How the Christian Right's Homophobia Scares Away Religious Young People
May 16, 2012 |
Christian Right
activists who give money, pressure politicians and organize against gay
rights may think they’re accomplishing a couple of goals, like rolling
back gay rights and asserting their religion’s primacy in American
culture. Unfortunately for them (but fortunately for the rest of us),
one of the things they're doing in the long run is alienating their
young people -- not a good long-term strategy. Short-term victories like
passing more bans on gay marriage, sometimes repeatedly in single
states, might feel good for homophobic Christians, but in the long run,
it’s their religion that will pay the ultimate price; available evidence
shows that anti-gay activism is souring young people on Christianity.
In response to the latest gay-bashing vote in North Carolina, evangelical writer and speaker Rachel Held Evans wrote
an impassioned plea to her fellow Christians to just cut it out. She
points to statistics showing how much damage the church has sustained
because of its anti-gay crusade. Research conducted by the pro-Christian Barna Group in
2007 on Americans age 16-29 found that “anti-homosexual” was the
dominant perception of modern Christians. Ninety-one percent of
non-Christians and 80 percent of Christians in this group used this word
to describe Christians.
She also points to research documented in the book You Lost Me by
David Kinnaman showing that 59 percent of teenagers who grow up as
church-going Christians abandon their faith in adulthood. One of the
major reasons is the gay rights issue. Overall, the perception--a
largely correct one, I’d add--is that modern conservative Christianity
is dominated by sex-phobic bigots who use God as a cudgel to beat all
sorts of people, but especially gays and lesbians. No wonder many in the
younger generation want out.
Unfortunately
for Evans, these kinds of numbers probably won’t do much to convince
the Christian right to give up on gay-bashing, at least not until it's
done even more serious damage to the Christian brand. Evans may be drawn
to Christianity for fellowship and spirituality--many more tolerant
Christians are--but the dominant function of conservative Christianity
in the real world has never been to offer comfort and solace to
believers. Religion is about power and giving up the war on gays would
mean relinquishing power and control over their adherents' most private
selves. Thus, we can guess that the Christian Right won’t stop fighting
gay rights until it’s way too late for them to take it back.
Right-wing
American Christianity is rife with contradictions. The content of the
church’s actual teachings are centered around the figure of Jesus
Christ, who is renowned as the lover of the meek and the powerless. Yet
right-wing Christianity in America has often served to comfort the
powerful and afflict the weak.
In
fact, when you look away from the “meek shall inherit the earth” text
to the actual uses of Christianity throughout history, a different
picture emerges. God has been used to rationalize the power of kings
over the people, men over women, rich over poor, Westerners over the
rest of the world, and has even been used to justify slavery. In the
latter half of the 20th century a particular brand of American
Christianity called the Prosperity Gospel began to celebrate obscene
wealth, taking Christianity far away from its progressive elements. And
of course, conservative Christianity in America has spent much of the
last century and the start of this one demonizing and oppressing LGBT
people.
As devoted as it is to
its anti-gay agenda, the Christian Right will be paying the penalty as
gays are increasingly accepted in mainstream culture. Most political
watchers are downright astounded at how quickly gay rights activists
have turned public opinion around to favor their point of view. Less
than two decades ago, most of the country had never even heard of the
concept of same-sex marriage. Since then, there’s been a steady rise in
support for legalizing same-sex marriage, with the most recent polls showing a majority of Americans supporting legalization.
Conservative Christian activists
know that the perception of homophobia is damaging, which is why they
try to avoid speaking of the issue directly at all, instead saying that
they support “traditional marriage.” But the attempts to seem less
hateful toward gays while attacking their rights fail repeatedly because
homophobes can’t stay on message.
Virginia legislators this week blocked the nomination of highly regarded prosecutor Tracy
Thorne-Begland to be a district judge for no other reason than they
disapproved of his homosexuality. Del. Bob Marshall went on the record
tut-tutting Thorne-Begland for “his behavior,” even though
Thorne-Begland lives a quiet life with his partner and their adopted
children. The whole situation exposed the emptiness of the “traditional
marriage” rhetoric, demonstrating once again that the Christian Right’s
views regarding gay people are rooted in a very un-Christ-like hate.
With
all this hatefulness on display, no wonder conservative Christianity is
losing young people. While just a little over half of Americans
supporting gay marriage, nearly two-thirds of adults born after 1981 do.
The Christian Right is increasingly out of step with how Americans feel
about gay rights. This issue, even more than abortion rights, might be
the one that destroys them in the end.
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