Adventist
The Adventist Church’s Denial Is Deadly For African LGBTI People
Last week, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni signed into law a bill that imposes 7-year-to-life sentences for same-sex intimacy, 7-year sentences for those who perform same-sex marriages, and 5-7 years in jail for people and NGOs accused of “promoting homosexuality” or seeking support through the internet or local religious ministers. Once dubbed the “Kill The Gays” bill, it’s now the “Jail the Gays” bill.
Advocates of compassion and human dignity, including the organization I serve, Seventh-day Adventist Kinship International (SDA Kinship), have spent the last four years challenging this law. SDA Kinship is a fully affirming organization extending unconditional love to LGBTI people who are current and former Adventists and their families.
Our denomination is one of the largest Protestant denominations in Uganda, and a growing number of Adventist converts worship in East Africa.
This outrageous law has now been signed, and our church should have unambiguously condemned the stigmatization and criminalization of a vulnerable minority. Instead, its latest letter to SDA Kinship erroneously claimed that the Ugandan bill had been vetoed and referred us back to the church’s 2012 statements:
“This statement applies by extension to other parts of the world where similar measures have been or are being taken against the LGBT community,” says Orville D. Parchment, assistant to General Conference President Ted Wilson.
The Seventh-day Adventist church could be using its influence in the region to quell homophobic attitudes and laws, but instead, it has remained silent in the face of oppression, discrimination, and violence. Instead, the church is planning a summit in South Africa that will only further marginalize vulnerable populations on the African continent.
The Adventist church should be outraged about this law—but it is not.
In December 2012, SDA Kinship asked the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists to respond to the proposed bill “in a Christ-like way” and clearly refute the bill’s threats to LGBTI Ugandans’ life, liberty, and security of person. Church administrators eventually rejected a local church leader’s support for the bill, but they did not stand up for LGBTI Ugandans or explain why imprisonment and execution don’t show Christian compassion.
Furthermore, this law will not help public health workers, protect children, or support the public health mission of the church in the region. UNAIDS and international HIV/AIDS charity AVERT reports that Uganda is the only East African country whose HIV rates are increasing, and the main modes of transmission there are unprotected sex and mother-to-child.
Even before the bill was passed into law, Ugandan LGBTI people have been verbally abused and maligned by their president, and Ugandan civil society groups are actively being threatened by informers and newspaper harassment. Yet the Adventist church believes its past comments are enough to challenge Uganda’s legislation and “by extension,” any other anti-LGBTI law enacted anywhere else in the world.
We conclude that the Seventh-day Adventist church—our church—has no intention of condemning Uganda’s “Jail the Gays” bill.
Nor does it seem willing to condemn the US evangelical influence, anti-LGBTI religious rhetoric, and falsified science that fueled the passage of this legislation. We have urged our church to “affirm the human dignity, liberty, equality, and non-discrimination of all Ugandans by publicly advocating for the safety of those put at risk by this outrageous law and by taking specific actions to provide physical protection for individuals where it may be needed.” It has not.
Not only has the Seventh-day Adventist Church refused to challenge anti-LGBTI legislation, it’s also preparing a summit for church ministers and administrators on what it calls “alternative sexualities” in Cape Town, South Africa, in a few weeks. The conference, In God’s Image: Scripture, Sexuality, and Society, isn’t open to the public, and offers attendees a single, non-affirming perspective on non-heterosexual orientation and LGBTI lives.
SDA Kinship has worked with and for LGBTI current and former Adventists since 1976 and has members from more than 80 countries worldwide including Uganda, Nigeria, Russia, and India, yet our church hasn’t invited one member of SDA Kinship to attend the conference or speak to delegates about our community’s faith, experiences, and families.
No one scheduled to present at this conference is an authority on our lives, but we’ll be their topic of conversation for four long days.
It is dangerous for our church to organize such an echo chamber for conversations about sexual and gender minorities when LGBTI Adventists on the very same continent are at risk for beatings, prison terms, and mob violence. I can’t fathom why my church is spending so much money and effort to transport delegates who agree with the “company line” on sexuality and gender to a continent where several countries are passing brutal anti-LGBTI legislation.
The Adventist church has consistently excluded SDA Kinship from conferences like this one and has sought to avoid having any contact with the Seventh-day Adventist lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community or our relatives and friends. We cannot be silent about this un-Christlike treatment.
We’ve published a letter we sent conference participants, GC President Wilson, and Vice-President Mwansa three weeks ago in the same spirit of transparent dialogue that we so wish our church would use with us.
They haven’t yet responded to us.
We respect our members enough to honor their consciences about their faith and what they believe God requires of them in this life. Some have chosen committed relationships, some have built families with children, and others are celibate; all must be convinced in their own mind as the Lord leads them. We believe that love is worth celebrating, and we support all of our members as they grow in grace. We wish our church would do the same.
Being silent in the face of oppression is complicity. Excluding key voices and perpetuating harmful stereotypes isn’t dialogue, and in the context of the extreme anti-LGBTI legislation just signed into law, it’s dangerous.
Image by R. Otieno via SDA Kinship
Comments (6)
Carolyn Parsons
One of the most troubling
One of the most troubling breakout sessions for Wednesday March 19 is presented by Peter Landless, one of the leaders of the SDA church on health issues. The title is “Alternative sexualities a disorder or a choice”. The idea that there is to be a healthy discussion based on premises that have been rejected for years in the mental and medical health fields is absurd; though it sadly represents the church’s official views.
Daneen A. Akers
Thanks so very much for this
Thanks so very much for this powerful piece. As someone with deep ties to the Adventist church, I am ashamed my church hasn’t spoken up already in the face of this legislation. And it’s appalling that LGBTI Adventists are being excluded from sharing their stories and perspectives from a summit that’s entirely about “ministering” to this very demographic. As Yolanda says, “Being silent in the face of oppression is complicity. Excluding key voices and perpetuating harmful stereotypes isn’t dialogue, and in the context of the extreme anti-LGBTI legislation just signed into law, it’s dangerous.”
Keisha McKenzie
Thanks to the Believe Out
Thanks to the Believe Out Loud team for publicizing this story. I can only hope that as more people learn about this situation, the international Adventist community will be inspired to be more responsive to, more engaged with, and more concerned for the well-being of human beings no matter who they are or where in the world they live.
It has saddened me to see my world church defer again to law and custom as if what is legal and majoritarian is necessarily also ethical, sustainable, and good. We talk a good game about having a higher and more humane morality–so where is that morality when people are actively endangered?
May God help us learn from our past silences in Germany, the USSR, the Jim Crow US, the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and Sudan, and in India, Russia, Nigeria, and Uganda today.
Andrew
It’s a rock and hard place
It’s a rock and hard place scenario, while globally we need to condem the hate laws, locally, stepping in against the law may be seen as being in breach of those laws, criminalising adventist will not help anyone, lest of all any Underground Railroad that may start
Rena Otieno
My sadness does not stop when
My sadness does not stop when I read and see that the very people, the very church I hoped loved most seems to hate most. Hate me most that even though they are holding a meeting in my part of the universe and talking about me they vehemently, silently like cowards refuse to invite any of us to attend. what are they so afraid of? the lies they are going to tell each other about us?
When I pay taxes I have a right as a tax payer and as a citizen of that country to speak up. I’m a tithe payer of my church, I’m a Seventh Day Adventist yes I have a right to say what I feel and how I feel. I pray that someday very soon our leaders will listen to us and other then listen condemn unnecessary deaths and tortures that come with the terrible laws against LGBTI people.
Yes I write with sadness because it’s not Just Uganda or Nigeria it is a threat to many more countries and Kenya my country might not be safe in future if our leaders are unwilling to open their mouths in public and a shame the devil.
Christina Dalton
Does not everything depend on
Does not everything depend on our interpretation of the silence around us?
Lawrence Durrell
SDA is the religion of my childhood, and my family. It hurts and frightens me to read these words. What is driving the un Christ like decisions made by the church ? A Christian church must NEVER side with hate despite what a persons personal biases may be or not be. I will pray that love and light prevail during this conference and dark time for the SDA church ,but it appears it is not wanted there.
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