Except for mine, the names of all persons in the book have been changed
in order to protect the innocent and the guilty. Two of my college
years were spent in a fundamentalist Christian bible college which to
this day I deplore, yet without its painful evisceration of my
innocence, I would not become the person I now cherish. As most
fundamentalist Christian colleges are, in my opinion, it was nothing
less than a hothouse for blossoming homosexuals which it delighted in
confining in the closet then castigating when impetuous latency could
no longer be repressed.
This book is entering print as one of the most corrupt and conservative
political administrations in the history of the United States is about
to leave office. For me, it has been excruciating to witness its
machinations for the past seven years, mirroring to me so much of what
was an inhumane upbringing and what was so emotionally and spiritually
devastating in the first half of my life. Yet, it is one thing to have
grown up in a household terrorized by it and quite another to watch the
same dogma, hypocrisy, and neo-fascist ideology perpetrated on an
entire nation.
Approximately six weeks after the resignation of Ted Haggard from New
Life Church, youth leadership minister, Christopher Beard of New Life,
also resigned in disgrace over “sexual misconduct” the orientation of
which at this writing is unknown. On Monday, December 11, 2006, the
Associated Press broke the story of the disclosure and subsequent
resignation of Englewood, Colorado’s Rev. Paul Barnes, pastor of
another Rocky Mountain megachurch who confessed to his congregation
that he had been involved in a number of homosexual relationships and
was stepping down. I winced as I heard one sentence from Barnes’ mea
culpa, so reminiscent of my pre-coming out years: “I have struggled
with homosexuality since I was a 5-year-old boy. ... I can't tell you
the number of nights I have cried myself to sleep, begging God to take
this away."
Was 2006 just a bad year for Colorado Christian fundamentalists? A series of coincidences, perhaps?
Or maybe December, 2006 was a bad year for fundamentalists in general
as the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported on the 20th that church
leaders announced that Rev. Paul Williams, a Bellevue Baptist Church
staffer for 34 years, had been placed on paid leave pending an
investigation regarding a "moral failure”—a disgustingly vague and
abbreviated description of the pastor’s alleged sexual abuse of a
relative some seventeen years prior. Supposedly aware of the incident,
Senior Minister, Steven Gaines, had done nothing and complicitly
assumed that “the incident had been resolved.” Fundamentalists would
have us believe that only in the Roman Catholic Church is sexual abuse
rampant and that only there does the non-offending clergy collude with
it by moving priests from one location to another, thereby protecting
their dirty little secrets.
On the contrary, I have for decades believed and publicly stated that
there is something inherent in Christian fundamentalism that attracts
individuals who are fleeing the impact of coming to terms with their
sexual orientation, dealing with their own experiences of being
sexually abused, or confronting other issues regarding sexuality and
that fundamentalism not only draws such individuals but fosters their
hypocrisy, thereby exacerbating their suffering and the suffering of
everyone close to them. While a thorough exploration of this hypothesis
is yet another book in itself, my book will endeavor to shed light by
offering my own experiences and reflections on them.
In my experience and that of countless others, fundamentalist
Christianity is intrinsically spiritually abusive, and I have
painstakingly explained why in the pages of my book. Moreover, its
homophobic and bigoted agenda has so infiltrated and influenced the
pillars of power in the current fascist regime that governs America
that all LGBT individuals residing in the United States need to be
vigilant regarding the eroding and elimination of their civil liberties
as a result of that reality.
Here is yet another example of how history repeats itself. Replete with
homosexual activity, the Third Reich officially condemned homosexuality
and hypocritically relegated homosexuals to the same status in German
society as Jews. In fact, during the height of Hitler’s reign,
homosexuals were required to wear pink triangles on their clothing,
just as Jews were required to wear yellow stars on theirs. As I listen
to the ranting of homophobic hatemongers such as James Dobson, Pat
Robertson,
Albert Mohler, and
Janet Parshall,
I hear not the essence of Christ’s teachings, but the deranged
blathering of ideological neo-Nazis who would delight in slapping a
pink triangle on me and shipping me off to a death camp.
In terms of the civil liberties of lesbian and gay individuals in the
United States, these people are not harmless, or merely over-exuberant
true believers. In his brilliant article, “
For The Christian Right, Gay-Hating Is Just The Start,” Harvard Divinity School graduate Chris Hedges states:
These attacks mask a sinister agenda that has nothing to do with
sexuality. It has to do with power. The radical Christian right — the
most dangerous mass movement in American history — has built a binary
worldview of command and submission wherein male leaders, who cannot be
questioned and claim to speak for God, are in control and all others
must follow. Any lifestyle outside the traditional model of male and
female is a threat to this hierarchical male power structure. Women who
do not depend on men for their identity and their sexuality, who live
outside a male power relationship, challenge this pervasive cult of
masculinity, as do men who find tenderness and love with other men as
equals. The lifestyle of gays and lesbians is intolerable to the
Christian right because its existence is a threat to the movement's
chain of command, one they insist was ordained by God.
In the Appendix of my book I have included an extraordinary article
“The Psychology Of Christian Fundamentalism,” by Professor Emeritus,
Walter Davis, Ohio State University, in which the author’s
extraordinary insights into the emotional underpinnings of
fundamentalism address that “something” in it that backfired, and in my
opinion always does, on the three Colorado clerical homophobes and one
Southern Baptist sex offender. “Morality for the fundamentalist,” says
Davis, “is not about a life of charity or the pursuit of justice or the
need to open oneself to the depth of human suffering. It’s about
avoiding certain sexual sins and fixating on that dimension of life to
the virtual exclusion of everything else.”
Because I am also an historian, I want to emphasize that fundamentalist
Christianity as we know it today in the United States is a relatively
new phenomenon in the Christian religion. From the official
establishment of the Christian Church dating from the fourth century
until the present time, myriad doctrines, traditions, practices, and
biblical interpretations have existed in the Christian religion. Within
the past two hundred years, the so-called mainstream denominations that
were born in America’s Great Awakenings and some that evolved from the
religious communities of European settlers—Methodist, Presbyterian,
Baptist, Episcopal, Lutheran—have experienced diminished membership as
the evangelical or fundamentalist factions of Christianity have
skyrocketed in popularity and enrollment.
In this book I use evangelical and fundamentalist interchangeably. Both
adhere to clearly delineated, strict “fundamentals” resulting from a
literal interpretation of the bible, and whether one identifies as an
evangelical or a fundamentalist, evangelizing or attempting to recruit
believers into one’s religion is pivotal in accomplishing the mission
of fundamentalism/evangelism, namely, enlarging Christ’s church on
earth. “Fundamentalist” is a more nineteenth-century term associated
with specific “fundamentals” that conservative Christian literalists
believe are the backbone of Christianity whereas “evangelical”, a
twentieth-century word may have been chosen to cosmetically alter the
presentation of fundamentalist teachings, thereby making them appear
more contemporary and less stodgy. Not wishing to evoke images of
sweaty, red-faced Victorian ranters such as William Jennings Bryan or
Billy Sunday, evangelical ministers adorned with blow-dried hairstyles
and Rolex watches, their sermons preceded with hip-hop rhythms,
synthesizer extravaganzas, and digital light shows, may not be any less
theologically pedantic than their predecessors, but they are decidedly
more marketable.
Coming Out Of Fundamentalist Christianity is not merely an
autobiography—one woman’s coming out journey, but is intended to
facilitate confluence between the integration of sexuality and
spirituality and how individuals in the LGBT community struggling with
that challenge, influence the society at large and are influenced by
it, endeavoring to discern our limitations, our infinite opportunities,
and the difference between them. In the Appendix the reader will find
in addition to my article on Ted Haggard, an extensive list of
articles, books, documentaries, and websites pertaining to sexual
orientation research, spirituality, and issues social, economic,
political, and environmental justice.
On February 6, 2007 , our collective intelligence was profoundly
insulted with Ted Haggard’s “official” pronouncement that he is
“completely heterosexual.” Even graduates of repulsively-onerous,
long-term “ex-gay” therapy implied that this declaration by Haggard
didn’t even pass the laugh test. Not only was American fundamentalism
doing damage control, but once more, Ted Haggard opted to wallow in the
same lie he has lived for over five decades.
Dr. Robin Meyers, United Church Of Christ minister and author of
WHY THE CHRISTIAN RIGHT IS WRONG: A Minister’s Manifesto For Taking Back Your Faith, Your Flag, Your Future, states in his chapter on homosexuality:
Religious fanaticism itself is a symptom of
compensatory behavior. The most rigid, the most compulsive, the
most paranoid religious devotees are often hiding their own dark
secrets. They seek the rigidity of authoritarian systems in order to
cope with their own feelings of shame. Their inner conflicts are turned
outward, and the collateral damage is all-too apparent….In my own
ministry, I have noticed an unmistakable pattern, and it is more than
mere coincidence. The most homophobic people I’ve ever met do not
live comfortably inside their own sexual skin.
I am well aware that despite the vast sums of money and energy spent by
Christian fundamentalism to convince its followers and the rest of the
world that its dogma holds all possible answers to every human
predicament, there are countless women and men within its fold whose
souls, like Ted Haggard’s, and mine at the age of twenty, are
eviscerated with conflict between their innate sexual orientation and a
religious system and attendant community that proclaims them the worst
of sinners for their impulses. Some have repressed their desires, some
have shoved them into unconsciousness, some live double lives as
Haggard did, and some have graduated from “ex-gay” therapy programs
that promise a biblical transformation into lifelong heterosexuality,
only to discover that they cannot annihilate a God-given, yes I said
God-given, part of themselves. Others have become alcoholics, addicts,
psychotics, or suicide statistics.
It is for those individuals, as well as those who are authentically
content with their orientation, that this book has been written. As a
tormented fundamentalist Christian in the second decade of life, I
might have found liberation, comfort, and affirmation had I had access
to a book that blessed my sexual orientation as compatible with, rather
than at war with, my unquenchable heart’s desire for the sacred.
Inexplicable suffering and a couple of suicide attempts might have been
averted. And, I might have loved myself and others more attentively had
I been able to love and honor the most forbidden aspect of all in my
psyche.
But there are times and places when sexual orientation does not
matter—or at least, when focus on LGBT “rights” must be considered in
the context of the macrocosm of planet earth’s current condition. At
this moment, planet earth is headed for cataclysm unless its
inhabitants very quickly address daunting issues of climate chaos,
hydrocarbon energy depletion, and global economic catastrophe. (I
hasten to add that I am not referring to a Rapture/Tribulation
scenario.) Such issues are far more comprehensive than sexual
orientation—or are they? Yes and no. Perhaps they are macrocosmic
mirrors of how humans have conducted themselves in their span of years
on the earth. War, greed, and patriarchy—that is, attitudes of power
and control, have put earthlings on a fast track to annihilation, and
persecution of diverse sexual orientations has been an integral aspect
of humanity behaving badly.
In the light of these daunting realities, I do not believe that the
LGBT community can afford to focus only on the dual issues of gay
marriage and HIV/AIDS. I do not oppose concern with these issues, but I
cannot help but be appalled that LGBT political leaders have become
fixated on them with little awareness or discourse about what I
continue to name as
The Terminal Triangle
of climate change, Peak Oil, and global economic meltdown. While I
support the right of every lesbian and gay individual to conceive and
birth children, I cringe at what in some instances is an obsession with
doing so in the face of earth’s
carrying capacity,
population overshoot, and the die-off that may occur as a result of the
Terminal Triangle’s devastations. In one of the chapters of my book
“Tunnel Vision In The Rainbow Nation”, I state that while the LGBT
community desires a “place at the table” in the American political
discourse, its overall lack of understanding about the nature of that
political discourse and the realities of the Terminal Triangle
guarantee that its misguided focus on gay marriage and HIV/AIDS assures
that it will have a place at the table, but it’s place will be “dinner”
for the ruling elite.
I hold little hope for the avoidance of civilization’s collapse, and in
fact, it may be the only process capable of reconstituting humanity’s
priorities. Much anguish will ensue, and when humans are desperate,
they tend to blame someone—anyone for their misery. I therefore expect
the LGBT community to be one scapegoat, among many others. I fully
anticipate that as the severity of collapse intensifies, we are likely
to see pink triangles or their equivalent foisted on the LGBT
community. The ruling elite’s “need” for social control will intensify
and with it, increased monitoring of all who do not conform to a
lifestyle sanctioned by the empire’s pseudo-Christian, fascist agenda.
But if the LGBT community is capable of transcending so-called LGBT
politics and addressing issues that affect all humanity, we may
decrease our vulnerability. What would happen if thousands of lesbian
and gay individuals in the United States, identifying themselves as
such, began organizing to prepare for collapse and reached out to the
heterosexual community in doing so? What would happen if gay and
lesbian families began organizing with heterosexual families on issues
of debt slavery, healthcare, childcare, and myriad concerns that affect
all families?
Likewise, if the heterosexual community is capable of increasingly
repudiating fundamentalist Christianity’s ghastly condemnation of all
forms of diversity, civilization’s collapse may facilitate the creation
of small communities of individuals who are willing to move beyond
mainstream society’s media-manipulated, fundamentalist-fed culture wars
and experience themselves on a cellular level as one human family.
In terms of human rights and civil liberties, sexual orientation
matters enormously. In terms of the perils that threaten every life
form on earth, it’s no longer about “us” and “them.” The lifeboats we
create must honor the diversity of every passenger whose well being
depends on the well being of every other.
Coming Out Of Fundamentalist Christianity: An Autobiography Affirming Sensuality, Social Justice, and The Sacred, is now available for order at Amazon. To order click HERE. The book will also be available very soon on this website.