Seventh Day Adventist Kinship International, Inc.
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for gay Adventists since 1976


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News Notes Archives

Posted on the Spectrum: Collegiate Blog

 

Building Blocks of Community: Forgiveness

by Raymond Thompson

This past week, I had the privilege to speak at SDA Kinship’s Kampmeeting in Reston, Virginia. My message was titled, “Building Blocks of Community: Forgiveness” and touched on my personal experience with community and forgiveness as a homosexual male within the Adventist Church. As an active member of the Spectrum online blogging community I have been involved with helping to “build our online community ....| Full article..


NATIONAL PRESS CONFERENCE FOR
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST BOOK

On June 17, the Human Rights Campaign hosted a national press conference for the release of the Seventh-day Adventist book, Christianity and Homosexuality: Some Seventh-day Adventist Perspectives. Edited and produced by the Seventh-day Adventist affinity and advocacy group, SDA Kinship, this inspiring and informative collection speaks to mainstream Evangelical Christians, Seventh-day Adventists, and all people of faith struggling to reconcile sexuality with their religious teachings. Among the speakers were Rev. Dr. Miguel de la Torre, Religion Council Member and associate professor of Social Ethics at Iliff School of Theology. You may view the press conference by choosing from the options below.

View a webcast of the press conference at your required speed:
Dial-up connection
Medium-speed Internet
High-speed broadband

Get your copy today at www.sdagayperspectives.com!

Kinship Member's Art Featured
on Spectrum Magazine Cover

Morris Taylor, now retired and living in California, taught in five Adventist Colleges and Universities in a career that spanned 42 years (biography). He and his partner live in San Francisco where Morris is pursuing a career as a watercolor artist.

Spectrum is a publication arising from a group of scholars among Seventh-day Adventists. The Adventist Forum often expresses liberal viewpoints, if judged by fundamentalist standards. As you notice from the articles featured on the cover (click on the cover photo), this issue contains a major theological discussion of homosexuality and Biblical Texts. You may purchase an annual subscription at: http://www.spectrummagazine.org/spectrum/subscribe. Individual copies may be purchased at: http://old.spectrummagazine.org/store/

In 2005 Morris took a trip to the Holy Land and recorded his impressions of that trip with quick sketches. The one featured on the Spectrum cover is titled, Phillipi at the Time of Paul. Morris says, "I remember the day well. With considerable reverence I viewed the ruins of this ancient city. In the background you see the mountain where Phillip of Macedon mined the gold, the reason for his building the then-new city. The wealth financed the military adventures of his son, Alexander the Great. The pavement in the foreground is where Paul walked with Silas. Nearby is the traditional site of the prison where they sang the midnight duet."

Morris states, "I have expanded my artistic vision to include a variety of joyful experiences. During a pilgrimage to Palestine and Israel I explored my religious core. Simultaneously, I painted the exquisite contours of the human figure. Even my abstract images have become more bold and innovative.

"As an artist, I draw inspiration from the natural world. Painting with watercolor gives me a direct connection between the inspiration of nature and the flow of paint from my brush. This synapse excites me and I want to share that energy. I choose colors for their sensuousness, forms for their expressiveness and textures for their sumptuousness. My recent works explore the juxtaposition of pure colors as well as near monochromatic nuance. I employ classic watercolor technique where the only white is the paper showing through the transparent pigment."

Taylor's portfolio also includs abstracts, flowers, and fly fishing and can be viewed at www.morristaylor.net.


Annual Council session
of the General Conference

A document entitled, "Safeguarding Mission in Changing Social Environments," was voted during the Annual Council session of the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church on October 15, 2007 in Silver Spring, Maryland. That document states, "Legislation concerning employment practices represents one area in which Seventh-day Adventist values and beliefs may be subject to challenge. For example: societies may establish laws providing new definitions for marriage or protecting a range of expressions and behavior associated with gender identity. Seventh-day Adventists believe that marriage is a lifelong union between a man and a woman in loving companionship, and that the Bible makes no accommodation for homosexual activity or lifestyle. The Church does not accept the idea of same-sex marriages nor does it condone homosexual practices or advocacy." | Full article...

 


PUC’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. Colloquy Program

Aubyn Fulton, professor of psychology and an alumnus of PUC, closed the morning’s gathering. “I’m deeply moved by what’s happened this morning,”said Fulton, who is African-American. He recalled his own days at PUC and the underlying, and in some cases overt, racism on campus. He felt that the college’s recognition and apology for the racial tension was a good beginning, though “on the other hand, we have a long way to go still.”

“It made me wonder, who are the people that I am oppressing, that I’m not aware of. I think we all have to ask ourselves, who are the people that we are drawing barriers against and putting on the other side?”said Fulton. “Is it African-Americans, is it Hispanics, is it Muslims, is it Arabs, immigrants, homosexuals? Who are the people that we are making the ‘other,’that we are making to feel outside the family of God? Maybe in a small way we can spend some time thinking about ways we can change that.”Full article...


Annie's Mailbox®, February 6

Dear Annie: I am a male in my early 40s. My mother died a few years ago, and my grandmother shortly after, so life has been difficult lately.

Here is my problem: I'm gay and still in the closet to friends and family. At my age, single and never having dated, people have pretty much put two and two together, but I was raised to think this is not an acceptable lifestyle. If I were to come out publicly, I believe I would be made an outcast by my family and church. Full article...


Street's gay about-face
Once a foe, he will lead a same-sex wedding.

Philadelphia Mayor John Street, a practicing Seventh-day Adventist, and once regarded as Public Enemy No. 1 of the gay community, will preside over his first same-sex commitment ceremony on Saturday, November 24, 2007, in City Hall.

nullBy Marcia Gelbart
Inquirer Staff Writer

Eight years ago, it would have been unimaginable.

But over brunch on a warm Sunday morning last fall, Micah Mahjoubian leaned over and asked his boss a question.

"I told him Ryan and I got engaged to be married, and I'd like him to consider whether he would officiate our ceremony."

John Street, once regarded as Public Enemy No. 1 of the gay community, did not flinch. Yes, he said.

So on Saturday, as the clock winds down on his time as mayor, Street will preside over his first same-sex commitment ceremony, in City Hall.

With 125 guests expected, it will resemble in every way a traditional wedding but will have no legal standing, since Pennsylvania prohibits gay marriage.

Mahjoubian, 33, and Ryan Bunch, 32, will wear matching black tuxedos with orange vests. There will be a 10-person wedding party; each groom's best man happens to be a woman. Mahjoubian and Bunch will say their vows, exchange wedding rings, then leave for a reception at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.

Steven Goldstein, chairman of Garden State Equality, New Jersey's gay civil-rights organization, said he was unaware of another mayor who performed a commitment ceremony in a state where civil unions and gay marriage are illegal.

"Every single time a public official like Mayor Street performs a ceremony," he said, "it strengthens the case for marriage equality."

For Mahjoubian and Bunch, it's as much a political statement as a show of their love before family and friends.

For Street, who has performed fewer than 10 weddings as mayor, it's anything but.

"Micah is my friend. He has been in my campaign and has been in my administration for eight years," Street said. Currently, Mahjoubian is his deputy secretary of external affairs. "I've come to respect him as a person, and if this is something he would like for me to do, then I'd like to do it for him."

But the 64-year-old mayor, a practicing Seventh-day Adventist, was also clear - four times in a 30-minute interview last week - about what the ceremony is not:

"It's not marriage. It's not real marriage. They can't be married. . . . It's not a religious ceremony. I mean, it's not really marriage."

However it's regarded, Street's decision to officiate seems to cap a personal journey of sorts in regard to gay men and women.

Through most of the 1990s, Street as City Council president strongly opposed legislation to provide city benefits to the same-sex partners of city employees. It would cost too much, Street said at the time: "Taxpayer dollars should not be used to support relationships such as these that mimic traditional family relationships."

In 1998, the city did adopt the domestic-partnership ordinance; it was Street's first defeat as Council president.

As he began his mayoral campaign the next year, many in the gay community vilified him, passing out "Stop Street" bumper stickers. It was, Mahjoubian recalled, "anybody but John Street."

The gay community was "right to be apprehensive about me as mayor," Street said. "I had not supported some things that were important to them."

But once elected, many of the same activists said, Street immersed himself in their community.

"He immediately made it clear he welcomed openly gay people serving in his administration. He formed a mayor's commission on sexual minorities. He appointed a member of the community to be a liaison on his staff," said Malcolm Lazin, who in the general election supported Sam Katz, Street's GOP opponent.

As Council president, Lazin said, "he led a somewhat, at least, insular life in terms of interfacing with the gay community. As mayor, I think, he really did want to be the mayor of everyone."

Street supported several gay-related issues - including providing a strong defense of the domestic-partnership ordinance, which a conservative activist was trying to have court toss out.

"By the time 2003 came, people were a lot more comfortable with me as a mayor," Street said.

He declined to elaborate on any personal change he experienced. But some insight into his views was recorded in an e-mail he sent to Mark Segal, his friend and publisher of the Philadelphia Gay News. (The e-mail surfaced after federal agents seized Street's BlackBerrys on Oct. 7, 2003, after an FBI bug was found in his office's ceiling.)

On Sept. 13, 2003, he wrote Segal:

"The past 3 1/2 years have been a great learning experience for me. Thanks to you . . . and many others I have broadened my horizons, expanded my understanding and set aside some bias and prejudices I previously did not even know I had. I have not changed unless you call growing in wisdom and understanding 'change.'"

In his second term, Segal and others said, Street only strengthened his ties to their community. He held an inaugural ball to raise money for Center City's William Way Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center. In 2005, he spoke at an unveiling ceremony for a historical marker at Independence Hall recognizing the work of gay and lesbian activists.

"He turned out to be a better friend to our community than I expected," said Peter Salometo, president of the local Log Cabin Republicans, a gay and lesbian grassroots organization.

While some people might dismiss Street's outreach as political, Segal views his decision to officiate at Mahjoubian and Bunch's ceremony as "from the heart. . . . I think the mayor is doing it out of respect, and in his own mind is making amends for some of the damage he might have created."

Mahjoubian, who in his final bachelor days last week was busy conferring with Street about how the mayor would lead the ceremony, knows it will have no legal meaning.

No matter. "To me, this is like a 'Nixon goes to China' thing," he said. "He came in as a mayor that a lot of people in our community were skeptical of, and yet he is going out able to accomplish more than anyone thought."

Contact staff writer Marcia Gelbart at 215-854-2338 or mgelbart@phillynews.com.


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4/9/2007 © copyright 2002 SDA Kinship International, Inc.