Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Catholics Talk About Sex


By Kate Ott

Whether it’s Pope Benedict’s recent comments about condoms and HIV, or the story of a pregnant Mary, looking for a place to give birth, ’tis the season for Roman Catholics to talk about sexuality and sexual health education. Catholics Talk About Sex

Religious Groups Support Repealing Gay Military Ban

nly 27 percent of Americans oppose lifting the ban, according to a poll released Monday (Nov. 29) by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.

Almost every religious group surveyed supports lifting the ban, according to the Pew poll. Only white evangelicals (48 percent) came close to having a majority opposed to open gays and lesbians serving in the military. White mainline Protestants (62 percent), black Protestants (52 percent) and Catholics (66 percent) all favor allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly. more

Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Issues World AIDS Day letter: “Pray for a future without AIDS”

“Pray for a future without AIDS,” Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori asks in her World AIDS Day 2010 letter.

World AIDS Day is noted annually on December 1.

“The first priority: continue to advocate forcefully for government investment in the fight against AIDS both here and abroad,” she noted. “The second priority: Episcopalians must continue to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS within our own communities. “

The following is the letter from Presiding Bishop Jefferts Schori:
_________________________________________________________________

Brothers and sisters in Christ,

On the first day of December, people around the world pause to remember World AIDS Day. Christians remember all who live with HIV and AIDS, and all who have died, at the same time we begin the season of Advent. We search for a healer and a hope-giver as we prepare for the coming of the Redeemer. One of the traditional prophetic readings for the season says:

While gentle silence enveloped all things,
and night in its swift course was now half gone,
[God’s]all-powerful word leaped from heaven, from the royal throne,
into the midst of the land that was doomed.
[Wisdom 18:14-15, NRSV]

The magnificent contrasts of this ancient vision – silence pierced by the Word, doom cast out by new life – seem a fitting frame for reflecting on the challenges and opportunities confronting us on World AIDS Day 2010.

The world lives in painful silence and gathering doom. More than 30 million people around the world are living with HIV, and at least 2.5 million persons will be infected in the coming year. Developing countries experience HIV and AIDS as major links in the chain of poverty and instability binding so much of God’s creation. In the United States HIV rates are also rising among the poor. An increased need for American funding of HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment has been met with silence and retreat, as other pressing challenges vie for national and global attention.

And yet silence and doom do not have the last word. The UNAIDS report released last week notes that the rate of new HIV infections has either stabilized or been reduced significantly in 56 nations. New infections have fallen 20% in the past decade, and AIDS deaths have fallen 20% in the past five years. The director of UNAIDS urges the world to break “the trajectory of the AIDS epidemic with bold actions and smart choices.” The Centers for Disease Control identify HIV/AIDS as one of six diseases which can be overcome. Research results released last week show promising results in clinical trials of a new prophylactic drug, designed to prevent HIV infection in at-risk communities. This success comes in the wake of recently publicized advances in identifying HIV ‘controller genes,’ which may lead to advances in vaccines or treatment.

This contrast confronts us on World AIDS Day: great progress and even greater hope despite public discourse and political leadership that rarely prioritizes an end to this deadly and stigmatizing disease. What can Christians do to ensure the victory of hope and new life in the face of silence and death?

The first priority: continue to advocate forcefully for government investment in the fight against AIDS both here and abroad. The U.S. government’s has, in the past two years, decreased our nation’s promised investment in HIV/AIDS abroad. This reduction had included both funding for particular countries, and our investment in the multinational Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. Archbishop Desmond Tutu wrote compellingly of President Obama’s unfulfilled commitments in a New York Times op-ed this past summer. As the President prepares his budget for the coming fiscal year, I urge Episcopalians to challenge him and the new Congress to keep America’s promises to the world. Joining the Episcopal Public Policy Network will connect your voice to those of other Episcopalians working in this and other areas of social justice.

The second priority: Episcopalians must continue to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS within our own communities. This Church still has AIDS, and urgent challenges remain. Stigma continues to be a major issue in the United States and around the world. Encouraging routine testing is essential, particularly among adults over age 50. I commend to all Episcopalians the work of the National Episcopal AIDS Coalition, which has done much to raise awareness of HIV and AIDS and avenues of healing within our own communities.

Finally, I urge your prayers. As we prepare to mark the thirtieth year of the world’s awareness of HIV and AIDS in 2011, pray for all who have died from this terrible disease. Pray for those living now with HIV and AIDS. And pray for a future without AIDS.

These past weeks have brought us new signs that such a future is indeed possible. Pray that we will use our collective resources, imagination, and will to make a world without AIDS a reality.


The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori

Presiding Bishop and Primate

The Episcopal Church

Advent Advice: Prepare For A Divine Interruption

During this solemn season of Advent, the preparation to re-live the birth of Jesus, we have a choice: We can focus on decorations and gifts and food, some of it fun and bonding. Or we can focus on the door, once a baby, adjoining heaven and earth. We can get ready to worship God in such a way that we will be ongoing agents of reconciliation. We can long for and work for a world where different and distant groups are all a part of the same story -- His. more

Thursday, November 25, 2010

COMMENTARY: Grace, gratitude and my big, gay Thanksgiving prayer

This commentary was originally published Wednesday on the The Bilerico Project website and is being republished here with exclusive permission from the author at:
COMMENTARY: Grace, gratitude and my big, gay Thanksgiving prayer

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

ENGLAND: General Synod supports Anglican Covenant process

By Matthew Davies, November 24, 2010

[Episcopal News Service, London] The General Synod of the Church of England has voted in favor of continuing the process towards adopting the Anglican Covenant, a set of principles intended to bind the Anglican Communion in light of its differences.

The Nov. 24 decision -- which was passed by synod's three houses of bishops, clergy and laity -- recommends that the church should consider a draft Act of Synod that "solemnly covenants with the other churches which enter into and adopt it in making the affirmations and commitments that it contains."

The bishops voted 39 for, 0 against, with 1 abstention; the clergy voted 145 for, 32 against, with 11 abstentions; and the laity voted 147 for, 25 against, with 8 abstentions.

The draft act will now be sent to the church's dioceses for consideration before returning to General Synod, which may be asked formally to adopt the covenant as early as February 2012.

Before the synod debate, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams encouraged its members to support the motion and the ongoing conversation towards adopting the covenant.

"The drift of the covenant has been towards … ways with which we can, in some sense, act in coherence together for the sake of God's mission," he said. "I hear and partly understand the anxieties about legislating family relations [but] I do want to resist very strongly that the covenant creates a central authority."

Williams said the covenant is about "trying to understand what it is to be completely accountable to one another," acknowledging that the context of the Anglican Communion is a global one to which all Anglicans have a responsibility.

The three-hour synod debate included a broad diversity of opinions about the pros and cons of a covenant, with repeated concerns expressed about section 4 of the document, which outlines a method for resolving disputes in the communion. Some critics of the covenant are concerned that section 4 may be used as a means to discipline certain provinces.

The Rev. Miranda Holmes, chaplain at the University of York, urged synod members to vote against the covenant, saying that the church should decline to use such structures to express its relationships.

"Local and global are increasingly blurred and a clash of contexts is something that we need to keep thinking about," she said. But in section 4 of the covenant, "suddenly our contexts are irrelevant," she added. "This text sounds like a couple in marital difficulties asking their wider family about whether they should divorce or not. I ask you to vote against a document that has such negative and legalistic terms."

The Rev. Mark Beach from Coventry said he hadn't yet decided how to vote but warned that "if the communion survives it will be because we have conversed in mother tongue, not because we have tried to legislate for unity."

Julie Dziegiel of Oxford compared the Anglican Communion with the situation in Northern Ireland in the 1970s -- "two sides entrenched and it doesn't look like a solution can be found," she said.

"The covenant is intended to address these issues," she said, but added that the effect of section 4 "can only be to split the communion further and permanently. What is needed is lengthy and permanent negotiation until both sides agree to respect one another's views and co-exist."

The Rev. Simon Cawdell of Hereford spoke in favor of the covenant, which he believes "is trying to find ways where the disagreement in our common life can be resolved in love."

Cawdell said it is a mistake to understand the covenant in judicial terms and that voting against it would send a negative signal to the rest of the communion.

Following years of discussion and several draft versions, the final text of the covenant was sent in December 2009 to the communion's 38 provinces for formal consideration.

The covenant first was proposed in the 2004 Windsor Report as a way that the Anglican Communion and its 38 autonomous provinces might maintain unity despite differences, especially relating to biblical interpretation and human sexuality issues. The Lambeth Commission on Communion, the group that produced the Windsor Report, was formed in response to the 2003 election of Gene Robinson, an openly gay priest, as bishop of New Hampshire, a development that caused some provinces to declare broken or impaired communion with the Episcopal Church.

Bishop Peter Price of Bath and Wells told synod members about his experience of attending a recent Episcopal Church House of Bishops meeting and finding a church "offering vibrant worship, engaging theology and a profound sense of mission … There was a commitment to addressing differences in an adult way, and a commitment to staying together."

He acknowledged that the Episcopal Church also is committed to studying and considering the covenant.

"Section 4 has been revised and clearly states that it cannot override the canons and constitutions of a particular province," he said. "The issue of governance will not go away [but] if we stay with the process we are not committed to tablets of stone. Although I still have some reservations, I shall nevertheless vote in favor of continuing this process."

Canon Elizabeth Paver of Sheffield, vice chair of the Anglican Consultative Council, the communion's main policy-making body, said that many provinces look to the Church of England for leadership in difficult times. "The covenant should be seen as a positive means for handling our diversity. It calls us to responsibility," she said. "The Church of England, the Anglican Communion, and the archbishop of Canterbury need this vote to go through overwhelmingly so that we can be seen to give some leadership."

Conversely, Bishop John Saxbee of Lincoln said he "will entirely support this process as long as it never ends. The Anglican Communion doesn't need a covenant, because the Anglican Communion is a covenant … If there is grace and goodwill then a covenant will not be necessary."

Saxbee said the covenant seems to be "more about factory-farmed religion that about free-range faith. I hope you will continue to enjoy discussion the idea of a covenant, but hesitate long and hard before signing on."

A procedural motion to adjourn the debate until July 2011 failed as did three proposed amendments to the Act of Synod text.

In February 2009, members of the Church of England's General Synod signaled their overall support for an Anglican Covenant but remained divided on how much authority or influence it should marshal in the communion's 38 provinces. About one third of General Synod members are new at this November meeting.

Various groups and individuals had been campaigning against the Anglican Covenant in the lead up to the General Synod debate.

An international coalition -- made up of Anglicans in Canada, England, New Zealand and the United States -- on Nov. 3 said the covenant would constitute "unwarranted interference in the internal life of the member churches of the Anglican Communion, would narrow the acceptable range of belief and practice within Anglicanism, and would prevent further development of Anglican thought."

The coalition launched a website, called "No Anglican Covenant" that it says provides resources "for Anglicans around the world to learn about the potential risks of the proposed Anglican Covenant."

"We believe that the majority of the clergy and laity in the Anglican Communion would not wish to endorse this document," said the Rev. Lesley Fellows, the coalition's moderator and a member of the Church of England. "Apart from church insiders, very few people are aware of the covenant. We want to encourage a wider discussion and to highlight the problems the covenant will cause."

Following the synod vote, Fellows issued a statement saying that the No Anglican Covenant Coalition is "disappointed" with the decision, but that it that it would "continue to oppose the covenant in the Diocesan Synods and work to defeat it when it returns to the General Synod."

Meanwhile, the conservative GAFCON/FCA Primates Council, in a Nov. 24 statement, described the current text of the Anglican Covenant as "fatally flawed," adding that "support for this initiative is no longer appropriate."

In the U.S.-based Episcopal Church, congregations are being urged to study and discuss the covenant during the next two years in preparation for General Convention in 2012.

Executive Council has predicted that any formal approval of the covenant by the Episcopal Church could not come until at least 2015 should endorsement require changes to the church's constitution.

The Anglican Church of Mexico, meeting in General Synod in June, became the first province formally to adopt the covenant. The Anglican Church of Southern Africa on Oct. 1 voted in favor of adopting the covenant, but that decision will need to be ratified by the next meeting of provincial synod in 2013.

-- Matthew Davies is editor and international correspondent of the Episcopal News Service.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Gays disproportionately targeted for hate crimes, report finds

Gays and lesbians are more at risk for becoming hate crime victims than any other group, according to a report by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The overall number of hate crimes declined in 2009, compared with the year before; more than 18% of reported incidents were based on sexual orientation, according to FBI statistics. Google/The Associated Press (11/22)

56 Religious Groups to U.S. Senate: Save the Clean Air Act

Rockefeller Bid to Delay EPA Regulation of Greenhouse Gases Mentioned as Unwise Move; Effort Involves Protestants, Jews, Unitarians and Other Leading Faith Organizations

WASHINGTON, DC -- A diverse group of 56 leading denominations and faith-based organizations today released a joint letter calling on the U.S. Senate to leave intact the power of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to protect the environment and public's health.

In particular, the religious leaders noted that the effort by Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) to delay EPA controls on greenhouse gas emissions should be turned down.

The letter from the 56 national, regional and state faith groups comes as some members of Congress have threatened to undermine the EPA's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and other pollutants, including ozone emissions (smog).

The joint letter opens as follows: "As communities and people of faith, we are called to protect and serve God's great Creation and work for justice for all of God's people. We believe that the United States must take all appropriate and available actions to prevent the worst impacts of climate change; we therefore urge you to oppose any efforts to undermine the authority of the Clean Air Act (CAA) to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. We have seen various challenges to the CAA this session including Senator Rockefeller's proposal to delay regulation of greenhouse gases under the Environmental Protection Agency. We urge you to protect the Clean Air Act and allow the EPA to use the full strength of the law to ensure that God's Creation and God's children remain healthy."

Rev. Harriet Olson, deputy general secretary, United Methodist Women, General Board of Global Ministries, United Methodist Church, said: "As leaders in our communities of faith, we take very seriously our charge to act as stewards of God's Creation. Preserving a strong Clean Air Act and limiting the harm done by climate change are very important and concrete things we can do today working together as people of faith acting in that stewardship capacity."

Rev. Michael McClain, southeastern coordinator, African American Climate Initiative, National Council of Churches, noted that "African Americans are disproportionately impacted by the effects of air pollution and climate change. More than 70 percent of African Americans and Latinos live in counties that violate federal air pollution and ground-level ozone, which have extreme health impacts, including aggravated asthma, chronic bronchitis, and premature death. Asthma is one of the leading serious chronic illnesses in African American children."

Rabbi Daniel J. Swartz, Temple Hesed, Scranton, PA., said: "Jewish values teach us to be good caretakers of our earth and all its resources, and to protect the life and health of all people. The Clean Air Act has helped to ensure that we protect the earth and we must ensure that this continues."

Rabbi Swartz is the author of "To Till and To Tend: A Guide for Jewish Environmental Study and Action," published by the Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life, and "Faith Communities and Environmental Health: From Global to Local," for which he won the 2005 Award for Excellence in Professional and Scholarly Publishing from the Association of American Publisher.

Rev. Chris Boerger, bishop, Northwest Washington Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, said: "For more than 30 years, the Clean Air Act has protected our air and the health of all creation, embodying the Christian ethic of stewardship for God's earth. Climate change presents a critical challenge for the future health of our planet and each of us, and the Clean Air Act is a key component of efforts to address that threat. Efforts to interfere with this vital legislation threaten the progress we have made in caring for the earth as well as the health and well-being of future generations."

The balance of the joint letter reads as follows:

"The [Clean Air Act] has a strong history of reducing pollution and protecting God's children and God's Creation, successfully decreasing the prevalence of acid rain, responding to health threatening smog and ozone problems faced in our major urban areas, and generally improving the air quality of our nation in the decades since it passage.

It is only appropriate that the CAA continue to oversee any and all air-related challenges that we face. In 2007, the Supreme Court ruled that greenhouse gas emissions, the leading cause of climate change are, in fact, covered under the CAA and could be regulated by the EPA. New CAA regulations limiting greenhouse gas emissions will also ensure that the largest emitters, such as power plants and factories, use the best available technologies to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and begin to shift to sustainable forms of energy.

The EPA, in its efforts to implement the CAA in an appropriate manner, has already proposed to tailor the CAA to exempt small carbon emitters and apply them only to large sources that have long been subject to similar standards for other pollutants.

Further changes to the Clean Air Act would limit the EPA's ability to live out its role and diminish the strength of the law. Senator Rockefeller's bill, and other proposals, would allow our nation's substantial contribution to global climate change to continue unchecked, exposing vulnerable communities to the impacts of climate change. In addition, this attempt to undermine the authority of the EPA and the CAA to regulate greenhouse gas emissions will interfere with an effective U.S. response to this global crisis.

Any attempt to undermine the Clean Air Act threatens the well being of at risk communities, undermines efforts to shift to a sustainable energy future, and inevitably will impact the right of all of God's children to live in a healthy world. Congress should instead focus its efforts on passing comprehensive climate legislation and national energy policy as a means to ensure a just and sustainable future for God's Creation."

The signers of the faith organization letter are (in alphabetical order):

Church of the Brethren

Church World Service

Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life

Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach

The Episcopal Church

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Franciscan Action Network

Interfaith Power and Light

Jewish Council for Public Affairs

Jewish Reconstructionist Federation

National Council of Churches USA

Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns

Mennonite Central Committee U.S. Washington Office

Presbyterian Church (USA) Office of Public Witness

The Missionary Oblates, Justice Peace/Integrity of Creation Office

Union for Reform Judaism

Unitarian Universalist Ministry for Earth

Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations

The United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

United Methodist Church – General Board of Church and Society

United Methodist Women

State and Regional Groups

Arizona Interfaith Power and Light

California Council of Churches

California Council of Churches IMPACT

Connecticut's Interfaith Power and Light, a project of Interreligious Eco-Justice Network

Earth Ministry

Eco-Justice Ministries

Ecumenical Minstries of Oregon's Interfaith Network for Earth Concerns

The Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut

Faith in Place

Georgia Interfaith Power and Light

Greater Washington Interfaith Power and Light

GreenFaith

Illinois Interfaith Power & Light

Iowa Interfaith Power and Light

Kentucky Interfaith Power and Light

Lutheran Coalition for Public Policy in Minnesota

Maine Council of Churches

Maine Interfaith Power and Light

Michigan Interfaith Power and Light

Minnesota Council of Churches

New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light

North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light

Pennsylvania Council of Churches

Presbyterians for Earth Care

Rhode Island Interfaith Power and Light

Tennessee Interfaith Power and Light

Texas Impact

Virginia Interfaith Center

Virginia Interfaith Power and Light

Voices for Earth Justice (MI)

Washington Association of Churches

Washington Interfaith Power and Light

Wisconsin Council of Churches

Wisconsin Interfaith Power and Light

Pope's condom remark seen as breakthrough

Pope Benedict XVI's mention of an exception to the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to condom use brought praise from HIV/AIDS activists. "There could be single cases that can be justified, for instance when a prostitute uses a condom," Benedict said, as quoted in an excerpt from a book due to be published this week. CNN

Major breakthrough in fight against HIV reported

Gay men who stuck to a daily dose of an antiretroviral drug were 90% less likely to become infected with HIV, according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. "That's huge. That says it all for me," said Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health. The therapy would cost more than $12,000 per year in the U.S. currently, though generic versions of the drug are available in some developing countries for as little as 40 cents per day. Los Angeles Times (11/23) , The New York Times (free registration) (11/23)

No Anglican Covenant Gathers Momentum

LONDON – As the Church of England General Synod prepares to debate the proposed Anglican Covenant, a group of unlikely campaigners have worked hard to ensure that there is a serious debate about the potential risks involved.


Started just three weeks ago after online conversations among a small number of international Anglican bloggers, the No Anglican Covenant Coalition has built on the work of two English groups, Inclusive Church and Modern Church, to set the shape of the debate.

“A month ago, General Synod and the entire Communion were sleepwalking into approving the Covenant without a proper discussion of the issue,” according to Coalition Moderator, the Revd. Dr. Lesley Fellows. “In some places, the Covenant was being presented as a means to punish North American Anglicans.

In Britain, the United States and Canada, it was being spun as nothing more than a dispute resolution mechanism. I’ve spoken to many Synod members who were only dimly aware of the Anglican Covenant, including one who thought we were referring to the Covenant with the Methodists.”

The week preceding the General Synod debate has seen a flood of articles criticizing the Covenant, including:
an article by Canadian canon law expert, the Revd Canon Alan Perry, challenging the assertion that the Covenant would have no impact on the constitution and canons of member churches of the Communion;

an article by the former Chancellor of the Anglican Church of Canada, the Hon. Ronald Stevenson QC, a former judge of the Court of Queen's Bench, critical of the lack of clarity regarding the disciplinary procedures in the Covenant; and

an article by the Bishop of the Convocation of American Churches in Europe, the Rt. Revd. Pierre Whalon, challenging the idea of enhancing communion by excluding those who disagree with the majority.
"We are all strongly committed to the Anglican Communion, but we are not convinced that this proposed Covenant will do anything to keep the Communion together," according to the Revd. Malcolm French, the Coalition's Canadian Convener. "Covenant supporters have hurt their case by being dismissive of critics while failing to make a compelling case for this proposed Anglican Covenant. And no one has been prepared to explain he initial and ongoing costs to implement the Covenant."

Within the last three weeks momentum has gathered to encourage the Church of England to wake up. The first test will come tomorrow, when General Synod debates the Covenant and votes on a motion for initial approval, the first step towards final approval at a later session. Although significant decisions such as women in the episcopate normally require a two-thirds majority, questions should be asked about why the English House of Bishops has proposed only a simple majority for the Covenant.

noanglicancovenant.org

The articles referred to, and several others, can be found at:
noanglicancovenant.org/resources.html

Friday, November 19, 2010

Same-sex marriage hearing to be shown on C-SPAN

A hearing in San Francisco next month on the constitutionality of Proposition 8, California's ban on same-sex marriage, can be televised on C-SPAN, a federal appeals court has decided.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/11/18/BALP1GE6N5.DTL#ixzz15ktkSVFW

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Globe Editorial - Robinson: A human, not just a symbol

V. Gene Robinson’s announcement last week that he will step down as New Hampshire’s Episcopal bishop may have shocked his congregants and made waves around the world, but his reasoning is hardly surprising: After seven years of strain caused by the controversy surrounding his elevation as the first openly gay Anglican bishop — and a steady stream of death threats aimed at him and his partner — the bishop is ready to open a new, less public chapter of life. It was only seven years ago that Robinson stood during his consecration ceremony surrounded by bodyguards, wearing a bulletproof vest. While many were hailing Robinson as a civil-rights trailblazer, those safety measures stood as a reminder of the everyday sacrifices required of such pioneers.

They were also symbols of the Episcopal Church’s rocky road ahead. Robinson’s appointment precipitated a rift between liberal and conservative Anglicans, which almost caused a schism within the 476-year-old Communion. That’s not how Robinson wanted it. Despite his groundbreaking role, the bishop didn’t carry a firebrand’s mantle. Instead, he performed his job quietly and steadily, proving by example that he wasn’t the radical some believed him to be, but a caring, competent man of the cloth who just happened to be gay.

Although historians will paint Robinson as a lightning rod for the cause of gay rights and a catalyst for change, his announcement should remind us of a simple fact: Robinson may be a symbol, but he is also a human being. Over the years, he has dealt with many struggles publicly, from divorcing and coming out in the 1980s to a more recent addiction to alcohol. But that’s what makes Robinson an effective spiritual leader. Instead of covering up his troubles, he has shared and grappled with them. His retirement has been no different. It is unfortunate that the stresses of the job have caused him and his family great strain, and Robinson deserves a graceful exit off the public stage. His presence will be missed.

Thou shalt not use Facebook

New Jersey pastor has ordered couples in his church to delete their Facebook accounts according to CBS Philly: Thou shalt not commit adultery. And thou also shalt not use Facebook. That’s the edict from a New Jersey pastor who feels...[http://dlvr.it/8n8n6]

Toronto issues guidelines for blessing same gender couples

The An­glican diocese of Toronto has issued guidelines for clergy to use in considering requests by same-sex couples for blessings. The guidelines are a pastoral response to committed gay and lesbian couples but are “not an authorized rite of the Anglican dio­cese of Toronto”. Some say this distinction is important, that adopting a rite for blessing same gender couples would spark conflict with the Archbishop of Canterbury and others.

The College of Bishops acknow­ledges that the guidelines might strain the “gracious restraint” called for in the 2004 Windsor report, which included moratoria on ap­point­ing someone in a same-sex relationship as a bishop, authorising same-sex blessings, and intervening in another province. More @ Church Times.

New Hospital Visitation Rule Issued

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a new hospital visitation rule Wednesday that allows patients to designate their own visitors during a hospital stay, including their same-sex partners.

The new regulation, which will apply to any hospital that participates in Medicare or Medicaid, will go into effect approximately 60 days from tomorrow, when the it is likely to be posted in the Federal Register. More @ The Advocate

Covenant debate grows in UK

Thanks to Thinking Anglicans.

Catholics for Equality Decries USCCB Election As Yielding To "Increasingly Uncharitable Demands of the Pope"

Election of Dolan as president and Kurtz as vice-president of USCCB evidence of "increased Vatican influence in US politics" suggests SARAH POSNER in Religious Dispatches.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Decline of Marriage And Rise of New Families

Americans today are less likely to be married than at any time in the nation’s history. Rates have declined for all groups, but they’ve fallen most sharply among those on the lower rungs of the socio-economic ladder.

A new Pew Research survey finds that these less-advantaged adults are more likely than others to say that economic security is an important reason to marry. But this is a bar that many cannot meet.

Even as marriage shrinks, family remains the most important and most satisfying element in the lives of most Americans. Interactive: Five Decades of Marriage Trends or full report.

Prop. 8 appeal will be televised

Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal grants C-Span permission to carry the Dec. 6 proceedings in S.F. live. MORE

Epidemic of HIV Requires National Mobilization, Health Officials Warn

Despite Progress in Testing Americans for HIV, Lack of Federal/Private Insurance Impedes Expansion

WASHINGTON, DC -- With projections that human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection rates are increasing in some populations, former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop -- who charted the nation's policies on HIV/AIDS following the first deaths from AIDS in 1981 -- today issued a stern warning to the public health community: HIV/AIDS continues to be a major epidemic and requires a national mobilization to identify and provide immediate care for many Americans with HIV who remain undiagnosed -- an estimated 200,000 people.

Addressing the 2010National Summit on HIV Diagnosis, Prevention and Access to Care, a biennial scientific conference convened by the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research, Dr. Koop called the public's lack of attention to HIV the "new front" in the nation's ongoing battle against this disease. Noting that one in every 300 Americans (1.1 million people) is infected with HIV and an additional 56,300 will become infected each year, Dr. Koop said the nation's growing complacency is as dangerous as the irrational fear in the first days of the AIDS epidemic.

"As someone who has been speaking out on HIV/AIDS for 30 years, I want to go public once more with the same message I delivered as Surgeon General - HIV is contagious and it can kill you," Dr. Koop said. On a more positive note, Dr. Koop added that with HIV, knowledge is power: learning one's positive serostatus is the first step for newly diagnosed HIV patients to get linked to care and treated early in the disease process with the potential to have a nearly normal lifespan.

As the first major meeting to address the nation's prevention and detection efforts since the release of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy for the United States in July, this year's summit on November 17-19 will bring more than 350 HIV researchers, health care providers, policymakers and advocates together to create the pathway for accelerated adoption of routine HIV testing and for increasing patients' access to care - two strategies that will dramatically reduce HIV transmission and better support people living with HIV.

"If there was ever a time when we can change the course of HIV in this country, it is now," said Veronica Miller, Ph.D., Director of the Forum. "HIV testing is a crucial step in reducing HIV infections and getting newly infected people into care quickly when treatment will significantly improve their health outcomes. Elevating the need for routine HIV testing must become a new imperative to which we devote the resources of our communities and our nation."

Towards this end, the summit charted the progress to date in making HIV testing a routine part of preventive care and called for immediate action to eliminate the systemic barriers that are impeding further adoption: lack of federal reimbursement and private insurance coverage for HIV testing, state laws that require written consent, and complacency about HIV in gay and bisexual men that is leading to a significant increase in infection rates among this group. These actions are essential if one of the major goals of the Obama Administration's new HIV/AIDS Strategy - increasing to 90 percent the number of HIV-positive Americans who know they are infected - will be met by the target date of 2015.

Confronting Two HIV Epidemics

Mobilizing the public health community around HIV prevention and early detection is especially warranted now that HIV infections among gay and bisexual men are on the rise and HIV has become a significant minority health problem. Presenting an update on the state of HIV/AIDS in the U.S., Dr. Kevin Fenton, Director of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (NCHHSTP), reported that:

  • · Men who have sex with men (MSM) represent 53 percent of all new infections and are being diagnosed at rates 44 times greater than other men and 40 times higher than in women
  • · African Americans now account for almost half of the U.S. population living with HIV (46 percent) and nearly half (45 percent) of the new infections each year
  • · Hispanics/Latinos have rates of new infections that more than double that of white men and nearly four times that of white women.

Late Testing Remains Major Challenge

Although routine testing is intended to stop HIV transmission and late entry to care, new data presented at the summit find that "late testers" -- those who develop AIDS within a year of diagnosis -- account for 40 percent of all new HIV diagnoses. Changing this trend is medically necessary because there is a 7 to 9 year lag after HIV infection, during which the infected person may unknowingly transmit HIV to others. Studies show that transmission rates are 3.5 times greater among undiagnosed patients compared to those who know their status. Moreover, delayed diagnosis with late entry into care is projected to result in 100,000 life years lost in the U.S. as well as significant costs to the health system for treating AIDS-related illnesses.

Illustrating the challenges for the public health community, summit leaders focused on data from examining health insurance records of late testers, which reveal many missed opportunities for diagnosing HIV earlier, when CD4 or T-cell counts are higher and antiretroviral treatment is more effective in prolonging survival. According to research studies, the average CD4 cell count in late testers in 190, which is alarming low. HIV infected people are considered to have "normal" CD4 counts if the number is above 500.

HIV Testing Accelerating But Impediments Continue to Hinder Progress

To further increase the number of Americans - particularly those at high risk - who get tested for HIV, CDC launched its HIV Testing Initiative in 2007. Originally focused on testing African Americans at high risk, the initiative has resulted in an additional 1.4 million Americans being tested for HIV since 2007, and in some 10,000 HIV-infected people being identified, most of which (75 percent) were linked to care. These new statistics represent significant progress in implementing the 2006 recommendations from CDC that all Americans aged 13 to 64 years be tested for HIV when they receive care in hospital emergency rooms, clinics and other heath care settings.

Looking at the impact of expanded HIV testing at the community level, in Washington, DC, where at least 3 percent of residents are living with HIV or AIDS, the Department of Health reported new HIV diagnoses increased 17 percent after the city implemented an expanded HIV testing program in 2006. Accordingly, the average CD4 count among newly diagnosed cases also increased by 57 percent, meaning more people were diagnosed at an earlier stage when treatment is most beneficial. Another innovative program in San Francisco increased by more than 4,000 tests when HIV screenings were combined with hepatitis A and B vaccinations and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.

Despite these positive developments, however, summit leaders identified significant barriers that are impeding further success, especially current reimbursement policies that are linked to coverage recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) -- an independent panel of private sector experts that determines which preventive services should be incorporated into primary medical care. Although other routine screening tests, such as for cholesterol and triglyceride levels, rate an A or B grade and are recommended for coverage, USPSTF currently assigns HIV testing a C grade - defined as "offer or provide this service only if other considerations support the offering or providing the service in an individual patient." Accordingly, Medicare limits coverage for HIV testing, despite analyses that HIV screenings save $50,000 to $64,000 per quality adjusted life year.

In addition, Medicaid coverage -- which is the largest single source of care and coverage for people with HIV (an estimated 40 percent of HIV/AIDS patients receive services through Medicaid) -- is a state-by-state decision but because of the economic downturn, many states do not consider HIV testing a priority. Therefore, many people at risk for HIV are currently not eligible for coverage or, if eligible, face barriers to enrollment.

To change this situation, summit leaders called for more states to follow the examples of the District of Columbia and California, which enacted legislation requiring all health insurers to pay for HIV screenings. As with Medicare, most private insurers use the USPSTF recommendations when developing reimbursement policies and do not cover routine HIV testing.

"Although the nation is now 30 years into the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the health care system remains stuck in the past, despite increasingly effective treatment and promising new approaches for prevention," said John Bartlett, MD, Professor of Medicine, Chief, Johns Hopkins AIDS Service, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a co-chair of the Summit. "There is so much that medicine can do to alleviate the impact of this devastating disease but we first have to expand access to a test that takes minutes and costs ten dollars. It is the only realistic way to reach more people with HIV early when treatment is most effective."

Another immediate priority for the HIV community is to remove the requirements in four states that still mandate signed consent forms: Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska and Pennsylvania. Since the CDC recommendations were published, the HIV community has been successful in removing laws and regulations in 16 states that previously required the separate written consent for HIV testing of non-pregnant adults. Thus, today, 46 states and the District of Columbia have laws and regulations that are consistent with CDC's recommendations to use an "opt-out" approach under which HIV testing is part of the general medical consent.

About the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research

Now part of the University of California (UC), Berkeley School of Public Health and based in Washington, DC, the Forum was founded in 1997 as the outgrowth of the Keystone Center's report "The Keystone National Policy Dialogue on Establishment of Studies to Optimize Medical Management of HIV Infection," which called for an ongoing collaboration among stakeholders to address emerging issues in HIV/AIDS and set the research strategy. Representing government, industry, patient advocates, healthcare providers, foundations and academia, the Forum is a public/private partnership that is guided by an Executive Committee that sets the research agenda. The Forum organizes roundtables and issues reports on a range of global HIV/AIDS issues, including treatment-related toxicities, immune-based therapies, health services research, co-infections, prevention, and the transference of research results into care. Forum recommendations have changed how clinical trials are conducted, accelerated the delivery of new classes of drugs, heightened awareness of TB/HIV co-infection, and helped to spur national momentum toward universal testing for HIV.

To memorialize and fight for a better future

November 20 marks the annual Transgender Day of Remembrance, memorializing those lost to anti-transgender violence over the past year. The Task Force honors the memory of transgender people killed both in the U.S. and abroad during 2010. For more information on the Transgender Day of Remembrance and a list of related events around the world, many of which are held this week, visitwww.transgenderdor.org.

From a divinity school in Rochester, N.Y., to Piazza Liberazione in Magenta, Italy, to the steps of the Cleveland Justice Center in Ohio, the Task Force hopes you will be part of one of these events and work with us toward a day when the dignity and value of all people is affirmed and protected.

The National Transgender Discrimination Survey - Preliminary Findings on Employment and Economic Insecurity, a joint study from the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and National Center for Transgender Equality, found more than one quarter of transgender people surveyed have lost a job for being transgender and discovered that members of the transgender community have double the rate of poverty as the general population. And, alarming though not surprising, the survey also indicates that transgender people are very vulnerable to physical violence because of bias.

The Task Force is proud of its work to change the federal hate crimes law to include anti-transgender crimes. In 2009, violent hate crimes committed on the basis of gender identity, along with sexual orientation, became federal crimes under the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, passed by Congress and signed by President Obama in October of that year.


The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund, founded in 1974 as the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, Inc., works to build the grassroots political power of the LGBT community to win complete equality. We do this through direct and grassroots lobbying to defeat anti-LGBT ballot initiatives and legislation and pass pro-LGBT legislation and other measures. We also analyze and report on the positions of candidates for public office on issues of importance to the LGBT community. The Task Force Action Fund is a 501(c)(4) non-profit corporation incorporated in New York. Contributions to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund are not tax deductible.

Louisiana Panel Votes in Favor of Science Textbooks BY LAURI LEBO Louisiana Family Forum behind creationist attack.

Last week, parents in Louisiana raised objections over the fact that science books proposed for adoption in that state would teach kids about (the horror!) evolution. As Winston White, one of the residents who complained about the books, said, "It's like Charles Darwin and his theory is a saint. You can't touch it."

On Friday, Louisiana's textbook advisory panel listened to the public complaints and there's some good news. By an 8-4 vote, the panel recommended the books be adopted.

More of Louisiana Panel Votes in Favor of Science Textbooks BY LAURI LEBO

US Catholic Bishops Elect a Culture Warrior

MARIAN RONAN reports in Religious Dispatches:

This brings us to the election of Archbishop Dolan as president of the USCCB. ...But his election is not a good sign. As the New York Times mentions, this is the first time a vice president has not been elected president of the USCCB since the 1960s. What theTimes fails to mention is that it happened then because the vice president was quite old and would have retired as bishop in the middle of his term. The rejection of a Bishop Kicanas is essentially unparalleled. As Thomas Reese SJ., the former editor of America has said, the election of Dolan signals the increasing investment of the US Catholic bishops in the culture wars.

Fairness Sponsors Transgender Week of Awareness Events Transgender Day of Remembrance Memorial Service Nov. 20, 7PM

LOUISVILLE, KY—The Fairness Campaign sponsors Louisville's Transgender Week of Awareness, a series of events surrounding the 12th annual Transgender Day of Remembrance memorial service held November 20, 7 p.m. at Metropolitan Community Church to commemorate the more than 320 known transgender individuals who have lost their lives to anti-trans violence since 1998. Eleven names have been added to that list in 2010 alone. The Day of Remembrance is organized by the Women's Center of the Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary.

The Transgender Week of Awareness, organized by Louisville's transgender support group, Sienna, includes a number of events held at the University of Louisville to promote education on transgender issues and raise awareness of the disproportionately high level of discrimination and violence trans-identified individuals face. Among the events will be a showing of the popular movie Soldier's Girl, focusing on the true-life story of Barry Winchell, a Fort Campbell, Kentucky army private who was murdered for his relationship with a transgender woman. Calpernia Addams, Winchell's former girlfriend, appeared at the University of Louisville last year as the keynote speaker of the campus's popular Pride Week.

On Thursday, November 18, University of Louisville students will fill the entrance to the campus Student Activities Center with chalked body outlines to represent trans individuals who have been murdered.

TRANSGENDER WEEK OF AWARENESS EVENTS

Soldier's Girl Movie Showing, Wednesday, November 17, 7 p.m., University of Louisville Chao Auditorium, Free

"TransAwareness in Action," Performance Art (chalk lines of bodies lost to anti-trans violence), Thursday, November 18, Noon, University of Louisville Student Activities Center Entrance

Trans Health Discussion, Thursday, November 18, 5:30 p.m., University of Louisville Campus Health Services

"Night of the Legends," Performances and Speeches Honoring Trans Heroes, Friday, November 19, 7 p.m., University of Louisville Student Activities Center Multipurpose Room

Transgender Day of Remembrance Candlelight Memorial Service, Saturday, November 20, 7 p.m., Metropolitan Community Church, 1432 Highland Avenue

Alameda County home to first transgender judge in nation

OAKLAND -- Alameda County has become home to the first transgender trial judge in the country as Victoria Kolakowski won the race to fill an empty seat on the county's Superior Court bench.
Final results from the county Registrar of Voters show that Kolakowski won 50.98 percent of the vote against deputy district attorney John Creighton, who won 47.98 percent of the vote. MORE

Bars closed? Pa. church offers late-night Mass

Pittsburgh churches used to offer middle-of-the-night services for employees who worked odd hours. One church is bringing the tradition back with a 2:30 a.m. service. The Rev. Carmen D'Amico said he's adding a weekly Mass on Sundays, timed for just after the bars close. D'Amico is hoping to attract those out late on Saturday nights. Officials have been handing out fliers at local colleges to publicize the new service.

Read more.

Your angry God will not save you now

This much we know: Increasingly it is being proven that sexual orientation in general and homosexuality in particular are largely biological adventures, hardwired and pre-set in your genetic code by sly and well-groomed angels way, way in advance, back when you were but a twinkle in the eye of the moan. ... It's a lot to unpack. But it turns out we've had it all exactly backwards all along. You actually can't choose your particular wiring for love, but you can choose to be a warlike, antagonistic force of cancerous doom. We cannot design our innate sexual chemistry, but we sure as hell can choose whether to celebrate it with wine and song and fearless abandon, or poison it at its heart with ignorance, panic, a violent misreading of God.

Read more Mark Morford:

Monday, November 15, 2010

Louisiana Citizens Horrified that there’s Evolution in Science Books

Religious Dispatches reports:
A group of Louisiana citizens, believed to be backed by the conservative Christian Louisiana Family Forum, are attacking the state's proposed biology textbooks because, well, they teach too much evolution.

The Baton Rouge Advocate reported this week that a state panel is scheduled to review the issue Friday after the state's school board held off adopting the biology I and biology II textbooks due to the complaints.

Winston White, one of the residents who complained about the books, said, "It's like Charles Darwin and his theory is a saint. You can't touch it." MORE

A Gay Family of Faith Speaks Out on Bullying

The Rev. Dr. Cindi Love writes at the Huff Post:

Last weekend, I served as one of the conveners of the 2010 Soulforce Symposium in Philadelphia entitled "The Truth About Faith, Science, Love & Reparative Therapy."

For me, the most exciting part of the gathering was the compelling presence and energy of so many young adults from diverse communities, several of whom were Soulforce Equality Riders over the last five years.

These young people are brilliant and articulate and well-prepared. They were spot on with their requirements for those of us in leadership:

  • They will not tolerate another generation of citizenship in their country where so many people are treated as "less than" if they are gender non-conforming.
  • They will not barter peace of mind or their lives in any way that perpetuates gender profiling and bias.
  • They "just say no" to discrimination regarding their employment, military service, rights of covenant relationship or safety.
  • They will not accept or condone bullying, spiritual violence or religious abuse. MORE

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Focus on the Family Cashes in on Anti-Gay “Day of Truth”

Religious Dispatches reports:

When suicides by teenagers bullied for being gay, or perceived as being gay, reached a relative peak a couple of months ago, leading “ex-gay” organization Exodus International dropped its sponsorship of the annual “Day of Truth” designed to counter the “Day of Silence” observed by gay kids and their allies at schools around the country.

At the time, Exodus cited the “Day of Truth” activities as too divisive in an atmosphere where kids were being bullied to death for their sexual orientation. Have no fear, though, because the Focus on the Family has stepped in to save the “Day of Truth”—complete with a new name for the same old idea. ... More importantly, it’s not as profitable for Focus on the Family—and Focus’ true concern is always about that bottom line. MORE

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Homosexual Thoughts and Feelings Not a Sin, Says New LDS Handbook

Religious Dispatches reports:

Changes to LDS Church policy on homosexuality will be presented to LDS lay clerical leaders worldwide this Saturday, November 13.

The changes are being introduced through a global leadership training satellite broadcast for the release of the newly revised Church Handbook of Instructions (CHI), a 400-page lay priesthood manual reserved for use by LDS Church members in local and regional lay leadership positions.

Multiple advance copies of the CHI leaked on the internet reveal significant changes to Church policy on homosexuality.

Websites are reporting changes (in CHI Book 2) as follows, with deletions marked in strikeouts and additions in italics here.


Friday, November 12, 2010

Top Episcopal bishop sees less conflict over gay issues

The number of Episcopalians leaving the church over same-sex unions and gay clergy has dropped, according to the faith’s presiding bishop.

“There were very, very few in the past year,” the Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori said during a visit to Salt Lake City last weekend for the consecration of Utah’s 11th Episcopal bishop, the Rev. Scott Hayashi.

In an interview, she expressed confidence that the Episcopal Church will grow by attracting those drawn by its “transcendent worship,” sense of social justice and diversity.

Research indicates that women in transition and Latinas are two groups especially attracted to the Episcopal Church, Schori said. “They find us appealing because we invite people to ask questions. We don’t just provide answers.”

The Episcopal Church, like other mainline Protestant churches, has lost members in recent decades. It now has 2.2 million members, though it is part of the worldwide Anglican Communion with 77 million. In Utah, the number of Episcopalians has dropped from 6,000 in the mid-1990s to about 5,200. MORE

Wedding Announcement Gets Lesbian Fired From Illinois Catholic University

Benedictine University doesn't mind you being gay. Really. As long as you don't tell anyone.

Administrator Laine Tadlock, who was director of the education program at Benedictine, was forced from her job from the Catholic university in Springfield, Illinois after a local paper, The State Journal-Register, published her wedding announcement to her partner Kae Helstrom in Iowa. The university knew she was gay and about her out-of-state wedding. But apparently took issue with the announcement mentioning she worked at the university. MORE

Experts Fear Copycat Suicides After Bullying Cases

PHILADELPHIA — The experts call it "contagion" when a suicide or rash of suicides inspires others to follow in an attempt at martyrdom or solidarity in death.

Most people would call them copycat suicides. Whatever the name, it appears to have been at play in at least one suicide since Rutgers University freshman Tyler Clementi's highly publicized jump off the George Washington Bridge. And experts fear that other recent suicides might fit the mold or that more are ahead.

That creates a conundrum for advocates who want to stop teenage bullying and their related suicides, as well as for the media outlets that cover them: how to spread the word without romanticizing the problem or unwittingly encouraging vulnerable teenagers to choose death. More @ Huff Post

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Democrats, The Gays, And The Evangelicals

BY SARAH POSNER reports @ Religious Dispaytch:

The Democrats don't plan to try to repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell legislatively during the lame duck session of Congress, giving the term new meaning -- perhaps a different sort of fowl.

There's no reason why the Democrats should be afraid of repealing this policy that even the gay Republicans have sought to overturn in court. As I've written before, "The only group that has more opponents of open service than supporters is white evangelicals." Even Republicans support it by 47-43% margin, according to a recent Pew poll.


One of the head-scratchers of last Tuesday's exit polls was how the Republicans increased their share of the gay vote from 19% in 2008 to 31% this year.

On LGBT issues, there can be only two factors worrying the White House: religion and religion, or the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the evangelicals. The Democrats lost ground both with Catholics and evangelicals from 2008 to 2010: 42% of Catholics voted Republican in 2008, and 54% in 2010. They lost ground with evangelicals, a group with which they made modest gains in 2008. But they also lost ground with the unaffiliated, with Republicans picking up ten percentage points in this group since 2006. And, of course, this cycle the LGBT vote -- unenthused, apparently, with the tepid Democratic support for their basic rights -- bizarrely migrated toward to party that actively caters to the most virulently anti-gay elements of American religious life.

It's exactly that element, it seems, that the White House is fearful of inciting. It's a loud element, a shrinking minority that the GOP seeks out, even as younger evangelicals drift away from caring about gay marriage. It keeps certain foot soldiers out and marching -- to the polls, to fundraisers, to rallies. But that didn't stop a third of gay voters from pulling the lever for the GOP.


More of The Democrats, The Gays, And The Evangelicals