Monday, March 28, 2016

Banning Sexual Conversion Therapy

homo-therapyAs the Executive Director and on behalf of the Board of Directors of Grace Rivers Ministry, I’d like to make the following statement regarding the banning of Sexual Orientation Conversion Therapy.

At Grace Rivers Ministry, we believe that a person must make healthy, authentic, and respectful decisions about how they will act upon their sexual desires. We believe people should be given the freedom by loved ones, the culture, and religious institutions to make those decisions without condemnation or coercion within appropriate limitations such as rape, pedophilia, sex slavery or sexual acts that will emotionally or physically damage another person. We also believe that a person considering marriage to a person who has a different sexual orientation should do so with great caution, counsel, and honesty with themselves and the one they are considering marrying.

We know that within religious culture there is vast disagreement as to what the Bible says or doesn’t say about homosexuality or transsexuality. Due to these diverse perspectives we believe a person should also have the freedom to believe and to follow their religious convictions in their actions and sexual relationships. However, we do not believe that a person’s sexual orientation can be changed through counseling, conversion therapy, Reparative Therapy or religious practices such as deliverance, or exorcism.

We believe that messages that communicate that someone’s sexual orientation can be changed through such processes or that one’s orientation should attempt to be changed to conform to society or religious belief can be tremendously harmful. At times these messages or practices can even be toxic to a person’s sense of self and psychological well being.

It is also our experience that when a person marries someone with a different sexual orientation (“Mixed Orientation Marriage”) that this marriage is destined to have great complications including the probability of divorce in time. We advise an honest evaluation of the potential effects prior to making the decision to enter into a mixed orientation marriage.

We stand against counseling practices aimed at changing one’s sexual orientation. It is our conviction that it is far better to provide support, counsel, and mentors to help people accept their sexual orientation as it is. It is within these supportive actions and relationships that we believe a person can far better make healthy and appropriate decisions as to their sexual practice and relationships.

Psychological problems, addictions, unhealthy relationships and the potential for suicidal ideations and actions can come as a result of coercion to change, or condemnation for individuals whose sexual orientations are different from the hetero-normative. When youth struggle with accepting their homosexuality or transsexualism and they do not have healthy and supportive mentoring, this can delay their emotional and sexual development causing immature, harmful and potentially damaging consequences.

I have personally been negatively impacted and I’ve experienced the consequences brought about by sexual conversion therapy. I also have led hundreds of men and women through sexual conversion therapy over a period of two decades. I’ve seen the harm and painful outcome of this inappropriate attempt to alter or change a person’s sexual orientation or identity.

We believe that sexual conversion therapy should be considered harmful, destructive, and should be banned as the toxic practice that it is.

John J. Smid, Executive Director
Board of Directors, Grace Rivers Ministry
www.gracerivers.com
jjsmid@gracerivers.com

BornPerfectWe support of the Born Perfect campaign. NCLR (National Center for Lesbian Rights)  has launched #BornPerfect: The Campaign to End Conversion Therapy in the next five years by passing laws across the country to protect LGBT kids, fighting in courtrooms to ensure their safety, and raising awareness about the serious harms caused by these dangerous practices.

Conflicting Message With the Word "Change"

I saw a link to an interview with Jackie Hill, a professed Ex-Lesbian. It's titled "Ex-lesbian Spoken Word Poet Slams Macklemore’s Anthem ‘Same Love’ for Claiming Gays Can’t Change." I was quite disturbed because of the message of eternal damnation for homosexuality, and the mixed messages about the concept of change.
In the lyrics of Macklemore's song he says:

I Cant ChangeAnd I can't change
Even if I tried
Even if I wanted to
And I can't change
Even if I tried
Even if I wanted to


Macklemore's  lyrics communicate the plight that so many have lived as they've tried their hardest and in faith, to change their sexual orientation.

For over twenty-five years I heard and taught the message “you can change” in connection to homosexuality. Thousands of people were deceived including myself due to an unclear message of what the word change means. Many, if not most us believed it meant we could experience an eradication of our homosexual desires. We were taught God could to anything, and if we believed in faith, God just might give us our miracle. So, we desperately sought to find changes in our sexual orientation. I believed that I would experience a damaged relationship with God if I didn’t find the change I looked for. I sought deliverance, counseling, prayer healing, and I spent $30,000 and invested most of my adult life seeking this kind of change. I found no change at all.

Very often the motives for people like me to experience such desperation was a theology that taught that someone who was homosexual would die an eternal death at the hand of God’s righteous judgment for what we called homosexual sin. I believe this theology is fraught with problems. If that were true, then habitual gossips, slanderers, and others would also find their eternity in jeopardy.

Jackie says in her article, “she saw that she "deserved Hell" for her lifestyle” She then goes on to say, “If God chooses not to change my desires, he has promised to give me his Holy Spirit that will help me flee from them.”

“I actually started to consider hell in exchange for her being my wifey,” Hill said in her poem. “Then one day the Lord spoke to me. He said, ‘She will be the death of you.’”

Jackie seems to believe she will lose her eternity because of being actively gay. It appears that her motivation to suppress her lesbianism is due to that intense fear. And yet, she has not found the changes that she says can occur and “slams Macklemore’s anthem ‘Same Love’ for claiming gays can’t change.” This is deceiving, and for some who experience homosexuality, it is potentially dangerous to their relationship with God because it conveys that someone can change their sexual orientation and yet Jackie speaks in her article as though she herself has not experienced that change.

This message also sends parents and loved ones into spiritual tailspins in fear that their children will also go to hell if they don’t change. This theology therefore beings destruction to the relationships between gay people and those they love because they fear hell for them.

The truth is people do not change their sexual orientation. Jackie has not. God does not condemn anyone to hell for being gay, or even for having a gay relationship. Jackie believes that could happen. People can make choices as to how they will respond to being gay. They may choose, as Jackie did, to live a celibate life. But let's not call that change. I call that personal choice. God will not abandon us no matter what is chosen. Neither will He abandon any of us for our actions.

I hope that at some point, Jackie will find the true freedom within  God's intense love for her and that she will find freedom from shame and fear that God will snuff her out if she doesn't act right.

I Oppose Sexual Conversion Therapy

JohnSmidPensiveB&W#1I was involved in Love In Action for twenty-two years and served on the board for Exodus International for eleven of those years. I entered the ministry with the hope that as self proclaimed experts in their field, they could help me to eradicate homosexuality from my life. It was my belief that somehow through those that ascribed to being professionals in conversion therapy, they would have the answer for my search to find what they said was "freedom from homosexuality.

What I found was further shame and an ongoing message that I needed "healing" from "issues" that may have led me to be gay to begin with. So, after leaving ExGay ministry I have finally come to see that being gay is not something that I need healing from. Rather is is something I needed to accept about my life and embrace the truth. It has been in embracing this truth that I have finally feel the best emotionally and psychologically that I have ever felt in my life. I am more emotionally stable than I've ever been. I believe in myself, have tremendously decreased anxiety and I have a far more balanced sense of my whole being than ever.

Through my attempt to gain the healing I believed I needed, I was told that I had an intimacy disorder, that I struggled with misogyny, and that my wounded childhood caused me to have unmet emotional and psychological needs that I used to somehow attempt to repair my same sex deficit. The anxiety that I lived in while I believed I was sick and needed healing was an underlying reality for all of the years I embraced ExGay thinking.

I came to realize that Sexual Conversion Therapy was at the core of my imbalances and anxiety. It contained the message that I was sick, unhealthy, imbalanced, and that I needed healing for sexual brokenness. This was at the core of the anxiety and shame filled thinking that plagued my every day life. I have found it interesting, if not amazing, that today as I've accepted myself as a gay man I no longer struggle with any signs of an intimacy disorder, nor the psychological imbalances that I experienced all through those years. I no longer expend the internal energy attempting to cover up the shame that seemed to be a predominant factor in my life. I'm no longer wishing I would die early so as to not have to live in the pain of a broken life that seemed to never be healed.

I am a free man as Christ promises we can be through a relationship with Him!

For this reason personally as well for all of those who have had similar circumstances I stand with this group of nine others in a public statement against Sexual Conversion Therapy (and other terms for it such as Reparative Therapy).

This is our public statement:

Former Ex-Gay Leaders Unite in Opposition to Conversion Therapy


BuzzFeed did an exclusive article about our statement. (click here for article)

Another post by Daniel Gonzales (click here for article)

I'd Really Like to Hear.......

"Being willing to change allows you to move from a point of view to a viewing point - a higher, a more expansive place, from which you can see both sides."
Thomas Crum

be-willing-to-changeAs I read all of the posts about gay marriage, Christianity, homosexuality, ExGay stories, and the deep struggles of so many gay men and women to reconcile their lives with their homosexuality I find such a diverse selection of beliefs and convictions. Frankly, I’d love to hear this sometime:

“I’m an evangelical Christian, I believe in the Bible and its’ messages for our lives. I’m truly listening to the life stories of my LBGT friends. I’m trying to understand what it may be like to be a person of faith and gay."

"For the sake of my LBGT friends, I’m truly praying, seeking, and considering whether or not I’ve been wrong in my understanding of the Bible and its teaching on homosexual relationships. Until I completely understand what that is, I’ll love them, support them, and keep searching with an open heart.”

One of the first things I realized about four years ago is that there are extremely diverse teachings on homosexuality and the Bible. Men and women of scholarly research and knowledge have come to differing conclusions. Straight scholars, LBGT scholars, pastors, teachers and others disagree on the true teaching on this matter and what the Bible says and doesn’t say about same sex relationships.

This realization caused me to begin to rethink all of this for myself. I had taught against gay relationships for over twenty years with great conviction. But admittedly, I had only read or studied this from one perspective and believed I had no need to look any further. I held fast to believing the matter had been researched enough and that scholars much more learned than I am believed it to be a settled matter and there was no need for further discussion on it. I took on their convictions and held tightly to them.

When I found the diversity of belief to be coming from equally knowledgeable and experienced men and women I had to humble myself and begin to ask the harder questions. Had I been wrong? Was my dogmatism stemming from my own convictions and research, or was I just repeating what I had heard. Was my teaching a mere repetition of rhetoric that came from the culture of faith I had associated with?

I find there are far too many others just like myself. Those who believe they need to stand firm against homosexual relationships and gay marriage just because they had been taught that is the way they should believe.

I’m challenging those who really have never been open to reading or studying this matter from a different viewpoint. I'm asking if you might be willing to open up your hearts and minds to see differing views and to ponder – "Have we been wrong?"

I won’t deny, I now believe I was wrong. I now hold to a belief that gay men and women should be allowed to embrace and enjoy the intimacy of a committed relationship, and marriage if they so choose to make it a legal entity. The changes came as I was challenged to research it for myself and to open my own mind and heart to asking the harder questions.

Sure, I’m now in a committed gay relationship as a result of my convictions changing. But this is not why I’ve changed my perspectives four years ago when I did. Things changed when I reluctantly attended a six hour workshop on the Bible and homosexuality. I did have somewhat of an open mind when I went, but I was also skeptical to listen to the different views that were going to be presented. As a result of the information presented I began to read through the Bible on this issue for myself.

When my heart began to believe differently, I wasn’t looking for a gay relationship for myself. I began with an openness to validate the pain and suffering that so many of my gay friends had gone through. I listened to their hearts for the first time without judgment that their homosexual inclinations would lead them into sin if they acted upon it. As I listened, the new information I was digesting was validated. Their stories, and life experience resonated in what I was willing to consider. I could now see that the passages I had long believed to condemn homosexual relationships were not saying what I believed they had said at all! I was shocked and also somewhat frustrated about what I had been taught because I could now see that I had been wrong and believe that others were too.

I understand that there are those who have convictions different than mine. I'm not claiming that I have the definitive answers. If I did, I'd be as wrong as I was before. I have my own convictions and truly want there to be freedom for others to believe differently. I would just like to see more people grasp that this matter isn't as much of a sure things as once thought.

I believe that the faith community is now in a deep quandary and changing because some of the brave few are actually asking themselves the question, "Have I been wrong?" Can we look at this with an unbiased eye to see what is really said in our Bible and how to apply the wisdom and teaching of Jesus to this matter today in our contemporary culture? Can you honestly come to a place of willingness to affirm a gay relationship within the faith of Christ if you find you've been wrong?

I've Changed Religions

religion

I’ve been pondering my spiritual history this week and came upon a dramatic realization. I’ve changed religions!

I grew up in the Catholic tradition. When I was a kid at school, we’d often talk around the school about what religion we were. Some were Baptist, others Lutheran or Presbyterian and I was Catholic along with some others. We knew our beliefs differed and really thought of our religions as major differences in our practices and where we attended church on Sunday. We didn’t consider ourselves as being Christians in a larger context. We also didn’t separate from one another; we just went to church somewhere different on Sundays.

As I grew up, I made the decision to stop going to church. When I got close to thirty years old some friends from high school talked with me about being “born again” and that Jesus was the focal point of their lives today. They really seemed convincing and passionate about their new religion. Both of them were Catholics when we were in school. Although I was curious about their new enthusiasm I wasn’t ready to go back to church.

About a year later I discovered a church that I was interested in. A new friend introduced me to it and said it was “non-denominational”. That was something new for me and I embraced the freedom that seemed to come along with not being labeled in any religion. But I soon found out it was Assembly of God and that it was in fact associated with a specific denomination but by that time, I had connected with the people there and didn’t care that we were Assembly of God.

From there I changed churches several times to belong to Charismatic independent churches, Presbyterian churches, and even Baptist churches. Throughout my church transitions it seemed most of us considered ourselves Christian and not necessarily a specific denomination. We connected on some basic tenants of belief and even went to events together under the cover of being Christians.

We held tightly to certain beliefs and soon I discovered there was an us vs. them attitude. We were saved, and there were people that weren’t. It was our responsibility to evangelize others to help them come to our side, our beliefs so that they could be saved too. I began to see the unsaved people around me as somewhat of a threat to my religion in that I was taught that they were of the world and I needed to be careful not to be tempted to fall away from my faith through associating with them without caution.

Then there were those who “fell away” from the faith. They were people who’s behaviors or beliefs were incongruent with what we, as Christians, believed. I was taught that the Bible said there were times when we needed to disassociate with some people who had fallen away in order to protect our fellowship and to allow them to find a life lesson that may bring them back to our side again.

In my journey I came to a place where I began to question some things that I had been taught. I held my questions tightly to my chest as I believed I would be challenged if I believed anything other than what I was taught I must believe in order to be close to God and others. Fear entered my spiritual journey. Fear that I could be wrong and lose God, fear that I could be ostracized by those around me if I began to believe differently.

At one point I began to throw my questions out on the table within a close-knit group of friends. I could see the discomfort on their faces as I made comments connecting to my internal questions. But by this time, I wasn‘t willing to stuff my questions back into the secret places of my heart. I truly wanted to know, I wanted to explore. I started to find things about what I was taught that I no longer believed for myself. I saw inconsistencies within the teachings and what I believed about God, what I believed about humanity. I felt a need to be a person of integrity and I could no longer espouse something that I wasn’t convicted to be my personal belief.

I didn’t think my questions were that far out of place. I still believed in the basic tenants of the Christian faith, Jesus, God, salvation, living a good, godly life. But I could tell that my surrounding fellowship of people were becoming more uncomfortable with my questioning mind and some of the conclusions I was coming to as a result of my own searching and discoveries.

At one point I began to search for others who were searching as I was. Through lunch meetings and casual conversation I began to find others that found the freedom to question the status quo. There was great liberty and excitement as I found I could be more connected in my heart and my faith.

One day two men from my regular fellowship contacted me to meet. I agreed and could feel something serious was about to take place. “John, we have come to believe you to be a false teacher, unrepentant, and in rebellion. We must break fellowship with you.” I wasn’t surprised, but the sting of that meeting still resonates within my heart. A group of people that I was closer to than anyone in my life at that time had made the decision that they could no longer speak with me. There was a warning of impending doom in my life if I continued down my path of deception.

I felt peace about the event as I’d come to a place where I didn’t believe all of the same things as they did and the changes in my own convictions brought deep discomfort in being around them anyway. It was right to separate even though it came through a measure of discipline from their perspective.

I was now free to continue my search for truth, for beliefs that were consistent with who I am and how I personally believe. I realized that things weren’t really changing for me as I had thought. Many of the beliefs that caused problems with my friends were things I had always believed. I realized that in an attempt to conform to the churches I was part of I tried to change my beliefs to their convictions.

I’ve realized that I’ve changed religions. But this has not come without tremendous cost to me personally. The overwhelming majority of people I have known throughout my experience with churches now consider me to be in rebellion, a false teacher, and unrepentant. They have overtly, and covertly disassociated from me. Some of these people I was very close to for many, many years! I thought them to be the best friends I’d ever had. Some of the men were pillars of life for me that I held tightly to for stability and security. No more! They’re gone, separated, standing in the scowling wings of my life. No more happy birthdays, or let’s have lunch. But I understand. I was there.

I was once one of those who scowled at others who had fallen away. Considering them to be in rebellion they were considered a threat to my own journey. I believed that I needed to prioritize protecting myself, and the flock from the likes of them. There weren’t many conversations to seek understanding or to hear their heart. My perception of their behaviors was enough for me to make a judgment about their spiritual life.

Now that I’m on the outside of where I was, things seem so different! I can see my judgment. I realize how many times I felt it important to separate without much concern, as it was what we were taught was the right thing to do. But I can also see how wounding and shaming that practice can be for those targeted for that action. I'm seeing how many of us there are who've been cut off, judged and deeply wounded.

I miss the closeness I felt with those friends but now I realize how much of our relationship was based on performance expectation. I can see how it was conditional based on having the same beliefs. I feel abandoned by many of them and it still hurts when I realize how many friends have acted upon the practice of separation regardless if it were overt or covert.

But, as a person who holds highly to a core value of integrity, I can no longer follow something that I don’t fully embrace. I can not be part of a religion that isn’t congruent with my personal convictions.

I also see how cult-like my former religious practices have been; follow the strong leader, believe the same ways, don’t question things and if you do you’ll be challenged. If your questions go too far you’ll be shamed, judged and kicked out for being rebellious. The fallacy is that if you're a Christian you believe the same thing as other Christians. But we all know, intuitively, that couldn't be farther from the truth. I wonder what would happen if we all became honest about what we truly believe? But, like my experience, there's too much fear of loss if we became honest about that. We'd certainly be judged.

I’m trying to find a new religion. I’m searching for connections with people whom I can connect with based on common journeys or beliefs. But the problem is that I have my own beliefs. I’m discovering that there are no two people who have the identical beliefs. I realize that we each have a spiritual journey to walk, to explore. It's a struggle for sure and there are times when I feel alone.

I’m finding that I can no longer separate myself from others in an attempt to find people who agree with me. I must embrace people as individuals with their own personal convictions even when they don’t agree with mine. I must bring into my life those who disagree with me, who hold to beliefs that are incongruent with mine. If I don’t, then I’m just like I used to be, a person who separates from people who are different.

Yep! I’ve changed religions! I feel guilty because of how I used to scowl at people who said they had their own religion. I used to judge people as trying to make their religion go along with their behavior. I considered their own religion as an attempt to rationalize life into a place they could find comfort.

Now, I realize that there must be freedom to explore! There must be freedom for people to discover their own religion, one that is congruent with their life and belief. But this does not come without a cost. As I write this journey down I continue to discover the wounds, I feel the anguish and would love to spew out of my pain. But that would not be productive and I need to continue to allow the healing from separation to continue. I'm not there yet, but I know how important freedom is and I wouldn't be where I am without having embraced that freedom for myself. I'm more at peace with me. I am living in the reality of the integrity that I believe in so strongly. The moments of pain are less, and shorter in duration. But there are still those times when I feel the prick of hurt. I want to continue to grow so that for one, I never do that to anyone again.

I trust God is big enough for our individuality. After all, we were all made unique, weren’t we? There are no two people who hold to the exact same beliefs. Why not recognize this and embrace life as it is?

Ex-Gay Counsel and Suicide

A man recently wrote to me about the suicide of a common friend. He and our friend once went through the ministry Love In Action when I was the director there. I'm thankful for the opportunity to continue our dialogue even though we have gone many directions since our common place in life. Here's his question:

John, as I’ve processed the suicide of our common friend, I’ve struggled to answer some questions that I’ve been going over in my mind. I believe he repented, but did his involvement in ExGay treatment play a role in his suicide? From what I’ve read it seems some of his closer friends believe that it did. What would you say?

Dear Concerned Friend,
As I look at the circumstances surrounding his passing these thoughts have come to me.

On his FaceBook feed, a friend of his mentioned Exodus (Exodus International, nationwide coalition of ExGay ministries, now closed.) and the negative affects that had on his life. I hadn’t known him personally through the recent years so I frankly cannot say what his process has been. But during this last couple of years it was very obvious that his emotional stability and health has been extremely questionable. He exhibited huge mood swings and apologies often on his posts.

Regarding the ExGay theology and practice, it's face-palm obvious to me now that there have been a tremendously high number of people who participated in ExGay groups suffered deeply from their pleading with God for change to find none.  They have been left with serious fears of condemnation and failure if no success was found in finding freedom from their homosexuality.

I also find that some people have worked through their discouragement and disappointments to a place of resolve, while others have not. I cannot say why some have, and others haven't but without placing any judgment call on it, the facts are the facts. Many have struggled deeply, even some with PTSD,  and continue to do so.

If I attach all of that to our mutual friend’s seeming emotional and mental struggles I can only ponder which came first, his mental instability, or his ExGay therapy. But regardless, it is apparent to me that Jim's spiritual battle with his homosexuality exacerbated his mental instability.

I also wonder if our friend would be alive today if he hadn't endured a culture, a faith construct, and a community that along the way brought a message of change, and therefore condemnation, for his homosexuality. No one can answer that question, but if I take into consideration what I've seen I think it's likely he may be alive today if that weren't the case.

So very few people have found peace while living within a theology that says homosexuality a result of sin and condemned if acted upon. And yet, I've seen, known, and personally experienced, a tremendously high number of people who have found freedom from addictions, anxiety, mental instability etc. when they've reconciled their homosexuality as an acceptable thing along with their faith.

Five years ago, I heard my first life story of a man who tried the ExGay life to find deep discouragement and became disheartened. Afterwards he went through a season of extreme sexual immorality finding himself back at the throne of the grace of God. In his process he reconciled his faith with his homosexuality to find the extremely addictive patterns amazingly gone. Following hearing his story I began to hear others, myriads of others, who had the same experience as this man did. Their true freedom came as a result of the freedom from condemnation for their homosexuality.

I finally had to open my ears and my mind to hear a different message than the one I believed in for so many years. Spending 22 years of my life trying to help men and women find peace and a life of integrity (with horrible success) I finally came to believe that the message I’d been giving was flawed and harmful. While I once believed that peace could only come as a result of eradicating homosexuality from their lives, I've changed my view and my message.

So, in answer to your question, I wholeheartedly believe that the ExGay experience for this beloved man did play a role in his eventual suicide. Even if it was indirectly through the loss of his job, his stint in a mental hospital, and his financial demise. I believe those things were also brought on by his inability to settle his homosexuality and his faith.

And, I also wholeheartedly believe that the grace of God is large enough, and deep enough to see through a person’s struggle, understand it, and accept them into eternal rest and peace. I don't believe for a minute that God rejects those who, through their own discouragement, denounce God. I believe more than ever that God also understands our struggle to understand the deeper spiritual things in life. We are just too finite in our human understanding, God is able to bridge that gap, and I believe God does.

I remember my season as a conservative evangelical (or whatever one might call it) as a time when I spent more time trying to figure out who had lost, than seeing how we'd won. I spent more time living in fear of what I'd do that might be wrong, than seeing God's never ending love permeating all of creation, redeeming eternally. I was more focused on sin than I was on living an abundant life.

And, in the name of our friend who passed on, and so many others, I have the conviction that I must communicate the message of grace to all LGBT people with the hope that someone's life might be restored rather than ended prematurely.

I also must communicate the truth that the message of forced celibacy for LGBT people, and the ExGay line of thinking that God will remove homosexuality, and we’re the failure if it doesn’t go away, is wrong and terribly harmful.

And you said, you believe our friend repented. I believe the practice of repentance is more for your own soul. I think that repentance, the change of mind regarding negative behaviors and thoughts, is something the sets us in position for better things and can in effect, bring us more inner peace. These changes can set our entire life onto a new path.

However, I don't think it changes one wit our position with God. I believe in an all encompassing fully covering grace and that nothing I can do, or not do, will separate me from God. I think that the line of thinking that my decisions, or my actions can separate me from God is part of the larger problem of shame and discouragement.

I hope this helps, my dear friend.
John

A Life Lost to Suicide

bb04fec3aa1dc09590b4dd91583b7db9Throughout the years I was involved in leadership with ExGay ministries those in the LBGT community often said that we were causing suicides. I often dismissed their accusations, as I perceived them to be attempts only to discredit our work. Sadly last week, January 15, 2016, Jim, a man that was in the Love in Action program back in 1994 committed suicide.

In 1994, Love In Action was considering a move away from San Rafael, CA. As we discussed our plans, during Jim's  program time with us, he came to me saying that his church back in Memphis, TN would gladly welcome our ministry there. He introduced us to his church leaders, and as a result, we chose to move the entire ministry to Memphis in December of 1994. At that time, Jim was excited about being involved with an ExGay ministry. He was hopeful that he might find freedom from what he believed was a besetting sin. Jim finished the program, moved with us to Memphis and stayed in the program for a follow up year. He seemed to do well and to be thankful for his involvement.

But, along with so many who were part of the Love in Action program, after they moved on, they evaluated their participation and had mixed reactions. When I reconnected with Jim a couple of years ago I discovered he was really struggling with his life and had lost a great job because he was so discouraged. After twenty years of trying, he found his life was under severe depression. He had not had any change in his sexuality as he had heard could be his experience, and yet he was really trying to maintain his relationship with God. After so many years of hearing messages of shame and guilt about being a gay man, he just couldn’t seem to get over his internal discouragement.

A long time friend of his wrote this upon Jim’s death:

Jim left this life today. I knew him 32 years. We were in school together and moved to Gatlinburg for summer jobs from college. Jim was a survivor of the Exodus program. I blame them directly for this. Christ died for Jim, and Jim loved the Lord. No one can separate us from Christ's love. Thankful, so very thankful we had just spoke on the phone. All my love, Jim.

I've reconnected with close to 200 men and women who were involved with Love In Action during the time I was there (1996-2008) I cannot tell you how many struggled intensely with depression afterwards. As I think back to the overt and covert messages that were communicated through Exodus International and through Love In Action, clearly we are accountable for laying out a message that conveyed that people were broken, deceived and wounded because they were gay. We encouraged them through messages of hope that they would experience change if they believed, followed biblical instruction, obeyed and repented of their homosexual temptations and behaviors.

LGBT people have heard messages like:

  • “If you’re gay, you are an abomination!”
  • “Until you repent, you’ll never find a good relationship with God, or others!
  • “If you’re gay, you must submit yourself to God and God will heal your brokenness.”
  • “You’re gay because you had a negative relationship with your dad, and you were overly enmeshed with your mom, or you were sexually abused.”
  • “You were emotionally dependent on that man that you were so close to. That’s sinful and you have to break that off and can never talk to him again!”
  • “Don’t believe the lies the devil tells you! You are not gay!”
  • "Maybe you could get married to a woman and that will help you to not act upon your homosexual inclinations."
  • "Stay away from anything gay, or connected with your homosexual lifestyle."

Hearing those messages over and over laid out a negative foundation of belief that some people never overcame. These messages were especially destructive since they were connected to one’s spirituality and relationship with God.

But it wasn’t just Exodus leaders that hold accountability for the discouragement that so many within the LGBT community face. I was part of the communities in several churches throughout my years at Love In Action. Exodus messages were not unique, but they are the messages I heard from the pulpits of many of those churches, through the fellowship discussions, and from radio and television venues. Much of the doctrine and theology I had in those days came directly from those who were teaching me how to live the Christian life and how to overcome my sinful temptations towards homosexuality. I heard the messages loud and clear.

I’m so very sorry for all of the ways I was involved in communicating these shaming and erroneous messages. Jim’s life was clearly wounded by them. He never found his freedom in this life. For this, I am deeply grieved.

Jim’s struggle in this life is over, but the horrific and negative effects on Jim’s life while he was here, will be remembered for a very long time through those who knew him and most closely heard his pain. Jim’s sweet temperament, his kind soul, his beautiful voice will also stand out as unforgettable.

We must continue to evaluate how we have dealt with LGBT people wrongly. We must continue to look deeply into ways we have been complicit in shameful, degrading, and accusatory ways we have spoken towards the LGBT community. We must be willing to admit where we have judged LGBT people as being worse, more depraved, and in need of deeper repentance than others.

join_the_fight_against_lgbt_suicide_button-r70f400623e1948cf88320df5785c5651_x7s24_1024How many more beautiful lives are we willing to lose?

An excellent article by a friend, Stephen Long,  on this very struggle.