Talk given at the Affirmation conference in London, UK, Saturday, June 20, 2015
I often hear LGBT folks talk about
“reconciling” our sexuality with our faith. What do people mean
when they say that? Do they mean finding a way to be OK with being
lesbian or gay or bi and a person of faith? Do they mean finding a
way to be OK with having a same-sex relationship and being a person
of faith? Does it mean we adapt our faith to suit our life choices?
Or do we adapt our life choices to conform to our faith? Or is it
some combination of both?
As I've matured, my concept of what
faith is has changed. As a young adult, my faith consisted of a set
of very clearly defined doctrines along with a set of very clearly
defined rules. I knew exactly what it was, and I knew it had been
bequeathed to me more or less directly from God. I wasn't aware of
how every time someone taught me a Gospel principle, even if they
taught it to me correctly, I was interpreting what they taught based
on my own assumptions.
The other day, my husband and I were at
the British museum. I saw a glass case full of a bunch of statues.
The statues had been found in Cyprus buried in a pit, each with a
unique, though very similar, inscription. One inscription, for
example, said, “These statues are dedicated by Batshalom, daughter
of Marzyhai, son of Eshmounadon, for her grandchildren... to fulfill
the vow of their father Marzyhai... to the god Reshef Mikal. May the
God bless them.” The pit had been full of statutes, each with their
own inscriptions, presumably tossed into it over the course of
centuries by many different people. The name of the god to whom these
statues were dedicated changed, but the practice remained the same.
It struck me that, on the one hand,
this represented a certain piety and devotion. They believed in God.
They sought God's blessings. They made offered a sacrifice – in
this case a statue – as a token of their desire to please God. Were
the prayers of these people that much different from my own daily
prayers for God's blessings on me and my family? Were they any less
pious?
At the same time, it struck me as
presumptuous and even superstitious. How would God be pleased by a
statue being tossed into a pit? What kind of god were they praying
to? Who is Reshef Mikal? Apparently, according to one scholar, he was
a god of “smiting,” often portrayed as armed and menacing, his
name meaning flame, lightning, heat, pestilence or inflammation;
redoubtable, awesome, terrifying or fearsome; a great god, a god of
the sky, an everlasting god; a lord of arrows and pest. Were their
ideas about God any more superstitious or presumptuous or idolatrous
than mine?
As I have matured, I have grown in my
yearning for an authentic relationship with God, not with a god of my
understanding or suppositions or presumptions, not a god I could
serve by making up some sort of offering intended to appease or bribe
or please him, but a real, living God, who might ask difficult and
unexpected things of me if I seek him “with full purpose of heart,
acting no hypocrisy and no deception before God, but with real
intent, repenting of [my] sins” (2 Nephi 31:13).
While we were in the British Museum, I
saw a bust of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, and next to it a bust of his
male lover Antinous. I was intrigued by the inscription under
Antinous' bust: “Antinous was Hadrian's lover. He was in his mid
teens (the normal Roman marrying age) when he met the emperor in the
120s AD. After his Mysterious death in the Nile in AD 130, Hadrian
publicly mourned him. He erected shrines and statues of him as youth,
man and even as a god – the Greek Dionysos or the Egyptian Osiris.”
I am intrigued by this evidence of a
committed gay relationship in ancient times. At one time, I might
have considered this story as a kind of validation of my own
relationship with my husband, as proof of the existence of
homosexuality in all cultures and periods of history, as evidence of
tenderness and devotion among individuals who love each other in this
way. But of course it is not a validation. Even though Hadrian is
considered one of the “five good emperors,” and his relationship
with Antinous appears to have been free from corruption or abuse –
it seems to have been truly loving – Hadrian was no more nor less a
sinner than I, not more nor less capable of being mistaken about
something truly important than I. No one else's life can serve as a
validation or justification for the choices I make in my life.
There have been points in my life when
I have felt truly lost, when everything I thought I knew seemed to be
turned upside down; when all of the fixed points in my life no longer
seemed fixed; when I didn't know who to turn to or where to go or how
to proceed. There was a point in my life where I genuinely, honestly
felt angry at God. It was in that moment of anger and pain and
darkness of the soul that God reached me – in a way that I knew it
was real, and I knew it was God. When people ask me how I knew, I
could try to describe the experience. But I think the best thing to
say is to confine myself to the statement that God spoke to me in a
way that I knew it and I could not deny it. And God spoke to me
insistently and persistently, demanding my attention and demanding a
decision. I could choose to do what the Spirit was guiding me to do –
which in this case was to start attending the LDS Church again after
19 years away from it – and as long as I listened to the Spirit and
continued to follow it, I would continue to hear and to have the
Spirit with me. Or I could ignore it and dismiss it, and the Spirit
would depart from me. It was my choice, but I knew what I needed to
do.
This moment of grace in my life, when
God spoke to me, is the starting point for me. Everything comes back
to this. In the last ten years of my life's journey since then, I
have learned important things.
First, I couldn't take it for granted
that there was a way of reconciling my sexuality and my faith.
I realized that faith, if it was anything worth having, was all
encompassing. It could demand anything and everything of me. It is
about taking up our cross and following the example of a Savior who
taught that if we seek to save our lives we will lose them, a Savior
who did not withhold his own life, to join disciples who gave their
lives in order to follow him. Perhaps my sexuality can't be
reconciled with my discipleship. I can't know at the outset of the
path. I should be prepared to cut off a hand if it offends... A
metaphor for avoiding actions that would alienate me from God. I
should be prepared to pluck out an eye if it offends... A metaphor
for changing my perspective, my point of view, if my view of God is
distorted. There is no reconciliation with anything that turns me off
of the path toward God. That has had to be my starting point.
But from that starting point I
understand that I can't know in advance what those offending things
will be. I can't assume that just because some leader has said
something, or even because many leaders have repeated that something,
because everybody thinks a certain way, or because a scripture says
something that strikes me a certain way, I should take any of that at
face value. There's a discernment process that is life-long that
needs to take place within the context of my relationship with God,
within the context of discipleship to Christ.
I could talk about my relationship with
my husband and my relationship with the Church. But in talking about
these things I couldn't talk about any sort of resolution or
reconciliation. I am blessed in both relationships. I love my husband
more now and am more happy in our love now than ever before in my
life. It is a blessed relationship. We have found so much joy in
raising a foster son, and watching him mature to adulthood and find
his way in life. My family is a blessing from God and is blessed by
God and I thank God for them. I have a testimony of the Church. I
believe in the restoration of the priesthood and I believe our
leaders are called by God. I've had profound experiences with that,
and I can't deny it. I've met with an apostle of the Lord and
counseled about my situation, and he has counseled me to continue to
do what I am doing, and he's laid his hands on me and blessed me to
continue to follow the Holy Spirit in my life and to fulfill my
life's calling. My stake and ward leaders and the members of my ward
have been a blessing to me. They love my husband Göran and they
respect our relationship and they have never said or done anything to
detract from it or to discourage us.
But I remain excommunicated from the
Church, so that conflict in my life remains unresolved. There are
different ways the seeming contradictions between the blessedness of
my family life and my testimony of the Church could be reconciled.
For example, my father is utterly convinced that the prophet will
inevitably receive a revelation that would permit relationships like
mine and Göran's to be sealed in the temple and become part of the
great chain of families that connect all the families of the earth.
My dad has a testimony of that. And many indicators in my life and
many personal experiences point in that direction. But those types of
reconciliation are contingent, they are uncertain, until such a
revelation has been received. So I live my life in a kind of limbo at
the moment.
On Wednesday, Göran and I drove down
to Mont Saint-Michel in France, and we hiked up to the abbey there.
And in the main sanctuary of the abbey, I saw an ancient bas relief
portraying Christ's descent into “limbo” during the time between
his death on the cross and his resurrection. I meditated deeply on
that image, which portrays Christ fending off demons as he stretches
his hand out to lift up souls who are buried and crushed under fallen
rocks and beams. I think many of us LGBT folks are crushed by broken
cultural expectations and religious beliefs and are by oppressed by
political campaigns motivated by animus and misunderstanding. And
we're still waiting for Christ to rescue us from that.
But I don't feel hopeless about the
lack of resolution or that “limbo.” During a hike around downtown
Caen during our trip to France it was cold and damp and cloudy almost
all evening. But just as we reached the Church of St. Pierre – the
oldest Church in Caen, whose original structure was built by the
Normans – the sun came out and covered the entire Church with
golden light. It was beautiful. And that sunshine is very much like
the Spirit in my life, which continuously breaks through the dark
clouds and fills me with light and joy so long as I am willing to
follow it.
There was a point in my journey where I
felt a sense of dread because I worried that God might ask me to give
up my relationship with my husband, which is the greatest source of
joy in my life. And when I prayed to God and when I put that on the
altar, what God told me is that I needed to focus on anger and on
learning to forgive the individuals or the groups of people who had
hurt me, including the two bishops whose handling of my situation in
1986 sent me on the downward spiral that almost led to my suicide. I
needed to focus on learning to put others before myself, and my
relationship with my husband was the context where I had
opportunities every day of our life together to practice that. I
needed to learn discipline by living the Word of Wisdom and studying
the scriptures daily and observing the Law of the Fast (which
includes using my material means to help the poor). There were so
many things in my life that needed work, so many ways I could improve
myself. And I needed to focus on those things, before I worried about
finding some ultimate resolution around issues related to my gayness
and my faith as a Latter-day Saint.
I believe that resolution is known to
the Lord and I believe it is coming, and I believe it will be
glorious. And until then, I continue without resolution, one step at
a time, trusting the Lord to lead me where he needs me to go.
In the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
Your story is deeply moving [At times I cried], and promotes hope and joy, Amigo. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteP.S. Now i know why both of you are in Europe. ENJOY:
Thanks, Armando!
ReplyDelete