Articles From Our August, 2006 Newsletter


AUGUST MEETING FEATURES PRESBYTERIAN PASTOR

The guest speaker at our August 13 meeting of PFLAG/KC will be Reverend Jay McKell, pastor of Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church. Rev. McKell recently returned from the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church where he presented his Presbytery’s overture in support of gay ordination.

He will be sharing with us many of his autobiographical insights on his journey in understanding this issue.

We look forward to having him in our midst, and we also look forward to having YOU in our midst; so come and join us on Sunday afternoon, August 13, at our usual starting time...3pm at Village Presbyterian Church, 6641 Mission Road, Room 307. The meeting rooms are wheelchair accessible. There will be lots of delicious snacks and, as always, great fellowship. Hope to see you there.
 

First President of PFLAG/KC Passes Away

Pat Benjamin, at age 69, died on July 21, 2006 after a short, but courageous battle with cancer.

She was instrumental in bringing PFLAG to Kansas City, and was the first to serve as president.

A celebration of her life will be held August 5th, 2006 from 2pm to 4pm at White Chapel Memorial Gardens at 6600 N. Antioch, Gladstone, MO.


From Your Editor,

As I have read many newsletters from various organizations, it has occurred to me that ours needs some “sprucing” up. I think we need more pictures, and a more varied, jazzy, format.

My computer expertise is limited. As I have said to some of you, I know enough to get myself into trouble, but not enough to get me OUT of trouble.

Perhaps some of you have some creative ideas about what we can do to make the newsletter look more exciting. If so, please let me know. I need help.

And if you would like to take charge of the publication, please let me or Jamie know about that too. I do not feel possessive. :)


From Our President

I have been getting updates from PFLAG national about the marriage amendment battles that are still raging in some states--and I must confess that it deeply saddens me that this topic is even an issue to be debated. This article by Bob Minor--whom many of you have heard speak at our chapter meeting--sheds new light and a new argument on the debate. I think it's brilliant and worth passing on to you all.

Marriage Amendments Threaten Religious Freedom
Bob Minor

There's another argument to be made when we fight state and federal marriage amendments. It has the potential to take back the debate because it's about the Constitution and the First Amendment's guarantee of religious freedom. There's no doubt that the need for marriage equality is first and foremost about the civil and legal benefits that currently come with government recognition and approval of two people's legal commitment to each other.

It might be that the ultimate solution to the issue is to recognize marriage as only a civil issue with its legal benefits for everyone. Couples could then add the blessings to their union of a religious institution of their choice if they desired. Yet the history of marriage in US culture and consciousness is one enmeshed with religious images, sanctions, and overtones. That means that we must take those connections in American consciousness seriously.

There is an established legal history in this country that state governments license religious leaders. In fact, the only civil benefit of such government licensure is that ministers, rabbis, priests, and other state-approved leaders can then perform marriages for the government.

Most marriage ceremonies are performed in churches and by clergy, and many pro-marriage-equality clergy would love to be able to perform them for the many LGBT people who'd prefer to get married in a religious setting.

The language of marriage as “sacred” invokes religious images. Fighting those images is difficult. We need a new way to use them to express progressive values.

Berkley linguist George Lakoff in Don't Think of an Elephant (2004) recommends we use the idea of sanctity, even if it's not religious, when we speak of marriage equality. “Sanctity is a higher value than economic fairness,” he advises. “Talking about benefits is beside the point when the sanctity of marriage is in dispute. Talk sanctity first.”

The arguments behind the federal and state marriage amendments are essentially religious. Right-wing think-tanks play on what have been the dominant cultural religious sentiments, but they also know that they must act as if their crusade is not the imposition of a sectarian religious understanding. So, they couch their arguments in terms of inaccurate history, poor science, rejected psychological theories, and statistics unsupported by the social sciences.

Based on right-wing understandings of the Bible, tradition, and God, amendment proponents argue that same-sex marriages don't suit a traditional model of one man and one woman. One need not look deeply into the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament to see that even among the Patriarchs, Ten Commandments-giver Moses, and hero-kings such as David and Solomon polygamy was common and traditional.

Even early members of the Church could be polygamists. Otherwise, why would the writer of the first letter to Timothy say that he should pick from the diverse membership men for church leaders who were “the husband of but one wife?”

These clear Biblical practices must be explained away by the right-wing to make an argument that supports their sectarian understanding. Even “ traditional” has to be defined quite selectively to eliminate all the cases of polygamy in world history.

It surely is the height of irony that the Mormon Church has been a major funder of amendments claiming that traditional marriage has been between one man and only one woman. Even its second prophet and president, Brigham Young, married some 50 women.

People looking instead for real histories of traditional families will be interested in reading historian Stephanie Coontz's two exhaustive studies: (1) The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap (2nd ed, 2000) and (2) Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or How Love Conquered Marriage (2005).

But, it's time also to recognize that there are many religious people who believe that the Bible, tradition, and God actually require them to confirm same-sex commitments. Their religious beliefs about morality, love, commitment, and marriage demand that they recognize and celebrate loving commitment wherever it is found.

They believe that government has no business telling God, the Church, and any two consenting adults whom they can and cannot love.

Unitarian Universalists, the United Church of Christ, and the Central Conference of American Rabbis have spoken out of their faith to testify that affirming same-sex marriages is a response of true belief. It arises out of the very central tenets of their faith.

It's time to change this debate and expose it for the imposition of the sectarian religious position that it is. It's time for liberal religious people to state so clearly. And it's time for all of us to invoke the First Amendment in this matter.

Amending the Constitution to forbid these religions from performing same-sex marriages violates both clauses of the First Amendment of the Constitution's Bill of Rights. It's both the “establishment” by the government of one religious position as well as “prohibiting the free exercise” of the religion of others. It's religious discrimination at its core.

The Federal Marriage Amendment recently defeated again by the Senate must be put to rest permanently because it is anti-American. Yet, it's anti-American not only because it would be the first amendment to write discrimination of a group of people into the Constitution. It's also anti-American because it destroys religious freedom. It forbids the religious practice of clergy, denominations, and religious communities that believe they are divinely called to affirm the love of two adults who happen to be of the same gender.

To stand up against this sectarian religious abuse of the Constitution, it only takes the courage to say and repeat: “If you're for the Federal Marriage Amendment, you're for destroying religious freedom?”

Robert N. Minor, Ph.D. is Professor of Religious Studies
at the University of Kansas and author of Gay
& Healthy in a Sick Society and Scared Straight: Why
It’s So Hard to Accept Gay People and Why It’s So Hard
to Be Human
. Reach him at
www.fairnessproject.org.


Kansas City Anti Violence Project
to hire new position

Outreach and Education Coordinator to be added

The Outreach and Education Coordinator is responsible for implementing a multicultural outreach and community education plan to increase awareness about lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) domestic violence, sexual assault, and bias crimes including connecting clients to existing resources and strengthening the community to prevent LGBT violence. This position also requires recruitment, training, and management of volunteers, providing some client services, and online outreach/Web site management.

NOTE: This position is currently 30 hours and has the potential to increase to 40 hours by the end of year. However, the increase is not guaranteed. Health and welfare benefits are available at 30 hours per week and retirement and paid time off benefits are available at 40 hours in addition to the benefits offered at 30 hours per week.

For more details see www.kcavp.org


A Message from PFLAG's Executive Director,
Jody M. Huckaby

"I come from a family committed to civil rights. My faith tells me that we are all children of God — equally loved, equally cherished, equally entitled to the rights He grants us all."
--- President George W. Bush
Address to the NAACP (July 20, 2006)
In the wake of the Washington state court ruling this week, it is difficult to reread the quote from President Bush’s address to the NAACP and not feel like something is just not right with how “equality” is playing out in this country.
.......Indeed, discrimination is a strange and insidious thing.
So we have to go back to why some people discriminate in the first place. In the President’s case, he professes to find this reason in his faith. He argues that his understanding of the Bible tells him that it’s necessary to discriminate against gay people.
That helps keep him - and people who use this justification - from having to deal with the reality of what discrimination really means. It makes it unnecessary for him to feel discomfort while sitting across the table from his family’s gay friends, looking them in the eyes and saying, “I’m sorry, but you just don’t deserve the same rights as I do.” Or worse, “I’m sorry Dick, but your lesbian daughter doesn’t deserve the same rights as my daughters do.” (Excerpted from www.pflag.org)


PFLAG SUPPORTS REAL FAMILY VALUES