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Related: About this forum"I'm leaving the United Methodist Church and anyone who respects LGBT rights should, too"
https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/voices/2019/03/12/united-methodist-church-gay-lgbt-marriage-clergy-vote-sex-column/3129369002/Gaar Adams is a London-based writer and is currently working on a nonfiction book on queer communities in the Middle East. Follow him on Twitter @gaaradams.
Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors. I encountered this welcoming slogan of the United Methodist Church the largest mainline Protestant denomination in the country on a weekly basis growing up as a young parishioner in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. It is a phrase familiar to 12 million UMC members globally; the denomination even publishes a style guide to standardize how this brand promise should uniformly appear on billboards, advertisements, and newsletters around the world.
But today that ubiquitous slogan rings with cruel irony, and the unity sought by the church has been torn apart in the wake of a controversial binding resolution passed by the UMCs top legislative body affirming a ban on non-celibate LGBT clergy and same-sex marriage. The vote effectively closes off any space for theological diversity on the topic of homosexuality within the denomination.
...As a queer man raised in the UMC since birth, I urge all its members to begin this Lenten period of reflection contending with the lasting damage that this condemnation of the LGBT community will inflict on congregants struggling with their sexuality. And to the UMC communities wrestling with leaving the church, I ask you to first reckon with the consequences of complicity and then take the bold step of starting an entirely new denomination of acceptance for the 21st century.
...These kinds of difficult conversations on ethics and morality should always come hand-in-hand with faith. But one thing is unambiguous: I will not be a part of an organization that does not respect my legal right to marry or create a family.
But today that ubiquitous slogan rings with cruel irony, and the unity sought by the church has been torn apart in the wake of a controversial binding resolution passed by the UMCs top legislative body affirming a ban on non-celibate LGBT clergy and same-sex marriage. The vote effectively closes off any space for theological diversity on the topic of homosexuality within the denomination.
...As a queer man raised in the UMC since birth, I urge all its members to begin this Lenten period of reflection contending with the lasting damage that this condemnation of the LGBT community will inflict on congregants struggling with their sexuality. And to the UMC communities wrestling with leaving the church, I ask you to first reckon with the consequences of complicity and then take the bold step of starting an entirely new denomination of acceptance for the 21st century.
...These kinds of difficult conversations on ethics and morality should always come hand-in-hand with faith. But one thing is unambiguous: I will not be a part of an organization that does not respect my legal right to marry or create a family.
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"I'm leaving the United Methodist Church and anyone who respects LGBT rights should, too" (Original Post)
trotsky
Mar 2019
OP
Definitely they should leave. Who needs a church that embraces and promotes hatred! n/t
RKP5637
Mar 2019
#1
Well they are intolerant too, so that proves religion can't possibly be blamed
Major Nikon
Mar 2019
#4
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)1. Definitely they should leave. Who needs a church that embraces and promotes hatred! n/t
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)2. So much for "tolerant" Christianity
trotsky
(49,533 posts)3. WHATABOUT China tho? n/t
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)4. Well they are intolerant too, so that proves religion can't possibly be blamed
Cartoonist
(7,532 posts)5. Leaving God or the denomination
When I became an atheist, it was a rejection of myth and superstition. I was a Catholic, but I didn't think my church was any different from other denominations.
I have read posts here in which the writer claims disillusionment with the RCC as the reason for switching to Episcopalism.
They still use the same hate manual. They still worship the same author. I don't get it.
trotsky
(49,533 posts)6. Yeah leaving one's church can sometimes be the first step of a journey.
It was for me.
edhopper
(34,836 posts)7. I understand it is harder if it involves family or community
but really, if you are a Gay Christian, get the fuck out of a Church that hates you.