Monday, July 28, 2008

Offering hope?

OK – buckle your seatbelts…. this is going to be as close to a rant as I get.

Something’s been bugging me. Sort of like a sliver under your fingernail that you just can’t get out. It had come to my attention that a colleague had told others that “New Direction doesn’t offer hope anymore.”

Now, I’m not looking for sympathy here …. but let’s face it, New Direction deals with a pretty controversial area of ministry. It isn’t easy at the best of times to build credibility and engage pastors and local churches in our work. So, when a ministry colleague, who well knows the challenges facing a ministry like ours, takes a pot-shot at our credibility by saying ‘we no longer offer hope’…. it’s frustrating.

I wondered why this colleague didn’t call me up and say, “Hey I’ve got some concerns about the kind of language I see you using on your website – can you clarify some things for me?” Why didn’t they check out their concerns before spreading a death-knell for credibility and trustworthiness?

So the other night I had the opportunity to have a conversation with this colleague. Turns out, yes, they were concerned that we weren’t offering hope anymore. Seems their big concern was with our distinctive that we are ‘discipleship-focused, not change driven’ – that we seemed to be saying that sexual orientation change wasn’t always possible.

Now I have a bit of a track record for being candid….ok upfront ….. ok downright blunt sometimes. I asked this person if they thought every same-gender attracted follower of Jesus would become fully heterosexual. They said no. But, they said, they saw heterosexuality as part of God’s plan of redemption for people. “Everyone is on a journey towards heterosexuality”, they said, “but some people only go a little way down that road.” So then I asked about the disconnect for same-gender attracted people who don’t experience any significant change in the direction or intensity of their attractions – those who “only go a little way down the road” ….. You see, my concern is that we not set people up for a striving, good-works based gospel. My concern is that we don’t set up a system where people constantly feel like they don’t measure up, that their faith must be deficient…. where they are perpetually vulnerable to a sense of shame and condemnation for simply continuing to be same-gender attracted. This colleague agreed, that wasn’t what they wanted either ….. Then I said, “We’re offering people Jesus Christ – at the centre of their life, identity and sexuality – and Jesus is the hope of the world – how can you say that we’re not offering hope – when we’re offering people Jesus??”

Paul says, “When I came to you, brothers, I did not come with eloquence or superior wisdom as I proclaimed to you the testimony about God. For I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. I came to you in weakness and fear, and with much trembling.” (I Corinthians 2: 1-3)

In our wrestling for the blessing for same-gender attracted people, we are emerging in weakness and fear and with much trembling. There is a lot we don’t know about sexual orientation. We don’t really know what causes it, exactly how and what influences it, or how to consistently or permanently affect it. Even our trained counselors are humbled in the face of the complexities and seek to minister with gentleness and discernment. We’ve seen God do amazing things in people’s lives. But is the Christian life about the amazing things God does for us? Or is the Christian life about knowing God and participating with him in his mission to restore the world to right relationship with God?

By making heterosexuality part of God’s redemption plan…. I have to wonder if it isn’t just buying in to the consumer notion of Christianity. “Being a Christian is about getting what you want.”

I just heard the news about a precious little nephew born a few weeks back. Baby John has Down’s Syndrome. Is Down’s God’s best intention for humanity? Should we all now commit ourselves to praying and fasting that God will heal baby John of the reality of his condition? Will we limit John’s experience of faith in Jesus Christ because of his Down’s syndrome?

Before I find myself in a wasp’s nest of controversy, I am not suggesting a one-to-one comparison of Down’s with the experience of same-gender attraction. What I’m simply trying to do is raise some questions about how we go about shaping our theology of redemption.

When I was in seminary, I had an important conversation with my uncle – someone I respect who has been a pastor for many years. I was struggling with a number of doctrinal issues and he said, “Wendy, I’ve always felt that the church needed to focus much more on biblical theology than on systematic theology.”

Systematic theology says, “God’s best intention for human sexual intimacy is the covenant of marriage between husband and wife. Therefore, in God’s plan of restoration and redemption, he will restore heterosexuality to those who do not naturally experience it.” Never-mind that there are deeply devoted disciples of Jesus who have prayed much, experienced much counsel and ministry, and continue to walk day-by-day in the reality of experiencing same-gender attraction.

As for me and my team at New Direction, what we do know, without a shadow of a doubt, is that Jesus Christ is the light of the world. We know he loves all people and all of creation. We know that in him we are accepted by God. We know he offers us abundant life – but that he invites us to experience that through his upside-down economy of suffering, dying to self, taking up our cross and following him. We know that we experience redemption now – as we come to experience intimate relationship with God within the perfect relationship of Father, Son and Spirit.

I don’t think the experience of same-gender attraction is immutable. There seems to be sufficient evidence of the fluidity of sexuality for at least some people to prevent us from putting anyone’s sexuality in a box. But that certainly doesn’t mean everyone’s sexuality can and will change. (ok Karen K. I got sucked in ….. I did end up touching on this question on this blog :))

I’ve heard this very same colleague say that homosexuality is not a salvation issue ….it falls under the realm of sanctification (becoming more like Jesus). Yet, when we, in humbleness, take a step back from the issue of orientation change ….. we no longer offer hope??

Galatians 5:14-16: The entire law is summed up in a single command: "Love your neighbor as yourself." If you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.

“Lord, help me to keep my eyes fixed on you – the author and finisher of our faith. Help me to trust you to guard and protect New Direction as you keep leading us to risk and serve and love gay people. And keep my heart soft, open, gracious and forgiving – it’s much easier to just be pissed off. Make me like you.”

19 comments:

Anonymous said...

Frankly, I am dismayed by supporters of this mission and supporters of Wendy challenging herand her team to a place of defence of core values and beliefs. I am a long time SGA woman who fell away through both the gay community and doctronal divisions found in churches and orgnizations. That is why the gay community strives with createing there own 'take' on some pasages as many do regarding theology.
The gentleman who suggested to Wendy that new direction does not offer hope, I assume he is referring to the change that G-d makes possible for some and for a complexities of reasons we are all at various levels with G-d, and frankly we are his business.
I cannot help but wonder if this person who suggests the organization offers little to no hope for change, is just not experiencing areas he himself have failed to change through whos faith in G-d, or is frightened that wendy is proposeing the holy spirit do the work in peoples life, and the healing. Being present and developing friendships and showing christ ias an example in your own life is testimomny to people like me who have lost most hope.
The complexity of being gay is only one part, wendy recently kept me safe thruogh invitation of friendship at a most unsafe time.

People who dont like living with feelins that give them guilt and shame, sometimes all aspects of sexuality, evevn in hetrosexual marriages needs Hope, and redemption, But in G-d's good time. and thruogh consistent time consuming attention and love for people who have a variety of emotional challenges for feeling or being gay, and feeeling if G-d values them alone, with little to no evidence of pure exceptance and love from people 'who get' it' you are a dying organization.
While no organization is perfect, balancing out discipleship, and authentic love and frinedship for the broken that contact new drection is a noble and G-d honoring role. Some need change, some need discipleship, all need love.
Start with WEndy, as if you get a hardliner in herplace and G-d does not wish for all to be healed in our fallen states, suiciide and other tradgedtys will occur in those broken lives.
Talk more to gay people wo struggle and meet there need. not all people that offer assistance is the right friendship match, so, more shuold get involved.I wonder what secrets that guy needs support in, as did G-d fail to offer him hope in a neccesary area of his life.
Respectively yours.

Sandra said...

I agree that heterosexuality is part of God's redemptive plan for all people, and in this life we are all on a journey towards heterosexuality - including those of us who identify as heterosexual. That God desires us to have healthy, life-giving relationships is without question, but all of us, on this side of heaven, are somewhere on that journey towards wholeness, whether we struggle with same-gender attraction or not. I think New Direction is blazing a trail that will offer real, lasting hope to people who experience same-gender attraction - and as Wendy said, that hope has a name: JESUS!

College Jay said...

This was wonderful. It inspired my latest blog post. I think your ministry offers the best hope around, and God bless you, ma'am.

wendy said...

thanks Jay .....

friends - do pop over and read Jay's wonderful post - puts flesh on my thoughts.....

Karen K said...

Wendy, I totally agree with you. In fact, I find the line of thinking around "we're always working toward heterosexuality" to be damaging. After 5 years of trying, I stopped trying to change and that was the best thing I ever did. I was becoming so depressed--so full of this sense of failure because things were not changing. If I hadn't stopped trying my despair would have led me to give up entirely and go back to homosexuality--which is exactly what happens to many people. It was coming to accept life on its terms the way it is that I could finally move on and find joy in my life.

As you said: “We’re offering people Jesus Christ – at the centre of their life, identity and sexuality – and Jesus is the hope of the world – how can you say that we’re not offering hope – when we’re offering people Jesus??”

Amen sister!

PS-its easy to get sucked in on the change question, eh? :)

toujoursdan said...

Well put.

I truly admire the resolve you display at staying in an uncomfortable place where there are no easy, pat answers.

wendy said...

Thanks Toujourdans .... some days the resolve seems stronger than others :)
It's not our human tendency to want to stay put in an uncomfortable place ... at the end of the day it is about truth and love .... and that is enough to risk and persevere

wendy said...

sorry to anonymous and Sandra .... somehow your comments got "lost" and I'm too technically illiterate to figure it out .... but you were "lost and now you're found" :)
Thanks for your comments.

Karen K. I commented and blogger inexplicably shut down before it posted ..... urghhhhh ..... technology :)
I really appreciate you sharing - I know others who chased the 'holy grail' of orientation change to the point that they were in despair and very close to losing their faith... when they gave up the quest and refocused their energy and hope on Christ alone they began to experience new life. This kind of authentic and honest sharing is so crucial for the church to hear. There are lots of things that we long to experience redemption and wholeness in, but as Jay said so well in his post, they all fade away and the one thing we can be absolutely sure of is Christ and Christ alone.

toujoursdan said...

To touch on your previous post as well as this.

Many of us won't ever think of ourselves as needing to journey toward heterosexuality, any more than as a left handed person, I would think as myself as needing to journey towards right-handedness. For many of us, even in the Church, we see ourselves as just a normal variant in God's creation. Some of us interpret the Bible differently than others, and some of us look to mainstream science and the natural world to justify our worldview. There are Christians who think our approach is wrong, but we can find as much support for our worldview as those who think being gay is flawed can for theirs.

One phrase that tends to turn me off is "struggling with same sex attractions". Honestly, I don't struggle with same sex attraction at all. I struggle with people who struggle with my same sex attractions though :-) But seriously, using this phraseology will often poison the conversation. If one just assumes that I am an incomplete heterosexual needing hope, I will assume that person has nothing to say to me, because they haven't taken the time to get to know me.

Too often, people in conservative Christian circles approach gay people as if we need some kind of "hope" or that we're broken in need of being fixed. When I encounter this kind of language I find myself wondering "What about the normal gays? What about those of us who don't 'struggle' with your sexual orientation? What about those of us who have successfully integrated our sexuality with our personhood and honestly don't have internal conflicts? When will you talk to us?"

Undoubtedly there are people with all kinds of struggles, including sexual struggles. There are all kinds of people in unhealthy relationships. And there are all kinds of people in need of wholeness. But when the assumption is made that gay = struggle = incomplete heterosexuality = needing wholeness, then you've lost me. I am not going see myself like an untreated alcoholic in the gutter needing an intervention no matter how hard some want to put me into that box.

wendy said...

Toujourdans - you've touched on a very important point - and one that can often put a divide between gay people and conservative Christians. In our vision statement for instance, we say ".... and every Christian struggling with same-gender attraction access redemptive ministry in their own region". When I'm speaking to church groups I often elaborate on this statement by saying, "We recognize that not every same-gender attracted person is struggling ...." Regardless of what I believe about same-gender sexual behaviour, when I engage gay people I need to engage them as people first and foremost - not as their sexuality. I hope that with this blog, and offering people the opportunity to hear diverse voices through the comments, to remind followers of Christ to engage gay people not with an agenda but with the love and respect that is consistent with the good news of Jesus Christ.

Sandra said...

I think that's a very important point, Wendy, that we need to be mindful of in all our interactions. As representatives of Christ, "walking epistles", "we need to engage (people) as people first and foremost...not with an agenda but with the love and respect that is consistent with the good news of Jesus Christ." I live next to a Muslim family and have befriended them, but in the five years we've lived beside each other I haven't tried to "evangelize" them - because I know they'd be deeply offended and our relationship would be damaged. But I sense that they appreciate and are surprised by my warmth towards them. That in and of itself can be life changing and may open the door to discussions of faith.

Can I throw a little spice into the pot? :) I love the fact that New Direction is discipleship focused and not change driven, and I don't see SGA Christians who are not pursuing orientation change as "less than" at all. However, is it still okay to hope for and pursue change? I've been walking with the Lord for about 13 years now and have experienced tremendous change in many facets of my personhood, including my sexual/relational desires. Like the Apostle Paul, I can say, "not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me." I think early in my walk with Jesus I was pursuing change in a very limited sphere, dreaming of the white picket fence, etc. I'm much more concerned now with pursuing Jesus and letting Him change me radically on the inside, so I can bear greater and more excellent fruit for Him. So I'm still "pursuing change" but not focusing on my sexuality. I really just wanna grow up!! And Christ is doing it, but it does take time. Anyway, I'd hate to see another faction in the "ex-gay" arena - a group of people who haven't experienced any significant change in their attractions saying to someone like me, "oh, you're kidding yourself!", or "don't push your agenda on us!" Please understand that I have my tongue firmly planted in my cheek as I say this, and I know this isn't where New Direction is coming from. But I would hate to see the Cross of Christ emptied of its power - so I still believe change is possible. My focus is to be changed into His image, from glory to glory - what that will look like on this side of heaven remains to be seen - it's a work in progress!

wendy said...

Ah Sandra.... spice is good :)
As you've mentioned, our distinctive reads, "Discipleship focused, not change-driven".... What we seek to avoid is the person driven by the pursuit of orientation change to the exclusion of all else - including a primary focus on faith and walking with Christ as his disciple. That doesn't mean that a person shouldn't continue to grow in Christ, grow in their sense of personhood, grow in their sense of gender identity, grow in engaging in healthy relationships, grow in understanding some of the negative things that may drive some of their needs etc. etc. As some individuals continue to grow in these areas, they may be surprised by the impact it may have on their sexual attractions. Such growth takes intentional focus and sometimes painful and hard work .... and we celebrate that. I guess the distinction is that the pursuit of change isn't the primary focus, not the goal which demands all of one's energy. Rather, in fixing one's eyes on Christ and growing up in him, a person is free to "be".
By encouraging putting first things in first place and secondary things (shifts in attractions) in second place, we don't intend to discourage anyone in exploring the potential to experience a shift in their attractions .... but we do hope to speak an honest, realistic word that encourages a robust and vibrant focus on one's relationship with Christ.

Brandon said...

God bless ya, Wendy, and your ministry. You bring me lots of hope. :)

jennypo said...

I share your dismay at the idea that heterosexuality is what the Christian ought to be working toward. I imagine God chuckling over us ascribing an idea so narrow in its scope to Him! What we are all working towards is handing our sexuality, whatever it is, and our selves, over to the Christ.

We'll do anything to avoid the real issue - that the cross involves real sacrifice and the death of what serves the ME in ALL of us. A person who offers their attractions, their wants, all that belongs to THEM - before the cross is ALL that God means for us to be. In Christ, we are not asked to alter the nature, but to put it in the place of death. We are to be ruled by the spirit.

Nature is not to be redeemed until the return of the Saviour (else why does the earth groan in anticipation of the redemption?)but it has been, and ought to be in each one of us, subjected to the Christ.

Isn't it just that we want the easy way out? We don't like the death that the Cross implies for us. We can't imagine God's purpose for us anything higher than our HAPPINESS. Unlike David, we think it's best to offer to God what costs us nothing.

Heh. How often would we not know a real blessing if we tripped over it?

I just hope that in heaven God will consider me worthy to be the servant of the SSA person who was unable to alter her sexuality, but offered it in love to the Lord Jesus. That will be an honor indeed.

sonia said...

Based on 20 years' service in various ministries including Living Waters and Safe Passage (a small ministry I lead in California), it has been my observation that in the long term, most don't experience significant orientation change, and this is consistent with the results of the long-term study published in 2007 by Stanton Jones (Wheaton College) and Mark Yarhouse (Regent University) of participants in Exodus ministries, which estimates that rate to be on the order of 10 to 15%.

I deeply appreciate Wendy's willingness to look at that plainly and not reframe it in terms that might on the surface sound more faith-inspiring but which can (and all too often does) so easily set people at critical junctures of their spiritual life up for despair further down the road. By remaining steadfastly focused upon Christ and radically open to the profoundly miraculous transformations of heart, personality and character His followers have experienced in Him for centuries, Wendy offers a much more substantial hope.

With joyous appreciation,
Sonia

wendy said...

Thank you Jennypo and Sonia for your comments.
As a straight woman called to the privilege of engaging in ministry with those addressing the realities of diverse sexual identities, I have often been deeply moved, challenged and honoured to see the profound faith commitment of sga friends in the face of struggle and sacrifice. Their stories are vital to a church that is complacent, over-indulged, selfish and consumeristic. The point is to ask a more robust discipleship of all of us! Lord help me as I stumble to walk out a deeper more radical commitment to you - there are distractions and diversions at every turn.

Warren Throckmorton said...

wendy - I recently gave a talk about the research on change and causation. It must have seemed pessimistic to some because a lister asked this question: "If change is rare or not possible, then why would a gay person accept Christ?"

In that question, I hear so much that is wrong with how sexual identity ministry is conducted today. Jesus becomes a reparative therapy tool and not a redemptive shepherd.

Keep at it, girl!

wendy said...

thanks Warren...
i recently preached a sermon based on John 15: 1- 11 that asked, "What is the good news for someone with a life-dominating reality - like a persistent experience of same-gender attraction?" Simplistic or triumphaslistic answers won't suffice... at least not when you take the time to actually be involved in the lives of real people. So the sermon develops around three expressions of the abundant life of which Jesus speaks in John 10:10 - namely an experience of intimacy with God out of which flows the opportunity to bear fruit as a co-heir with Christ in the renewal of all things out of which flows joy. Intimacy with God, being fruitful in the lives of others and in creation, and experiencing the joy that fruitfulness creates .... is abundant life - regardless of what challenges you face or struggles you navigate. Christianity is not about getting everything we want ... but it is the amazingly good news of abundant life in God. This side of heaven, he really is sufficient - more than enough - for experiencing the fullness of life.

A. Friend said...

This is the logical extension of name-it-and-claim-it; the Christian version of Oprah's "Secret".

These people have abandoned Jesus a long time ago. That is why Jesus is not satisfying enough for them.
They are selling themselves instead: "If you're not like me, you're not living a full Christian life."

I am astonished you had to sit and explain that to somebody who calls themselves a Christian.

If Jesus is not Hope, I dunno what is!

How can we as Christians offer anything else but Jesus to people who are hurting?