Thursday, September 29, 2005

I simply am.

[Below is an excerpt from a 1994 essay by Andrew Sullivan (the essay can be found in its entirety here). The essay is in several parts, and I plan to post it in sections and comment on each part. Mr. Sullivan (someone for whom I have deep respect) is an excellent writer who here shares some insight into the dynamics involved in his faith, his sexuality, and his church. My comments follow the excerpt. I post this because I think this essay says more than I can say about what it means to be gay and Christian. I would appreciate your comments.]

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Alone Again, Naturally
The Catholic Church and the homosexual


In everyone here sleeps
A sense of life lived according to love.
To some it means the difference they could make
By loving others, but across most it sweeps
As all they might have been had they been loved.
That nothing cures.
- Philip Larkin, "Faith Healing"


I.

I can remember the first time what, for the sake of argument, I will call my sexuality came into conflict with what, for the sake of argument, I will call my faith. It was time for Communion in my local parish church, Our Lady and St. Peter's, a small but dignified building crammed between an Indian restaurant and a stationery shop, opposite a public restroom, on the main street of a smallish town south of London called East Grinstead. I must have been around 15 or so. Every time I received Communion, I attempted, following my mother's instructions, to offer up the sacrament for some current problem or need: my mother's health, an upcoming exam, the starving in Bangladesh or whatever. Most of these requests had to do with either something abstract and distant, like a cure for cancer, or something extremely tangible, like a better part in the school play. Like much else in my faith-life, they were routine and yet not completely drained of sincerity. But rarely did they address something that could unsettle the comfort of my precocious adolescence. This time, however, as I filed up to the Communion rail to face mild-mannered Father Simmons for the umpteenth time, something else intervened. Please, I remember asking almost offhandedly of God, after a quick recital of my other failings, help me with that.

I didn't have a name for it, since it was, to all intents and purposes, nameless. I don't think I'd ever heard it mentioned at home, except once when my mother referred to someone who had behaved inappropriately on my father's town rugby team. (He had been dealt with, she reported darkly.) At high school, the subject was everywhere and nowhere: at the root of countless jokes but never actualized as something that could affect anyone we knew. But this ubiquity and abstraction brought home the most important point: uniquely among failings, homosexuality was so abominable it could not even be mentioned. The occasions when it was actually discussed were so rare that they stand out even now in my mind: our Latin teacher's stating that homosexuality was obviously wrong since it meant "sticking your dick in the wrong hole"; the graffiti in the public restroom in Reigate High Street: "My mother made me a homosexual," followed closely by, "If I gave her the wool, would she make me one too?" Although my friends and family never stinted in pointing out other faults on my part, this, I knew, would never be confronted. So when it emerged as an irresistible fact of my existence, and when it first seeped into my life of dutiful prayer and worship, it could be referred to only in the inarticulate void of that Sunday evening before Communion.

From the beginning, however - and this is something many outside the Church can find hard to understand - my sexuality was part of my faith-life, not a revolt against it. Looking back, I realize that that moment at the Communion rail was the first time I had actually addressed the subject of homosexuality explicitly in front of anyone; and I had brought it to God in the moments before the most intimate act of sacramental Communion. Because it was something I was deeply ashamed of, I felt obliged to confront it; but because it was also something inextricable - even then - from the core of my existence, it felt natural to enlist God's help rather than his judgment in grappling with it. There was, of course, considerable tension in this balance of alliance and rejection; but there was also something quite natural about it, an accurate reflection of anyone's compromised relationship with what he or she hazards to be the divine.

To the outsider, faith often seems a kind of cataclysmic intervention, a Damascene moment of revelation and transformation, and no doubt, for a graced few, this is indeed the experience. But this view of faith is often, it seems to me, a way to salve the unease of a faithless life by constructing the alternative as something so alien to actual experience that it is safely beyond reach. Faith for me has never been like that. The moments of genuine intervention and spiritual clarity have been minuscule in number and, when they have occurred, hard to discern and harder still to understand. In the midst of this uncertainty, the sacraments, especially that of Communion, have always been for me the only truly reliable elements of direction, concrete instantiations of another order. Which is why, perhaps, it was at Communion that the subject reared its confusing, shaming presence.

The two experiences came together in other ways, too. Like faith, one's sexuality is not simply a choice; it informs a whole way of being. But like faith, it involves choices - the choice to affirm or deny a central part of one's being, the choice to live a life that does not deny but confronts reality. It is, like faith, mysterious, emerging clearly one day, only to disappear the next, taking different forms - of passion, of lust, of intimacy, of fear. And like faith, it points toward something other and more powerful than the self. The physical communion with the other in sexual life hints at the same kind of transcendence as the physical Communion with the Other that lies at the heart of the sacramental Catholic vision.

So when I came to be asked, later in life, how I could be gay and Catholic, I could answer only that I simply was. What to others appeared a simple contradiction was, in reality, the existence of these two connected, yet sometimes parallel, experiences of the world. It was not that my sexuality was involuntary and my faith chosen and that therefore my sexuality posed a problem for my faith; nor was it that my faith was involuntary and my sexuality chosen so that my faith posed a problem for my sexuality. It was that both were chosen and unchosen continuously throughout my life, as parts of the same search for something larger. As I grew older, they became part of me, inseparable from my understanding of myself. My faith existed at the foundation of how I saw the world; my sexuality grew to be inseparable from how I felt the world.

I am aware that this formulation of the problem is theologically flawed. Faith, after all, is not a sensibility; in the Catholic sense, it is a statement about reality that cannot be negated by experience. And there is little doubt about what the authority of the Church teaches about the sexual expression of a homosexual orientation. But this was not how the problem first presented itself. The immediate difficulty was not how to make what I did conform with what the Church taught me (until my early 20s, I did very little that could be deemed objectively sinful with regard to sex), but how to make who I was conform with what the Church taught me. This was a much more difficult proposition. It did not conform to a simple contradiction between self and God, as that afternoon in the Communion line attested. It entailed trying to understand how my adolescent crushes and passions, my longings for human contact, my stumbling attempts to relate love to life, could be so inimical to the Gospel of Christ and His Church, how they could be so unmentionable among people I loved and trusted.

So I resorted to what many young homosexuals and lesbians resort to. I found a way to expunge love from life, to construct a trajectory that could somehow explain this absence, and to hope that what seemed so natural and overwhelming could somehow be dealt with. I studied hard to explain away my refusal to socialize; I developed intense intellectual friendships that bordered on the emotional, but I kept them restrained in a carapace of artificiality to prevent passion from breaking out. I adhered to a hopelessly pessimistic view of the world, which could explain my refusal to take part in life's pleasures, and to rationalize the dark and deep depressions that periodically overwhelmed me.

No doubt some of this behavior was part of any teenager's panic at the prospect of adulthood. But looking back, it seems unlikely that this pattern had nothing whatsoever to do with my being gay. It had another twist: it sparked an intense religiosity that could provide me with the spiritual resources I needed to fortify my barren emotional life. So my sexuality and my faith entered into a dialectic: my faith propelled me away from my emotional and sexual longing, and the deprivation that this created required me to resort even more dogmatically to my faith. And as my faith had to find increasing power to restrain the hormonal and emotional turbulence of adolescence, it had to take on a caricatured shape, aloof and dogmatic, ritualistic and awesome. As time passed, a theological austerity became the essential complement to an emotional emptiness. And as the emptiness deepened, the austerity sharpened.

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A few comments on part 1 (Please note that, as a writer, I am nowhere near the same league as Andrew Sullivan. My apologies.). I simply want to note a few of the reasons I identified with this essay:

I, like many before me, often asked for divine help with that before I could even really identify what it was. I don't think I am unique in this. I remember asking for help when I was 12 (shortly before I was baptized); I remember asking for help when I was 16; I remember asking for help when I was 18 (shortly before I was baptized again); and I remember asking for help the moment the thing had a name (I was 20).

And from the beginning, my sexuality (such as it exists as an independent personal characteristic) has been a part of my faith; there has been dynamic interaction between the two, not diametric opposition. At times, I knew the sexual part of myself in a way that I didn't know the Christian part of myself, and at times the opposite was true. The "differentness" I felt as a result of my sexual feelings and impulses led me to question foundational assumptions about the world, the Bible, and the Church. The knowledge I gained by seeking to identify the sexual aspects of my being directly influenced the way I read the Bible, much as the things I learned as a student of Science directly influenced the way I read Genesis 1. These two totalizing aspects of my person worked together to re-create me time and again.

I can also identify with Mr. Sullivan's desire to immerse himself in the sacraments. Certain aspects of worship have remained sacred to me because of their steadfastness. As I worked my way through, around, in, and out of faith, the constant act of weekly Communion instructed me. As I thought and rethought who I was, the Old Songs gave me comfort (I still can never sing "Come Thou Fount" without losing my composure - the words quiet me and anchor me). The repeated symbols of worship, through their constant calming simplicity, were signposts, tools to maintain a course.

And finally, I identify with Mr. Sullivan's answer when asked how he can be gay and Catholic: I simply am both gay and a Christian.

Sunday, September 25, 2005

A break from the silence

A sincere apology for the length of time between posts. A few thoughts:

Going home again (see below post) made me introspective and gave me time to sit still. The stillness and the introspection are terrifying to the point of being nearly debilitating (often, there can be nothing so frightening as knowledge of oneself). But they serve a didactic function.

I move so much: grad school, work, friends, church, news, politics, all piled on top of some ceaseless desire to read more and more and more, and to create words about God and faith and the Church, words that no one has yet thought to say. But when I went home, I had nothing to do but think. I couldn’t bring the books with me that I wanted (they upset my parents, who think that too much reading is partly to blame for my “condition”), I had no work to do, I had no classes. I stopped, so I decided to look inside.

Stillness and introspection can be dangerous. For me, they allow the voices of my inner demons to finally be heard. These demons have names: Fear, Self-Doubt, Anger, Pride. Introspective stillness allows Fear to speak of Hell, which I spent so many years fearing, and failure, which lurks always in the back of my mind. It allows Self-Doubt to tell me that I am not worthy of the church I so long to serve, and that even if I were worthy, I have not the talent or resources to accomplish those goals toward which I work. It allows Anger, that demon of War and Hate, to contradict the words of Self-Doubt by saying that the mistreatment I have received by my Church in the past make it a source of Evil, not Good. And finally, the demon of Pride (perhaps the demon that helps me to write these things?), which tells me that I know better than those who have come before me.

But other voices speak in the stillness: the voices of the Angels (those messengers of God). They are the voices of my friends, who have loved me and stood by me, and who, for some mysterious reason, believe that I have something to add to the Conversation of the Saints, which has continued on its steady way all these thousands of years. They are the voices of two Preachers I so admire who say more every Sunday than I can hope to say in a lifetime and who encourage me to live a life of service. They are the voices of the downtrodden, who tell me of the privileged place I occupy, and who command me to serve and to pursue justice (the suffering of others brings a great deal of perspective; I learn from them that my indulgent self-pity is a weight I should cast off). They are Providence and they are Grace, messengers of a merciful and loving God.

It can be a difficult thing to continue trying, to continue working, and to continue on the long march to the goal. But we must. The voices of the Angels drown out the voices of the Demons in the end. And so we work toward the goals of worshipful peace, justice, equality, and liberation. We work by thinking, praying, serving. We work with humility strengthened by passion for the truth. And we work with the help of the Lord, whose abundant grace and strong arm are with us.

May we all serve as we should, and may God’s will be done through us.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Home, Sweet Home

As some of you have noticed (though I guess I shouldn't overestimate the size of my audience), I have been absent for a little while. My apologies. Since my last post, I have started several new essays, but have been unable to finish any of them. The reason: I'm visiting my parents.

For the past 12 days, I have been at my parents' house, and I will be here for several days more. Originally, I planned this as a time of great productivity. My parents both work, and I am home alone most days, so I thought I would get a lot of reading accomplished, write a bit, and have some time to watch Springer and General Hospital.

But it hasn't been working out quite that way. Now, I love and miss my parents, so I'm glad to spend some time with them. But, as many of you can understand, it can be difficult to be home again.

When I am home again, I remember the good times with my family. I remember laughing, playing, having fun, and growing up. However, I also remember the fights, the anger, the avoidance, and the loneliness. When I am home again, I have to seal up a large chunk of myself in a ziploc bag and leave it in my suitcase, making sure to hide it very carefully to avoid conflict and further pain.

It has been a little more than 2 years since my parents found out that I am gay. Since that time, each of us has been struggling to keep the fmaily together, but it often feels as though we are failing. Of the past two years, one full year passed with basically no contact between me, my parents, my siblings, and my extended family. Now that we are speaking again, each of us is constantly walking on eggshells to avoid saying that wrong thing that will make the situation come tumbling down like the fragile house of cards it is. Usually, we have to pretend the "problem" doesn't exist, just so we can stand to be in the same room together.

My parents do not approve of my "chosen lifestyle," and never will. Originally, they were hopeful that I would one day snap out of it, find the right girl, and produce a few heirs. I think they have revised their goals for me: celibacy and avoidance of hell. I don't approve of my parents theology, and can only hope that it changes. I come by my stubbornness honestly, though, so I don't think change is in the cards for any of us.

I can't even imagine how hard this must be for them. They honestly believe that one of their children is doomed to the fires of hell, and nothing I say can convince them otherwise. They believe they have failed me, and they now feel helpless to fix everything and make it right.

So where do we go from here? Do I just move on, pretend that I've forgotten the day that my mother called me and told me I was no longer to come home or speak to any member of my family? Do I forget the day that my father called and, without explanation, told me I was allowed to come home for Christmas?

My thinking becomes very unfocused when I'm home (hence my inability to finish a post). I can't seem to sift through all the baggage, history, and pain to get to the point. I can't seem to think about theology; I only have regret. This trip has been particularly difficult, and I have to wonder whether I will have the strength to come home for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

I don't know where my parents and I will be a year from now. I fear I may someday get another phone call letting me know I've been disowned (again).

That's all for now. I'll write something more when I leave home and can think clearly again.