I was raised a Methodist and have been a loyal member of my current UM church, but I am leaving the denomination. I am leaving because I’m gay and I’ve finally had enough of the denomination’s pretense of welcoming the gay community.

It’s time someone called the denomination on its blatant doublespeak, so I will gladly step up to the plate.

“Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.” is the denomination’s seemingly ingenuous welcoming catch phrase. However, when it comes to the gay community the denomination's heart, mind and door is only open to us if we play by their rules.

The “rule book” for the denomination is its Book of Discipline (which includes, among other things, the church’s doctrine, theology and social principals). In the Book’s section on homosexuality it says that “all persons are individuals of sacred worth” (which, I would assume, includes gay individuals). Even so, it appears a gay person’s sacred worth really isn’t worth that much.

We are welcome to sit in the pews of UM churches. We just aren’t allowed to preach from their pulpits. Well, we can; but only if we don’t acknowledge or, as the Book of Discipline puts it, “self-avow” that we are “practicing” our homosexuality.

I bristle at the misuse of that word in referring to gay people. When do you ever hear anything about heterosexuals practicing their straightness?

I wish the denomination would just come out and say what they really mean. They don’t want gay people having sex.

A celibate gay person = good. An unchaste gay person = bad.

What the denomination fails to recognize is that in telling us we can’t “practice” (or be) who we are, they are telling us that we can never have romantic love in our lives; forgetting that love is more than just sex. There are the emotional, mental and spiritual intimacies two people in love develop. The memories made; the joys and sorrows shared.

I want to ask the denomination, if I were to commit my life to another man and if we were to live together for 30 years; for better or for worse, in sickness and in health and never, ever once made love would we be considered non-practicing homosexuals? Would we be okay in the UM Church’s eyes? Or does the denomination’s definition of practice include the above mentioned gifts that a loving relationship brings, which goes beyond just the physical? Are we being told that we are not allowed to love or be loved? That we don’t deserve it?

The United Methodist Church will gladly accept our tithes and offerings yet they reject our relationships and legal marriages.

According to the Book of Discipline, the denomination “insist[s] that all persons, regardless of age, gender, marital status, or sexual orientation, are entitled to have their human and civil rights ensured.” Why, then, isn’t the United Methodist Church at the forefront of defending our civil (not religious) right of marriage equality?

The UMC can’t have it both ways. They are either for us or against us. Doesn’t the Bible say something about those being neither hot nor cold but lukewarm being spit out?

The denomination’s campaign of open hearts, open minds and open doors is deceptive and hypocritical; nothing more than a marketing ploy. Perhaps the following would be a more honest appraisal of the United Methodist Church.

Closed Hearts to the hurt inflicted on gay men and women by not affirming their relationships or their right to marriage.

Closed Minds to the very thought that God might bless and sanction loving, committed gay relationships.

Closed Doors to gay families that wish to be validated, respected and assured they are equal to "traditional" families.

The UMC says “the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching.” I think the way the denomination treats its gay members is just as incompatible. So, I am taking my leave and will find a church that won’t mind me “practicing” my gayness.

Artie Van Why, Lancaster, PA

3 comments:

  1. Artie,

    I am a straight ally who left the UMC in 1995 in part because a wonderful mentor and friend was not able to live fully and openly as a gay man and a phenomenal Minister of the Gospel in the UMC. He stayed and has been instrumental in opening up the New England Conference to dissent; I could not in good conscience stay after knowing him and so many colleagues in seminary whose ministries bore good fruit. Once I asked myself how it was possible for "bad trees" to bear good fruit, I came to the obvious conclusion that LGBTQ folk are not in any way "bad trees" but have much to offer for the Realm of Christ.

    I found a home in the United Church of Christ. I happen to be out in the Penn West Conference, but I'm in school for my doctorate at Lancaster Theological Seminary and know many students and pastors from UCC churches in the Lancaster area. I hope you will take the time to visit several of them and that one of them will become "home" for you. We really are the church of "Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors." We just have a better slogan: "GOD IS STILL SPEAKING,"

    Blessings on your journey,
    Rev. Ruth Shaver
    United Church of Schellsburg UCC

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  2. Artie,

    I understand your sentiments totally. There was a tremendous upheaval in my former UMC congregation, and the church eventually closed its doors. I was a delegate to the Iowa Conference from my congregation while it was still a congregation and started to understand the double standard in the UMC regarding gay individuals. When the upheaval in my UMC church started to affect my health I knew I would have to leave. I thought long and hard about the UMC's stance, how the UMC was missing out on some very talented persons because of this policy, and decided I could no longer tolerate what I felt to be hypocrisy. I learned about the UCC's policies from a friend who had joined a local congregation and investigated the denomination. I decided the UCC was a better "fit" for me than the UMC. I am now a more spiritually happy person in the UCC and am a member of a congregation which has a gay pastor who has a partner. Both are respected and loved by the congregation. The love bestowed upon our congregation by both the pastor and his partner is unbelievable. Both are very spiritual. Our pastor came to Iowa from Virginia. As he has gotten to know other pastors in our district he has told me he is much surprised by the number of UCC pastors in the district who were former UMC pastors and decided they could no longer stay with the UMC because of these policies. It would seem to me that they are probably much more spiritually happy now just as I am. Like Rev. Shaver, I would hope that you would visit some UCC congregations in your area and see if you can find one that will be a "fit" for you.

    Good luck and God Bless,
    Terry Wehrman
    Member of Eden UCC
    Cedar Rapids, Iowa

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  3. Denominations and political parties are made up of people and people can make positive changes within the organization. Be that positive change in the organization. One person can make a difference in the world or any organization.

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