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The GLBTReligious Experience
Finding acceptance and unity along the spiritual
path
BY TYLER HOWER
R
ecently a number of mainstream religious
groups have done things that call into question even more starkly
their acceptance of gays and lesbians among their ranks. In July,
still in the midst of its own sex scandals, the Vatican released a
document reiterating its opposition to same-sex unions and
adoptions, essentially demanding that Catholic politicians voice
their opposition to — and vote against — any pro-gay legislation. At
its General Convention in August, the Episcopal Church approved the
consecration of an openly gay, non-celibate bishop. But, in the
midst of the debate, several groups of Episcopalians have threatened
to divide the Church. At the United Methodist Church’s General
Conference that same month, delegates voted to continue the church’s
ban on same-sex unions. Meanwhile, over the past several years
governments and local authorities in heavily Islamic parts of the
world have tried, convicted and sometimes tortured gays and lesbians
for allegedly offending public morality, widely-held interpretations
of the Koran and the sayings of Muhammad.
So, while more than 60 percent of gays and
lesbians in the United States consider themselves members of a
particular religion (according to the results of a survey by
GLCensus Partners released in early August), it’s hardly surprising
that only 38 percent of gays and lesbians practice the religion they
profess. It might even be more surprising that gays and lesbians are
as active as they are — after all, church attendance ranged from
only 36 to 49 percent of all adult Christians in the early 1990s,
according to the American Religious Identification Survey. In spite
of the ways in which religion — and traditional religion, in
particular — may not always be accepting of gays and lesbians, there
are many in our community who not only draw strength from their
religious convictions and commitments, but also feel an obligation
to make a difference in those religious communities that are not
accepting of gays and lesbians.
It is just such a feeling of responsibility that
keeps Patrick McArron in the Catholic Church. In 1972, McArron
founded the local chapter of DignityUSA (www.dignityusa.org), an organization for gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender Catholics. McArron is currently
the National President of Dignity. DignityUSA was originally founded
in 1969 as both a social and self-help group for gay Catholics by
Patrick Nidorf, a priest from San Diego — though most of Dignity’s
initial members were based in Los Angeles.
“Dignity caught on like wildfire,” recalled
McArron. “The people were just crazy about it; they thought this is
great. This was their first opportunity back in 1969 to get together
with like-minded guys who happened to be Catholic and gay.”
In the years since its formation, Dignity has
transformed itself from a mere social group into one with an agenda
for changing the face and teachings of the Catholic Church. This
change in focus is reflected in something McArron himself says. When
asked why he’s still a Catholic in the face of his Church’s
rejection of gays and lesbians, he replied, “I don’t need the
Catholic Church, but the Catholic Church needs me and people like
me.”
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“I don’t need the Catholic Church, but
the Catholic Church needs me and people like me.” — Patrick
McArron, who founded the San Diego chapter of DignityUSA, a
national organization of GLBT Catholics |
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This dedication to making an impact in the
Catholic Church — even in the face of rejection — has been a part of
McArron’s religious life since early on. As a young man, he spent a
year and a half studying for the priesthood with a religious order,
after having been refused by the San Diego diocese because those in
charge suspected that he had “homosexual tendencies.” Ultimately his
time in the seminary ended for the same reasons, with the seminary’s
proctor telling McArron that he had to leave the seminary, for
reasons he would not disclose. McArron recalled that the proctor
told him he would figure out for himself later why he was being
asked to leave. “I asked the priest for a favor then. I told him
that the next time he told someone he had to leave the seminary, he
should give him a reason.”
For McArron, the way in which this priest
handled his dismissal from the seminary is symptomatic of the
Catholic Church’s treatment of sexuality. Even though the Vatican
and bishops issue statements about their view of sexual morality,
there is an air of secrecy about sexual matters, an environment many
cite as having contributed to the Catholic Church’s history of
hidden sexual abuse.
Part of Dignity’s current mission is to force
open discussion of sex, sexual orientation and other matters of
social justice, as well as to hold the Vatican and Church leaders
accountable for their actions. For instance, in the wake of the
Vatican’s statement against same-sex unions, Dignity issued a
statement reminding the Church of its commitment to the proposition
that God is love and reminding Catholic politicians of their
commitment as Americans to the equal creation and equal protection
of all citizens. They have also been at the forefront of the fight
within the Church to prevent gays from becoming the scapegoats of
the sexual abuse scandal.
“We told the bishops that banning gay men from
the priesthood was unacceptable,” said McArron. “That idea has more
or less gone away.” This demonstrates the way in which Dignity
continues to have an impact on the Catholic Church, even though it
has been banned as a group from any Church-owned property since the
Vatican issued a letter in October of 1986. “The bishops thought we
would disappear at some point, and they wouldn’t have to deal with
us anymore — but we haven’t disappeared and we’ve become more
vocal,” McArron said, noting that the Church has had to more or less
come to terms with Dignity, and listen to what the group has to say.
“Dignity’s relationship with the Church is
sometimes contentious, because of our outspokenness, but we engage
in dialogue with the bishops whenever we can,” added McArron. “The
relationship is good because there’s been some dialogue, but there’s
never enough. The hierarchy is standing its ground and they don’t
like to be challenged, but that’s what we do.”
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“When I was a boy, my father told me that
God wants everyone to find a mate and be happy, he didn’t say
a man or a woman. My father chose those words carefully.” —
Reverend Chester McCall |
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Speaking for himself, McArron explained his
continued involvement with Dignity and the Church, stating, “I could
have walked away from the Church, but the Church would have
continued to harm people.”
Like McArron, the Reverend Chester McCall felt
an early calling to be involved in the Church. He has also felt
rejection at times from the church that he has tried to serve.
McCall is the interim associate minister at the First Unitarian
Universalist Church in San Diego. Though he was also raised as a
Catholic, by the time he was 12 he had announced that he was called
to be a minister in a Pentecostal church in his hometown of East
Palo Alto, California. Although he was prevented for a time from
pursuing his ministry because his parents thought that he was too
young to know what he wanted and “shouldn’t be playing with God,” he
resumed his ministry at 17, becoming involved with a street ministry
in his hometown, which is still in operation today.
After college, McCall ultimately argued his way
into the Pacific School of Religion, convincing the administrators
that they needed to accept him because it was God’s will that he
attend. And in 1979, he became the first (and still only)
African-American to be ordained by the Northern California
Conference of the United Church of Christ.
McCall recalled that being a bisexual never made
much of a difference either to his family or to his work in the
ministry, at least until very recently. “It was never an issue with
my family. I never had to say it; I never had to declare it. When I
was a boy, my father told me that God wants everyone to find a mate
and be happy, he didn’t say a man or a woman. My father chose those
words carefully.”
He also recalled that later, when he was
returning to his hometown, his parents told him how proud they were
of the way he lived his life, and that they wanted him to continue
living his life in a way that made them proud. Similarly, his
sexuality has almost never been an issue in his ministry.
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“I had never been oppressed because of my
sexual orientation until I founded a church in Durham (North
Carolina). The black community in Durham had a problem with me
because I was a gay minister.” — Reverend Chester McCall,
interim associate minister of the First Unitarian Universalist
Church in San Diego |
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“Besides being a Unitarian minister, I’m also a
United Church of Christ minister, and I had never really told them.
Although they claim to be the first church to have ordained a gay
male, that wasn’t an issue. I hadn’t put it on the record books,
they were dealing with me as a single man, so they couldn’t
understand some things that I did financially because they didn’t
know I had a partner. But when I told them, they said ‘Yeah, we
knew.’”
In fact, McCall doesn’t think his orientation
really mattered to anyone very much until he went to Durham, North
Carolina, to found a new UCC church, six years ago. “I had never
been oppressed because of my sexual orientation until I founded a
church in Durham. The black community in Durham had a problem with
me because I was a gay minister. In that context, I lost community —
I lost Christian community, I lost black community and I was
ostracized. And, it became an issue in the church I had created, so
I decided not to be the called minister of the church I had
founded.”
McCall’s journey led him to become a minister
with the Unitarian Universalist Association, through the invitation
of a Unitarian minister he met as Director of Homeless Services in
Oakland, California. In many ways, the Unitarian Church is an ideal
home for McCall, because of its openness to various expressions of
religious and spiritual belief. McCall describes his own theological
focus, saying, “My dominant theology is
pagan-Buddhist-Jewish-Christian-Universalist-humanist-experiential-liberationist-mystic.”
This reflects the way in which he believes in drawing from the truth
in various religions and belief systems. The Unitarian Universalists
are also an ideal home because of the way they pride themselves on
being totally open to GLBT persons. In fact, McCall himself sees
something of a danger in the way that sexual orientation within the
Unitarian Universalist Church has become so accepted. “It’s pretty
much a non-issue for this church, except for the one time a year
when we talk about it specifically, but that means that people can
forget that it still is an issue out in the world.”
Ultimately, McCall doesn’t accept that his
orientation has very much effect on his relationship with God, whom
he envisions primarily as a woman. “While I’m sure that being
bisexual has had some impact on my religious life it has never had
any conscious impact. There’s this question I ask: ‘Are you a
spiritual being having a human experience or are you a human being
having a spiritual experience?’ I’m on the spiritual being side. I’m
a spiritual being having a spiritual experience that just happens to
be male, black, gay.”
At the same time, McCall recognizes the fact
that the acceptance of more emotive and theatrical behavior from
preachers and ministers might have had some impact on his coming to
believe that God wanted him to be a minister. What he is certain of
is that God cannot disapprove of gays, lesbians and bisexuals. “I
ask myself, if being gay is so bad, then why am I so blessed? If it
is really so evil and wrong then why am I having such a good life?
Those two things don’t click.”
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“I’m a spiritual being having a spiritual
experience that just happens to be male, black, gay.” —
Reverend Chester McCall, interim associate minister of the
First Unitarian Universalist Church in San Diego |
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While being bisexual has made little difference
in McCall’s religious life, for some religious believers, like
Salman, a local Muslim, religious activity and sexual orientation
don’t fit together very well. “I haven’t been able to come out to my
family or to other Muslims,” he said. “I’m afraid of being
ostracized. I would be cast out, be excommunicated almost, even
though the mosque doesn’t officially do that.”
This is because almost all Muslims interpret the
story of Lot and Sodom and Gomorrah — essentially the same story
contained in Genesis — to mean that all homosexual activity is
forbidden, according to Salman. “The most liberal or progressive
interpretation you ever get is to hate the sin and love the sinner.
The completely progressive interpretation would be to embrace the
relationship, but you just don’t find that among many straight
Muslims.”
Within some of the collections of Muhammad’s
teachings there are condemnations of homosexual activity. However,
Salman doesn’t believe that these are accurate reports of the
Prophet’s words. “I deny that the Prophet of God would have
condemned anyone for something they didn’t choose,” he said.
Because of predominant attitudes towards
homosexuality in the Muslim world, Salman also loses out on the
socialization aspect of participation in his mosque. “I go to mosque
every Friday and pray, but then I leave. I don’t socialize because I
don’t want to hide myself,” he explained.
At the same time that he has withdrawn from
social activities at his mosque, Salman believes that coming out has
brought him closer to God. “I’ve had more faith since I came out.
Before I was angry because I thought that the Being who made me was
condemning [me] for fulfilling my own nature.”
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“I asked the priest for a favor…. I told
him that the next time he told someone he had to leave the
seminary, he should give him a reason.” — Patrick McArron, who
founded the San Diego chapter of DignityUSA, a national
organization of GLBT Catholics |
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This attitude towards being gay and being Muslim
is also shared by Afdhere Jama, editor of Huriyah, a journal
of queer Muslim studies. “Islam is such a personal faith, yet
Muslims are united under certain erroneous interpretations of
certain things,” writes Jama. “My own personal Islam was very
welcoming from the beginning. There are verses in the Koran that
say, ‘God creates whatever God wills.’ Those verses were very
helpful to me because it told me that even though humans might find
you a mistake or something like that, God created you regardless of
what they think.”
Like Salman, Jama also feels that being gay has
brought him closer to God and to Islam. “Being queer has made me
understand and sympathize with other people’s problems. I was able
to identify with victims of abuse. I think every queer Muslim has a
softer spot for people who suffered pain inflicted by society in
their lives. When I was a teenager I read The Diary of Anne
Frank. I remember feeling so close to that little Jewish girl.
And because I was able to do this, my relationship with God and
Islam, both of which are about liberating the weak and the abused,
grew far richer, I think, than if I was just a heterosexual among
the mainstream.”
Although Salman is not as active in his religion
as he once was, he also found support in Al-Fatiha (www.al-fatiha.net), a group for gay and lesbian
Muslims named for the first Sura of the Koran (“The Beginning”). The
group also has a chapter in San Diego. Al-Fatiha serves as a social
outlet with picnics and (alcohol-free) cocktail parties at the Abbey
in Hillcrest, as well as a place for gay and lesbian Muslims to
share their experiences.
Although Judaism has also traditionally been
opposed to homosexuality, Rabbi Elizabeth Goldstein believes that
ultimately there is nothing inconsistent between being a Jew and
being lesbian or gay. Goldstein is a member of the board of J-Pride
(www.jpridesandiego.org), a new group for local
GLBT Jewish persons.
Goldstein, who is currently studying biblical
history at UCSD, said she wanted to be a rabbi from the age of 14.
“Although my parents weren’t Orthodox, I went to an Orthodox day
school. My first experiences were that the men and women were
separated. So, forget about being lesbian, not that I knew that
then, but I couldn’t be a rabbi as a woman.”
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While more than 60 percent of gays and
lesbians in the United States consider themselves members of a
particular religion, … it’s hardly surprising that only 38
percent of gays and lesbians practice the religion they
profess. |
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Goldstein found the rituals and spirituality of
Orthodox Judaism appealing. “I was sort of a spiritual person to
begin with, so I gravitated to that school.”
Because being a woman would prevent her from
becoming a rabbi, she decided instead to study to be a rabbi within
the Conservative movement. “When I realized I was a lesbian, I had a
problem, because Conservatives don’t ordain gays and lesbians.”
This realization led her and her partner — whom
she met in rabbinical school — to Reform Judaism. It also led
Goldstein to reflect on Jewish law within Jewish life, as part of
what had appealed to her about Orthodoxy and Conservative Judaism
was the role of Jewish law and ritual.
But, she realized, “A system of law is really
great until you’re the one on the outside. I no longer saw Jewish
law in the same way. I no longer thought that there needed to be a
bound system of law for ritual. [However,] I still believe that the
ethical laws are necessary.”
This new relationship to Jewish law is one that
allows Goldstein to live her life as both a Jew and as a lesbian.
The Reform movement with its openness to continued interpretation of
the law is where she found her spiritual home. She believes it is
important for other Jews who might be coming to terms with their
sexuality to make sure they find a community which supports them in
their entirety, which can help them in their own personal spiritual
journey. Because she thinks community is such an important part of
Judaism, Goldstein believes it’s vital that gay and lesbian Jews
steer clear of congregations that interpret scripture and
traditional law literally. Instead, she thinks that both scriptural
and rabbinical law need to be read contextually, in a way that might
recognize the tensions between being gay or lesbian and Jewish, but
still allow for a resolution of those tensions.
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“There are verses in the Koran that say,
‘God creates whatever God wills.’ Those verses were very
helpful to me….” — Afdhere Jama |
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For some gays and lesbians, tensions between
their sexual orientation and their religious faith lead to a break
with their faith and a movement to a different religious expression.
Such was the case for Alecia Vultaggio. Vultaggio is a member of a
local Kalyanamitta (Spiritual Friends) group that meets every month
to study Buddhist dharma. She is also a practitioner of Vipassana
(Insight) Meditation in the Theravadan Buddhist tradition.
Vultaggio grew up without any particular
religion, although she read the Bible as a child. When she was 16,
she converted to Christianity and remained very active in her church
until she was about 21. “Then I came out and was rejected by the
church and left to flounder. I had been very committed, I learned
the Bible and got up every morning at 4:00 a.m. to pray.”
Left without a spiritual home, Vultaggio began
to identify more with her sexual orientation. “I identified more as
a lesbian. I dressed the part, I cut my hair, but I was lost
spiritually.” She regained some of her spiritual footing when she
went to Berkeley and began meditating, rekindling an interest she
had formed in martial arts as a child. Her commitment to meditation
was strengthened when she was about to leave Calcutta, but instead
took a friend’s suggestion and attended a 10-day meditation. When
she did return to the United States, she searched out meditation
groups and has continued to meditate and more deeply explore
Buddhism.
There aren’t very many other lesbians or gay men
in the groups she meditates with, but that hasn’t made her sexuality
an issue with them. “It’s a total non-issue. I’ve not found tensions
between my meditation practice and being a lesbian.
“I’m more compassionate with myself and with
others [because of meditation]”, explained Vultaggio. But in some
ways, her practice, which she credits with giving her more control
over her emotions and desires, can make things difficult in the GLBT
community. “The gay and lesbian world is so sectioned off into
different groups and interests, and I’m just not interested in that.
The façade doesn’t interest me. I try to connect with the real
people.” This is parallel to McCall’s identification of himself as a
spiritual being who just happens to be a black, gay, man. And,
according to Vultaggio, finding a real person in the GLBT community
isn’t always easy, nor is it easy to find other people who really
want to make spiritual connections.
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“I deny that the Prophet of God would
have condemned anyone for something they didn’t choose.” —
Salman, a local gay Muslim |
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However, she sees in meditation something for
everyone, including those in the GLBT community. “It helps you to be
happy and to work on [easing] attachment to things, thoughts and the
past. That’s good for anyone,” she said. “Besides, there’s so much
drama in the community and drama falls away with this kind of
practice.”
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