PictureAmendment One, Sean Harris, Machismo, Equality, Love, North Carolina, Bullying, Progressive, Christian
I like calling North Carolina home. (I know, it sounds like I stole a line from James Taylor or the Allman Brothers, but I actually think it's from a old PSA for traveling to N.C. ... sung by none other than North Carolina's own: Andy Griffith). But seriously, I like calling North Carolina home. 

I mean, what's not to like? We have majestic mountains for snow skiing. Beautiful, uncrowded beaches that are perfect for sunbathing or bodysurfing. Over 120 colleges and universities. We are “first in flight” with the Wright Brothers and we are the site of the Woolworth Sit-in (which is now the home of the International Civil Rights Museum). We also have the preacher who told his congregation to knock the gay out of their “limp-wristed sons” and the guy who became a YouTube sensation by blowing holes in his teenaged daughter's laptop for complaining like a... well, teenager. And, we are voting in just a few days to make same-sex marriage, which is already not legally recognized in the state, a constitutionally prohibited thing. Ah, soak in the goodness and machismo of the Tarheel State. Come in and stay awhile. Ya'll come back now, ya' hear?

Oh... and our state bird is the Cardinal (almost forgot). 

Yep, the Cardinal is a gorgeous bird, particularly the males who are a brighter red than the females. Considering the beautiful landscapes of our state, what a perfect bird to represent us! And the Cardinal is a terribly aggressive bird. Considering the machismo of some of our residents (even some of our preachers), what a perfect bird to represent us.

Don't get me wrong, I really do like calling North Carolina home, but I'm not going to pretend like we don't have our problems. As a minister, some of the problems are terribly concerning to me. Recently, one particular problem keeps floating to the top – machismo.

My concern began growing stronger when this guy started blowing holes in his daughter's laptop as a way to teach her a lesson:

I'm not sure what lesson he was trying to teach her, but the one she was likely to walk away with was: Violence solves problems. Or maybe: Many men prefer to solve problems with violence. The first conclusion is sadly wrong and the second is sadly sometimes true.

But that's not what I found most concerning about the whole thing. What bothered me the most was the way the dad was cheered on by so many other parents. Even those of us who tried to point out the aggressive and violent nature of his actions received aggressive and violent responses from people who were defending their right (need/desire?) to be... well, aggressive and violent.

Then, along comes Amendment One. An attempt to make it constitutionally illegal for two people who are in love but happen to be of the same sex to get married. Which is a stereotypically hyper-masculine thing for which to advocate all by itself, but the language of the amendment is so vague that it actually makes it harder for a woman, who is being abused by a man she is living with but not married to, to get protection via the state. Fantastic, a constitutional amendment that not only tries to normalize the false Christian notion that the Bible prescribes marriage to only be between one man and one woman, but also makes it easier for one man to abuse one woman (or quite frankly, more if he feels so moved). Seriously, whoever picked the aggressive Cardinal as a state bird was some kind of a soothsayer... or, more probably, male and he simply self-identified. 

The most resent national display of this hyper-masculinity of the Tarheel soul comes from Pastor Sean Harris who in a sermon which told his congregants to vote for Amendment One (can someone please get the IRS to revoke their tax exempt status?), also told them to knock the gay out of their “limp-wristed” sons. Yes, really. He, of course, now says it was just a joke, has apologized and even sort of retracted his statement, but why don't we let you decided if it was a joke or if it sounds like he didn't really mean it. You can listen to him here (as welll as the laughter of the congregation). Or just read the transcript below:
“So your little son starts to act a little girlish when he is 4 years old, and instead of squashing that like a cockroach and saying, 'Man up, son! Get that dress off you, and get outside and dig a ditch, because that is what boys do!' you get out the camera, and you start taking pictures of Johnny acting like a female, and then you upload it to YouTube, and everybody laughs about it, and the next thing you know, this dude, this kid, is acting out childhood fantasies that should have been squashed ... Can I make it any clearer? Dads, the second you see your son dropping the limp wrist, you walk over there and crack that wrist. Man up. Give him a good punch. OK? 'You are not going to act like that. You were made by God to be a male, and you are going to be a male.'”
You can almost feel the testosterone oozing through your computer can't you?

Well, I'm tired of sitting by and simply shaking my head over all of this or just posting a particularly well worded Facebook status update to express by deep sense of disdain. So, Rev. Zac Bailes of libsandcons.com and I came with a campaign to let people like Pastor Harris know that there are Christians out there who not only disagree with advocating for bullying LGBT folks (particularly kids) but that the bullying frequently has horrible outcomes.

We are asking you to send a letter (even if it's only a few lines) to Pastor Harris and along with it, send a page from your Bible or a photocopied page with a verse highlighted. It might be the verse that Zac and I are using, Micah 7:8, or you may chose Micah 6:8 or Mark 12:31 or even Psalm 23. Then across the page write the name of a child who committed suicide due to bullying. I added the age and date of their death to mine. Here's picture of the page I'm sending to him and the page Zac is sending. 
Picture
Rev. Zac Bailes of libsandcons.com
Send your pages and letters to:
Sean Harris
Berean Baptist Church
517 Glensford Drive  
Fayetteville, NC 28314

 
Here's the letter I'm sending:
Dear Pastor Harris,

Greetings to you in the name of the One who called us to a vocation of serving the Prince of Peace! I hope this letter finds you doing well, even if troubled by your latests proclamation against children who are, (how did you put it?), “limp-wristed” and “effeminate”?

Let me start by saying, I am with you 100% in trying to help our congregations understand what it is that God calls them to in this life. After all, God made it. Who would know better than God about how it best works?

I do need to say, however, that we seem to disagree on what it is that Jesus was trying to teach us about God. Admittedly, with the constraints of pastoring my own congregation, I have never attended one of your services, but I have read the words from your most recent sermon and even parts of your blog. In doing so, I'm left to wonder how is it that you justify not only preaching and exclusive faith, but a violent one?

The things for which you advocate, from Amendment One to knocking the gay out of a kid, are wrapped in the clothing of privilege and exclusivity and, dare I say, even hate and machismo. It is more than just difficult to justify this when paired with the teachings of Jesus which told us to love everyone and to seek out equality for all, it's impossible.

Kids who are bullied for being who they are, you might say who God created them to be (and, yes, having their parents knock the gay out of them is a form of bullying), find themselves very conflicted between knowing who they are and wanting to please others. The lack of love and support, the lack of core Christian values, for which you are being an advocate, eventually pushes some of them to believe that it is better not to live than to live in the constant conflict and bullying for being who God made them to be. To put it as simply and directly as possible: their deaths, their blood, are on your hands and on the hands of others who advocate or practice this kind of bullying.

I've included a page from the NKJV Bible. On it you will find the name of one such child. As a collegial favor, I'm asking you to keep it on the desk where you research, reflect and pray over your sermons. May it be a reminder that God loves us all and asks us all to love one another.

Peace and blessings,

Rev. Mark A. Sandlin
Finally, while I will not ever address it directly from the pulpit. I would like to make my position clear on Amendment One. As I've referenced once already, the idea of many Christians that same-sex attraction and acting out on it are against what the Bible teaches is simply and utterly false. While it is true that our English translations were made to read that way, as I have demonstrated in my blog post “Clobbering 'Biblical' Gay Bashing,” which draws on the best scholarship available on the topic, it is also true that the authors of the Bible never tried to address homosexuality as we understand it today, nor could they have.

Amendment One, not only tries to push this false Christian belief on the rest of society regardless of their own religious beliefs or lack thereof (which seems like a very unloving and unChristian thing to do), but because of it's poorly worded dictates it also further marginalizes folks who are already looked down upon by certain groups of people and it opens the door for those who are abused to find themselves less protected and more at risk than ever before. When I read the teachings of Jesus, a man who reached out to those society marginalized, I find no way to justify supporting Amendment One.

Amendment One is nothing more than hate on a page, legalized discrimination. It is divisive, damaging and disingenuous for those who truly seek to follow the teachings of Jesus. There is nothing loving, supportive or nurturing about it. Its end results will only be to limit love, to hurt those who are already being hurt and to further divide the Body of Christ. As a Christian and as a minister, I cannot, I will not, vote in favor of it. I will be voting against Amendment One and I am asking you, in the name of the One who loves us and asks us to love one another, to do the same.

I really do like calling North Carolina home. I just want it to be a place everyone would like to call home.
 
 


Comments

Willa Grant
05/05/2012 09:42

Thank you for this article & idea. It gives me hope as a Christian to see other Christians saying "Wait a minute here.." I hope to visit your lovely state someday & I hope Pastor Harris & others like him will go back & read what Jesus said, and then practice that.

Reply
05/05/2012 10:24

Your letter of course is beautiful...and I know heartfelt. Regarding the points you made about the bullying...beyond the Marriage Equality issue in a state that is ranked something like 38th for at-risk-children, the idea of not only suggesting but, encouraging a congregation to abuse children is horrible. I had the very sad experience of sitting in a church, as a guest, in Wilmington a few years ago as the list of names of children that had been killed or badly injured by a parent was read. It was heart-breaking. To potentially take away protection from domestic abuse would also be literally "criminal" in a state that is ranked (as of this past Mar) 4th in domestic homicide. I am hoping that there will be a bit of time to speak to these issues on the radio program with Rev. Guy Lynch, on The Practical Christian radio program, today. Peace & bles-sings...

Reply
Kathryn
05/05/2012 10:37

Thank you, Mark, for once again articulating the unruly thoughts in my head. The bullying in the press and, more disturbingly, at the polls, does not reflect the NC I love and call home. After May 8, when all the hired mercenaries go home, we still have to look at each other--in the grocery store, in our churches, in our daily lives. It will be difficult to see the "neighbor" Christ spoke of after all the rhetoric is done.

Reply
Karen Knorr
05/05/2012 12:32

Thank you.

Reply
Traci
05/05/2012 17:49

Just a small point about churches and tax exemption.. I believe that churches are allowed to advocate for or against measures like this. (Sadly or not.) Many of us pass around Bread for the World petitions, for example. But we are NOT allowed to advocate for particular candidates. I think there's a difference in the eyes of the law.

Am I correct?

Reply
05/05/2012 21:22

Dear Rev. Sandlin,

I have spent my whole life as a person looking in on the Christian faith. I envied the love as seen through Jesus, the sense of belonging to a community, a shared purpose and journey, like comrades crossing the river of life together. However, I have never been able to make the leap of faith, the embracing of a religion that could not accept, that chose not to accept people as they are born.

I am a suburban soccer mom. I have been married for seventeen years to Eric, the love of my life, and we have three very wonderful children: a boy and two girls. My marriage and my children are not threatened when two people in this world defy the odds and find happiness together. And I shudder to think what the bulk of Christianity would say if one of my children turned out to be gay. I would love them no less, and so, I believe, would your Christ, but what would the Christians say?

Your blog has given me much to think about and I thank you. Also, even as a heathen, I own and have high-lighted and dog-eared my own King James Bible, so I may add to your letter writing campaign. And if so, as I wrote in my own blog some months back, I would dedicate it to Jamey Rodemeyer, who hanged himself at the age of fourteen. Too young, a baby, really.

I do not use these words often, as I feel they are often trivialized, but, bless you.

Sincerely,

Erika

Reply
05/06/2012 15:25

It is difficult to find solace in the place you live when you see injustice, bigotry and old fashioned pigheadedness. North Carolina is a beautiful state. I've been there many times and my dad dreamed of retiring there. I'd be sad, though, to know that the state is not welcoming to all. Let's hope as a state, NC discovers that Amendment One is a mistake and fails to ratify it.

Reply
Jay Pontius
05/10/2012 16:21

Dear Mark,

I hope that you will forgive the familiarity, but I had to respond to your letter. As a gay man, I can identify with the struggles involving the rights of gays...I too, have experienced discrimination, bullying and abuse both familially and socialogically, and ,if nothing else, it has brought me to these conclusions: Absolute ignorance is dangerous and is fear based, to assume that gay people are incapable of loving, lasting relationships, or are mentally derelict is farther from the truth than I could ever imagine. To deny anyone of their rights of equality is unforgivable. I feel that what we are experiencing in these days are last gasps of a society that wants to hold on to antiquated thinking and reasoning. I honestly believe that social awareness will eliminate this obsurdity, and in ten to twenty years from now, there will be such significant change that what we are experiencing now will be insignificant. I am about to embark on a journey with someone that I have waited my whole life for...whether we have the law on our side or not, will not deter our love or devotion...it's just a matter of waiting it out. Thank you for presenting such a poignant letter and strengthing a truth that needs so desperately to be heard!

Reply
Charis Ruth
05/11/2012 17:26

Thank you, Mark.

A year ago my older sibling informed the world that she is transgendered and lesbian. My father has been a United Methodist minister for the past 30 years, and I am going through the discernment process to go into ministry of some kind as well. The whole issue of homosexuality in the church is one that is dear to my heart. I pray for the UM church as a whole that we will be able to be a truly UNITED church, including every single one of God's children without prejudice or caveat.

I hope, in my own ministry, to have a small amount of the eloquence and bravery that you do. It feels like a kick to the gut as I see the decisions that have been made on the part of the "Christian" church. I believe that God is infallible, and God made us exactly as we are, with every "flaw", and with graces, strengths, and gifts beyond our wildest dreams.

I recently gave a sermon about Jesus cleansing the temple on the day of my church's big fundraiser dinner (moved to Sunday over the pastor's objections). I felt like I was yelling into the wind, especially when those that most needed to hear it were the ones in the basement working on dinner preparations.... Sometimes it all feels like screaming into the wind, but maybe if we all start yelling together, we can make a difference against the seemingly overwhelming tides of fear and discrimination in this world.

So Mark, thank you for everything you do. Blogs like this give me hope that there really are Christians out there who do believe in and work for a true God of hope and love.

And I will be sending a letter as well, in support of a transgendered youth who committed suicide at the age of 15, who was bullied and tormented until she took her own life.

-Charis

Reply
Gary Nance
05/13/2012 17:32

Mark, I appreciate your stance against Amendment One and wish the results had been different. There was a lot of hate spoken from the mouths of "Christians" during this whole debate. It is hard to understand.

Reply
joanne Van Ert
05/28/2012 11:55

Saddens my heart to hear the struggles of teens...
I stumbled on this page by accident (so I thought!). Reading all of your thoughts gives me hope that one day, we will truly be "Christ-like" and love and accept everyone, no matter how they choose to live their lives. I am a 55 year old lesbian who, fortunately, never went through the struggles so many teens are experiencing. My heart aches for those kids who feel so alone; feel so much pain. Thank-you to all who have posted, blogged, shared their love and acceptance. I plan on sharing these pages of love and acceptance in hopes that it might open the eyes and hearts of those who believe that God condemns GLBT people.
Namaste ♥

Reply

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply