Moss to African-American Clergy: Don’t Abandon Obama Over Same-Sex Marriage.
In an open letter, the Rev. Otis Moss III urges African-Americans not to stay home in November or pull support for Obama because of his support for gay marriage—because the Constitution protects everyone and the civil-rights struggle demands they vote.
Reaction
from African-Americans to President
Obama’s support for same-sex marriage continues to be mixed, with some black
ministers across the country openly criticizing the president this past Sunday,
and threatening to vote Republican, or not all, in November.
AP Photo; Getty Images
But from the pulpit of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, the Rev.
Otis Moss III challenged that stance. He read an open letter to his congregation
on same-sex
marriage, and what the Bible teaches about Christian love. His letter
targeted those in the black
clergy and community who’ve decided this one issue alone will determine
their support the second time around for the nation’s first African-American
president.
Here is Moss’s letter:
My Brother:
Tell your brethren who are part of your ministerial coalition to “live their
faith and not legislate their faith” for the Constitution is designed to protect
the rights of all. We must learn to be more than a one-issue community and seek
the beloved community where we may not all agree, but we all recognize the
fingerprint of the Divine upon all of humanity.
There is no doubt people who are same-gender-loving who occupy prominent
places in the body of Christ. For the clergy to hide from true dialogue with
quick dismissive claims devised from poor biblical scholarship is as sinful as
unthoughtful acceptance of a theological position. When we make biblical claims
without sound interpretation we run the risk of adopting a doctrinal position of
deep conviction but devoid of love. Deep faith may resonate in our position, but
it is the ethic of love that forces us to prayerfully reexamine our
position.
The question I believe we should pose to our congregations is, “Should all
Americans have the same civil rights?” This is a radically different question
than the one you raised with the ministers, “Does the church have the right to
perform or not perform certain religious rites.” There is difference between
rights and rites. We should never misconstrue rights designed to protect diverse
individuals in a pluralistic society versus religious rites designed by faith
communities to communicate a theological or doctrinal perspective. These two
questions are answered in two fundamentally different arenas. One is answered in
the arena of civic debate where the Constitution is the document of authority.
The other is answered in the realm of ecclesiastical councils where theology,
conscience and biblical mandates are the guiding ethos. I do not believe
ecclesiastical councils are equipped to shape civic legislation nor are civic
representatives equipped to shape religious rituals and doctrine.
The institution of marriage is not under attack as a result of the
President’s words. Marriage was under attack years ago by men who viewed women
as property and children as trophies of sexual prowess. Marriage is under attack
by low wages, high incarceration, unfair tax policy, unemployment, and lack of
education. Marriage is under attack by clergy who proclaim monogamy yet think
nothing of stepping outside the bonds of marriage to have multiple affairs with
“preaching groupies.” Same-gender couples did not cause the high divorce rate,
but our adolescent views of relationships and our inability as a community to
come to grips with the ethic of love and commitment did. We still confuse sex
with love and romance with commitment.
My father, who is a veteran of the civil rights movement and retired pastor,
eloquently stated the critical nature of this election when speaking to
ministers this past week who claim they will pull support from the President as
a result of his position. He stated, “Our Ancestors prayed for 389 years to
place a person of color in the White House. They led over 200 slave revolts,
fought in 11 wars, one being a civil war where over 600,000 people died. Our
mothers fought and were killed for women’s suffrage, our grandparents were
lynched for the civil rights bill of 1964 and the voting rights act of 1965…my
father never had the opportunity to vote and I believe it is my sacred duty to
pull the lever for every member of my family who was denied the right to vote. I
will not allow narrow-minded ministers or regressive politicians the
satisfaction of keeping me from my sacred right to vote to shape the future for
my grandchildren.”
“The institution of marriage is not under attack as a result of the President’s words.”
Gay and lesbian citizens did not cause the economic crash, foreclosures, and
attack upon health care. Poor underfunded schools were not created because
people desire equal protection under the law. We have much work to do as a
community, and to claim the President of the United States must hold your
theological position is absurd. He is President of the United States of America
not the President of the Baptist convention or Bishop of the Sanctified or
Holiness Church. He is called to protect the rights of Jew and Gentile, male and
female, young and old, Gay and straight, black and white, Atheist and Agnostic.
It should be noted the President offered no legislation, or executive order, or
present an argument before the Supreme Court. He simply stated his personal
conviction.
If we dare steal away from the noise of this debate, we will realize as a
church we are called to “Do justice, live mercy and walk humbly with
God.” Gay people have never been the enemy; and when we use rhetoric to
suggest they are the source of our problems we lie on God and cause tears to
flow from the eyes of Christ.
I am not asking you to change your position, but I am stating we must stay in
dialogue and not allow our own personal emotional prejudices or doctrines to
prevent us from seeing the possibilities of a beloved community.
November is fast approaching, and the spirits of Ella Baker, Septima Clarke,
Fannie Lou Hammer, Rosa Parks, A. Phillip Randolph, James Orange, Medgar Evers
and Martin Luther, King Jr. stand in the balcony of heaven raising the question,
“Will you do justice, live mercy and walk humbly with our God?” Emmitt
Till and the four little girls who were assassinated in Alabama during worship
did not die for a Sunday sermonic sound bite to show disdain for one group of
God’s people. They were killed by an evil act enacted by men who believed in
doctrine over love. We serve in ministry this day because of a man who believed
in love over doctrine and died on a hill called Calvary in a dusty
Palestinian community 2,000 years ago. Do not let the rhetoric of this debate
keep you from the polls, my friend.
Asking you to imagine a beloved community, your brother and
friend,
Otis Moss, III
Senior Pastor
Trinity UCC
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Rev. Otis Moss III is Pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. A Christian activist and cultural critic, he is the co-author of The Gospel Re-Mix: Reaching the Hip Hop Generation.
Senior Pastor
Trinity UCC
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Rev. Otis Moss III is Pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. A Christian activist and cultural critic, he is the co-author of The Gospel Re-Mix: Reaching the Hip Hop Generation.


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