Searching for Home 
          Mary
          Jane Viar 
            Former Convenor, Integrity-Memphis   
            A
                few weeks ago, I read a story from the recent gathering in Dallas
                sponsored by the American Anglican Council (AAC), an organization
                of the “orthodox” constituency within the Episcopal
                Church. The AAC has been in the forefront of the opposition to
                the consecration of Bishop Gene Robinson and to the blessing
                of same-gender unions.  
            This
                was a special meeting, called for the purpose of formulating
                a plan of action to be taken in response to the majority votes
                on these two matters at the 2003 General Convention. Because
                all attendees were required to sign a statement of agreement
                with the mission of the AAC, the gathering was very much one
                of like-minded people.  
            One
                of the AAC leaders, the Reverend Kendall Harmon, told the story
                of a man who was seen at the meeting, sitting alone sobbing,
                who appeared to be in distress or was emotionally disturbed.
                For this reason, he was brought to the attention of security
                personnel and was subsequently approached by them. When asked
                was he OK, he said he was. When asked why he was crying, he replied, “Because
                I dedicated my whole life to serving God in this church and I
                felt I had wasted myself for nothing. And now, I have come to
                realize, I have not wasted myself, and that there is a place
                for me." 
            Obviously,
                this man had felt abandoned by the Episcopal Church and its recent
                decisions, but he was overwhelmed to have found acceptance and
                comfort among this group. He was apparently experiencing what
                Harmon described about the gathering when he said “…part
                of what is going on here is that people have a profound sense
                of being given a home. It is safe, they are loved, they have
                a message, they can be who they are.” He went on to say
                that he wept at hearing this story. “Dorothy in the Wizard
                of Oz was right” he proclaimed, “there’s
                no place like home.” 
            The
                irony in this story is obvious. Those in attendance at that meeting,
                the great majority of whom have always felt “at home” in
                the Episcopal Church, are now experiencing the painfulness of
                feeling alienated. They feel that they have lost the comfort
                and security that comes with being able to be true to who you
                are and what you believe without fear of criticism or humiliation.  
            Many
                have expressed feelings of abandonment by the church. They long
                for the days when the church felt like home and they make plans
                to leave if they see returning to that as being impossible. They
                need not describe to gays and lesbians the depth of their pain;
                we know it all too well. Neither do they need to explain to us
                the joy that accompanies the feeling of being truly loved and
                of belonging within the church. Some of us have only recently
                learned something of what that emotion can mean. Others of us
                may never get that chance. 
            It
                seems that we all want the church to feel like home; in fact,
                it may be a necessity if we are to effectively go about doing
                God’s work through the church. But, is it possible with
                such divergent opinions and strong-willed advocates on either
                side for the church to exist as a home to all? What are the qualities
                we associate with that feeling of home?  
            As
                adults, when we think of home, it seems we often refer to the
                home of our childhood and the family that surrounded us. There
                are many warm and fuzzy feelings connected to the notion of home:
                unconditional love, acceptance, belonging, and security, to name
                a few. There is a sense of nostalgia: familiar people, familiar
                food, familiar routine and rules and, perhaps it is this familiarity
                that makes us feel comfortable and safe when we’re home
                with our family. 
            However,
                familiarity doesn’t mean similarity. All these desirable
                feelings of home take place in the midst of and because of a
                group of people--the family--whose members are as different as
                night and day.  
            When
                I consider my parents and the four siblings in my own immediate
                family, I can’t imagine a more diverse group. We are Democrat
                and Republican, gay and straight, vegetarian and Atkins dieter,
                Christian and non-Christian, and the list goes on.  
            No
                matter how long it has been since we last saw each other, we
                tend to assume a right to frankness. We freely express our differing
                opinions about each other and our lives, something we hesitate
                to do even with close friends we see every day.  
            And
                no matter what the topic of discussion, each of us is convinced
                that he or she knows what is right. It is impossible to believe
                sometimes that we all came out of the same home. But we did and
                that’s our connection and that’s why we love each
                other. It’s also why we tolerate our differences, strong
                as they may be at times.  
            Our
                bond has nothing to do with like-mindedness. It has everything
                to do with the fact that we all call the same place home and
                it’s with each other that we experience those warm and
                fuzzy feelings. Our home is our common ground. 
            Of
                course, families do split sometimes. Furthermore, this idealistic
                image of a family is not so easily generalized to the church
                family or to society at large. Humans willfully segregate themselves
                along all sorts of lines, despite social efforts to avoid it.
                It’s too bad we can’t just use our own families as
                examples of units of diverse people who, because of a common
                bond, are able to all feel at home together. What
                a shame it is to have a large family break up with so much still
                to do, just because its members disagree over who’s in
                and who’s out, who’s right and who’s wrong.  
            I
                don’t take the issue of authority of Scripture lightly,
                but with so many intelligent, dedicated Biblical scholars reaching
                so many different interpretations, it’s hard to believe
                this one issue is worth breaking up a family and leaving one’s
                home.  
            Gay
                people have lived in this home since it was built, without the
                benefit of agreeing with all its rules. After all, as Kent Keith
                on Louie Crew’s Anglican Pages website said, “You
                see, in the final analysis, it is between you and God - It never
                was between you and them anyway.” 
            The
                reference to the Wizard of Oz by Harmon (and the fact
                that there’s little doubt that “we’re not in
                Kansas anymore”) reminded me of an interpretation of the
                story line for televised broadcast that I recently read. “Transported
                to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the first woman she
                meets and then teams up with three complete strangers to kill
                again.”  
            People
                do see things differently and families do split. But one thing
                (maybe the only thing) that Reverend Harmon, Dorothy and I agree
                on is that “there’s no place like home.” Let’s
                all pray that we are able to preserve the home God has given
                us in the Episcopal Church and that we can all find a way to
                live together as a family.  
            Copyright ©2003
                Mary Jane Viar. 
             Reprinted
                with permission from Mary Jane Viar. From the Integrity-Memphis
                newsletter  On The Bluffs, Advent-Christmas, Dec. 2003-Jan.
                2004. For more information please go to the Integrity-Memphis website.  
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