An Open Letter to Any Parent of an LGBTIAQ+ Child May 14, 2016
From: Elder Kris and Debbie Widmer.
Recently and
ongoingly, (Kris is a poet and wordsmith so occasionally he forges odd words.)
transgender people have been in the news. The world and national news as well
as the internal news that Adventists hear through their social media and other
communication channels have seen a steady stream of stories about transitioning
people, bathroom laws and murders/suicides of transgender men and women.
Transgender people
have been in our personal news lately as well.
We have been asked
to share our experience as parents of a MTF transgender daughter. We have known about this reality in our
lives for a little over 4 years.
In this open
letter, we write a listing of a few of our decisions and learnings. Perhaps they will be helpful to others who
also walk the path of parenthood with a LGBT child of any age.
We decided:
1. We
decided to listen. When our son came out
to us, he asked us to listen to a 10+ page letter he wrote and read to us
sobbing. We listened, then held her
close.
2. We
decided to grieve. The fact is we had
“lost” a son. We didn’t announce it in
church and there was no funeral – but our son had “died”. Accepting this loss prepared the way for our
acceptance of the new reality…so we could accept the daughter he told us she
was.
3. We
decided we had been placed in a “second closet” when she came out. At first we didn’t talk about “it.” To complicate matters, we are a pastoral
family. Who should we talk to? How would we answer the question “How is your
son?” Closets are protective…but they
are dark and unhealthy places to live.
So, we decided to open the door to our closet…swallow hard…and talk
about “it” appropriately to others.
4. We
decided to educate ourselves through reading.
We searched the Internet for information. We read books. We
read other people’s testimonies. We
adopted an open mind on the topic and read to learn…not to confirm preconceived
opinions or longstanding traditions.
5. We
decided we are still a family. We
decided God was calling us to live out the deepest depth of parental love. “Can
a mother forget her nursing child…Yes they can.” Isaiah 49:15. Could we? Yes.
Should we? No! We decided we would NEVER
emotionally or physically abandon the person that carries our genes…regardless
of her gender identity or presentation; regardless of her name, clothing, hair
color, piercings or tattoos. She’s
stuck with us. We’re her parents. We’re stuck with her. She is our child.
6. We
decided to stay in family fellowship. – This wasn’t a hard decision…but it had
to be intentional. We continue to claim
her as our flesh and blood…and we still want to do things together, now in
adulthood. Her Master’s degree
graduation happened 6 months after she came out. Of course, we were there. And there are holidays to enjoy, ball games
to attend, dinners out together. Her
sister sibling is getting married. She is included. Period.
7. We
decided to continue to be parentally physically affectionate. The experts say a person needs 12 hugs a
day. She probably isn’t getting that,
given the fact that she’s single and transgender…so we are committed to hugging
her in greeting and parting…and other times in between.
8. We
decided to believe her story and experience.
Rather than discounting her perspective on her thoughts about herself,
we choose to take her word for it. We
believe you, girl.
9. We
decided to use appropriate pronouns and her new name. (The name she settled on
was actually suggested by her mother!) We
did this out of respect for her as a person and also to communicate love and
acceptance. To do otherwise; to insist
on using his old name and calling him “he” may have resulted in pushing her
away.
10. We decided
to put ourselves in her place. What
would we want from our family were we in her situation. We feel the Golden Rule applies here. We
decided to model God’s grace…taught in The Prodigal Son. (Luke 15) We choose to NOT give her what some felt she
deserves (rejection)…but what she needs (inclusive love).
11. We decided
that we are not alone. So, we sought
others for peer support and counseling.
We heard from caring friends and family – some ahead and some behind us
in a similar life journey. Out of these
emails, conversations and meals out…we found that we were “normal” in our
feelings and thoughts. We found other
Adventist parents who found the grace to love their children, too.
12. We decided
to take a break from ministry. We took a
sabbatical, and the time away from the daily grind of ministerial work gave us
schedule space to deal with thoughts and emotions.
13. We decided
to have a key heart-to-heart talk with our children…individually alone and then
together. This was a turning point in
our family dynamics, and no one could do it but the two of us. We…mom and dad…did it together. It was transformative.
14. We decided
to keep praying with and for her. God is
not dead…and the Divine is still at work…in our lives and her life. We lift her up in prayer daily, and when she
leaves our presence, she joins us in a family prayer circle.
15. We decided
to stop asking God to change her back into a him…and began asking God to change
us. God has been answering those
prayers.
16. We decided
talking about our family was healthy. We
talk about our own feelings and our daughter in appropriate ways with people we
can trust. We have slowly moved from
silence to advocacy for others in the LGBT community, offering love and care
where we can.
17. We decided
that we would stop blaming ourselves.
We know it’s not our fault as parents that our child has these thoughts
about herself. We didn’t cause this. The jury is still out on causative factors (a
choice of nurture or a condition of nature?) so we have decided to blame the
reality of humanity’s fall instead.
18. We decided
to get acquainted with her friends…other members of the LGBT community. This includes attending worships, parties and
outings. Even a pizza night. You know…normal human kindness kinds of
interactions.
We learned:
1. We
learned that acceptance was a harder road…but we were up for the challenge. We know we “can do all things through Christ
who strengthens us.”
2. We
learned we could find peace in a new normal.
3. We
learned perfect families don’t exist – “You have the perfect family…a boy and a
girl…and the boy is older,” someone once said.
In their patriarchal world - this may be a good thing…but it hardly matters. Our family is what it is…and we love each
other.
4. We
learned that our families of origin are more gracious that we thought they
might be. After she came out to the
rest of the extended family, we saw them offer continued love and grace to our
child. We should have known that would
be the case…for they have shown grace to us through out our lives.
5. We
learned we will never fully understand what our daughter is going through. We are cis-gendered. Our brains match our bodies. Hers does not. But we learned we could have empathy.
6. We
learned that all people deserve love, respect and all people deserve to be at “God’s
table”…and not under it. We should never
equate people with “dogs.” – Matthew 15:27.
Jesus welcomes all to His table…and offers a feast of food, friendship
and faith to each one.
7. We
learned that gender identity and expression is a painful experience for a
person who is transgender. It isn’t something that they choose to be hip or
cool. And we need not make their life
more painful. In fact, the Christian would make their path smoother and their
load lighter by living out the love found in 1 Corinthians 13 and taught in the
Sermon on the Mount. We choose to
practice this basic Christian ideal.
8. We
learned personality is not gender related. – She is the same as he was. She is just as creative, messy and funny as
he ever was. She is computer savvy and still
a passionate baseball fan - just like he was.
9. We
learned that the brain is still the great mystery of the human body. A mass of grey, gelatinous tissue; it
controls the whole of the body. It is
the holy of holy of the human, if you will.
And ALL aspects of brain function, chemistry and it’s final output in
thought and feeling is still a great mystery.
10. We learned
to interpret the traditional homosexual Bible passages through the interpretive
lens of the ministry of the grace of Jesus.
The same Jesus who loved tax collectors, women, lepers and the
foreigner…would also love the LGBT community today. By following Jesus’ example in this, we
realize that we will likely be criticized the same way He was. “Why do you eat
with publicans and sinners?” To that
question, we will give Jesus’ answer.
11. We learned
to find comfort in Bible verses not usually quoted in discussions of the
intersection of faith and the LGBTIAQ community.
a.
Luke 10:26 – When asked for a list things or one
thing to do for eternal life, Jesus asked a question back. “What is written in the Law? How does it read to you?” That is a key question. “How do you read it.”
b.
Romans 14:5 – “Each person should be fully
convinced in their own minds.” Since
humanity is a glorious mix of races, cultures, perspectives, genders, etc. –
there is bound to be differences of conclusions. And every person is given the freedom to
think and act for themselves.
c.
Romans 14:15 – “Do not, for the sake of your
food destroy and ruin someone for whom Christ died.” We could insert any topic
in the place of food. Do not for the
sake of _______ destroy someone for whom Christ died. In the kingdom of grace,
a person is more important than a policy, a proposition or even a principle.
d.
Matthew 19:12 – Jesus’ mention of three types/causes
of eunuchhood deserves consideration and study.
Born that way, made themselves that way or made that way by others.
Certainly people born with any difference – physical, emotional, mental, etc.
receive Jesus’ accommodation in the kingdom.
12. We learned
that love is a choice. And we choose
love. Love is drawing our daughter close, rather than pushing her away. Love is including, not excluding. Shunning is not an option for us.
13. We learned
that if the family dog, Lady, could treat her the same as always - with a
friendly tail wag and an eager tongue – we could follow Lady’s example, minus
the wagging and licking.
14. We learned
two wonderful phrases of healing, encouragement and hope:
“There are some things that only God knows…and
They (the Trinity) are not telling.” Life is mysterious and there many things we
don’t understand. God’s ways are not our
ways and our thoughts are not God’s thoughts.
God’s ways are beyond finding out.
Some things are best left with God.
“We are not in Eden anymore and we are not
in Heaven yet.” We are here: outside
one perfect garden…and not yet in the next perfect garden. We are trapped
here…on a flawed, sin filled earth, of which we are a part. We’re all in this together…so sinner, be kind
and gentle and neighborly to your neighbor, the sinner.
And we’ll close with one additional
decision:
We
decided to courageously use our names.
Having written before with pseudonyms, this piece is signed with who we
are.
We
both come from families that have been part of the Adventist Church for several
generations: There are accountants,
teachers, pastors, chaplains, doctors, nurses and professors in our family tree
that have served God in this church for entire careers. Others, whose jobs
weren’t and aren’t in denominational employ, have served this church in
numerous volunteer officer roles as well.
We are Adventists by faith and fellowship. And, we are a family that has LGBT
members.
Our
limb of the family tree includes a gay grafting, a lesbian leaf and a couple of
transgender twigs. (Kris, the poet,
strikes again…with alliteration!) And
that is just what is known at this time.
We
understand that the only way to end the culture of shame in the Adventist Church
is to speak out and up for the other members of our church.
So
we say… “Love your gay and lesbian children.
Love your transgender kids. Love
your intersex child. Love your queer
child. And if you don’t have one of
your own…love someone else’s. For surely, they are among us.”
That’s our story. We love our daughters. Your results may vary.
Sincerely,
4 comments:
This was so touching. I wept when I read it. Gob bless you and your family.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We are walking a similar road and decide to follow a similar path.
So...I got my first negative comment to this open letter....informing me that I should read the Sodom and Gomorrah story. I've read it many times...and it's correlation in Judges 19-21. In the Sodom story, it is interesting to note...that the city was destroyed...when NO actual same-sex activity took place that night. And even before the night in question...God had already decided to destroy the city. Besides...the Sodom story is never interpreted to be relevant to people with transgender conditions. I believe that Romans 8 is also an important text. "Nothing can separate one from the love of God." That would include Homosexuality, Intersex, Transgender, being Asexual, etc.
I was very moved by your open letter. It is this type of openness that helps others newly faced with something they did not understand before. It will help other children find it eassier to share with parents. We often find that the earlier judgements we make on child rearing face a new reality when we encounter it personally. Thank you for sharing and for helping your son transititon openly. You sound like wonderful parents!!!!
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