First, our hope as followers of Christ does not and cannot come in or through the kind of democratic political process that limits us to two choices. Nor can it come in solutions that leave us doing ethics for everyone and that glorify the christologically arbitrary boundaries of the nation-state. I heard a sermon Sunday that's about to pass the Thursday test. The Reverend Sonnye Dixon taught about greatness and turned upside-down this image we've been bombarded with lately that greatness is something achieved by and attributed to winners. Greatness in terms of political, social, or athletic capital in this country is an altogether different thing than the greatness Jesus teaches us about, to love God, love ourselves, and love our neighbors. We may say this and even profess to believe it, but do we really understand?
Second, though the presidential election may be historic for our country, there were other ballot measures that were not. In California, Proposition 8 is on the verge of being declared official. It's not by much, but that doesn't matter because winning and losing doesn't recognize middle ground, at least not when it comes to official public policy. On this one, let's not talk about Jesus, because to talk about Jesus would be a whole different conversation that I've written about elsewhere. To talk about Jesus would be to call the church to account, especially - especially the "peace church" for the violence it has committed against people who are queer. Here instead let's talk about something more American, like freedom maybe.
Now on most days I'll respect those who believe differently and try to hear where they are speaking from. Most days I'd rather have dialogue than debate. But not today. Today I am angry. Today I think those who voted for Proposition 8 in California and Amendment 2 in Florida and Arizona's Proposition 102 and all the other marriage amendments that have passed across the country including in Tennessee (2006) and Kansas (2005), are oppressive, bigoted, unloving, and just plain stupid.
- "People believe in the institution of marriage," Frank Schubert, co-manager of the Yes on 8 campaign (California) said. "It's one institution that crosses ethnic divides, that crosses partisan divides. ... People have stood up because they care about marriage and they care a great deal."
- Jeff Flint: Early in the campaign "I think the voters were thinking, 'Well, if it makes them happy, why shouldn't we let gay couples get married.' And I think we made them realize that there are broader implications to society and particularly the children when you make that fundamental change that's at the core of how society is organized, which is marriage," he said.
- "This has been a moral battle," said Ellen Smedley, 34, a member of the Mormon Church and a mother of five who worked on the campaign. "We aren't trying to change anything that homosexual couples believe or want -- it doesn't change anything that they're allowed to do already. It's defining marriage. . . . Marriage is a man and a woman establishing a family unit."
- The Proposition 8 campaign also seized on the issue of education, arguing in a series of advertisements and mailers that children would be subjected to a pro-gay curriculum if the measure was not approved."Mom, guess what I learned in school today?" a little girl said in one spot. "I learned how a prince married a prince."As the girl's mother made a horrified face, a voice-over said: "Think it can't happen? It's already happened. . . . Teaching about gay marriage will happen unless we pass Proposition 8."
Regarding marriage, I will unapologetically question any claims that marriage as we understand it today is a building block for any society or is an institution that transcends its own continual reinvention. Ask your great grandparents. Read the Bible. Read a history book. The introduction to Stephanie Coontz's Marriage, A History would be an excellent start. As for a moral battle, what about that whole freedom thing? Isn't oppression immoral? Haven't we learned by now that separate but equal is never equal? And my goodness, how fear has polluted the discourse! It reminds me of people calling Barack Obama a Muslim. I don't give a damn if our president is Muslim or our children learn about all kinds of families. This is America.
I heard another sermon just this morning in fact. The preacher talked about grass like in Isaiah 40:6-8. Though it flourishes during the summer, conquering yards and gardens, when fall comes it begins to wither and eventually dies. What seems vibrant and victorious in one moment in history, be it Jim Crow or heterosexual marriage amendments, will die. "We pick ourselves up and trudge on," Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, said. "There has been enormous movement in favor of full equality in eight short years. That is the direction this is heading, and if it's not today or it's not tomorrow, it will be soon."
Now look at this picture. Here are Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon with San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom in the background. This is the first same-sex marriage in California after such marriages became legal in June 2008. At the time of their ceremony these lesbian activists and groundbreakers had been together fifty-five years.
There are a few more things to share. An editorial in the NY Times early last month was written after Connecticut courts decided that civil unions did not provide the same thing marriage did and thus legalized marriage for same-sex couples: "Separate is not Equal."
And in 2004 for a brief stint, San Francisco legalized same-sex marriage. Over 4000 marriage licenses were issued in defiance of state law as the city/county appealed to the Equal Protection Clause. Those marriages were later invalidated by the courts and then gay marriage became legal again last spring also in the courts. I don't know the ins and outs of that process, but there is a song you should listen to. It's by Vienna Teng, and it's called "City Hall." In case you don't make it to the link, here are some words:
me and my baby on a february holiday
'cause we got the news
yeah, we got the news
500 miles and we're gonna make it all the way
we've got nothing to lose
we've got nothing to lose
it's been 10 years waiting
but it's better late than the never
we've been told before
we can't wait one minute more
oh, me and my baby driving down
to a hilly seaside town in the rainfall
oh, me and my baby stand in line
you've never seen a sight so fine
as the love that's gonna shine
at city hall
...
outside, they're handing out
donuts and pizza pies
for the folks in pairs in the folding chairs
my baby's lookin' so damned pretty
with those anxious eyes
rain-speckled hair
and my ring to wear
10 years waiting for this moment of fate
when we say the words and sign our names
if they take it away again someday
this beautiful thing won't change
I cry every time: "Ten years waiting for a moment of fate to hear the words and sign our names, and if they take it away again someday, this beautiful thing won't change..." I'm not sure how many people who voted yes yesterday or these last years have thought about what it's like to not be able to get married; or to wonder if you'll be frowned at because the neighbors know she's your partner too, not just your best friend; or to jump through hoops to combine financial assets; or to find an anniversary card without people on it because the local drugstore doesn't carry any that have a lesbian couple. What if it was you? What then?
We know what it's like, and we know again and again and again. Today we know in an acute way, because they took it away again, whether we live in California or not. I guess the good thing is that our kind of salvation is not theirs to take. A ballot measure will not change this beautiful thing. Beauty will bubble up again. This is not over.
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