren denomination. He now works at the UCC’s Chicago Theological Seminary as director of developmental operations. A female Episcopal priest in Mississippi has resigned to protest the elevation of a gay man as bishop in New Hampshire. Rev. Sandra DePriest says: “I took vows to uphold Scripture.” She said she believes homosexuality is sinful. AND FINALLY: The Santa Cruz (CA) Bible Church awarded two women a prize for being the most recently married couple in attendance at a church meeting in February. The two were the last still standing at the end of a newlywed contest. The prize was a free dinner at a local restaurant. But later, pastor David Gschwend explained that his congregation had been caught off-guard and that he supports only heterosexual marriage. The couple had attended this fundamentalist church without incident on several previous occasions. |
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