TV networks show ‘cowardice, pure and simple’
JOSEPH N. BELL
In my view, one of the best and most provocative regular features
offered up by the Pilot is the commentary by a cross-section of local
religious leaders on some of the pithier moral issues of the day.
Their opinions are mostly straight to the point -- and not always
predictable.
Even though two of their number opted out, I was especially
pleased that the other three tackled the recent refusal of several
major TV networks to run a commercial on behalf of the United Church
of Christ. In case you missed the dispute, the commercial rejected by
ABC, NBC and CBS shows a pair of bouncers in front of an unidentified
church picking and choosing the people they allow to enter, followed
by the tagline: “Jesus didn’t turn people away. Neither do we.” The
reference is primarily aimed at churches that reject gay people
unwilling to accept celibacy as a condition for membership, a
restriction that doesn’t exist at the United Church of Christ.
According to news coverage, CBS said it rejected the commercial
because “it touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other
minority groups by other individuals and organizations.” An NBC
spokesperson said: “We do not accept commercials that deal with
issues of public controversy. The problem with this spot is it says
churches do not accept these people. That’s a controversial topic
that is in the papers every day.” CBS added that another factor was
the backdrop of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage
proposed by “the executive branch.”
Of the three Pilot panelists who responded, two -- Rabbi Mark
Miller and the Zen Rev. Deborah Barrett -- came down foursquare on
behalf of the commercial, while the Rev. Peter Haynes at St. Michael
Episcopal set a cautious toe there after a fair amount of wandering.
All of this has special significance because it is part of a rash
of mainstream churches defrocking gay pastors or breaking apart over
the issue of openly gay clergy.
We’ve heard a great deal about the defection of St. James in
Newport Beach from the national Episcopal Church. Less visible
locally was the recent decision of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
America to withdraw official recognition of a Lutheran mission that
serves the poor and homeless in San Bernardino because it installed
an associate pastor who is in a lesbian relationship, and the
Methodist Church defrocking a longtime pastor for the same reason.
There is no defense for the networks that refused the United
Church of Christ commercial. It was cowardice, pure and simple. A
number of self-labeled “Christian” congregations accept gay people
only if they deny their own sexuality, while the United Church of
Christ opens its arms to them without any such restrictions. Their ad
simply makes this clear by offering a warm welcome to all people.
That’s about the same level of controversy as one brand of toothpaste
saying it does a better job of cleaning teeth than its competitors.
The ad also surfaces the importance of celibacy in a direct way
I’ve seldom seen in news stories covering the dispute over gay
clergy. Church authorities or members of a congregation who are
quoted pledging their love and desire to include gay people in their
midst are seldom asked if celibacy is a condition of that love --
which is what they mean when they say they love the sinner and hate
the sin. To see how that impacts gay people, we need only to ask our
heterosexual selves how we would feel if we were told we could join
the club if we would deny the sexual instincts with which we quite
likely were born.
The rationale for this attitude toward homosexuals is a handful of
verses in the Bible, written in a quite different society several
thousand years ago -- none of which came out of the personal ministry
of Jesus -- and the dubious biological contention that homosexuality
is an acquired rather than a genetic trait. It should be pointed out
that the Pilot’s religious panelists dealt only with the
appropriateness of the ad and not the issues above. Some day, I’d
like to see them deal with the celibacy requirement for gay people.
And also with the growing demonizing of homosexuality in our
churches, almost to the exclusion of judging gay clergy by normal
standards of performance.
Nary a word did I read or hear from church authorities about the
quality of the spiritual work of the gay pastors being busted.
Lutheran pastor Jenny Mason, for example, was sacked in San
Bernardino because she wasn’t on the roster of recognized pastors.
And she wasn’t on the roster because -- after 10 years of meritorious
service with the poor and homeless -- she was forced to resign when
authorities learned she had a relationship with another woman.
And how many of the congregants at Newport Beach’s St. James did
you hear citing a lack of love or spiritual commitment on the part of
gay bishop the Rev. Gene Robinson, whose appointment helped drive
them out of the national Episcopal Church? The sin of these outcasts,
it seems clear, was being gay. Nothing more.
The Rev. Madison Shockley, director of the Justice and Witness
Ministries of the United Church of Christ, wrote in the Los Angeles
Times: “Right wing fundamentalist Christianity has so dominated the
media that many Americans don’t believe liberal/progressive
Christianity even exists.... This ad is simply our way of saying who
we are and extending an invitation to anyone who has felt unwelcome
in the Christian community.”
And our own regular Forum commentator Barrett wrote: “Are gay
people genuinely welcomed and accepted in our congregation? Do we
view them as afflicted, ill, defective or substandard in some way? Do
we judge their sexual expression as sinful? Are we taking appropriate
action in society to end discrimination based on sexual preference?”
All questions, it seems to me, that might profitably be pondered
in the year ahead. Maybe it’s time for a national new year’s
resolution to accept our gay fellow citizens into the mainstream of
our society, where they belong and where they are allowed to
contribute fully to the well-being of all of us.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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