Pastor Worley and the Slippery Slope of “Speaking the Truth in Love”


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Every time I blog about homosexuality and the church, I get at least one email or comment that says that I am either wasting my time or sowing dissent.  As a straight, married, Asian American Presbyterian, I agree . . . this is getting old. I dread the fact that issues of gender, race, economics and sexuality are still issues that the church must struggle with in order to fully be who I hope the church to be.  And I dread that some of us feel the calling to use whatever privilege we may have to keep fighting on behalf of those who are and have been excluded from community and call and subjected to violence in word and action.

I will also receive a comment or email that also says, if I – or the occasional ”you people” – would just stop talking about X, then it would go away. This I do not agree with, for silence in the face of oppression is sinful, and while we will all justify times of silence in defense of our own safety and comfort, most of us who enjoy the privileges that our heterosexuality avails, we really do not risk much by speaking up for our LGBTQ brothers and sisters.

Like many folks, I was appalled by the recent sermon preached by Pastor Charles L. Worley of Providence Road Baptist Church calling for LGBTQ folks to be gathered in an electrified pen until they died off from lack of reproduction. I encourage you to watch the video if for no other reason than to hear the words from the source.

Of course, Pastor Worley has every right to preach whatever kind of hateful rhetoric that he feels called to preach. Likewise, he must deal with the consequences of those words. As a person of faith, not matter how much I may disdain his theology, he is discerning God’s movement in his life, and as a Reformed Christian who believes in the sovereignty of God, I have to trust that somehow, in some way, God is working in thru all of this.

That said, it would be easy to dismiss him as some radical, fringe person that should be given little attention or thought. After all, no reasonable and faithful person would ever think these things, let alone say them.  Some, like my friend, Eugene Cho in his excellent post chastising Worley and others says,

No matter where you stand on the issue of gay marriage, there are some boundaries of human decency that should never be crossed.

For the most part I agree, most people who think homosexuality is a sin, probably do not think that LGBTQ people should be rounded up until they die off. And then I think back to some meetings/debates among those whom I would consider “thoughtful and faithful” communities in my own denomination, the Presbyterian Church (USA). When it came to homosexuality, the slippery slope argument was always busted out, “homosexuality will lead to . . . [insert perceived sexual "deviance"].” After an awkward moment of “Whoa, did he just say what I think he said?” most of us would simply dismiss these folks as fringe, after all, the slippery slope argument is unwinnable . . . and what does it matter anyway?

And then you hear people like Worley and others who do in fact verbalize what we know already happens, people take anti-LGBTQ thought, theology and rhetoric and walk down that slippery slope to the point of killing people who are gay. I am generally not a slippery slope kind of person, but in this case, I will borrow a page from some of my brothers and sisters in Christ who believe  that the affirmation of of homosexuality, as choice or creation, will lead to the destruction of all that is good and holy and say this:

You can wrap your theological position in all the “speaking the truth in love” or “hate the sin, love the sinner” rhetoric you want, but if you hold the idea that affirming homosexuality will lead to the destruction of societal “norms” then you had better claim the other side: anti-homosexuality rhetoric will lead to the death of human beings because they are gay.

Again, for many of us, we have been able to stand outside of much of this without really risking anything. Sure, some us us get nasty notes and people berate us for being theologically  bankrupt, but that sacrifice pales in comparison to what my LGBTQ friends must deal with every day when simply making choices about how they act, what they say or who they love.

There is no comparison.

Likewise, those of you who continue to give life and validation to anti-homosexuality thinking must know that you have been given the privilege of being thought of as reasonable and faithful. This protection has given you a false security that your words, no matter how diametrically different they may sound from Worley’s, do not lead to violence.

They do.

And then you hear things like this, from the Pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III as he speaks about same-sex marriage.

Theology like this is the antidote to the Worley’s of the world: those who call for violence as well as to those who stand by and allow this rhetoric to go unchallenged. I for one don’t care how tired we all get talking about this “issue” because, as long as people are being killed because of their sexuality, those of us who have the privilege of thinking about LGBTQ bothers and sisters as “issues” in the first place, must choose to speak out against the violence or risk continuing being part of it.

If you care to be part of a public action in NC this weekend, please see Kimberly Knight’s post, Following Jesus to Maiden, NC.

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Bruce is a native Northern Californian and third generation Chinese/Filipino who has been living in San Francisco since 1998.  Until May, 2011 he was the founding pastor of Mission Bay Community Church, a church of 20/30-somethings in San Francisco, CA and from 2008-2010 was Moderator of the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA). He is currently one of those “consultant” types who makes his way, writing, speaking, teaching and drinking coffee. His social networks of choice are  TwitterFacebook and his Blog

This article originally appeared on Bruce’s blog at Patheos.com

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About the Author

Bruce Reyes-Chow

Bruce Reyes-ChowBruce Reyes-Chow is a native Northern Californian and third generation Chinese/Filipino who has been living in San Francisco since 1998. Until May, 2011 he was the founding pastor of Mission Bay Community Church, a church of 20/30-somethings in San Francisco, CA and from 2008-2010 was Moderator of the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA). He is currently one of those “consultant” types who makes his way, writing, speaking, teaching and drinking coffee. His social networks of choice are Twitter, Facebook and his BlogView all posts by Bruce Reyes-Chow →

  • Anonymous

    thanks for this. anyone know where can i get a copy of the text from the letter that dr. moss read?

  • http://www.facebook.com/otro.tierra Otro Tierra

    Thank you Bruce Reyes-Chow and RedLetterChristians for continuing to be a voice of God-given rationality and compassion. And thank heavens for people like Chicago’s Reverend Dr. Otis Moss III: “We cannot get caught up in the rhetoric of this moment.”

    As for Pastor Charles Worley and those who continue to defend him, I hear hostility, fear, hatred, and deception based on a mere shadow of poorly collected scripture passages taken far from historical context.

    • Anonymous

      Who’s defending him?

  • http://www.facebook.com/stan.dotson.9 Stan Dotson

    Wonderful reflection, Bruce. I wrote about Rev Worley and an idea for a transforming initiative in response in my blog post today: http://inourelements.com/1-daily-passages/f-words Would welcome feedback.

  • http://ricbooth.wordpress.com Ric

    Amen.

  • Drew

    I am glad that hate speech is called out when it occurs. However, I’m disappointed by the intellectual laziness from folks like Reyes-Chow making these types of individuals the face of a viewpoint. It’s like when Fox News finds one Occupy sign or MSNBC finds one Tea Party sign, and then says that one person represents the movement. Maybe I should post pictures and videos from Gay Pride parades and pretend that is the face of homosexuality?

    • http://www.patheos.com/community/breyeschow/ Bruce Reyes-Chow

      Fair point, but what I was really trying to get at was that this is extreme AND those who are hiding behind some kind of rational dialogue are helping to give these extreme words actions.

      • Drew

        Logic dictates that if a rational person on one side of the argument is responsible for and gives credence to the crazies on their side, that a rational person on the other side of the arguments is responsible for and gives credence to the crazies on their side as well.

        • keith

          The message, I believe, however flawed the delivery, was that the basic ‘flaw’ in the lifestyle of homosexuality is that they cant reproduce. I believe also you will see continued lashing out at the homosexuality community as long as they keep bringing the fight. You can be compassionate but yet stand firm in your beliefs. You dont have to coddle them to show love. Bottom line

  • Anonymous

    And even if the pastor didn’t intend what he said to be taken literally, the problem is the people who unthinkingly sit under pastors each week and do not do their own discerning. They’re the ones who go out in the world and perpetuate hatred in different ways towards people who are different and they have nothing more to fall back on than, “well, my pastor said” or “the Word of God says” without being able to intellectually engage the text. In fact, often the statement “the Word of God says” is usually code for “my PASTOR says that the Word of God says”.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1224639989 Karen Curtis-Weakley

    As a member of the LGBTQ community, I thank you for taking a risk. As a clergy member, thank you for being a prophet. The world can use more courageous prophets like you!

  • just sayin

    Reminds me of Rev. Wright; Obama’s pastor.

  • Anonymous

    There is one glaring but very visible problem with your reasoning in this article: slippery slopes are real and need to be avoided. We need look no further at the danger slippery slopes represent than the modern issue of abortion. I can remember when Roe v Wade was first proposed that we were told that abortions would only be necessary in the case of physical danger to the mother, incest or rape. Women needed the protection of abortion against these crimes of violence and personal danger. So we approved abortion as a national right. Where are we today with abortion? Less than 3% of all abortions are due to incest, rape or physical danger to a woman. The vast, vast majority of abortions are now done for “convenience” sake. I’ve seen reports that 90% of all unborn babies identified with Downs syndrome are now being aborted; we now have individuals choosing abortion if the baby is not the “right” sex; we have stories of individuals taking fertility drugs to become pregnant and then aborting all but one of the fertilized embryoes. Abortion, which was once touted as a necessity for the protection of women has now become an outright danger to unborn babies, which is especially heinous because we have the technology to keep unborn babies as young as 2 months alive. Abortion is a classic example of the “slippery slope” principle. Earlier inour history, we stepped onto the slipper slope with slavery, which began only as a limited, stop-gap measure until the demands for more labor culd be met, but eventually also escalated into a national tragedy. Sorry, but changing the definition of marriage is another of those slippery slopes that we really don;t need to step upon again. If couples (regardless of sex) want the benefits of companionship, legal protection, etc. they can legitimately do so WITHOUT forcing the culture to change the historical and time-tested definition of marriage as between one man and one woman. To change that definition, definitely puts our culture once again on a “slippery slope” from which there is no real benefit to be gained for society and culture. God Bless.

    • keith

      great point……and now they get to abort if they dont like the ‘sex’ of the baby……Christians enabling sin is all you need to know. Love them but stand firm in your beliefs.

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