The ex-gay myth has crashed. Fallen. Shattered. Exodus International president Alan Chambers announced last night that Exodus is shutting down. Tonight in a televised interview with Lisa Ling (OWN 10pmET), he will publicly apologize to all who have been harmed by the organization. (See apology here)
The ex-gay house of cards has been falling for some time. Over a decade ago, Focus on the Family’s Dr. Dobson was advocating the use of so-called ex-gay
ministries. Prior to 2000 Focus on the
Family broadcasts featured their own John Paulk, "the story of how one man
overcame homosexuality." In 2000,
however, when Paulk was spotted in a gay bar, he quickly disappeared from the
organization family.
A most interesting Focus on the
Family story you may have missed was in 1997, when Focus on the Family
co-founder Gil Alexander-Moegerle, having left the organization, wrote a letter
of apology for the organization's stands on homosexuality and women's issues.
(This story of course was not broadcast, and Dr. Dobson certainly did not
endorse it.) He could no longer keep silent. In his words: "I apologize to
lesbian and gay Americans who are demeaned and dehumanized on a regular basis
by the false, irresponsible, and inflammatory rhetoric of James Dobson's
anti-gay radio and print materials."
Likewise, leaders and founders of Exodus
international have been leaving and apologizing for several years. (You can view many of these on YouTube.)
The message that must get to our churches: There’s no such
thing as ex-gay. Anyone can “change” and
believe himself changed for a period of time, even a few years, especially when
he wants so badly to please his church and his family, and when he has been
convinced that being gay is a sin before God.
Ultimately though, despite marrying, having children, becoming a perfect
church-going family man, no one can escape his orientation. It will always resurface. And before you argue with me, show me someone
who has been “ex-gay” for 10 years or more and who claims he is “cured,” and ask
yourself as a straight person if you could pray away your attraction to the
opposite sex.
Many wounded Christians have been hurt by so-called ex-gay ministries. Their churches have for many years sent them
to organizations like Exodus to be “cured,” only to be confused and harmed emotionally. Some tell stories of electric shock, others
of being forced to masturbate while looking at opposite-sex pornography, others
of being taught to play “manly” games like football, all being told over and
over that they are a disappointment to God.
If you pray hard enough and have enough faith in God, God will heal you,
cleanse you, make you heterosexual, many churches likewise have preached to
those who are gay. It has been in error
all along, and now the Exodus ministry itself is humbly saying, “We are sorry.”
Those churches that will be bewildered by the closing of
Exodus are those who have embraced the misguided belief that a person’s sexual
orientation is a choice and that being gay is a sin. All of us have believed wrong teachings,
especially when we have heard them over and over by religious leaders in whom
we place so much trust, who likewise were taught repeatedly by their leaders,
who likewise were taught by their leaders . . ., but there comes a time when we
all need to question and re-examine our teachings, measuring them against the
example and the teachings of Jesus himself.
And if we open ourselves up to really listen to the hurting people, we
will hear through their tears the same stories over and over – stories of
believing the church’s preaching of condemnation, and praying for years to
change, stories of wondering why God doesn’t change them, why God doesn’t love
them, stories of leaving church in sadness, and feeling like a broken human
being, not worthy of God’s love.
The American Psychological Association has estimated that one
in ten males is gay and one in twenty females, and this percentage is
consistent across lines of time, race, culture, and even religion. The reason we don’t see this percentage in many
of our churches is because they leave before adulthood, having suffered in
silent pain throughout their childhood and youth, listening to the
condemnation. Fortunately most just
leave the church (as if that’s not sad enough), but many choose in hopeless desperation
to leave the world. We cannot wash our
hands of these lives, churches. We
probably will never hear the reasons, because their families have been taught to
be ashamed. Parents are taught to
believe their gay children are “lost.”
Thus, not only are the church’s misguided teachings on homosexuality
hurting those who are gay, but also all those who love them. Entire families are grieving and hiding in shame
that their children are gay.
Without this “stop-being-gay” ministry to send them to, what
now can a church do to help those who are gay?
Exodus’ closing is actually a blessing, because it gives churches a
great opportunity to seek meaningful understanding and response. It gives us an opportunity for real dialogue,
for listening to gay people’s stories, for examining Christian organizations
that are ministering to gay people in helpful ways. Gay Christian Network,
Soulforce, Evangelicals Concerned, More Light Presbyterians, Pink Menno, the
Association of Welcoming and Affirming Baptists, The UCC Church, The Episcopal Church . . . the list of Christians reaching out with Jesus’ love and compassion
is growing every day, and these are excellent sources for churches to begin to
honestly seek direction.
Now is the time, churches, to ask ourselves if we indeed
have failed in this area. Now is the
time to hear the very real cries of those we have personally hurt despite truly
meaning to help. Now is the time to make
a choice. We can continue to quote the
Leviticus abomination passage and pretend we already know all there is to know,
or we can humble ourselves before those we have hurt and before God, and say “we
are sorry, deeply sorry.”
6 comments:
Kathy, I shed tears today for a few reasons as I read your blog. I was thinking about what we would have missed out on in our daughter’s life had we listened to the church, and the fact that she may not have even been with us today, had we not turned the corner. Thank you always for your encouraging words!
Joyce, it is for you and the many others with stories like yours, that I write. God bless you and your family!
The problem with this article is that it confuses 'reparative therapy' and other behavior-modification techniques with the regenerative and transforming power of God that results in conversion and a life of holiness. The failure of Exodus International and other such 'ministries' is precisely the failure to make this differentiation, or confusing and combining things that differ. I am a man who was same-sex attracted from my earliest sexual awakening and lived a homosexual life for 15 years from age 15 to age 30. During this time I knew both loving relationships with other males and also unrestrained promiscuity. Then in my 30th year I had a spiritual awakening in which God changed my heart to serve Him. I immediately stopped having gay sex and began a new life of progressive change in my thoughts and desires. Two years after my conversion, I met and married a woman and have been married to her for 30 years. We have 4 daughters (who know about my past) and wonderful grandchildren. So I've been 'ex-gay' for a lot more than
10 years. And there is such a thing as ex-gay!
Sexual orientation may not be a choice, but we are responsible for how we respond to that orientation. After all, contemporary psychology finds all behavior to have a predisposing orientation, but it does not conclude therefore that all such behavior is to be gratified or condoned. Predisposition does not equal predetermination, which is the gist of the gay christian argument. That argument does not reckon with the transformative power of the grace of God in
Jesus Christ. I agree that attempting to accomplish this change by any other means will be a failure, because it is behavioristically focused and cannot change the heart. Only the Spirit of God can do that effectively. And I am living proof of that.
Thank you, Dennis, for your story. As I responded to you at Red Letter Christians, while I don't see your story as the answer for all gay people, I am happy for you that you have come to this place in your life. That peace with God that you have found is available to "whosoever believes" with no ex-orientation stipulation.
Sorry, Kathy. Didn't realize who you were on the RLC comment. That's a 'duh' on my part.
Not a duh, Dennis - Thanks!
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