LGBTQ+ Aaron Manes LGBTQ+ Aaron Manes

God And The Gay Christian

When we talk about ‘the issue of homosexuality’ we can easily get caught up in language and lose the most important point: this is about people. Matthew shares his personal story; his narrative is so open and relatable, you feel like you are listening to a friend tell you his life story. 

Book Review: God And The Gay Christian

By Rev. Dr. Blair Thompson-White

When I think of a word to describe this book, the word that comes to mind is ‘compelling.’ It was so compelling, in fact, that I had to reschedule an appointment because I was so caught up in reading it that the time got away from me!  Why is this Matthew Vines’ work so compelling?

Because it is personal. When we talk about ‘the issue of homosexuality’ we can easily get caught up in language and lose the most important point: this is about people. Matthew shares his personal story; his narrative is so open and relatable, you feel like you are listening to a friend tell you his life story. 

Matthew grew up in a mainline church where he was taught that God is against homosexuality. He watched his sister’s friend Josh bravely ‘come out’ and share his sexual orientation to his family, only to be completely rejected. Although Josh grew up in the church and was a beloved son of the congregation who sang in the choir, the church couldn’t accept him as gay. Matthew could sense people’s shame about Josh’s sexual orientation…and so could Josh.

Josh felt rejected by the church and alienated from God because he was taught that the God of the Bible required him to hate a core part of himself. He left town and left the church. Years later, Josh’s family would embrace him but Josh never returned to the church, the wound was too deep and damaging. 

Josh’s experience is unfortunately all too common and Matthew feared it would be his experience, too:

For a young kid who realizes she is gay and has no one at home or church she can talk, it can be an impossibly heavy burden. For a young man like Josh, who internalized rejection from our church with barely a word spoken, it can drive a wedge between him and God. And what would become of me?

What became of Matthew is he took on the church’s teachings head on, with his un-affirming dad by his side. Together they explored scripture and tradition and by the end of their journey, Matthew’s dad changed his mind. He no longer thought homosexuality was incompatible with Christian teaching.  

Which leads to the second reason why this book is so compelling.

Because the theology and scriptural interpretation is spot on. Because the message of Scripture is NOT what non-affirming Christians have said it is. To put it more plainly: there is another way to interpret scripture.

If you are like Matthew’s dad and you are genuinely open to having your mind changed, this book will guide you through all the questions / objections you may have to same-gender relationships, such as “What is the meaning of marriage according to the Bible? And, can same-sex unions fulfill that meaning?”

Or, if you are LGBTQ+ affirming but you have always struggled with how to respond to someone who says, “but the Bible says homosexuality is a sin” this book will take you through each passage and give you the tools and resources you need and overarching Biblical themes that are—well, compelling—

The Biblical scholarship, historical evidence, and reason in this book is compelling—but what is perhaps most compelling is why, in the end, Matthew’s dad decides to ‘make some changes.’

Because when you take a closer look at Scripture you are compelled to advocate for the equal rights of our LGBTQ+ siblings.

The changes that Matthew’s dad makes include deciding not to renew his membership in a national organization for Christian lawyers because “I no longer agree with their position on gay Christians,” he said. He also became a vocal advocate at his church for LGBTQ+ inclusion. 

We, too, are called—no, we are compelled—by our faith to be agents of transformation until our churches and our world not only welcome all but embrace all and celebrate all as God’s beloved.

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In 2012, Matthew shared his experience at a United Methodist Church. His speech went viral and became be the foundation for his book God and the Gay Christian. Click Here To Listen



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LGBTQ+ Aaron Manes LGBTQ+ Aaron Manes

Book Review: Shameless

Shameless is a book challenging the traditional teachings in the church about sex and giving us the tools to build a new theology around sexuality that makes sense to our experience...do we need this right now or what?!

Book Review: Shameless

By Dr. Blair Thompson-White

Shameless is a book challenging the traditional teachings in the church about sex and giving us the tools to build a new theology around sexuality that makes sense to our experience...do we need this right now or what?! Thank you, Nadia Bolz-Weber!

Dear United Methodist Church, please read this book.

I have sat with many people who have shared with me how the messages from the church about sex and sexuality have caused harm to them. Women who have had premarital sex wonder if they are condemned to hell; LGBTQ+ wonder if they are loved by God; couples who struggle with intimacy because they grew up hearing from the purity culture that sex was bad. The messages received from the church (who claims to speak for God, making the wound so much more deeper), about sex and sexuality have caused so much harm to so many. 

Bolz-Weber writes that "If the teachings of the church are harming the bodies and spirits of people, we should rethink those teachings." This is exactly right. I am committed to help our church to rethink those teachings and this book is an excellent resource in that endeavor.

Here are three takeaways from Shameless:

1) We can reclaim the Bible as a source for inspiration and guidance on the gift of sexuality.
The Bible has been, for lack of a better word, hijacked by the Purity Movement on matters of sexuality and interpreted in a way that causes harm to the bodies and spirits of people. The tendency is to want to throw out the Bible because it has been used as a weapon for so long; Bolz-Weber invites us into it again to show us how to read it better.

2) We must create spaces in our churches where honest conversation about sex and sexuality can happen. 
I grew up in the Methodist church, and thankfully was not exposed directly to harmful teachings about sex and sexuality as some of my friends who attended more conservative churches were; some of my friends had purity rings and had to sign purity pledges. Although I wasn't exposed to shameful messages about sex, I also wasn't exposed to any messages about sex. Apart from a weekend in 4th grade in which we learned about the anatomy of bodies, the church was silent on the matter...so the conservative culture I was surrounded in seeped into my way of seeing sexuality. Like so many in my generation, I grew up thinking sex was shameful and not to be discussed.

We need progressive churches especially to equip children and adults with the tools and resources they need to build a theology of sexuality that is life-giving. We are implementing a new holistic curriculum "Wonderfully Made" for our 5th and 6th graders this spring and looking to offer a class for adults this fall so that our church can continue to be a place of help and healing.

3) Let your shame go. 
This book may help you discover the fear and shame you've felt about sex that you've been carrying around for so long. If we don't discover the shame, no doubt we will continue to live out of it, not even realizing the power it has over our ways of being and doing. Bringing our shame to the light helps us to examine it and eventually let it go. 

At the end of each of her book tour events promoting Shameless, Nadia Bolz-Weber invites people to complete the sentence "I'm ready to be shameless about..." on a card and turn it in. She then invites the audience to respond, "Let that stuff go!" after each card is read aloud. (I've substituted 'stuff' in place of a curse word...note about Nadia: if curse words offend you, maybe don't read this book.)

That is the invitation and the hope of this important work: to move from feeling shameful to being shameless. How freeing to let our shame go!

It is not too much to say that the gift of this book is freedom: through Biblical analysis, personal stories, and beautiful writing, Bolz-Weber constructs a theology about sexuality that ultimately offers a much-needed message. There is healthier way to talk about and teach about sex and it begins with this basic premise: you are beautifully and wonderfully made and celebrated by God for who you are in body and spirit.

Click Here To Purchase “Shameless”

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