Why I Participate in Pride Month
by Charissa Bradstreet, Interim Rector
On June 25 the Diocese of Olympia will participate in the Pride Parade and Good Sam will be part of that group. Given some things that were said at a recent Sammamish City Council meeting, I thought I would share a little about why I participate in Pride events. I do so out of confidence that the lives of LGBTQ+ folk matter, that God calls us to bear witness to the dignity of every human being, and with a spirit of repentance.
Growing up, I was taught that same-sex attraction was wrong and I carried that with me into adulthood, although with increasing discomfort with that position because of friends who loved me. When I started to take seriously the possibility that God called women into church leadership I could feel anxiety arise in my faith circles with some people fearing I was headed down a slippery slope – that my feminist readings of scripture would lead me to affirm same-sex relationships. I knew it would be safer for me if I could demonstrate that I was still sufficiently faithful to the Bible, and at that time, one’s position on sexuality was a key litmus test of whether one took scripture seriously. I confess that it would take me another two years before I could fully affirm LGBTQ+ folk as blessed by God in the fullness of their being.
I’m sharing my story, because that’s the only one I can tell. My story and perspective has been deeply shaped by the stories others have told me: stories of having to hide parts of oneself, stories of coming out, stories of experiencing harm within churches, stories of being assaulted, stories of the joy of loving and having love reciprocated, stories of learning to embrace the whole of oneself without shame, stories of being a parent and supporting an LGBTQ+ child, stories of not identifying with the gender assigned at birth. Stories of courage in the face of fear, anger, suspicion, and rigid gender norms.
At Good Sam, and in the Episcopal Church more broadly, we don’t just want to include LGBTQ+ folks, we want to confidently affirm, recognizing that they are vital members of the Church and have given graciously to help build the Church. We don’t affirm because it is politically correct but because we believe that God affirms and tells us to do so as well. To that end, I share a link to a recent theological reflection from the Bishop of Minnesota on the story of Creation as recorded in Genesis and how that teaches the Church to affirm, not just include. I hope you will take a few minutes to read it here!
Warmly,
Mthr. Charissa+
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