Thursday, October 15, 2009

"A Simple Matter of Logic, Really "

The following (satirical) op-ed by “Jane Kendricks” is from the latest issue of The Onion.

____________________________________


If God Had Wanted Me to Be Accepting of Gays,
He Would Have Given Me the Warmth
and Compassion to Do So


By Jane Kendricks
The Onion
October 13, 2009

I don’t question God. The Lord is my Shepherd and I shall put none above Him. Which is why I know that if it were part of God’s plan for me to stop viciously condemning others based solely on their sexual preference, He would have seen fit—in His infinite wisdom and all—to have given me the tiniest bit of human empathy necessary to do so.

It’s a simple matter of logic, really. God made me who I am, and who I am is a cold, anti-gay zealot. Thus, I abhor gay people because God made me that way. Why is that so hard to understand?

Here, let’s start with the basic facts: I hate and fear gay people. The way they feel is different from how I feel, and that causes me a lot of confusion and anger. Everyone knows God is all-powerful. He could easily have given me the capacity to investigate what’s behind those feelings rather than tell strangers in the park they’re going to hell for holding hands. But God clearly has another path for me. And who am I to question His divine will?

Compassion, tolerance, understanding, basic decency, the ability to put myself in another person’s position: God could have endowed me with any of those traits and yet—here is the crucial part—He didn’t. Why? Because the Creator of the Universe wants me to demonize homosexuals in an effort to strip them of their fundamental human rights.

I’m sorry, but you can’t possibly ask me to explain everything God does. He works in mysterious ways, remember?

Try to understand. If I were capable of thinking and acting any other way, then I’m sure I would, but God seems to be quite adamant about this one. He’s just not budging at all. So unless our almighty Lord and Savior decides to change His mind about my ability to empathize on even the most basic level — which I find highly unlikely — then everyone is just going to have to accept the fact that I’m going to keep on hating homosexuals. And I know that He will fill me with the strength to remain mindless and hurtful in the face of adversity.

Which isn’t to say that my faith hasn’t been tested. Believe me, there have been times when I’ve drifted from the bitter and terrified life God has chosen for me. When my younger brother told me he was gay, it shook my faith to its very core. But here I am, 27 years later, still refusing to take his calls. Just the way God intended.

It’s actually pretty astonishing how many complaints to the school board you can make regarding the new band teacher you’ve never met when you are filled with the Light of Christ and devoid of any real kindness or mercy toward His other children.

At the end of the day, I’m just trying to lead a good Christian life. That means going to church on Sunday, following the Ten Commandments, and fighting what I believe to be a sexual abomination through a series of petty actions and bitter comments made under my breath. Sure, I sometimes wish God would just reach into my heart and give me the ability to treat all people with, at the very least, the decency and respect they deserve as human beings. But unfortunately for that new couple who moved in three houses down, He hasn't yet.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I have God’s work to do.


See also the previous (and humorous) Wild Reed posts:
A Humorous Look at Internalized Homophobia
Did Ya Hear About Our John?
A Rich Laugh Fit for a Dame
A Beer Ad with a Difference
One Out of Ten
Oops!
A Car Ad with a Difference


3 comments:

William D. Lindsey said...

Michael, thanks for posting this. It's wonderfully droll. And frighteningly accurate in its send-up of the inexorable "logic" promoted by many Christians to justify what clearly cannot be justified by scripture, tradition, or reason.

Something in the news today totally validates the point this article is making. It's being reported that one of the two men arrested for the savage beating of a gay man in Queens, NY, recently claims he is not prejudiced, and nearly beat the gay man to death because the gay man made advances to him.

Yet the attacker sports a tatoo with the Leviticus text stating that it's an abomination for a man to lie with another man.

Mareczku said...

Hey, I've read worse than this today. And some of it has been directed at me. At least she didn't go on about devils and demons. (I realize that this is satire but it is not as scary as some of the other stuff that I have read recently even if it is taken seriously.)

Kelly W. Patterson said...

That is great. I love the onion, they know how to put just enough reality into their satire to make it both hilariously funny and enlightening at the same time.

RE:William - Not that I believe his story, but I'm sure that non-prejudiced attacker would have followed and brutally beaten a woman he wasn't interested in if she made advances toward him.