Posts Tagged ‘Christian’

Day 16: Being Your Authentic Self

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Today is Day 16 of the Thirty Days of Love. Today’s action is to to think about borders in your life, and how to be your authentic self both online and off. Click here for resources, family actions, and more! Click here to sign up for the daily Thirty Days of Love emails.


I remember the moment clearly: palms sweating, stomach in knots, anxiety swirling through my head. Reading and re-reading the status, I hesitated as long as possible until, in a rush of resolve, I finally pushed the button.

There was no turning back; I was “out” on Facebook.

This moment was a long time coming. I spent two years meticulously hiding evidence of my “gay lifestyle” online. Like any good millennial, I feared the power of the internet, the unstoppable flow of information, and the permanency of the digital world. There might as well be a weekly column chronicling the young, usually female, persons paying the price for past indiscretions and bad behavior online.

At the same time, we’re taught the power of storytelling. The internet holds an amazing power to connect folks from different places, different cultures, and different traditions. How can we have it both ways?

I come from a small town in the Bible belt, and was surrounded by gays and lesbians and queers who have been so deeply hurt by the church. Who still feel the pain of rejection and want nothing to do with faith. In these crowds, admitting I’m a Christian feels like coming out. In many ways, it felt like I was living multiple lives.

Eventually, the walls I built in my digital world began to crumble. The support and encouragement I received from my “friends” on Facebook became as superficial as my posts. The very people I wanted to stay in touch with no longer knew who I was.

There’s a community there that I was refusing—a communion I feared taking. Imagine if we approached our “real life” communities with the fear and trepidation we carry into the online world? Imagine how much we’d miss if we were too afraid to participate in conversations with our families or our faith communities?

We know how walls can tumble and hearts can melt with one powerful narrative. As the newest staff member at Believe Out Loud, I spend my days encouraging folks around the country to share their testimony of how they came to support LGBTQ equality. How can I ask for their transparency when I’m too afraid to share myself?

Yes, living openly and courageously online has certain risks, but the rewards of community are great if we choose to participate in this space. My only hope is that, by example, we can all encourage the kind of authenticity that builds community, online and in our “real lives.” It is only by claiming our space that we can hope to make a difference.

For today’s action, think about the borders in your own life, and whether they are serving you, or if you can find ways to move beyond them. And if you feel inspired, share it on social media—maybe by sharing this post on Facebook, tweeting something authentic about yourself, or uploading a photo on Instagram that conveys the borders you encounter in your day-to-day life with the hashtag #30daysolove.

In faith,

Alison Amyx

Alison Amyx is the Senior Editor at Believe Out Loud, a Georgia native, and a graduate of Emory University’s Candler School of Theology. Follow Alison on the website South & Out and on Twitter @queerfaith.

Honoring Our Son by Working for Peace and Reconciliation

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By Phyllis Schafer Rodriguez and Orlando Rodriguez

We are the parents of Gregory E. Rodriguez who was killed in the attacks on the WTC 9 years ago. Out of this tragedy we have been fortunate to be able to open up to new experiences that have enriched our lives, and have tried to use our voices to contribute to peace in a small way. But peace is not just an absence of war and violence; humanity and respect for other’s ideas, religions, customs, etc., must all be present for peace to succeed. And one of the best ways to accomplish these goals is to reach out to people who are different from us, i.e., “the other”.

Among the new experiences we have had since losing Greg has been getting to know people we might never have met otherwise. Several of them are Muslims and Muslim Americans. To our knowledge, we had never known a Muslim person before 2002. We were aware that there were Muslims living in our community in the metro New York area, but had had very limited contact. After the attacks, the decision was made by Muslim organizations to teach their neighbors the true meaning of Islam and how it relates to Judaism and Christianity. It was through these interfaith and intercultural programs and invitations that our sensitivity to the scary and difficult position of anyone looking Middle Eastern or Arab finds him or herself in today. We’ve learned stories of exile, immigration, disenfranchisement and pain. We’ve learned that we have more in common as human beings than what makes us different. We have learned the power of love through grief – by recognizing the suffering of all people, including families of the suicide pilots who use airplanes as deadly weapons.

The so-called “Mosque at Ground Zero” controversy has moved people of conscience to uphold the principles of freedom of religion and expression. NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg has become a champion of the first amendment. But many public figures and ordinary people have expressed hatefulness, venom and prejudice in the media and on the internet. And they pretend to be speaking for us, family members of victims. They are so “sensitive” to our feelings that they insult others in their mission to ban the center.

Would these expressions of hate be possible if we all knew Muslims personally? We think not. If your neighbor, co-worker, doctor or school teacher were Muslim, would you be able to categorically condemn an entire group? We think not.

We feel that the old saying, “Think globally and act locally” should guide us. It can translate into our welcoming Muslims and people we might not otherwise meet to our communities. Include them in local events, worship services, activities. This is an important part of working for peace and, in the words of your group, standing on the side of love.

As a result of our article in support of Islamic Cultural Center, we have been invited to be on a panel at Congregation Kol Ami, the reform temple in White Plains, on the afternoon of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Although I, Phyllis, am a secular Jew, it means a lot to me to talk about why I support the Center and the proposed location. Orlando is a Christian. We will join Talat Hamdani, who lost her son, too, that day and is a Muslim, and Ann Schaffer, of the American Jewish Committee on the panel. We will have the opportunity to present our points of view to members of the congregation and community. We know we will learn a lot from the experience.

Visions of a Tolerant America:
Jewish, Muslim and Christian voices discuss an Islamic Center near Ground Zero

On Yom Kippur, September 18, at 3-4:30 p.m.
at
Congregation Kol Ami
Chapel in the Woods
252 Soundview Avenue
White Plains, NY 10606

There will be a panel presentation, group discussion and text study of the Yom Kippur reading of the Book of Jonah.

Speakers:

  • Talat Hamdani, Orlando and Phyllis Schafer Rodriguez, bereaved parents and members of September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
  • Ann Schaffer, director of the Belfer Center for American Pluralism, American Jewish Committee
  • Rabbi Shira Milgrom, Congregation Kol Ami.

For directions or information see website at www.nykolami.org
Sponsored by Kol Ami’s Interfaithful Committee