An Introduction and a Statement
They may seem silly or obvious or inconsequential to you, nevertheless they are real and intense for me. So intense that, as I write this, my hands are shaking and my heart is hammering against my chest. The fear of being vulnerable and then getting hurt fills me as I weigh speaking or staying silent - a fear that pinches my throat and make breathing and thinking difficult. Anxiety over misspeaking rattles inside me as I struggle to find the right words to adequately and accurately express my thoughts and feelings. My fight/flight/freeze instincts are kicking in and I have to consciously keep myself in my chair, will myself to keep writing, and fight my instincts. Instincts that tell me to run away from this post, discard it, or "take a break" (read hide) from it. However, I believe that there is value in doing difficult things, so I shall sit here in my discomfort and ask your indulgence as I struggle to express myself.
The things about which I feel I must speak may seem silly or obvious or inconsequential to you, nevertheless they are real and intense for me. To give appropriate context for why I want to talk about this, I have to say something that I have avoided saying publicly for years now. Here it goes...
*Takes deep breath*
I'm gay.
I can hear that echoing in my mind and in my heart. I have resisted saying so because, for a long time, I didn't want it to be true. I didn't want to have that be a part of me. I wanted to be blissfully and blessedly normal. I thought that, if I denied or ignored it long enough, it would go away. And, for more years than I care to admit, I have hated myself for it. Let me explain why I think this is. To do so, I will have to talk about another part of me that, by all measures, doesn't get along with my sexuality. It is my membership in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Let me provide some context here.
Context And Research
Christianity in the United States
Some estimates show that about 70% of the nation belongs to one Christian denomination or another. This is no real surprise as many of the original colonists came here from their respective countries to practice Christianity the way they believed to be correct. Their views on Christianity and its attending doctrines and practices were, at their core, rigidly holding to old dogma that had been part of Christian culture since the early days of the Catholic Church, including strict rules about the roles of men and women.In the early days of the faith, the leaders set up a way to keep their “flock” in line by creating an “us-versus-them” mentality and encoded it into the doctrine and policy. Many of these polices are fairly clear-cut, detailing what is required to be considered a member according to the doctrine. Other church policies were adopted from the political government for, at one point, the political government adopted early Catholicism as the religion of state. Since the majority of Christian churches find their roots in the Catholic faith, it is safe to assume that many Christian policies and practices are a direct callback to this era.
Later on, Roman law was used as a basis for and heavily influence Canon Law, or the laws and policies of the Catholic Church. Together, these have, “been used as the cornerstone for punitive civil laws of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and into the present day." Laws governing marriage, child custody, military service, employment, housing, insurance, and health benefits just to name a few all have their origins in Roman and Catholic policy books. This fact has led to the entrenchment of Christian culture into nearly every facet of modern US culture.
Christianity, LGBT, and Homophobia
Due to Christianity’s dominance in western culture, the LGBT people have been pushed down and oppressed because of their “unnatural affection” (Romans 1:26-27). Homosexuals and homosexual behaviors, by many Christian sects, are considered abominable (Leviticus 18:22) and, for some more radical sects, they may even warrant the death penalty (Leviticus 20:13).
To be clear, I do not believe that all Christians or Christian groups believe that homosexuals and homosexuality is a punishable offense. There are those who are at least tolerant, many more who are supportive, and there are protections against such drastic actions. However, the fear of persecution still haunts LGBT people when they approach Christianity. For LGBT people growing up under the Christian umbrella, practices and beliefs about homosexuals are well ingrained before they know what they are. They have already swallowed homophobia before they had a chance to inoculate themselves.
The homophobia, which for our purposes here is defined as "the dislike of or prejudice against homosexual people", that is exhibited by Christian culture possibly has very simple and relatively harmless origins. It is possible that, due to the relatively small beginnings of the faith, it became imperative for those within it to reproduce to perpetuate it. This would make homosexuality especially undesirable, as homosexual relationships would not yield children of themselves, and, therefore, homosexual behavior required specific attention and condemnation. Nevertheless, the homophobic patterns within Christian culture are damaging to all people.
Although much research has been done on homosexuality and religion individually, there has been little done on how the two coincide. Christian beliefs about homosexuality contribute to the negative thoughts and internalized homophobia held by many gay men. Bozard and Sanders discuss how, “Christian sexual minority youth frequently experience conflicts between their religious and sexual identities that complicate or prevent utilization of their religion as a source of resiliency." Joshi also notes that “Christian groups have the power to define normalcy” and, therefore, what they say becomes what is acceptable.With these ideas and theories circulating about Christianity’s oppressive nature, many Christians feel they are being picked on by those who support the LGBT and other minority movements. This phenomenon is known as Christian fragility.
My Story
I grew up in an actively Latter-day Saint household. There was never any discussion of “other lifestyles” without their swift condemnation. Therefore, until I was in junior high, I had no idea what “gay” was except that I did not want to be it and the church did not support it. These teachings were accompanied by the modeling of appropriate responses to stereotypical homosexual behavior, which would often become the butt of a joke or warrant commentary such as, “did you see that guy? He was floating so far off the ground!” Circumstances that were considered undesirable would often warrant the exclamation, “that’s so gay!” Perhaps the most damaging message came from a discussion of some sort of homosexual behavior seen on television. Commenting on the show, the phrase, “ugh, it [gay behavior] just grosses me out” was said over and over again. When I asked why, the response was, “it is just gross, disgusting, evil, and wrong.” By 12 years old, I had been programmed to think homosexuality and the people who “practiced” it were not only bad, but evil. This was my normal, and, consistent with research, it was set by my Christian parents. I had begun to internalize homophobia without even knowing what homosexuality was.
This
familial culture made it necessary for me to hide my growing homosexual
feelings. I had become curious about
what “gay” was and, not surprisingly, my parents found pornography on the
computer—another LDS taboo. They needled
me asking if I was gay. However, the
questions were asked in such a way that any answer but the negative would have
been incorrect. These conversations were
also focused around my parents and their needs and not about me. To their credit, they did say that they would
love me no matter what. This gave me
hope that, somehow, everything would be alright. I was still terrified that someone might find
out about me, so I pretended to be straight as much as I could, even without knowing
I was doing it.
Eventually, I got so good at shoving
my feelings down that I managed to hide in the closet so well that I lost
myself. I thought I had “recovered.” I
served an LDS mission and grappled with my sexuality the whole time, and my
missionary work suffered from it. However, after serving the whole two years
without too much of a problem, I
figured I would be OK to follow the LDS template of getting married and having
children. I started dating my girlfriend
from high school and, try as I might, I did not feel comfortable pursuing
anything more than dating. I began
slowly coming out to close friends who I felt I could trust and get their
perspective on my conflicting LDS and LGBT identities. They were kind and full of love. There was also no question as to what they
wanted me to do—maintain activity in the church.
I wanted to hear this because it
made me feel terrible. I wanted to feel
bad, because it was the template I was given for the appropriate treatment of
homosexuals—belittlement and scorn. This
led to a deep-seated self-hatred and negative feedback loop. Consistent with what Bozard and Sanders
found, my religion ceased to be a source of strength for me. Instead, it became an
albatross I hung around my neck to drag me down. I would seek out homosexual pornography,
belittle myself for it, tell my bishop and my pornography addiction specialist
at LDS Family Services who would both belittle me for it, and I felt
terrible. But, it filled an unknown
expectation, and—although I did not get any better and I felt less than
human—somehow that felt right. I felt alone and that I would always be
alone—especially with the secret I was guarding so closely from so many.
It was also about this same time that I met my first boyfriend. I was attracted to him in a way that I never experienced and, although I had felt excited in a similar way before, this time was different. I did not want him to just like me, I wanted him to really like me. When we started dating, I was scared—I had never done anything this against the rules before, and it was thrilling and terrifying. I told my bishop about the kiss I had shared with him and my conflict between my feelings my boyfriend and my feelings for the church. He gave me his “best speech”, released me from my calling, took my temple recommend, called my testimony into question, and told me that the kiss could count as a “whoopsie,” but that everything thereafter would be on my head. I didn’t go back to that ward and was hesitant to go back to church at all.
It was also about this same time that I met my first boyfriend. I was attracted to him in a way that I never experienced and, although I had felt excited in a similar way before, this time was different. I did not want him to just like me, I wanted him to really like me. When we started dating, I was scared—I had never done anything this against the rules before, and it was thrilling and terrifying. I told my bishop about the kiss I had shared with him and my conflict between my feelings my boyfriend and my feelings for the church. He gave me his “best speech”, released me from my calling, took my temple recommend, called my testimony into question, and told me that the kiss could count as a “whoopsie,” but that everything thereafter would be on my head. I didn’t go back to that ward and was hesitant to go back to church at all.
My parents were, understandably, against this decision. They wanted me to follow the teachings of the church, even to a point of "helping" me to comply. Our relationship deteriorated as our perceptions of each other shifted. I felt that, to them, I had become a rebellious child who needed correction and they became punitive and controlling tyrants forbidding me from seeing my boyfriend. Their treatment felt unfair and restrictive when, as a 23-year-old man, I struggled to find my sense of self and establish autonomy. As I pushed back on this treatment, their trust in me dwindled to nothing and they refused to let me see my boyfriend. Eventually, I found myself without a home, felt I had lost my family, felt betrayed by my faith, with very few friends. And, yet, somehow this felt correct. I felt that I deserved this. The homophobia I had been so carefully taught was satisfied with what had happened to me.
Homophobia is not always blatant. It has subtler forms, usually along the lines of, "you're not really gay" or "your feelings are the product of exposure to
homosexual pornography.
Other times it is small comments like “can you not be so obvious about
it?” Or when some say they love me
“despite my sin.” Or when they say they are uncomfortable with me because I am
gay. Or when others discourage me from “acting out” on my feelings. These things resonate
with internalized homophobia, reinforcing what it has taught me.
I had not thought much about how
homophobia has impacted my life until the concept of internalized homophobia
came up in a Reflexive Social Work class last semester. I felt it
resonate in every part of my soul to such a degree, it was as if someone had
banged a gong as I was standing next to it.
I did not immediately know what to do because there were lots of resources available to discuss my LDS and LGBT
identities individually, but hardly any of how these two interacted. How could such shockingly opposite pieces of
me get along? I felt that I was too
LDS to be gay and too gay to be LDS.
What Now
As much as I would like to say that I have a
cure for this systemic homophobia, I have none—none that will affect the wide
and sweeping change that is so desperately needed to help the millions like
me. None that can be implemented to fix
everything all at once. However, I
believe that there is hope—hope that, at some future date, no one else will
have to hate themselves for who they are.
