Since the liberal
arm of the U.S. Episcopal Church passed a resolution in July to
bless same-sex unions, particularly in states like Massachusetts
that legalize such marriages, so too has, at least, one black congregation
within the Massachusetts diocese. On
August 30, St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church in Cambridge hosted
the marriage and blessed the union of its mayor, E. Denise Simmons,
and her lifetime partner, Mattie Hayes.
The historic event happened
because of the fierce determination of a straight ally to Cambridge’s
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community — the church’s
new Priest-in-Charge, The Reverend Leslie K. Sterling, who is also
the first African-American female priest at St. Bart’s. Having
just arrived at St. Bart’s in February, Sterling brings a
new vision to a church that has served both the African-American
and African-Caribbean community for over 100 years.
When I went to meet Sterling
to discuss our roles as officiates in the mayor’s nuptials,
I asked her if she were ready to jump into in this conflagration
that has the Episcopal Church at the brink of schism.
“Some will leave, I know,
but those who oppose and stay, at least, we can talk about it in
a spirited conversation,” Sterling said.
Cambridge, like many of its
residents, revels in its image as a bastion of liberalism. It’s
also a city of many firsts, like both E. Denise Simmons and Kenneth
Reeves being the first African American openly queer mayors of a
major U.S. city.
But underneath Cambridge’s
liberal facade is a rampant racism that came to light globally in
the racial profiling of Harvard professor Henry “Skip”
Louis Gates during his arrest by a white cop this past July. Evident,
too, is a toxic homophobia in black congregations of both liberal
white denominations and historical black ones, which put several
communities under both spiritual and sexual siege. For example,
Reeves, who was once a longtime worshipper at the historic African-American
St. Paul’s A.M.E in Cambridge, left that church after May
2004, when Massachusetts legalized same-sex marriage, because the
church made it clear it would neither bless same-sex unions nor
marry its queer parishioners.
Mayor Simmons, a native Cantabridgian
— who presides over a diverse demographic consisting of people
from various racial, cultural, economic, and sexual orientations
— had only one church she could go to with the hopes of not
being turned down.
“I am cognizant of the
deeper societal implications of this marriage…[St. Bartholomew]
might be the very first mainstream African American church to hold
a same-gender wedding,” Simmons told the Cambridge Chronicle.
In preparing her parishioners
for their leap of faith, Sterling wrote in a letter to them stating
the following:
“I am aware of all the
Bible verses conservatives cite in opposition to homosexuality,
and I am also aware that there is more than one way to look at each
one of those verses. If we believe that the Spirit continues to
guide the church in the interpretation of scripture, as was done
with respect to slavery and the status of women, then we have to
consider the possibility that the Spirit is speaking today, as the
hearts and minds of so many people at so many levels of Bible scholarship
no longer read those verses as a blanket condemnation of same-sex
relationships, or as a reason to deny committed, faithful couples
a blessing on their marriage.”
To be in full compliance with
the canons of the Episcopal Church, which would avoid Sterling confronting
ecclesiastical probation or being defrocked, the wedding liturgy
was divided among three officiates: The Rev. Sterling; Jada D. Simmons,
the mayor’s oldest daughter and Justice of the Peace; and
me.
I was elated to be a part of
this liturgical assembly line helping to make a historic event happened
within the church’s ecclesial strictures. Sterling did the
invocation, declaration of consent to marry, and blessing of the
marriage; Simmons pronounced the marriage; and I did the homily,
blessing of rings, and vows.
As the wedding service ended,
with Simmons and Hayes walking down the aisle as a married couple,
the church clapping, and the choir singing the gospel tune “Oh
Happy Day,” I turned to Sterling and asked what she thought
about the service.
“I’m feeling the history of the moment and what it must
have been when black folks were able to marry.”
Historically, as African Americans,
we have always focused on spiritual content of family and not its
physical composition.
Hayes spoke to me about the
spiritual content of her family when she said, “Of course,
to have my marriage and my wedding to be in an historic event is
phenomenal. But the bottom line is as wonderful as all that is,
I have married the woman I love, Denise Simmons.”
These
multiple family structures, which we have had to devise as models
of resistance and liberation, have always shown the rest of society
what really constitutes family. A grandmother raising her grandchild
or a lesbian couple raising their children as in the Simmons-Hayes
household that is now legal according to the state and blessed by
the church—families both.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist,
theologian, and public speaker. A native of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe
is a graduate from Wellesley College and Union Theological Seminary
at Columbia University, and served as a pastor at an African-American
church before coming to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate
as a Ford Fellow. Reverend Monroe is the author of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not-So-Everyday Moments. As an African American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that is
frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com. Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.
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September17
, 2009
Issue 342
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Executive Editor:
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