• I got a nice e-mail the other day from David G. Myers, author of What God Has Joined Together:  A Christian Case for Gay Marriage (co-authored with Letha Scanzoni).  He's out with a new book that I think will be of interest to a lot of people.  It's called, A Friendly Letter to Skeptics and Atheists: Musing on Why God is Good and Faith Isn't Evil.  It combines Dr. Myers usual blend of engaging writing along with skilled analysis of matters of importance in our church and society.

    The preface and three of the chapters are available free on his website.  In chapter 13, "God and Gays" (also available for free) he speaks about the growing consensus between science and religion.  From the chapter:

    • All humans have a deep "need to belong," to connect with others in close, intimate, enduring relationships. We are, as Aristotle recognized long ago, "the social animal." Solitary confinement, ostracism, and banishment from close relationships lead to genuine pain. Show social scientists a community where marriages are plentiful, and they will show you a community with mostly healthy and happy people, thriving kids, and low crime rates….
    • There is a Christian case for gay marriage, which arises from the human need to belong, from the biblical mandate for justice, from the benefits of a culturewide norm of monogamy, and from a refutation of popular arguments against gay marriage…

    Click (here) for the rest of the chapter or click (here) to find out more about Dr. Myers new book. 

  • I am pleased to announce that the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) voted today to restore the Heidelberg Catechism to its original text (thereby correcting several unauthorized insertions and theologically unwarranted changes which were made in 1963)!  The vote was 60% to 39%.  This starts a process which will also require review by a committee, concurrence by the next General Assembly, and approval by the Presbyteries.  I think today’s vote by the General Assembly is a wonderful step which will restore integrity and authenticity to this foundational text in our Book of Confessions. 

  • As reported earlier, "Thirty-two
    history and theology faculty members from the 10 Presbyterian Church
    (U.S.A.) seminaries have signed a petition calling for a better
    translation of the 1563 Heidelberg Catechism."  Below is the text of that letter. 

    You can also click (here) for a PDF version. Click (here) for a free Adobe Reader. 

    Restoring the Heidelberg Catechism for the Church

    We write as faculty members of Presbyterian seminaries who teach theology and church history to express our support for overtures asking the General Assembly to provide for a better translation of the Heidelberg Catechism.

    According to the PC(USA) Book of Order, “those who are called to office in the church are to lead a life in obedience to scripture and in conformity to the historic confessional standards of the church” (G-6.0106b).

    As theologians and church historians we feel a particular responsibility to make sure that the translations of our confessional documents accurately represent the Reformed heritage that office holders pledge to uphold. We see this responsibility as in keeping with the mandate given to the Peace, Unity, and Purity taskforce: “to deepen our understanding of our Christian and catholic identity and clarify key themes of the Reformed theological and constitutional heritage” (PUP Report, lines 269-70). Though we have different perspectives on several of the issues that divide Presbyterians today, we are united in the desire to clarify the teachings of our confessional standards.

    We are grateful to all who have come before us, preparing translations of historic texts for the edification of Christians and the upbuilding of the church. Yet because of key errors in translation, the version of the Heidelberg Catechism currently in the Book of Confessions presents at several points obstacles to contemporary readers who want to gain a clear understanding of the historic Reformed theological witness. Specifically, it distorts Reformed accounts of God’s covenant (4.019, 4.074) and of redemption and eschatology (4.055) and obscures the Reformed teaching of our adoption in Christ (4.033). Moreover, it misleads the reader by suggesting that this historic text took a clear stand on issues of sexual orientation and practice that are lively issues before us in the church today—when in fact these were not subjects of discussion in the sixteenth-century church (4.087).

    Professor Edward Dowey, as chair of the Special Committee that oversaw the production of the Book of Confessions, has acknowledged that he and the committee as a whole failed to notice these errors, and are in this respect “guilty of negligence.”

    Now is the time to set things right. An accurate translation of our confessional standards is critical for a church that requires its office holders be guided by them. Moreover, accurate translations of the Heidelberg Catechism are not in short supply. Several alternative translations are readily available, including contemporary translations that reliably render the original text in lively, contemporary English.

    We therefore ask the church and its representatives to make use of the best tools available to us—the best and most faithful translations—to assist our students, and the church at large, as we seek seriously and honestly to engage the Reformed witness of the past for the sake of the church today.

    Dr. Mark Achtemeier
    Associate Professor of Theology and Ethics
    Dubuque Theological Seminary

    Ellen L. Babinsky
    Professor of Church History
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    John R. Bowlin
    Rimmer and Ruth de Vries Associate
    Professor of Reformed Theology and Public Life
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Dr. Cynthia M. Campbell
    President
    McCormick Theological Seminary

    Katie G. Cannon
    Annie Scales Rogers Professor of Christian Ethics
    Union Theological Seminary and Presbyterian School of Christian Education

    Anna Case-Winters
    Professor of Theology
    McCormick Theological Seminary

    Milton J Coalter
    Library Director and William B. and Mildred L. Nivison Professor
    Union Theological Seminary and Presbyterian School of Christian Education

    James C. Deming
    Associate Professor of Church History
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Dawn DeVries
    John Newton Thomas Professor of Systematic Theology
    Union Theological Seminary and Presbyterian School of Christian Education

    Christopher Elwood
    Professor of Historical Theology
    Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    William Greenway
    Associate Professor of Philosophical Theology
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Johnny B. Hill
    Assistant Professor of Theology
    Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    George Hunsinger
    Hazel Thompson McCord Professor of
    Systematic Theology
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    David H. Jensen
    Associate Professor of Constructive Theology
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Michael Jinkins
    Academic Dean and Professor of Pastoral Theology
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    David W. Johnson
    Director of Supervised Practice of Ministry and Certificate in Spiritual Formation Programs
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Kathryn L. Johnson
    Paul Tudor Jones Professor of Church History
    Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    William Stacy Johnson
    Arthur M. Adams Associate Professor of Theology
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    The Rev. Gregory Love, Ph.D.
    Associate Professor of Systematic Theology
    San Francisco Theological Seminary
    The Graduate Theological Union

    Elsie McKee
    Archibald Alexander Professor of Reformation Studies and the History of Worship
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Kathleen E. McVey
    J. Ross Stevenson Professor of Church History
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Daniel L. Migliore
    Charles Hodge Professor of Systematic Theology
    Princeton Theological Seminary

    Martha L. Moore-Keish
    Assistant Professor of Theology
    Columbia Theological Seminary

    Christopher Ocker
    Professor of Church History
    San Francisco Theological Seminary

    Amy Plantinga Pauw
    Professor of Doctrinal Theology
    Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Charles Raynal
    Director of Advanced Studies
    Associate Professor of Theology
    Columbia Theological Seminary

    Cynthia L Rigby
    W.C. Brown Professor of Theology
    Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary

    Kenneth Sawyer
    Associate Professor of Church History
    McCormick Theological Seminary

    George W. Stroup
    J.B. Green Professor of Theology
    Columbia Theological Seminary

    Haruko Nawata Ward, Ph.D.
    Associate Professor of Church History
    Columbia Theological Seminary

    Rebecca H. Weaver
    John Q. Dickinson Professor of Church History
    Union Theological Seminary and
    Presbyterian School of Christian Education

    John E. Wilson, Ph.D.
    Professor of Church History
    Pittsburgh Theological Seminary

  • For a Microsoft Word version of this article please click (here).

    A ruling of the Permanent Judicial Commission of the General Assembly released on February 11, 2008 stated that “it is not permissible for a presbytery or a session to define ‘essentials of Reformed faith and polity’ outside of the examination of any candidate for office. Such a determination must be made only in the context of a specific examination of an individual candidate.” (Leslie Scanlon, “Top court prohibits scrupling fidelity-chastity standard,” The Presbyterian Outlook March 10, 2008, 6.) 

    There are good reasons, rooted in our history for that view. However, the GAPJC then violated its own ruling by creating one functional “essential tenet” that must be adhered to prior to “a specific examination of an individual candidate.”  The ruling stated that “the fidelity and chastity standard [G-6.0106b] may only be changed by a constitutional amendment. Until that occurs, individual candidates, officers, examining and governing bodies must adhere to it.”

    I believe this ruling is unwise and contrary to two centuries of  American Presbyterian history. 

    An essential, or confessional standard, is a core belief that already has the assent of the overwhelming majority of the community.  Essentials are not things that we are fighting over, but things over which we no longer fight.  For example, beginning in 1729 there were conflicts over the nature of predestination.  Then, finally, in 1903 in the North and 1943 in the South declaratory statements were added to the Westminster Confession that created a balanced view of God’s love and judgment.  We no longer are in conflict over predestination.

    Essentials are those doctrines that can be embraced by people of different schools of interpretation.  They cannot be the property of only one school of thought.  The essentials are the great themes of the Christian, Protestant, and Reformed traditions that bind us together, not the differing interpretations which sometimes have kept us apart.

    I believe a helpful metaphor that reflects our Presbyterian understanding of essential tenets is to think of a series of concentric circles.  According to our Confessions, Jesus Christ is the center of our faith as the one in whom we meet the triune God. That is the heart of Christianity and unites Christians in faith around the world.  For Protestants, the next layer of our core values are a belief in Scripture and justification by grace through faith. The third layer in the circle is made up of the characteristically Reformed concepts of sovereignty, election, covenant, stewardship, sin, and obedience.  (Book of Order, Chapter II, “The Church and Its Confessions,” especially G-2.0500.)  There are many further rings as we attempt to understand the whole counsel of God.  We are most sure that we are dealing with essentials as we move toward the center of the circle. 

    Our ordination vows use the concept of “essential tenets” intentionally to keep our attention fixed on the center of the circle (Jesus Christ is the center of our faith as the one in whom we meet the triune God) rather than on matters on the periphery.  (BO, G-14.0207c.) This approach to theology, crafted through two centuries of theological debate, allows Presbyterians to be united around a core set of values while permitting individuals, sessions, and presbyteries the right to exercise their own freedom of conscience on emerging theological issues. 

    G-6.0106b represents the view of one faction in the church on a matter that cannot be considered central to our faith. It is rather an inference that some have drawn from their understanding of a particular theological tradition. For the GAPJC to make G-6.0106b into an essential tenet upends the carefully crafted polity which has guided our church for two centuries. The GAPJC decision took something from the periphery of our faith that is still subject to intense theological debate and moved it into the center of the circle where it does not belong. 

    The day will come when we are no longer fighting over the implications of the sexual orientation of some of our members.  The day will come when we finally adhere to our own constitution that declares: “An active member is entitled to all the rights and privileges of the church, including the right…to vote and hold office.” (BO, G-5.0202.) At that point we will have allowed our differing views of human sexuality to take their rightful place on the periphery, but not at the center of those beliefs that we hold to be essential.

  • Just a quick note to let you know that http://www.ga2008.com, which appears to be an official site of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), is actually run by Presbyterians for Renewal (a conservative advocacy group). 

     

  • Click (here) for a Microsoft Word version of this article.

    There are seven overtures to the upcoming Presbyterian General Assembly that ask the church to restore the Heidelberg Catechism to its original text.  Why the interest in the Heidelberg Catechism?  Recent scholarship has shown that in 1963 two Reformed Church in America translators made several unauthorized and theologically unwarranted changes to the Heidelberg Catechism. They appear to have inserted their personal biases into an official church document. The erroneous version was unwittingly adopted by the Presbyterian Church in our Book of Confessions.  The overtures coming before this General Assembly present the opportunity to correct these unauthorized changes and restore the Heidelberg Catechism to its original wording. 

    Discovering unauthorized insertions

    The Heidelberg Catechism is the only confession in the Presbyterian Book of Confessions that mentions homosexuality.  Question and Answer 87 in the Heidelberg Catechism (italics mine):

    Q. 87 Can those who do not turn to God from their ungrateful, impenitent life be saved?

    A. Certainly not!  Scripture says, “Surely you know that the unjust will never come into possession of the kingdom of God.  Make no mistake: no fornicator or idolater, none who are guilty either of adultery or of homosexual perversion, no thieves or grabbers or drunkards or slanderers or swindlers, will possess the kingdom of God.”

    But in 1996 in the midst of the debate over what later became G-6.0106b, Professor Johanna Bos, at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, pointed out that the version of the Heidelberg Catechism contained in our Book of Confessions is not an authentic translation of the original text.  A footnote in the Book of Confessions indicates that this translation of the Heidelberg Catechism had its origin in the early 1960s, when the Reformed Church in America and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches produced a 400th anniversary edition of The Heidelberg Catechism.

    Johanna Bos was born and raised in The Netherlands where she received rigorous training in the Heidelberg Catechism.  Bos said that despite all of her study of the Heidelberg Catechism, she had never heard any mention of homosexuality in the text.  Bos later worked with Louisville Seminary Professor Christopher Elwood to document the errors in the 1963 version of the Catechism.

    I’ve spent most of my professional life teaching the Reformed Confessions.  In 2001 as I was teaching a class on the Reformed Confessions I decided to follow up on the research started by Bos and Elwood.

    I do most of my research at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California.  There, I discovered a significant number of editions of the Heidelberg Catechism available only in the rare book room.  I read Question and Answer 87 in the Latin version of Zacharius Ursinus, in a work published in 1586. I followed that with a German version from 1795. (Caspar Olevianus is believed to have authored the German text.)  Then I read a Dutch version of the Catechism, published along with a Psalm book, from 1591. I found and consulted a 1645 English edition published in London during the meeting of the Westminster Assembly, and I concluded my catechism inquiry by studying a 1765 English translation of the Catechism prepared for the Dutch Reformed Church in New York.

    Answer 87 was the same in the Latin original and all of these early translations.  The list of those impenitent sinners excluded from the kingdom of God was always, in the same order, “unchaste person, idolater, adulterer, thief, covetous man, drunkard, slanderer, robber, or any such like.”  In none of the texts was there even a word where the 1963 version inserted the phrase, “homosexual perversion.”  In every case the list went from adulterer to thief, with no intervening word or phrase which could have been rendered “homosexual perversion.”  My research confirmed the findings by Professors Bos and Elwood that in fact the 1963 translation had inserted a phrase that does not exist in the original text. 

    Chair of the Special Committee acknowledges the error

    Professor Edward Dowey was the chair of the Special Committee that prepared the Book of Confessions that contains the erroneous translation of the Heidelberg Catechism.  When the unauthorized insertions in the modern translation were later pointed out to him, Dowey contacted one of the translators, Eugene Osterhaven to find out what had happened.  Osterhaven told Dowey that Osterhaven and another translator, Allen Miller, made the unauthorized insertion because they believed it was needed to combat the sexual revolution of the 1960s — even though homosexuality was not mentioned in the original text.  Dowey later wrote, “Our committee, and I especially, as chair, are guilty of negligence.”  Dowey continued, “no one dreamed of such chicanery as this…”

    Translator admits he added words not in the original text

    I was stunned that such an unauthorized change had been made to an official church document.  So I decided to contact Osterhaven myself. We had an exchange of letters and one phone call.  He sent me material he had published in response to the criticism of Bos and Elwood.  In a phone conversation with Osterhaven, when I asked why they chose to insert the phrase, “homosexual perversion,” even though there is no corresponding word or phrase in the original text he replied, “We just thought it would be a good idea.”

    From a scholarly perspective, it is inexcusable to insert words that were not in the original text of the Catechism. Second, from a Christian perspective it is inexcusable to create a mid-twentieth century rendition of the Catechism that appears to condemn all same-sex relationships when that condemnation is not present in the 16th century original. The fact that this unauthorized and theologically incorrect insertion  is used to condemn a whole class of church members makes it all the more egregious. 

    Other errors in the 1963 translation

    Since that time, scholars have discovered four other changes to the original catechism that again appear to reflect the theological bias of the 1963 translators rather than the original text.  The four additional mistranslations seem to evidence a bias for what is called “federal theology” which developed in the period following the death of John Calvin.

    Federal Theology maintains that God first made a covenant of works with humankind in which salvation was offered on condition of keeping the law pe
    rfectly.  When people failed to fulfill the covenant of works, God made a covenant of grace with them in which salvation was achieved by faith in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ on their behalf.

    By contrast, Calvin believed that there was only one covenant between God and God’s people, and it was based on God’s grace manifested in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  Presbyterian theology is based on the one covenant as articulated by Calvin rather than the two covenants of Federal Theology.  Yet, scholars have discovered four instances in which the translators in 1963 removed the word “law” from the original 1563 text and replaced it with the word “covenant.”  By changing these key terms, the 1963 translation thus gives the impression that there is more than one covenant – which is contrary to traditional Presbyterian doctrine. 

    It’s a simple question of honesty

    This issue comes down to a simple question of honesty.  Do we want our confessions to honestly reflect the original text?  Or will we allow the biases of two translators in the early 1960s to continue to taint this official church document?  The overtures to restore the Heidelberg Catechism to its original text present a wonderful opportunity for the PC(U.S.A.) to restore honesty and integrity to our Book of Confessions

    For a more complete discussion of these issues (along with full citations) please see, Jesus, the Bible, and Homosexuality: Explode the Myths, Heal the Church pages 114 to 119. 

    Heidelberg banner


    Update #1: According to Presbyterian News Service: "Thirty-two history and theology faculty members from the 10 Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) seminaries have signed a petition calling for a better translation of the 1563 Heidelberg Catechism."  Full article (here).

    Update #2:  Many of those who wish to retain the 1963 version of the Heidelberg Catechism point out that Osterhaven and Miller substituted two sentences from the New English Bible translation of I Corinthians 6:9-10 for much of the original text of Answer 87 in the Heidelberg Catechism. That's part of the story but not the full story of what happened.  It's important to note that:

    1.  The phrase, "homosexual perversion" appears for the first time in any New Testament translation in the New English Bible published in 1961. Osterhaven and Miller only used the New English Bible for Question and Answer 87.  In translating the rest of the Catechism they used the Revised Standard Version of the Bible.  By their own admission, Osterhaven and Miller chose to use the New English Bible translation of I Corinthians 6:9-10 precisely because they wanted to insert the phrase "homosexual perversion."  So by their own admission they borrowed from a different translation to suit their own personal preferences rather than attempting to authentically represent the original text of the Heidelberg Catechism.  

    2.  Heidelberg Q&A 87 is not meant to be a meditation on I Corinthians 6:9-10.  In addition to I Corinthians 6:9, there are three other biblical texts cited in the margin of the Catechism. They focus in quite other directions than the New English Bible version of I Corinthians 6:9-10.  Ephesians 5:5 condemns "greed which makes an idol of gain."  I John 3: 14-15 says that "everyone who hates his brother is a murderer."  Galatians 5:21 has a long list of sins, including "quarrels, a contentious temper, envy, fits of rage, selfish ambitions." All of these verses, equally cited in the Catechism, go in very different directions than the allegation of sexual sin inserted into the Catechism by Osterhaven and Miller.

    3. In 1988, The Reform Church in America revised the Heidelberg Catechism and in Q&A 87 took out the phrase "homosexual perversion." So as it stands right now, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is still using the 1963 version of the Catechism that was commissioned by the Reformed Church in America even though the RCA itself no longer uses that version.

    Regarding Q&A 87, the bottom line remains that the phrase "homosexual perversion" is not in the original text of the Heidelberg Catechism. From a scholarly perspective, it is inexcusable to insert words that were not in the original text of the Catechism. From a Christian perspective it is inexcusable to create a mid-twentieth century rendition of the Catechism that appears to condemn all same-sex relationships when that condemnation is not present in the 16th century original. 

  • "Gay Unions Shed Light on Gender in Marriage" from the New York Times, Science section, June 10, 2008:

    "A growing body of evidence shows that same-sex couples have a great
    deal to teach everyone else about marriage and relationships. Most
    studies show surprisingly few differences between committed gay couples
    and committed straight couples, but the differences that do emerge have
    shed light on the kinds of conflicts that can endanger heterosexual
    relationships….

    Notably, same-sex relationships, whether between men or women, were far
    more egalitarian than heterosexual ones. In heterosexual couples, women
    did far more of the housework; men were more likely to have the
    financial responsibility; and men were more likely to initiate sex,
    while women were more likely to refuse it or to start a conversation
    about problems in the relationship. With same-sex couples, of course,
    none of these dichotomies were possible, and the partners tended to
    share the burdens far more equally.

    While the gay and lesbian couples had about the same rate of conflict
    as the heterosexual ones, they appeared to have more relationship
    satisfaction, suggesting that the inequality of opposite-sex
    relationships can take a toll."

    Here's the link to the full article.  It's definitely worth a read. 

  • On May 15, 2008 in a powerfully-worded decision, the CA Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples should be permitted to marry. From the decision:

    [I]n contrast to earlier times, our state now recognizes that an individual’s capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationship with another person and responsibly to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual’s sexual orientation, and, more generally, that an individual’s sexual orientation — like a person’s race or gender — does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights. We therefore conclude that in view of the substance and significance of the fundamental constitutional right to form a family relationship, the California Constitution properly must be interpreted to guarantee this basic civil right to all Californians, whether gay or heterosexual, and to same-sex couples as well as to opposite-sex couples.

    The LA Times recently published my letter to the editor expressing support for the decision:

    Re "Marriage ruling is a religious quandary," Opinion, May 20

    As an ordained Presbyterian minister and moderator of the 213th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA), I applaud the recent decision by the California Supreme Court to allow same-sex marriage.

    The Bible teaches us that we are all equal in God's sight. Indeed, Jesus reached out to those who were sexual minorities in his culture. The state Supreme Court decision affirms society's commitment to equal protection under the law and is consistent with the values of my Christian faith.

    Jack Rogers
    Pasadena

    Here's the link.

    This is a great day for California, a great day for the United States, and a great day for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). This gives us the chance to leave behind old divisions and move forward together. As Anna Quindlen writes in Newsweek:

    Someday soon the fracas surrounding all this will seem like a historical artifact, like the notion that women were once prohibited from voting and a black individual from marrying a white one. Our children will attend the marriages of their friends, will chatter about whether they will last, will whisper to one another, "Love him, don't like him so much." The California Supreme Court called gay marriage a "basic civil right." In hindsight, it will merely be called ordinary life.

    Link to the full text of the CA Supreme Court Decision.

    Faith in America statement.

    Human Rights Campaign statement.

    More Light Presbyterians statement.

    New Field Poll shows growing support for same-sex marriage in California.

  • This Fall I have spent six weeks traveling almost
    continuously in support of my book. It’s been a remarkable
    experience.

    The most intensive period was two weeks spent speaking
    across the midwest including events in Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, and Illinois. I spoke 21 times to over 3,000 people. In every case, the crowds were larger than
    the local hosts expected and people were eager to hear a Christian message of
    love for all people. The tour was
    sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign, Covenant Network of Presbyterians, and
    a host of local churches and allies. It
    was organized by the most extraordinary team of people an author could ever
    hope for including the Rev. Jay McKell at Grace Covenant Church, super-organizer
    Karen Turney, Margaret Blankers, and a dedicated planning committee. PFLAG and More Light Presbyterians also did
    fantastic work getting the word out to members and friends. A huge thank you to everyone who helped make
    this tour a success! 

    There were so many great moments during the tour but perhaps
    the highlight was the event October 11 at Drury University in Springfield, Missouri. Several people had warned that Springfield was a rather
    conservative town. At dinner with local
    hosts before the event, I met Jolie
    Cave, a remarkable student
    organizer who is the Vice President of Allies, the gay/straight alliance at the
    university. Jolie explained that the
    group had posted 500 flyers advertising my speaking event the night before only
    to discover that most of them had been torn down and thrown into trash cans the
    next morning. The Allies responded by
    producing another flyer which said: "We will not be silenced, closets are
    for clothes, and trash cans are for ignorance."–which they re-posted along
    with the crumpled flyers they rescued from the trash cans.

    The event was to take place in an historic Baptist church
    where Martin Luther King, Jr. reportedly had preached. Peter Browning, the university chaplain, who
    was to preside, estimated that we might have 30 or so people in attendance. I arrived early to do some book signing and
    discovered the room was quickly filling as organizers dashed about to put up additional folding chairs. By the time
    the event started, an estimated 125 people had crowded into the room, filling
    every pew, the choir loft, standing in the back and sitting in the aisles. The atmosphere was electric. When Rev. Browning introduced the Allies and
    explained the courage and determination they had shown in organizing the event
    — they received a standing ovation. Then I gave my remarks and the crowd really seemed to get it. Afterwards they asked really thoughtful
    questions and showed a real commitment to understanding the issues. I came away from the event feeling that the
    Holy Spirit was at work. I’m indebted to
    the students and faculty at Drury for their warm welcome and courageous
    witness.

    Since Jesus, the Bible, and Homosexuality: Explode the Myths, Heal the Church was published in March, 2006, I have spoken in over
    80 locations in 25 different states. What
    started out as a simple book tour has turned into a ministry. It is a pastoral ministry of comfort and
    encouragement to people who have been terribly hurt. It is a ministry of supporting marriage and
    family life. It is a ministry of evangelism,
    in which people come to Christ and the church. I feel blessed to have met thousands of people who are living Christ’s
    teachings. And I’m deeply thankful to
    all those who have helped share the message of Christ’s love through supporting
    this book and this ministry.

    Drury_university_diversity_center_2

    Drury University Diversity Center.  (from left to
    right:) Dr. Rebecca Denton, director of the center; Rev. Bill Havens,
    pastor of Southminster Presbyterian Church; Jack Rogers, and Dr. Peter
    Browning, Chairman of the Philosophy dept and our host at Drury.

    Heartland_presbyterian_center_3

    Book signing at Heartland Presbyterian Center

    Grace_covenant_church_jack_rogers_e

    Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church

    Grace_covenant_presbyterian_church_

    Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church.  (from left to right:) Gary Blankers, Karen Turney, Margaret Blankers, Jack Rogers, Randy Fowler, and Jay McKell.

  • Kudos to the U.S. House of Representatives for passing the Employment Non-Discrimination Act!!!  Congratulations to the Democratic leadership and to the 200 Democrats and 35 Republicans who took a historic stand against employment discrimination. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church has been on record since 1978 as opposing discrimination in employment based on sexual orientation — so it’s encouraging to see this finally receive Congressional approval.  Congratulations also to the Human Rights Campaign, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, More Light Presbyterians, the Covenant Network of Presbyterians and innumerable people of faith throughout the country who helped to make this victory possible. 

    John Lewis (D-GA) gave an extraordinary speech on the floor of the House today in support of the ENDA. 

    Here’s the text:

    “Madam Speaker, I for one fought too long
    and too hard to end discrimination based on race and color, not to
    stand up against discrimination against our gay and lesbian brothers
    and sisters. During the 1960’s, we broke down those signs that said
    ‘white’ and ‘colored.’ Call it what you may, to discriminate against
    someone because they are gay is wrong, it is wrong, it is not right.
    There’s not any room in our society for discrimination. Today we must
    take this important step after more than 30 long years and pass the
    employment Employment Non-Discrimination Act. It is the right thing to
    do. It is the moral thing to do. Let us do it. Not just for this
    generation but for generations yet unborn. Today we have an opportunity
    to bring down more signs. Now is the time to do what is right, what is
    fair, what is just. The time is always right to do right. Let us pass
    this bill.”

    Click on this (link) to see the YouTube video (or watch it below):