Tags
Christianity, Cognitive Dissonance, Compassion, Cultyral Conservatism, Diane Medley, Gay Rights, Homosexuality, School
Sometimes your 15 minutes of fame is a moment in the sunshine (or so I hear), and sometimes it’s fifteen minutes under the spotlight of public interrogation (or so I fear). Sometimes, I expect it’s a confusing mixture of both. Take for example the case of Diane Medley, a special needs teacher who claims those of homosexual orientation have no purpose in life. She will be grist for the left wing mill for a little while, and I suppose a hero to Christian conservatives and right wing culture warriors.
Just to be clear, we will be doing the grist-grinding thing here in this post.
…just a little.
So, what’s the story? Well apparently the standard prom for the local high school will be allowing those of homosexual orientation to attend, which is the reason Medley and others have taken to advocating a second prom in which homosexuals will not be admitted. Wabashvalley.com come attributes the following quote to Medley.
Homosexual students come to me with their problems, and I don’t agree with them, but I care about them. It’s the same thing with my special needs kids, I think God puts everyone in our lives for a reason.
Asked if this also holds for those of homosexual orientation, she responded:
No I honestly don’t. Sorry, but I don’t. I don’t understand it. A gay person isn’t going to come up and make some change unless it’s to realize that it was a choice and they’re choosing God.
Now to be fair, there is a trace of compassion somewhere in these comments, but it’s struggling for shoulder room with a whole mess of condemnation. One suspects that Diane Medley’s caring may well be cold comfort for those whose lives she has declared to be utterly without purpose.
The same could be said of assurances made by some of the others in favor of the alternative prom, and by Christians everywhere who wish to assure us that they hate the sin but not the sinner.
A distinction that often comes up short of any real difference.
And here it is easy to get dismissive, easy to write Medley and so many others off as people without redeeming value. I can’t pretend I don’t feel that way at times, but herein lies the really terrible thing. I actually don’t think she sounds like a person completely devoid of humanity. I strongly suspect that she does indeed help students on a regular basis, that she cares for them deeply, and that her caring does extend in some perverted sense to the homosexuals that may come to her for help.
I said perverted, didn’t I?
And I mean it too.
And yes, it is Medley’s approach to homosexuality that strikes me as perverted, deeply so in fact. To imagine that one could help someone whose very life one accords so little value requires an exercise in mental gymnastics that would surely break the back of a healthy conscience.
This is good will gone wrong folks, and that’s the charitable interpretation of her statements.
You can ask people to change and rethink an awful lot in life, and yes that includes religious beliefs, political commitments, work ethics, and even favorite sports teams. Hell, you can ask people to get over an aversion to cats. But you cannot reasonably expect people to change their sexual orientation, nor to live their whole lives as though it didn’t matter. I expect there is a certain range of people with bisexual orientation who could make conscious choices about what gender they do and don’t want to be with, but for the vast majority of us that decision has simply been made for us. We don’t choose which gender we find attractive; we learn it. …and that learning process can be difficult enough for those of us fortunate enough to end up on the socially acceptable side of the spectrum. So much the more difficult for those whose desires take them in a different direction! People going through that deserve all the help that they can get; they do not deserve the conditional embrace of those whose love is full of caveats and footnotes. And they certainly do not need to hear that the only choice that they can make which would possibly make any difference in their lives, the only choice that could give their existence meaning, is the one that will have them going against their their own natural inclinations.
That approach just isn’t good enough.
And God is no excuse.
Medley has attached conditions to her compassion, conditions that dehumanize those who may need her help. That she accounts for these conditions by recourse to her faith in Christ is both beside the point and ironic at the same time. Frankly, I don’t think you get to set aside the vast array of evidence on the subject of human sexuality and proceed as though important factual questions can be safely relegated to the sphere is personal faith, not when other people’s lives and mental health lies in the balance. But beyond that, there is something deeply inauthentic about that approach.
It isn’t that Medley and her allies have renounced the love and compassion, so central to the vision of Christianity. Indeed that message is all over their approach to the subject. But they have reduced it to a sort of footnote. Gone is the motivating force of this powerful message, and what is left of that message is a mere rationalization. Love does not guide their actions; it guides their narrative. Because it is unthinkable that a Christian should act without love, an explanation must be offered which includes it. And so we get one, a vision of love and compassion so filled with caveats that it is guides actions indistinguishable from those motivated by clear malice. And we are left with an absolutism of laws and rules while the very value of a human life is reduced to an artistic expression of sorts, a trick of story telling.
Again, I don’t think Medley is a beast. But in this matter, her faith is hardly a virtue. Indeed, Christianity as she articulates it in this story is an outright moral failing. It is the reason she cannot treat some students with the dignity they deserve. I’ve known Christians who took the message of love to heart, Christians for whom it was a genuine force in their lives. And perhaps on other days, in other moments it is for Medley.
But not today.
And not for those that are gay.
If it was possible for the Nazis to define their discrimination and murder of others as a moral “good” (because, they believed, those others were polluting the gene pool and destroying German civilization) then Diana Medley’s mental gymnastics are child’s play by comparison. Happily, at least she isn’t setting up death camps for gays.
One difference strikes me as interesting. The Nazis didn’t profess any love for the groups they attacked. Medley, for all her dehumanizing rhetoric still professes to care about homosexuals. That would seem a hard angle to work.
A wonderful post! Thank you for a compassionate treatment of a well intentioned lady who does not understand the gay side of science. Gayness is common and natural in the animal kingdom. Is it unnatural and sinful that all mammals have approximately the same incidence of gayness as humans? Did God create gay animals? Or, did they choose gayness as a way of life? Evolutionists even surmise that gayness may have a useful purpose in evolution. It certainly has not hindered evolution. Usually those who abhor gayness change their minds when they give birth to a gay son or daughter, or when they personally meet a likable gay person.
I am not at all anti-gay, but your “interpretation” of animal behavior requires a dose of reality from a real animal behaviorist. All incidences of “gay” behavior by animals can easily be explained as settling issues of dominance, heirarchy, conflict, etc. Animals do it to make more animals, period. Their behavior can never be easily shoehorned into the affairs of human beings. Humans are very different, because of our very different brains. Hmmm. It’s just biology sir.
Thank you for commenting M. Flaherty,
I do realize it’s tough to extrapolate conclusions about human homosexuality from the homosexual acts of animals, and I’m also aware that a significant quantity of homosexual activities can be described as dominance-behavior. I was not aware that a broad consensus has been reached in the field of animal behavior to the effect that all homosexual activities in the animal world could be explained as expressions of conflict and/or dominance. Do I understand you correctly, that this is the case? And if so, could you please direct me to the best sources on that subject?
Thank you for your comment, Gosling. That is one of many angles I know people have pursued in the research. Still not sure how the comments from your critic will shake out, so let’s see…
I have to tell you that I think you are one heck of a writer!
This is the kind of “Christian” who gives reason for others to sneer at Christians as a whole. Is it because they are more vocal than the rest or because the media just loves to latch onto this kind of thing and run with it?
Why do we all feel that we have the right to dictate how someone else should live? We all do it in one form or another. What makes us think that our way is the only way, the best way? What arrogance!
I would love to see the day come when we all can stop judging one another. Why is it so much more attractive to use our hands to slap someone down then to extend it to lift them up?
How God must weep.
I suppose one reason is that a good number of our actions actually do affect one another. Those of us in favor of gay marriage, for example, aren’t just saying leave those guys alone, but actively advocating a public responsibility to treat homosexuals and homosexual unions with a certain degree of respect.
It’s not even clear to me that Medley has ever been openly aggressive in trying to change the behavior of homosexuals (though it wouldn’t surprise me if she had). What does seem clear to me is that her job brings her into contact with people who may need more compassion than she is prepared to give. I also think a separate prom just to say n-gays is pretty lame. That isn’t even about whether or not a pair of guys can dance together; apparently homosexuals will not be allowed to attend at all, …which is rather aggressive after all, I suppose. It’s also problematic. What do they have a list?
Very well said!
Thank you.
Thank you!
Absolutely!
I hadn’t heard of this particular case, but we have had similar in Australia, when a girl wanted to bring her girlfriend to a school formal, and there was a lot of noise in the media about whether such a thing should be allowed. To say that someone is fundamentally ‘wrong’ for being who they naturally are is , well, wrong. However, Medley is only repeating what she has been raised to think on the subject, and may be capable of learning to love unconditionally. I hope so! Thanks for your well written thoughts on this.
Well at least it appears that the school as a whole is on a better page than she and her allies. Thank you for your kind remarks.
Compassion…………but with conditions.
It usually comes with conditions, sadly enough.
Some more than others.
…and rather onerous ones at that. I know I couldn’t choose to just be gay. I see no reason to believe it would be easier for anyone to do the reverse.
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Thank you for articulating this message so well – I agree wholeheartedly with you, and appreciate you message . . . inclusiveness equals love. Period.
Thank you, Bruce.
Amazing. Only TRUE Christians lives have any real meaning !
Argghhh
One is tempted to add a trademark to that term, the way some use it. 🙂
Well spoken!
Thank you.