Mondays are my trip down memory lane. I shuffle through my memory's snapshots and look for one that is especially clear.
To set the stage for today's post, I need to tell you about two things that have happened recently.
First, I had the privilege of receiving the gift of a confidence regarding a friend's sexual orientation. (Clearly, if it is a confidence, they are gay. Otherwise, they'd have no hesitation in telling me they are heterosexual, right? Straight is easy. Gay is complicated.) Second, I just found and friended Wes Brown on facebook. I know Wes from my time at Duke Divinity School.
Which led me to rummage around in my mind's Div School memory box. Rummaging unearthed this memory:
I was sitting on the steps of Duke Chapel with a woman I had recently met and with whom I shared an immediate and vibrant connection. A rare moment of deep kinship. As part of our deepening trust and vulnerability, Beth shared with me that she was a lesbian. I was very young. The sun was very bright. The look on her face was hard to read. I was unprepared.
As gently as I could, and with the utmost compassion, I told her I was deeply opposed to her sexual orientation. I know now there is no way to be gentle and compassionate when telling a person that at their core there is something wrong with them. As a "good" Christian I felt obligated to encourage her in the direction of heterosexuality. Or celibacy. We agreed to disagree.
Looking back, I am surprised she remained friends with me. But she did. Our friendship flourished. When I moved to Germany, she was a faithful correspondent. On the night before my wedding, it was Beth with whom I wanted to spend time. At my wedding, she read Scripture. When I had my first child, I wanted Beth to meet her. And yet, I was always slightly uncomfortable with her sexuality. I never doubted her faith.
It has been a long journey for me and I have probably hurt many people along the way. Most notably, Beth. But with age comes wisdom.
If I could sit on that sunny step again, I would say to Beth what I said to my young, ashamed, hurting friend last week.
Your gayness does not separate you from God. You are beloved of God, just as you are. Frankly, I don't think God is all that worked up over sexuality. I think God is deeply concerned about covenant and relationship. So, find a true love and live in fidelity and wholesomeness. (btw, good luck with that...do not, I repeat, do NOT use heterosexuals as a model of covenantal love and fidelity. They haven't done a very good job of showing us how that works. But God has.) Be at peace.
I was unable to say those words to Beth when we were young and I was a "good" Christian. Thankfully, she never abandoned the friendship.
I am no longer young and I'm not particularly good. But, I am still a committed follower of Jesus Christ. And I am convinced that homosexuality does not grieve the heart of God. At all.
Consider me out.
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You write SO well! But first, you think and faith well. Thanks for the beauty and succinctness of your brain and of your fingers.
ReplyDeleteWell said. Needed in these days.
ReplyDeleteJulia-
ReplyDeleteI was caught off guard by this post and your trip down memory lane but that's a good thing!
I still remember how beautiful the Chapel looked, how absolutely terrified I was to come out to you and how the warmth of the sun gave me the courage to say the words I had rarely ever spoken to any person.
I was saddened by your response but at the same time I was hopeful. Hopeful because I believed when we said we agreed to disagree we meant it and our friendship over these 20 plus years bears that out. I thank God on a regular basis for the blessing that is our friendship.