Jesus, the Bible & Homosexuality, by Jack Rogers: Chapter 6

Chapter 6: Real People and Real Marriage
In this chapter, Rogers deals with some of the stereotypes and language that surrounds the topic of homosexuality. For example, many times you’ll hear people refer to “the gay lifestyle” as inherently promiscuous, sinful and the specter of AIDS. This is just one way in which people use the power of language and perceptions to foster fear against the LGBT community. Rogers likes to point out the injustices and inequalities that exist in our current system, especially when it comes to issues related to clergy sexual misconduct. Rogers speaks about male PC(USA) pastors who have affairs with women in their congregations:

“…These heterosexual male pastors who have clearly violated the teaching of Scripture, their marriage vows, their ordination vows, by having affairs with female parishioners, are usually treated as individuals, with restoration always a possibility. But in the case of homosexual people the church makes a blanket a priori that none of them is worthy of ordination to serve as deacon, elder, or minister of Word and Sacrament” (93).

It would have been interesting if this chapter would have been written after the recent passing of Prop 8 in California. Rogers believes that the issue of ordaining people who are gay and lesbian is linked to the issue of marriage. Specifically in the Presbyterian Church (USA), candidates for ministry are supposed to be married or celibate. And since LGBT folk are barred from marriage in the church, we give LGBT persons one option: to remain celibate and not express their God-given sexuality.

[Read more...]

Everyone Deserves a Clean Cup

cupI spent today in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco with 8 of our middle school and high school youth. We went into San Francisco to serve lunch and dinner at Glide Memorial United Methodist Church. The youth did an awesome job serving over 700 meals at lunch and close to 800-900 at dinner. If any of you have ever been to Glide and worked in the kitchen, you’ll know they have an amazing food assembly line that gets set up, and things go very, very quickly.

During lunch, my job for 2 hours was to place the plastic cup on the napkin, and pass it down the line. A pretty simple job – but when things were really flying, you had to be pretty quick about it. During one of these rushes, I picked up a plastic cup and happened to notice that it hadn’t gotten thoroughly cleaned by the dishwasher. It wasn’t really dirty, but it was clear that it wasn’t as clean as the rest. But I saw the rest of the trays coming my way, and another was already being handed to me, so I figured it wasn’t that big of a deal. I placed the cup on the napkin, and just kept working.

[Read more...]

President Barack Hussein Obama

president-barack-hussein-obama

I just finished watching the Inauguration of the 44th President of the United States: President Barack Hussein Obama. There is so much to say, but it truly was an amazing moment for the United States of America. President Obama’s speech was deeply profound, much of it calling for a new era of peace and the United States’s role in working for that. I hope to reflect on it more later, but you can read the full text of his Inaugural Address here. There were some great moments during the ceremony, including the Inaugural Address, the poem and a brilliant benediction by Rev. Joseph Lowry (I’m still looking for the full text), in which he prayed that we’d turn our “tanks into tractors.” Additionally, the moment President Obama was sworn in, change not only came to our nation, but it also came to WhiteHouse.gov, with a wealth of new information, including a blog and Weekly Video Address from President Obama.

As I watched this on CNN this morning, I couldn’t help but feel emotional. I couldn’t help but feel more patriotic; actually proud to be an American. It seems a bit cheesy to type that, and I know that President Obama is not a Messiah figure, and this doesn’t mean our nation is perfect by any means. But I kept watching people’s Facebook Status Updates and Tweets about how hopeful they were, about how they could now really be proud to be a part of this country. I think that was evident from the faces and tears of those in the crowds around the United States today. Something happened today. Something great happened. The swearing in of President Obama allowed millions of dissatisifed and disillusioned Americans to finally be able to claim their identity as citizens of these United States and be able to hope once again.

Jesus, the Bible & Homosexuality, by Jack Rogers: Chapter 5

Chapter 5: What the Bible Says and Doesn’t Say about Homosexuality
In this chapter, Rogers deals with the few biblical texts that many use as “evidence” that the Bible is against homosexuality and same-sex relations. Before I get too far into the chapter however, if you haven’t read my post, “The Bible and Homosexuality: Enough with the Bible Already,” then I would recommend reading it. Many people interpreted the post as my way of saying that we just needed to get rid of the Bible. I made it clear in the post and comments that I was not recommending that strategy. However, I still think we need to realize the very personal nature of this conversation and recommend that people genuinely get to know people in the LGBT community. I think there are some who too easily interpret these passages to support varying degrees of homophobia and yet, they don’t know anyone who is gay. [I want to say that I do know others, who have close friendships with gay people and still hold conservative views on this issue]

The debate over the Bible and homosexuality generally focuses on these texts: Genesis 19.1-29; Judges 19.1-30; Leviticus 18.1-30; Leviticus 20.1-27; 1 Corinthians 6.9-17; 1 Timothy 1.3-13; Jude 1-25 and Romans 1. Rogers writes, “Together they cover a maximum of twelve pages in the Bible. None of these texts is about Jesus, nor do they include any of his words” (69). Rogers addresses the first seven texts in the first half of the chapter, and then spends some additional time looking at Romans 1. For some of you, this probably won’t be as in-depth as you are hoping for; I don’t have the time to do in-depth word studies on some of the Hebrew or Greek words, nor to go through every single aspect of each verse. However, I would recommend reading the entire chapter in Rogers’s book if you are really interested in what the Bible actually says, and doesn’t say, about homosexuality.

[Read more...]