Abomination
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| Wide Open by Corita Kent |
abomination
[uh-bom-uh-ney-shuh
n]
1. anything
abominable; anything greatly disliked or abhorred.
2. intense
aversion or loathing; detestation:
3. a vile,
shameful, or detestable action, condition, habit, etc.
It is not
too often, I have a conversation with someone who doesn’t know me, and they use
that descriptive word to describe my church and teachings. Today, it happened.
I was caught unaware as I said hello to a fellow patron of the coffee house I
frequent.
Upon
entering, I proceeded to set up my computer and get out a couple books that I
wanted to work through on this early morning.
And then, out of the blue, the man sitting next to me asked about the
book I was reading and proceeded to question if it taught people about
“Alternative Lifestyles.”
“What?” I
thought. What a weird turn of events and an unusual question. I was a bit taken
back since the book had nothing to do with that topic. I simply laughed it off,
and tried to move on. The person was persistent. Soon that descriptive word I
mentioned earlier was dropped into the conversation.
Abomination.
What a loaded word.
In Christian circles it often is an abusive word and used to describe what
some consider the “sin of all sins.” Even though I kind of knew he was talking
about same-sex relationships, I couldn’t help wonder, which abomination from
the Bible were we talking about?
Everything from having “proud looks” to “praying wrongly” are considered
abominations in scripture. Proverbs 6:16-19 offers us an entire list of
abominations:
There are six things the Lord hates, seven that are detestable (abominations) to him:1. haughty eyes,2. a lying tongue,3. hands that shed innocent blood,4. a heart that devises wicked schemes,5. feet that are quick to rush into evil,6. a false witness who pours out lies7. and a person who stirs up conflict in the community.
I believe that the problem with the
conversation I was having lies in this list of abominations from Proverbs. I
know people have differing views on Scripture. I know people have different understandings
of “alternative lifestyles” (as the man put it). Ironically, his words to me
were delivered through his own set of abominations. The reality was that this
man had never spoken to me or been to my church. This morning, I kindly engaged
him, as I would anyone at the coffee shop. Only then to endure a stream of
assumptions about who I was, what I taught, and why our church was an
abomination to our community – and all around his biggest concern – people of
“alternative lifestyles.”
·
People, he suggested, we allowed in our church.
·
People, he suggested, we kept unrepentant and who were going to begin to “rub off” on our
community.
·
People, he suggested, who were going to have to be separated from us so
we could stay untainted.
The problem
he never considered in his thinking was that these “abominations,“ these people
he labeled with the term “alternative lifestyles” (instead of the more
respectful LGBTQIA community) were my friends, my neighbors, my sisters and
brothers in Christ. Some are faithful followers of Christ who are on a journey
alongside me and my fellow church members.
And that
their sins, whatever they are, are no
different than mine (and his for that matter).
This may
come as a surprise, but the more I think of it, I am actually proud that this
random man, called me and my church an abomination to our community. That means, we must be identifying with those
on the margins like Christ. We must be
walking with, eating with, associating with…wait a minute…Isn’t that what Jesus
was accused of in scripture?
“Then the Son of Man came, enjoying life, and you say, ‘Look, a drunkard and a glutton, a bosom-friend of the tax-collector and the outsider!’”
Actually, looking
at that list from Proverbs 6, I too have all the reason to be called an
“abomination” by just about anybody (as most of us do) - and the same goes for
the church - my local church as well as the universal Church. Too often, because the Church is being such
an abomination to our families, neighborhoods, communities and world by our
judging, scheming, devising, lying, and stirring up conflict, we miss the
opportunity to serve and be served by those God has actually drawn to our front
steps and into our lives.
So, I guess
I don’t mind being called an abomination so much after all. It just tells me we
are doing something right and actually making visible the Kingdom of God to ALL
people in our community.



Nice post, Bob. You and your congregation are certainly not alone. My congregation is an official Open and Affirming congregation and we hear lots of angry comments from members of other churches in our area. We prefer to believe that God calls us to be a reflection of divine love to our community, not a congregation called to meet some standard of purity. If our fellow Christians who are non-affirming would see how dedicated our LGBTQIA members are to discipleship, and if they were to have an honest relationship with LGBTQIA Christians, I like to believe that they may let God change their hearts as well. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this -- it was good to read this.
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