Article from:
http://www.soulforce.org/blog/ex-gay-isnt-exactly-over-mel-white-writing-for-advocate-com/
In the past few days, many have celebrated the headline “Exodus
International Closes Down.” And we should rightfully thank Alan Chambers
for his confession that “ex-gay therapy” does not work and for his
apology for the “pain and hurt” it has cost so many of us. I saw Alan
issue his apology at the last Exodus conference. He was sincere and
contrite. Even if you don’t trust Alan’s motives, you have to admit that
his confession and apology are a giant step forward in undermining the
credibility of those who continue to hold out the false promises made by
the ex-gay movement.
On the other hand, we should not allow ourselves to believe that the
ex-gay movement died with the closure of Exodus. Quite the contrary.
Alan’s apology has motivated ex-gay loyalists to hunker down and commit
to riding out the storm, reorganizing. and eventually reemerging with an
even more militant dedication to their belief that that lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender people can and must be “cured.”
The Exodus (ex-gay) faithful are now uniting under a new name, the
Restored Hope Network, currently being organized by Anne Paulk. She
admits proudly that this will be an ex-gay ministry. In her online
testimony she describes the network’s “cure” for us in these words:
“Jesus got hold of me and that was the end of my homosexuality.” Paulk
is one of several ex-gays who participated in a national ad campaign and
what was probably the highest moment of visibility for their movement,
appearing on the cover of Newsweek with her (now openly gay) husband,
John, in 1998.
The board of this old nightmare in new trappings includes the same
laundry list of fundamentalist leaders whose names are associated with
decades of biblical misuse, scientific ignorance, and harm to LGBT
people: Matt Barber, Robert Gagnon, Joseph Nicolosi, Leanne Payne, Janet
Parshall, Mat Staver, and 11 other megachurch pastors and right-wing
organizers. The terrible suffering caused by Exodus and the failure of
its ex-gay therapies flows directly and indirectly out of the false
teachings of these fundamentalist Christian leaders.
These hard-core ex-gay promoters really believe that those who “give
in” to their “temptations” will find “their lives ruined and their souls
damned.” My worst fear is that the more than 250 ex-gay ministries
located in the U.S. and 17 other countries that were once associated
with Exodus will simply sign up with the Hope Restored Network instead
of following Alan Chambers’s example.
Let’s not kid ourselves. These local ex-gay ministries know that
their therapies do not work and that they personally are responsible for
suffering and even death. One need only look at the suicide rates among
LGBT youth rejected by their families, communities, and houses of
worship to see the impact.
The real difference between Paulk’s Restored Hope Network and
Chambers’s new Reduce Fear organization is their ultimate goal for LGBT
people. The old word “cure” is out. “Change” is in.
Consider the
Restored Hope Network as the hard-core “changers” who are committed to
the failed methods of Exodus and Reduce Fear as the soft-core “changers”
who practice “change lite.”
At the recent Exodus Freedom Conference, Chambers’s own testimony
inadvertently described “change lite.” The first step for the soft-core
“changers” is to admit that that they cannot “cure” you, that no matter
how hard you try your feelings will still exist.
Chambers also admitted quite openly that he still “struggles” with
his desires, and in deciding not to “act on those desires,” he describes
the second step toward soft-core change. Alan and the other soft-core
changers don’t describe same-sex attraction or sexuality as sin (that’s
the hard-core way), but they do cling to the old notion that the only
sexual relationships in keeping with God’s plan for are those between
one man with one woman.
It’s very likely that Chambers’s Reduce Fear ministry will offer
loving counsel to those who struggle against their sexual orientation.
It is also likely that it will help churches organize small groups for
dialogue (not unlike Alcoholics Anonymous’s group meetings) and publish
new materials for soft-core change that emphasize mercy and not
judgment.
But just beneath that loving, nonjudgmental surface there remains,
whether spoken or not, the belief that change is still the ideal
outcome. Which makes this all the more insidious and dangerous.
Chambers’s change will not call for LGBT people to become heterosexual
but for sexually active individuals to become self-accepting but
celibate lesbian or gay persons.
For those who choose not to remain celibate or fail at celibacy, the
group will hold up as an example Chambers’s loving relationship with his
wife, Leslie. Soft-core changers will teach that sexually active
lesbian or gay people should enter into “traditional” opposite-sex
marriages or into a relationship with an opposite-sex fellow
“struggler.” This sounds a lot like the apostle Paul’s unfortunate
advice that “if they cannot control themselves, they should marry, for
it is better to marry than to burn with passion” (I Cor. 7:9).
Here’s the problem. Alan Chambers and Anne Paulk are different only
in degree. As long as change is involved in a ministry, it remains an
ex-gay ministry. Hard-core change demands that our natural sexual
orientation be cured or at least denied. Soft-core change asks gently
and lovingly (although it does not demand) that we live unnatural lives
by refusing to be the people we were created to be.
Alan and Leslie Chambers are obviously in love. It is perfectly
appropriate for Alan to decide that being married to a heterosexual
woman is worth holding his homosexuality in check. But it is not
perfectly appropriate for him to set himself up as an example on which
to build an entire ministry.
If his Reduce Fear ministry would say, “It’s OK to accept your
homosexuality as a gift from God. It’s OK to be in a loving same-sex
relationship. If that’s your decision, Reduce Fear will support you in
every way,” then it could also say, “But if you decide to struggle
against your orientation in order to stay in a loving relationship with a
heterosexual spouse, we will support you in that decision as well.”
As long as Alan Chambers even implies that not accepting your sexual
orientation is the better way, he has not ended his ex-gay ministry. He
has just reorganized it as a kinder, gentler form of Exodus. I’m afraid
that one day he will have to confess that his new kinder, gentler change
methods didn’t work either and apologize again for the suffering and
death he and his ministry have caused.
THE REVEREND DR. MEL WHITE is the cofounder of Soulforce, the
recipient of the ACLU’S National Civil Liberties Award, and author of
Stranger at the Gate: To Be Gay and Christian in America and Holy
Terror: Lies the Christian Right Tells Us to Deny Gay Equality.
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