When
North Carolina amended its constitution last month
prohibiting any possibility for LGBTQ couples to wed,
it comes as no surprise the loudest voices condemning
President Obama’s support of marriage equality is
presently coming from there.
“The
last time NC amended the constitution on marriage
was in 1875 to ban interracial marriage. We look like
a bunch of backward jack assess down here! Please
tell your friends we don’t all fly confederate flags
& thump our Bibles quoting Leviticus,” my friend
Cora from Greensboro,
N.C wrote me in an email.
But
the passing of Amendment One, which now constitutionally
defines marriage as being between a man and a woman
has emboldened many of its Bible-thumping denizens
of that state, especially its ministers, who not only
verbally condemn lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender
and queer (LGBTQ) citizens, to now openly speak of
exterminating us.
“I
figured a way out, a way to get rid of all the lesbians
and queers but I couldn’t get it pass the Congress
– build a great big large fence, 50 or a hundred mile
long. Put all the lesbians in there, fly over and
drop some food. Do the same thing with the queers
and the homosexuals. And have that fence electrified
so they can’t get out,” Rev.
Charles L. Worley of Providence Road Baptist Church
in Maiden, N.C stated in his Mother’s Day sermon,
responding to Obama’s public endorsement of same-sex
marriage.
Worley
continues his sermon, explaining what he perceives
would eventually happen to us.
“And
you know what? In a few years they will die out. You
know why? They can’t reproduce. If a man ever has
a young’un, praise God he will be the first.”
Unfortunately,
Worley isn’t the only North Carolinian cleric to brazenly
voice his opinion; his just reached national attention.
Rev.
Sean Harris’s, senior pastor of the Berean Baptist
Church in Fayetteville, reparative therapy advice
to parents in his congregation for their gender non-confirming
children is to engage in assaultive behavior toward
them. For effeminate sons, Harris advice, is to punch
them and “crack that wrist” if they are limp-wristed.
“Dads,
the second you see your son dropping the limp wrist,
you walk over there and crack that wrist. Man up.
Give him a good punch. Ok? You are not going to act
like that. You were made by God to be a male and you
are going to be a male.”
And
Rev. Ron Baity, a prominent pastor of Winston-Salem
and head of the anti-marriage equality organization
Return America, told his congregation favoring of
Amendment One that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
(LGBT) people were once upon a time justly prosecuted.
“For
300 years, we had laws that would prosecute that lifestyle,”
he is quoted as saying. “We’ve gone down the wrong
path. We’ve become so dumb that we have accepted a
lie for the truth, and we’ve...discarded the truth
on the shoals of shipwreck!”
Given
the country’s positive change toward LGBTQ civil rights,
its backlash from ultraconservative clerics and politicians
won’t stem our progress, but it will always remind
us of our history of homophobic persecution and scapegoating.
For
example, believing that the judicious way to keep
account of those who were infected with the HIV/AIDS
virus and to stop the virus from spreading, conservative
political commentator William F. Buckley Jr. in 1986
suggested that people with AIDS be tattooed on their
buttocks and forearms.
While
we can perhaps now chuckle at this ludicrous suggestion,
this was much of the nation’s mindset. And it was
not that long ago.
Another
example, in an essentialist argument where biology
is believed to determine one’s destiny, all marginal
people to mainstream society- women, the physically
challenged people of color as well as LGBTQ people,
etc. - must tune into this debate about genetic engineering.
If
LGBT people are viewed as genetically flawed from
a scientific point of view, and an abomination before
God from both religious fundamentalist and conservative
points of view that are a lot more pervasive in religious
thought then we like to think, then our unique way
of being sexual and loving in the world is not only
looked upon as an aberration to human sexuality, but
it can also ostensibly be viewed an abhorrence to
human life itself that might need to be exterminated.
With
science having an authoritative voice in society,
any counter moral and religious arguments on our behalf
lose their footing. And while we like to believe that
the field of science is objective and value free of
human biases and bigotries, scientists are, however,
human beings who analyze and interpret their datum
from their subjective and often times politically
motivated viewpoints.
A
classic example of how politics informs science is
Nazi German’s extermination plan of gay men, and how
Paragraph 175 of the German Criminal Code differentiated
between the type of persecution non -German gay men
received from German gay men because of a quasi- scientific
and racist ideology of racial purity. Richard Plant,
makes this point in “The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War
Against Homosexuals,” when he stated that “The polices
of persecution carried out toward non- German homosexuals
in the occupied territories differed significantly
from those directed against Germans gays. The Aryan
race was to be freed of contagion; the demise of degenerate
subjects peoples was to be hastened.”
NC
has made a backwards move on marriage equality. And
a cleric like Worley maintains the climate.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is
a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker.
She is the Coordinator of
the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the
Pacific School of Religion. 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.
She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. 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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