Last evening I attended a GLBT event at a local university with a friend of mine. He thought it would be a good event for me to attend as I wrestle with how the Church should respond to and interact with the gay community.

At the event we watched a short film on gay and lesbian young adults/teenagers coming out to their parents and the subsequent parental response. It was interesting to see how the parents responded in agony, not necessarily for them but more so for their child. It was also interesting to see how the families faith and church experience played a huge part in how they responded: almost all of their responses were rooted in both their church’s teachings and also out of fear with how that church would respond; whether Morman, Southern Baptist, Hindu, or Jewish, all families confirmed an abnormal condemnation and subsequent segregation for this particular “sin.” In their minds, their child’s self-proclaimed identity (not even necessarily their behavior) was so wretched that the only response was grief, condemnation, and separation from the Church.

Afterwards, a panel discussed the short film and their own experiences with the gay community: two men were gay, one lady was a mother of a gay son and was the president of a local GLBT community organization, and another was a college student lesbian who was the head of the local GLBT college group. Most of the dialogue centered on the film, but there was a moment where we glimpsed the Church’s response to their community and THEM.

“I had to leave the faith…and I haven’t gone back since” was the response of one of the gay men on the panel in response to a comment on West Michigan’s cultural response to the gay community (which is largely, predomenantly Christian, well above the national average of self-proclaimed Christians and regular church goers).

What he really meant by “leaving the faith” was that he left his faith community. He was forced to leave the Church and segregate to other spheres of society to find community and love, entirely at the expense of encountering God and growth through the teachings of Jesus.

Folks,

I am

sick

and tired

and disgusted

by the Church’s response to the gay community, and particularly to individual people who are wrestling with and identify themselves as being gay.

That response amounts to nothing short of sexual segregation:

Gay people are forced out of the community of the Church and have little to no safe space to figure out who they are, while still worshiping God and living out their faith in Jesus in authentic community.

Rather than embracing people in all of their fullness (whether they agree with the pieces of that fulness or not), the Church rejects.

Rather than providing safe space to wrestle and worship, the Church alienates.

Rather than serve and love this community, the Church defends and condemns.

So the only recourse for gay people (whether Christian or not) to find community is at 1) gay bars and 2) gay clubs, completely divorced from God-encountering space and Jesus’ transformational community of love.

It is time for the Church to rethink its table fellowship.

Rethink

and

repent.

Now is the time for Church Inc. to repent for closing and locking the doors to God’s community, fiercely guarding Jesus’ table, and arrogantly deciding who is in and who is out.

Instead may Jesus’ Building offer safe space for ALL who are weary and burdened down with life to find rest and shelter. May the Flock offer true community and human acceptance for those who are alienated. And may the Branch truly provide the life giving sustenance to all people, irregardless of who people are, but especially the gay community.