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Entries by Queer Spiritual Counseling (23)

Friday
Nov252011

What love DOES have to do with it

We need to love humanly in order to love and to feel loved by God. Jewish tradition, even with a God we can't see or touch, instructs us to use all the aspects of our physical loving selves as points of reference for loving God. Christian tradition teaches us about an incarnate God who understands first-hand the workings of our human hearts and bodies. Many other spiritual traditions give their God(s) human shape and personality, telling stories of their erotic interest and interaction with human beings.

The truth we should distill from this is that our Queer, corporeal, and carnal identities are the keys to our knowledge of the Divine Eternal. By second guessing our impulse to love and our human capacity for desire we disempower ourselves as worshipers of God.

I don't believe God wants us to check our flesh and blood at the door when we enter God's presence. Our bodies reap wisdom through all our senses, and that wisdom makes us better worshipers, better lovers of God. There may exist a realm in which engagement with God is best achieved through disembodied spirituality, but this isn't it.

Share a moment of blessing with God. Bless God for making you the loving and yearning person you are.

 

Thursday
Nov102011

Spiritual Doubt and Spiritual Worth

 

I used to believe in a myth of "Getting Life Right the First Time." I believed somehow that every kind of success and health ought to be achievable without trial and error, without back-tracking and redoing, and that life, in fact, ought to be problem-free. That was my default perspective (emphasis on the fault) on life for a long time, that I ought to be in perfect shape -- bodily, emotionally, amorously, financially, spiritually -- all the time.

Some of this is culturally rooted: I grew up white, male, safe, protected, indulged, and well provided for in the full bloom of the American dream: As a nation we have plenty, and everything is possible for everyone.

The shadow side of that magical thinking was my belief that if life didn't unfold like that, if something was out of place, then I must have misplayed the game, done life "wrong." Screwed up. Operator error.

Of late I have been using osteopath as my primary health provider. At age 51, my body responds differently than it used to. Over the course of a half-century, I've accumulated my share of scars and aches. My osteopath helps me through them (often to my amazement) and reminds me I am actually healthy.

Healthy??

But if I'm healthy, why does my damn shoulder hurt?

Health doesn't mean mythical, magical perfection. Health doesn't mean immortality either. Health is a present quality, a component to life. It's possible for me to have that scar on my ankle and that ache in my shoulder and still have health, be healthy. In fact, that's normal. I will still have health in the split-second before I eventually die.

Recently, someone quoted to me the words of a Queer teenager, struggling with addiction, who wondered, "How can I focus on my sobriety, when I have no spiritual worth?”

Culturally, Queer people are 'set up' to feel as if we have taken a wrong turn somewhere, that we are guilty of operator error in our lives. We don't fit the [mythical!!!!] norm, and even in the progressive wonderland of 2011 America (where, despite the powerful Queer-hatred and ignorance that are still out there, I believe Queer folks have never had it so good), we encounter unsettling teachings about our spiritual waywardness. You can't leave your house without bumping into it somewhere (and I live in San Francisco, for crying out loud). The world remains structured to instill in us a disproportionate amount of spiritual doubt, to cause us inappropriately to question our spiritual worth.

Spiritual doubt is a fact of life. There is no logical reason to think that we'll live perpetually in easy certainty of our place in the universe, our connection with God. But we have spiritual health, and we have a relationship with God, even if we don't feel it in the moment.

I am grateful to those teachings that remind me of my spiritual health, the same way I'm really grateful of my osteopath for reminding me of my physical health and teaching me to see beyond the pain.

I have health and I have pain. The two are not mutually exclusive. Most importantly, my pain does not nullify my health.

We all have doubt and we all have God. Maintaining spiritual focus is a challenge, but our spiritual doubt in no way imperils our spiritual health or denotes some lack of spiritual worth.

Go ahead, acknowledge and celebrate your persistent spiritual health and spiritual worth.

 

Sunday
Nov062011

Is the LGBTQ God any different from the Straight God?

God changes with every encounter. God is as flexible as our own imaginations and evolves and reshapes Godself as our spiritual needs evolve. God is always changing. Which means that God never changes: God is always fully available and fully God.

Queer God is different from Straight God not as a different entitity, but because we approach these God-images very differently. Queer God is not approached with apologies for our not being Straight. Beyond that, our particular insights into life and the world allow us to ask different things of God, confide different secrets to God's ear, create a relationship with God that conforms to the image of God in which we were created.

When all is said and done (but is "all" ever said and done?), connection to Queer God gives us the ability to converse and be in community with all people. It does not ghettoize us; it frees us to move through the world confident in our blessedness.

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