"The Arc of the Moral Universe Is Long,
but It Bends Toward Justice!" (Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.)
For the first time in our Nation's history a sitting President of the United States has voiced his personal position in support of "same-sex marriage." While others may be surprised and dismayed by the revelation, I am both appreciative and proud that it also came from the first African American President of the United States.
No doubt President Obama knew his statement would draw considerable criticism, but that African American Pastors, Clergy and Lay Leaders are among the loudest to cry foul is illuminating and yet, timely. That these so-called Men of God - who have been "judged" and stigmatized by another dominate group's assertion of biblical authority - are engaging in the same destructive tactics to try to deny other human beings their Right to self-actualization by virtue of their unalienable (God given) Rights of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" is shameful to say the least.
But, while you all know I certainly have my opinion on the matter, I am grateful and humbled by the presence of those Scholars and Clergy who have courageously reported for duty on this battlefield, and as such, I yield the floor and this blog post to Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III. Please take a moment to listen with an open mind and a loving ear.
Peace,
Rev. Dorinda G. Henry
THEOLOGIA HABITUS EST!
An open letter from Rev. Otis Moss III to the Black Clergy
Tell your brethren who are part of your ministerial coalition to
“live their faith and not legislate their faith” for the Constitution is
designed to protect the rights of all. We must learn to be more than a
one-issue community and seek the beloved community where we may not all
agree, but we all recognize the fingerprint of the Divine upon all of
humanity.
There is no doubt people who are same-gender-loving who occupy
prominent places in the body of Christ. For the clergy to hide from true
dialogue with quick dismissive claims devised from poor biblical
scholarship is as sinful as unthoughtful acceptance of a theological
position. When we make biblical claims without sound interpretation we
run the risk of adopting a doctrinal position of deep conviction but
devoid of love. Deep faith may resonate in our position, but it is the
ethic of love that forces us to prayerfully reexamine our position.
The question I believe we should pose to our congregations is,
“Should all Americans have the same civil rights?” This is a radically
different question than the one you raised with the ministers, “Does the
church have the right to perform or not perform certain religious
rites.” There is difference between rights and rites. We should never
misconstrue rights designed to protect diverse individuals in a
pluralistic society versus religious rites designed by faith communities
to communicate a theological or doctrinal perspective. These two
questions are answered in two fundamentally different arenas. One is
answered in the arena of civic debate where the Constitution is the
document of authority. The other is answered in the realm of
ecclesiastical councils where theology, conscience and biblical mandates
are the guiding ethos. I do not believe ecclesiastical councils are
equipped to shape civic legislation nor are civic representatives
equipped to shape religious rituals and doctrine.
The institution of marriage is not under attack as a result of the
President’s words. Marriage was under attack years ago by men who viewed
women as property and children as trophies of sexual prowess. Marriage
is under attack by low wages, high incarceration, unfair tax policy,
unemployment, and lack of education. Marriage is under attack by clergy
who proclaim monogamy yet think nothing of stepping outside the bonds of
marriage to have multiple affairs with “preaching groupies.”
Same-gender couples did not cause the high divorce rate, but our
adolescent views of relationships and our inability as a community to
come to grips with the ethic of love and commitment did. We still
confuse sex with love and romance with commitment.
My father, who is a veteran of the civil rights movement and retired
pastor, eloquently stated the critical nature of this election when
speaking to ministers this past week who claim they will pull support
from the President as a result of his position. He stated, “Our
Ancestors prayed for 389 years to place a person of color in the White
House. They led over 200 slave revolts, fought in 11 wars, one being a
civil war where over 600,000 people died. Our mothers fought and were
killed for women’s suffrage, our grandparents were lynched for the civil
rights bill of 1964 and the voting rights act of 1965…my father never
had the opportunity to vote and I believe it is my sacred duty to pull
the lever for every member of my family who was denied the right to
vote. I will not allow narrow-minded ministers or regressive politicians
the satisfaction of keeping me from my sacred right to vote to shape
the future for my grandchildren.”
“The institution of marriage is not under attack as a result of the President’s words.”
Gay and lesbian citizens did not cause the economic crash,
foreclosures, and attack upon health care. Poor underfunded schools were
not created because people desire equal protection under the law. We
have much work to do as a community, and to claim the President of the
United States must hold your theological position is absurd. He is
President of the United States of America not the President of the
Baptist convention or Bishop of the Sanctified or Holiness Church. He is
called to protect the rights of Jew and Gentile, male and female, young
and old, Gay and straight, black and white, Atheist and Agnostic. It
should be noted the President offered no legislation, or executive
order, or present an argument before the Supreme Court. He simply stated
his personal conviction.
If we dare steal away from the noise of this debate, we will realize
as a church we are called to “Do justice, live mercy and walk humbly
with God.” Gay people have never been the enemy; and when we use
rhetoric to suggest they are the source of our problems we lie on God
and cause tears to flow from the eyes of Christ. I am not asking you to change your position, but I am stating we must
stay in dialogue and not allow our own personal emotional prejudices or
doctrines to prevent us from seeing the possibilities of a beloved
community.
November is fast approaching, and the spirits of Ella Baker, Septima
Clarke, Fannie Lou Hammer, Rosa Parks, A. Phillip Randolph, James
Orange, Medgar Evers and Martin Luther, King Jr. stand in the balcony of
heaven raising the question, “Will you do justice, live mercy and walk
humbly with our God?” Emmitt Till and the four little girls who were
assassinated in Alabama during worship did not die for a Sunday sermonic
sound bite to show disdain for one group of God’s people. They were
killed by an evil act enacted by men who believed in doctrine over love.
We serve in ministry this day because of a man who believed in love
over doctrine and died on a hill called Calvary in a dusty Palestinian
community 2,000 years ago. Do not let the rhetoric of this debate keep
you from the polls, my friend.
Asking you to imagine a beloved community, your brother and friend,
Otis Moss, III
Senior Pastor
Trinity UCC
Senior Pastor
Trinity UCC
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