FINISHING THE JOURNEY: Questions and Answers from United Methodists of
Conviction![]()
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Chapter Six
Rev. John Thornburg
Why does our church doctrine say "the practice of homosexuality" is
"incompatible with Christian teaching"?
John Thornburg is a fourth-generation United Methodist minister who serves as senior pastor of Northaven United Methodist Church in Dallas, Texas. He is a poet and hymn writer whose work appears in several denominational hymnals and collections. His mentors in the faith include two men who were part of the Northaven congregation, Albert Outler and Schubert Ogden.
Anyone who has ever attended a General Conference knows church doctrine isnt formed as a result of a Pentecost-like unanimity. It is always the result of compromise among passionate people.
At the 1976 General Conference, and at every one since, there have been two sets of conflicting passions over the issue of homosexuality and the church. The first is how the Bible is to be understood. The second is how to be a faithful church.
Our Social Principles declare that the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching, because the majority of voting delegates over the years have continued to believe that:
The teaching of Scripture is clear and unequivocal, and/or
The church would be torn apart if it were seen to condone anything other than celibacy for gay men and lesbians.
I say "and/or" because many United Methodists, in-cluding several in key leadership positions, no longer believe the teaching of Scripture is unequivocal, but they are reluctant to be the first to stand up and admit theyve changed their minds.
The minority voices have argued that the Bible has both timeless truths and time-bound teachings. They offer reminders that the church has previously repented of its adherence to time-bound teachings (such as its defense of slavery), and they believe it ought to do so again on this issue. Those minority voices have also argued that when church unity is achieved by silencing or marginalizing a group of Gods children, it is no unity at all.
So what will happen now? Will we decide that God can work within the tension between the various voices? I pray that we will, because otherwise we dismiss all weve come to understand since 1976.
Twenty-four years can make a great difference. In this country, it took less time to desegregate lunch counters, public transportation, schools, and the military. In recent years, even less time has been needed for enormous shifts of sensitivity about sexual harassment, equal opportunity, and gender roles.
Since 1976, the realities related to homosexuality and the church also have experienced a significant shift. Twenty-four years ago, the only gay men and lesbians visible to church leaders were the activist pioneers whose zealous style was perceived as inflammatory and anti-establishment. Today, because so many dedicated gay Christians have had the courage to come out, church leaders know legions of gay men and lesbians whose mainstream lives stand as quiet testimony to their cause.
In 1976, North American culture was still under the sway of Sigmund Freuds understanding of homosexuality as a form of immaturity. In fact, Albert Outlers embrace of Freud was a central argument in his floor debate during the General Conferences of the 1970s. In 2000, Freuds interpretation of homosexuality is all but banished from psychiatry.
The membership decline after the 1968 merger made church leaders in the mid-70s fearful that even more catastrophic losses might result from any stance that appeared to condone "the practice of homosexuality." But despite the emergence of a network of more than 160 churches and campus ministries that have openly welcomed and affirmed gays and lesbians (the Reconciling Congregation Program), membership losses in the denomination have been waning.
God is at work in this tension. Silencing or diminishing the minority voices endangers Gods work.