Uhhh, there is no such thing as a "gay Christian."
That is like saying "tropical Antarctica" or "square circle."
BR observation
 
 
 
_At evangelical colleges, a shifting  attitude toward gay students_ 
(http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2013/03/30/at-evangelical-colleges-a-shifting-attitud
e-toward-gay-students/) 
 
By Sarah Pulliam Bailey, For CNN
Wheaton, Illinois (CNN)– Combing through prayer requests in  a Wheaton 
College chapel in 2010, then-junior Benjamin Matthews decided to do  something “
absurdly unsafe.” 
He posted a letter on a public forum bulletin board near students' post  
office boxes. In the letter, he came out as gay and encouraged fellow gay  
Christian students - some of whom had anonymously expressed suicidal plans in a 
 pile of the prayer requests - to contact him if they needed help. 
In a student body of 2,400 undergraduates in the suburbs of Chicago, at 
what  is sometimes called the Harvard of evangelical schools, Matthews said 
that 15  male students came out to him. Other students seemed somewhat 
ambivalent about  his coming out, he said. 
No one told him he was wrong or needed to change, Matthews said some 
students  were obviously uncomfortable with someone who would come out as gay 
and 
remain a  Christian. 
“I don’t think most Wheaton students knew what to do because they've been  
given ‘love the sinner, hate the sin’ rhetoric, but they don't know how 
that  plays out in real life,” said Matthews, who graduated in 2011. “They 
would  mostly just listen, nod and say, ‘Yeah man, that’s hard.’” 
As is the case at many evangelical colleges, Wheaton students sign an  
agreement to not have sex outside of marriage, including "the use of 
pornography 
 ... premarital sex, adultery, homosexual behavior and all other sexual 
relations  outside the bounds of marriage." 
On campus, the college _created_ 
(http://www.wheaton.edu/Students/The-Record/Archives/February-22-2013/Refuge-becomes-an-official-group-for-students)
   
an official group in February for students to explore questions of gender  
identity and sexual orientation. The group is intended as a “safe place for  
students who have questions about their sexual orientation or gender 
identity,”  where students may self-identify as LGBTQ. 
But cultural and political changes have created tensions for the academic 
and  student life environment. As more mainline denominations ordain openly 
gay  clergy and more states pass same-sex laws, some gay evangelicals – and 
their  allies - are openly deviating from Wheaton’s official and long-held 
positions.  Well-known Christian author _Rob Bell_ 
(http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/03/19/rob-bell-punches-back-against-claims-of-heresy/)
 , a graduate 
of Wheaton, _came  out in favor_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/greg-carey/rob-bell-comes-gay-marriage_b_2898394.html)
  of gay marriage in mid-March. 
OneWheaton, a group unaffiliated with the college, wants to offer an  
alternative view on homosexuality from that of the evangelical school. The  
group, which is not explicitly religious, wants GLBT students to feel affirmed  
in their sexuality, acting as a support network for students struggling with  
their sexual identity, whether they choose to be openly gay or whether they 
 choose to remain celibate. But leaders of the group say that gay 
Christians do  not need to be celibate to retain their religious identify. 
“For those of you feeling alienated, it gets better,” says OneWheaton’s 
_founding statement_ (http://onewheaton.com/) , signed by  about 700 GLBT and 
straight, alumni, echoing Dan Savage’s national “It Gets  Better” campaign 
for gay youth. “Your desire for companionship, intimacy and  love is not 
shameful. It is to be affirmed and celebrated just as you are to be  affirmed 
and celebrated.” 
A widespread question 
Wheaton is hardly the only evangelical college that’s seeing a growing  
spectrum of responses toward homosexuality among students, alumni and staff. 
Last year, a group at Biola University in southern California came out with 
 posters and a website called Biola Queer Underground. The group describes 
itself  as “like-minded LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and 
queer) students  and allies who have formed a private underground community in 
which we share our  life struggles, as well as our love and support for one 
another.” Biola then  issued a “statement on human sexuality” saying, "God’
s design for marriage and  sexuality is the foundational reason for viewing 
acts of sexual intimacy between  a man and a woman outside of marriage, and 
any act of sexual intimacy between  two person of the same sex, as 
illegitimate moral options for the confessing  Christian.” 
Groups from at least two Christian schools, Eastern University in  
Pennsylvania and George Fox University in Oregon, have formed OneEastern and  
OneGeorgeFox, which launched public websites in 2012. 
About 200 LGBT and straight alumni from California’s evangelical Westmont  
College co-signed a _letter_ 
(http://westmontlgbt.wordpress.com/2011/02/01/9/)  to the student  newspaper 
suggesting they experienced "doubt, loneliness 
and fear due to the  college's stance on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and 
transgender issues." 
Many Christian schools have different regional, historical and 
denominational  ties that keep issues related to sexuality complex and keep 
these 
institutions  from responding monolithically. 
Wheaton’s well-known alumni include evangelist Billy Graham, former Speaker 
 of the House Dennis Hastert and former George W. Bush speechwriter Mike 
Gerson.  To come out at the college, OneWheaton’s organizers say, is to risk 
losing a  network of fellow-minded alumni. 
“Part of OneWheaton is showing that while people are risking their 
networks,  they'll have people they can turn to,” said OneWheaton spokeswoman 
Kristin Winn,  who came out six months after graduating in 2007. 
The married-sex-only agreement that Wheaton students and faculty sign is 
part  of the college’s Community Covenant, which says that students agree the 
Bible  condemns “sexual immorality, such as the use of pornography, 
premarital sex,  adultery, homosexual behavior and all other sexual relations 
outside the bounds  of marriage between a man and woman.” Few students 
self-identify as gay, and if  they do, it has different implications based on 
their 
expressed beliefs and  behavior. Students can self-identify as gay, but college 
officials consider each  student on a case-by-case basis if it comes into 
question.

 
“What matters is the moral understanding of the person and how that matches 
 with our institutional identity and the moral behavior that flows from the 
 understanding. There’s no formula to how this gets applied," said 
Wheaton's  Provost Stan Jones, a psychologist who has written several books on  
sexuality. 
Students who openly deviate from or openly advocate for deviation from the  
covenant may be dismissed from the school, Jones said. 
Alumni say some gay students have been asked to leave or been counseled to  
leave Wheaton. No member of Wheaton would be asked or counseled to leave 
this  institution on the basis of sexual orientation alone, Jones said, and he 
is not  aware of any cases where people were dismissed only because of 
sexual  orientation. 
Jones said it would be difficult to say whether a student who signed  
OneWheaton’s statement would be in open disagreement with the covenant, though  
he is not aware of any student who has left or been dismissed over 
involvement  with the group. “We’re not in a rush to show people the door,” 
Jones 
said. “We  want Wheaton College to be a community where people can wrestle with 
these  issues.” 
The balance, college officials say, is between preserving the theological  
integrity of the school while leaving room for questions. 
“Articulating orthodox Christian theological beliefs and moral convictions  
itself is and ought to be an expression of grace,” said Philip Ryken, 
president  of Wheaton, explaining the college's stance on sexual behavior in 
response to  OneWheaton's emergence. “Those theological principles and moral 
guidelines are  an expression of God’s character and the best way to live.” 
Homosexuality is not a focus at Wheaton more than any other college, said  
Ryken, but culture places a priority on sex. The college does not keep track 
of  the number of students who leave over homosexuality, he said. “There 
are a  variety of challenges that different Christian colleges and 
universities face  from people advocating homosexuality,” Ryken said in an 
interview in 
his campus  office. “OneWheaton has been clear in saying they’re not 
interested in changing  the college, but it remains to be seen what kind of 
influence they desire and  may seek to have.” 
A growing trend 
Evangelical colleges likely face generational differences in attitudes 
toward  sexuality as younger evangelicals develop friendships with people who 
are gay,  says David Kinnaman, president of the Barna Group, a Christian 
market research  firm. 
“There has been a shift from rightness to fairness,” Kinnaman said. “There’
s  a real sense in which their institutional loyalty and their loyalty to  
theoretical morals and ethical choices are trumped by their peer  
relationships.” 
About 40% of evangelicals between the ages of 18 and 29 are likely to say  
homosexuality should be accepted by society, compared to 24% of evangelicals 
who  are older than 30, according to the 2007 religious landscape survey by 
the Pew  Forum on Religion and Public Life. But there is still less 
acceptance of  homosexuality by evangelicals than by other young people. The 
same 
Pew poll  found that 63% of Americans age 18 to 29 say homosexuality should 
be accepted by  society, as do about half of Americans ages 30 to 64. 
As a younger demographic is less opposed to gay marriage, they are also are 
 more likely than before to identify as pro-life. Forty-one percent 
consider  themselves "pro-choice," a record low since Gallup began asking the  
question. 
“During the last five to seven years, there has been a definite uptick in  
interest [in homosexuality],” says Michael Hamilton, a history professor at  
Seattle Pacific. “As evangelicals and the main currency of American culture 
 converge, an increasing number of gay students are going to say, ‘Wait a 
minute.  I don't see a problem.’” 
Last year, students at Seattle Pacific University received student support  
and a faculty letter backing a group’s desire to discuss being gay. Its  
administration approved the request but declined to give it official status. 
In  2010, Abilene Christian University declined to grant official status to a 
 gay-straight alliance. 
Michael Lindsay, president of Gordon College in Massachusetts, said that  
homosexuality is just one of a basket of issues that evangelical schools are  
dealing with now for the first time. 
“Any moral issue dealing with the body gets a visceral response,” said  
Lindsay, who said future important issues will include bioethics, disability 
and  other questions dealing with life. “Because sex is tied in with the 
body,  naturally it’s one of those issues folks will have highly charged  
responses.” 
Facing alternative views 
The Wheaton alumni group, OneWheaton, was initially a private Facebook  
network that went public partly in reaction to an April 2011 chapel service at  
Wheaton featuring Wesley Hill, a gay Wheaton alumnus who says he chooses to 
be  celibate, a path that some gay students and alumni take. Hill wrote the 
2010  book “Washed and Waiting,” about being gay, Christian, and celibate, 
and told  students how he came to his position that sex is between man and 
a woman in  marriage. 
“I found myself convinced of the position the church has held with almost  
totally unanimity throughout the ages, that although many people find  
themselves, through no fault of their own, to have sexual desires for members 
of  
their own sex, this is not something to be affirmed and celebrated, but is 
a  sign that we’re broken, in need of redemption and recreation,” Hill told 
 students. 
“Gay people are not uniquely broken,” he said. “That’s a position we 
share  with every other human who has ever lived or will live. But we are, 
nonetheless,  broken. And following Jesus means turning our back on a life of 
sexual sin, just  as it does for every other Christian.” 
According to a survey conducted by the Wheaton student newspaper in 2008,  
about 5% of students (mostly male) reported having "had a homosexual  
experience." About 56% of students agree or strongly agree that homosexuals are 
 
not welcome at Wheaton, the survey reported. 
OneWheaton is working to change that in some in-your-face ways. During one  
homecoming weekend, the group held a concert featuring Jennifer Knapp, a 
former  contemporary Christian Music musician who came out as a lesbian in 
2010.  “Although I disagree with painting sexual orientation and gender 
identity as a  biblical sin, Wheaton has a right to that interpretation,” Knapp 
said. “But I  don’t know how you can be welcoming but not affirming.” 
Knapp questions whether colleges such as Wheaton present alternative  
theological positions. 
“Whether it’s alcohol or premarital sex, is Wheaton an academic 
institution  willing to present both sides, or is it wanting to churn out 
soldiers 
that  believe exactly the same things they do?” said Knapp, who used to 
identify as  evangelical but now disassociates herself from the movement. 
The college does not typically host speakers who espouse theology that  
affirms same-sex behavior, but it does not forbid such discussion from taking  
place. Administrators say they know that students might end up differing 
with  the college theologically. 
“This is not a place of indoctrination,” said Jones. “This is an 
educational  community. We need to have a high level of patience and tolerance 
for 
students  working through those issues.” 
In many ways, Jones said, students need to be thoughtfully engaging the  
issues. 
“Many students have only heard about homosexuality in the context of ‘
Those  bad people who we must oppose,’” he said. “There are many in our student 
body  who want to engage these issues sympathetically, but there are others 
who are  prone to thoughtless speech that can lean in the direction of 
incivility.” 
At the same time, he said, Christian colleges are facing outside 
professional  and political pressure on gay issues. _Wheaton administrators 
spent 
several months preparing for a 2006  visit from Soulforce_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2006/marchweb-only/110-42.0.html) , a 
group aiming to change 
religious leaders' minds on  gay issues that was co-founded by Mel White, 
who was a ghost writer for some  evangelical leaders, including Pat Robertson 
and the late Jerry Falwell. 
Soulforce members had been arrested at other Christian campuses that ban  
same-sex behavior, but the group had a cordial gathering at Wheaton and 
visited  again last year. 
In 2009, _the American Philosophical Association adopted a procedure to  “
flag” ads from employers_ (http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/11/23/apa) 
 that ban same-sex sexual conduct. 
“I find that extraordinarily ironic for a discipline that prides itself on  
spirited debate about fundamental issues,” Jones said. “You are inviting 
the  erosion of your distinctions if you don’t draw some boundaries.” 
Administrators also are carefully watching court cases related to federal  
funding and hiring practices, where the government could pull funding if an  
institution is deemed discriminatory. 
Faculty are expected to sign the same covenant as students, and those who  
advocate for something contrary to the stated beliefs would be called into  
question, Jones said. 
“If a person disagreed with a clear assertion of the covenant, that has  
implications regardless of their status, even for those who have tenure,” 
Jones  said. In faculty applications, he would consider where a professor 
stands 
on  sexual intimacy as between a man and a woman in marriage, though 
questions about  whether gay marriage should be legal at a state level would 
not 
necessarily come  up. “We don’t ask about their civic views of gay marriage,”
 he said. “I would  not be looking for their policies on a governmental 
policy voting.” 
On the “Day of Silence” in April 2012, about 90 students wearing white  
T-shirts printed with "break the silence" attended a campus-hosted discussion  
about homosexuality, such as whether Wheaton can be considered a "safe 
place"  for gay students. “You are telling LGBTQ students that no matter where 
they end  up on their journey of identity, you care for them, respect them, 
and will  remain their friend,” OneWheaton leaders wrote on a sign-up form 
for students  who wanted to wear T-shirts. One alumnus came out to the rest of 
the group. 
Matthews, the student who came out at Wheaton in 2010 – he now teaches 
middle  school science in Connecticut - wrestles with whether the group 
OneWheaton will  be an effective network since its views are far from the 
college’s 
stance on  sexuality. He said he followed Wheaton’s agreement to refrain 
from premarital  sex during school, but his personal views on the morality of 
homosexuality have  shifted. 
Matthews was attracted to men when he began college but hoped he would 
begin  liking women. 
He considered sexual orientation conversion therapy, which some evangelical 
 Christians embrace but which the American Psychological Association has 
said is  ineffective and could be damaging. After the Episcopal Church 
ordained its  second openly gay bishop in 2010, Matthews began reading more and 
eventually  embraced a theology that suggests gay Christians do not need to be 
celibate. At  one point, he considered becoming an Episcopal priest. 
Matthews said Wheaton was a safe place to come out because he could work  
through both being gay and being a Christian. If he had gone to another 
college,  he said he might have stayed closeted because people might suggest 
abandoning  his faith, something he wasn't willing to relinquish. 
“Quite ironically, had I not gone to Wheaton, I might not have come out,”  
Matthews said. “They weren’t going to say what I presumed people at other  
colleges would tell me, which is, ‘If you have conflict between your faith 
and  sexuality, drop the faith.’ No one at Wheaton was going to tell me  
that.”

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