Friday, April 04, 2014

Another "sad but not surprising" ABofC moment

It's a "breaking story" today in Anglican News circles as Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby -- in a radio interview -- tied the persecution of African Christians to the fuller inclusion of LGBT people in "the western church." And here we go again.

The Anglican News Service story is here.
The Guardian report is here.
And Episcopal Cafe is on the story here.


My reaction: Sad but sadly not surprising.

The sad part is, how can our hearts not break when members of our human family fall victim to the scourge of sectarian violence?

And yet, how can we remain blind to the reality that being blackmailed into bigotry against some members of the human family only serves to feed the pathology of demonization of "the other" throughout the human family?

The "not surprising" part is that this is the same kind of rhetoric we have been getting for years from the leadership of a Church of England that seems incapable of leading.

Where is the lament from the ABofC for LGBT youth who choose suicide over bullying? For those who live in fear of arrest or assault because of their sexual orientation or gender identity? Or for those who are dying the slow death of internalized homophobia not only condoned by but contributed to by "the church."
 
The prophetic response to the tragedy in Nigeria would be refusal to allow those inflicting violence to frame the debate and a renewed, articulated commitment to work to form alliances across differences to respect the dignity of every human being.

Instead, we get from Canterbury this pathetic response, once again making LGBT people the sacrificial lambs on the altar of sectarian politics.

La lucha continua -- the struggle continues. Kyrie eleison.


1 comment:

JCF said...

Hear, hear.

I just know I'm going to end up on the receiving end of secular LGBTs who say this kind of victim-blaming is par-for-the-Christian-course.