Tuesday, January 27

Sunstone Essay

As you might have guessed, things have been pretty busy lately with school and flying all over the place for doctoral interviews. 

To tide you over I wanted to post the final version of what I wrote on Prop. 8 for Sunstone Magazine in December.

It is an adaptation of my post here a few months ago, so it's not required reading. ;)
I Love You, Period.

I tried to remain as neutral as possible on the gay marriage debate, passing it off with, "Well, I don't live in California, so I don't have to make a decision." However, as the saying goes, "the personal is political."

My sister is gay. That has made this debate personal.

Just a few months ago I was talking with my sister’s friend (who is also gay) defending my LDS friends who believe the “I love you even though you’re gay” sentiment. I was arguing that one could love a gay family member and not accept (or even like) his or her sexuality.

My thinking shifted when she explained that for many people (possibly even me), their sexuality is a fundamental part of their personhood. So to truly love any kind of person, gay or otherwise, you cannot say, “I love you even though…” you have to say, “I love you, period.”

If my sister is gay, and God made her that way just as He made me straight, then I love that she is gay. For me, to be against gay marriage is to be against my own sister. How can I tell her, "You know, I love you but I really hate this particular fundamental part of who you are." I refuse to do that.

If that attitude is in conflict with the teachings of my faith, then it is something that I will have to just sit with, perhaps for the rest of my life. I love my sister too much, and I love my faith too much (which, paradoxically, has become more personal and more inspiring than ever in my life).

I hope my friends and family who disagree with me will be understanding and not decide that I have lost my testimony or am not following the prophet, both of which miss the point. There are simply some things you cannot reconcile or explain into neat categories. You just have to sit with them.

The best I can do is to allow this tension to make me a little softer, a little more humble, a little more patient. A little more like the One I claim to follow.

7 comments:

  1. Thank you for writing this. My brother and I are gay, LDS, and live in Cali... it hurts so much when people repeatedly tell me I love you BUT...

    Thank you for being bold enough to post this. you are the type of example we need in the LDS community... and you give guys like my brother and I hope that someday our LDS friends will understand.

    PS
    I highly recommend Carol Lynn Pearson's Book: No More Goodbyes. It has been a tremendous help to my family, especially my father.

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  2. PS... I has assumed you were female... (this assumption comes from years of seeing guys react negatively while girls being more empathic to gays) I then realized your a guy...
    I applaud you even more for being part of a small small minority of LDS men who are so compassionate to those with this trial. thanks again...

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  3. Thanks for your kind words NYC. It means a lot. It may be one small step at a time, but hopefully the culture will continue to evolve for the better.

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  4. When you apologize, when you say you love, you always have to stop with the statement and avoid qualifiers.

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