How many of you have heard a story of a family kicking their
kid out of the house because they found out their son or daughter was gay or
transgender? How many stories have you heard about a teenager or young adult
committing suicide... And finding out that the primary reason was because they
were gay?
How many of them were Mormon?
The more I ponder this horrendous trend in the culture of my
faith, the more I ponder this question: How can the "true church" of
Christ, with their beliefs, practices, and doctrines contribute to so many
suicides and homeless teenagers?
There's really no good answer. A lot of Mormons I know would
answer with something like this, "The Church is true, but the people are
NOT!" In it's most simplistic form, this statement would be correct. But
the problem appears when we notice that it has become culturally acceptable to
interpret the statement, "I know the Church is true," to mean "I
know the Church leaders and membership are always perfect." They are far
from equivalent.
So the question really is more like this: Is it the
doctrines of the Church that contribute to suicides and homelessness? Or is it
the culturally accepted beliefs of the members and leadership?
While the Church's doctrine and beliefs are not directly to
blame, it is dishonest not to acknowledge that the Church has policies about
LGBT people that have caused deep despair, as well as emotional and spiritual
harm. Add in the human interpretation of these policies, and you have a very
unstable mental and emotional compound.
We are taught that the family is the foundation of the Plan
of Salvation, and that the only place more sacred than the temple is the home.
Yet parents are cutting their kids out of their families in the name of purity
and righteousness, and are using these doctrines and policies to justify their
actions.
The Church came out with the website mormonsandgays.org in
late 2012. While this is far short of what most LGBT Mormons and their allies
need from the Church, it is the first small step towards love, acceptance and
equality for the LGBT Mormon community.
While I have mixed feelings about the site in general, I have
pulled some good out of it. Elder Quentin L. Cook has a video interview that's
towards the middle of the page, and he says some really great things. This
quote warms my heart, "[As] a Church nobody should be more loving and
compassionate. No family who has anybody who has a same-gender issue should
exclude them from the family circle. They need to be a part of the family
circle. [Let] us be at the forefront in terms of expressing love, compassion,
and outreach to those who choose a different lifestyle as a result of their
feelings about their own gender. I'm sorry, I feel very strongly about this as
you can tell. I think it's a very important principle." Elder D. Todd
Christofferson also does a video interview, near the top, about the purpose of
the website, "You'll see in these experiences that some people state what
you could call the position of the Church—it coincides perfectly—and others
not. But again, they're all very authentic, and as we listen to one another and
strive to understand, things can only get better." This quote stood out to
me because he is acknowledging that there are people in the Church who have
chosen a different path than what the Church teaches, and he acknowledges those
experiences and feelings as authentic.
This is coming from the mouth of two men we sustain as
Apostles of the Lord, and personally, two of my favorite General Authorities.
But because mormonsandgays.org isn't
listed on the Church's official website lds.org, no one knows about it. So can
we place all of the blame on the members and local leadership for the hurtful
rhetoric they teach? No. Because no one has taught them otherwise.
As members of the LGBT community, and as allies of this
community, we need to bring attention to the site (even with all its flaws). We
need to tell people in our Sunday School classes, Relief Society, Elder's
Quorum, Young Men's and Young Women's to cut the crap when they talk badly
about homosexuality and gay people. We need to correct them, and tell them
about the Church's website when they believe that Church doctrine and policy
allows them to hold such hurtful opinions. We, as the membership of the Church,
need to speak out about against kicking children out of their homes. We need to
reach out to those who are marginalized, and hurt. We need to offer a hand of
friendship to those in need. We need to consciously ask ourselves in every
situation, "What would Jesus do?"
Because when we love another, we
see the face of God.
I just want to thank you for being so out ward and expressive about what you believe :) I personally am straight but I have a lot of friends who fall under the LGBT category. I Have a friend who's interested in the church who falls under it and when she asked me about it I really wasn't sure what to tell her. I could answer all the other questions perfectly with doctrine and scriptures to back up answers to questions. but that is the one thing I know very little about. So I have to say, thank you for being an outstanding example.
ReplyDeleteThat is my entire purpose... to help LGBT Mormons feel like there are places in the Church for them. And to show the general membership of the Church that there are places for the LGBT membership, and that there is not one thing wrong with them.
DeleteI'm glad that people see me as an example... that's all that I could ever want from this blog