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The Presbyterian General
Assemblies have addressed the issue of homosexuality in three broad
categories: (1) the legal rights of gay men and lesbians in society;
(2) homosexuals in the church; and (3) the ordination of homosexuals
as deacons, elders, or ministers.
The Legal Rights of
Gay Men and Lesbians in Society
In 1978, a Presbyterian
General Assembly declared that ". . . there is no legal, social,
or moral justification for denying homosexual persons access to
the basic requirements of human social existence . . ."(1)
In 1987, the General Assembly
called ". . . for the elimination . . . of laws governing the private
sexual behavior between consenting adults [and the passage] of laws
forbidding discrimination based on sexual orientation in employment,
housing, and public accommodations . . ."(2)
Homosexuals in the Church
In 1978, a Presbyterian
General Assembly adopted the following statement:
Persons who manifest
homosexual behavior must be treated with the profound respect
and pastoral tenderness due all people of God. There can be no
place within the Christian faith for the response to homosexual
persons of mingled contempt, hatred, and fear that is called homophobia.
Homosexual persons are encompassed by the searching love of Christ.
The church must turn from its fear and hatred to move toward the
homosexual community in love and to welcome homosexual inquirers
to its congregations. It should free them to be candid about their
identity and convictions, and it should also share honestly and
humbly with them in seeking the vision of God's intention for
the sexual dimensions of their lives. . . .(3)
In 1991, the General Assembly
clarified its position with respect to the institution of marriage:
Inasmuch as the session is responsible and accountable for determination
of the appropriate use of the church buildings and facilities (G-10.0102n),
it should not allow the use of the church facilities for a same
sex union ceremony that the session determines to be the same as
a marriage ceremony. Likewise, since a Christian marriage performed
in accordance with the Directory for Worship can only involve a
covenant between a woman and a man, it would not be proper for a
minister of the Word and Sacrament to perform a same sex union ceremony
that the minister determines to be the same as a marriage ceremony.
(4)
The Ordination of Homosexuals
The specific issue of homosexuality
first arose as several presbyteries (regional governing bodies within
presbyterian churches) requested guidance from the General Assembly
on ordaining avowed practicing homosexuals. In 1976, a General Assembly
said, ". . . it would at the present time be injudicious, if not
improper, for a presbytery to ordain to the professional ministry
of the gospel a person who is an avowed practicing homosexual .
. ."(5)
This particular General
Assembly also ". . . direct[ed] that a task force be established
. . . to study these issues . . ."(6)
The 1978 General Assembly
received the report of this task force and declared in its definitive
guidance: "That unrepentant homosexual practice does not accord
with the requirements for ordination..."(7)
set forth in the church's
constitution. In 1993, the General Assembly adopted the recommendation
of its Advisory Committee on the Constitution which stated that
"current constitutional law in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
is that self-affirming, practicing homosexual persons may not be
ordained as ministers of the Word and Sacrament, elders, or deacons."(8)
In 1997, the approval by
a majority of presbyteries of an amendment to the Book of Order
known as "Amendment B" (now section G-6.0106b) makes constitutional
the following language: Those who are called to office in the church
are to lead a life in obedience to Scripture and in conformity to
the historic confessional standards of the church. Among these standards
is the requirement to live either in fidelity within the covenant
of marriage between a man and a woman (W-4.9001), or chastity in
singleness.
Persons refusing to repent
of any self-acknowledged practice which the confessions call sin
shall not be ordained and/or installed as deacons, elders, or ministers
of the Word and Sacrament. Since then there have been regular attempts
to "soften" or remove this wording from the constitution. These
attempts have been met with requests to continue discussion and
dialogue, rather than forcing a confrontation.
Footnotes
1. Minutes of the 190th General Assembly (1978), United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A., pp. 265-66.
2. Minutes of the 199th General Assembly (1987), Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.), p. 776.
3. Minutes of the 190th General Assembly (1978), United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A., pp 263-64.
4. Minutes of the 203rd General Assembly (1991), Presbyterian Church
U.S.A., p. 395.
5. Minutes of the 188th General Assembly (1976), United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A., pp 111-12.
6. Minutes of the 188th General Assembly (1976), United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A., p 112.
7. Minutes of the 190th General Assembly (1978), United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A., p. 265.
8. Minutes of the 205th General Assembly (1993), Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.), p 322.
(Copyright © 1997,
PresbyFax, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Louisville, KY.)
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