Religion
Related: About this forumConnecting the Dots: LGBT Equality, Reproductive Rights, and Religion
by Rev. Harry Knox, Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice
July 9, 2014 - 10:33 am
As a minister who spent most of my career working for LGBT equality, served on President Obamas Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, and is now serving an interfaith organization dedicated to reproductive justice, there is one fundamental connection that I hope we can all see given the events of the last two weeks. Its that the struggle for LGBT rights and the struggle for reproductive rights are inseparableand that we have to change the role religion is playing.
Just consider the events over a two-day period last week. On June 30, we learned of the Supreme Courts terrible ruling that gave religious liberty to corporations and determined that business owners can impose their beliefs on their employees. That evening, President Obama announced that he would be issuing an executive order banning discrimination against LGBT people in hiring by federal contractorsa critical step toward justice that was long overdue. This positive step was attacked the very next day, when a group of faith leaders wrote the White House to ask for an exemption in the LGBT executive order that would allow religious groups to discriminate in hiring while receiving taxpayer dollars. While the letter did not invoke the Hobby Lobby decision directly, it is on precisely the same theme: a small minority of the faith community wants the government to support their religious discrimination. They want public benefits without playing by the public rules. They want the right to impose their religious views on others, regardless of who or how many people are negatively affected.
This common theme shines a light on the larger goal of the extreme anti-gay, anti-abortion movement, which is that it is not ultimately about LGBT people or reducing the number of abortions. It is about imposing one narrow, religious view of sexuality and reproduction on everyone, with as much government support as possible. Think about it: By increasing access to the most effective forms of birth control, the contraceptive benefit of the Affordable Care Act will prevent hundreds of thousands of unintended pregnancies and significantly reduce the need for abortion. Indeed, just last week, Colorados governor credited low- and no-cost access to long-lasting contraception with major declines in unintended pregnancies. And yet the anti-abortion movement continues to fight against the contraception benefit, and birth control generally, at every step. Why? Because their primary goal is not to reduce the need for abortion, it is to regulate other peoples bodies and decisions and punish anyone who makes choices outside what they establish as the moral norm. I call this approach moralism. It is deeply rooted in our American culture and it is deeply religious in nature.
What we have to offer at the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, standing with our allies in the faith community (and there are many) is a theology of pluralism, a theology of love and liberation. Our theology says that all people have value and should be able to make decisions about what happens to their bodies. Our theology says that bodies are good, that knowledge is good, and that sexuality is good. Our theology says that there is strength and beauty in imperfection; that diversity is a blessing, a part of Gods plan, even. Our theology affirms every persons right to religious liberty and no ones right to impose their religious views on others.
http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2014/07/09/connecting-dots-lgbt-equality-reproductive-rights-religion/
longship
(40,416 posts)To smack down the loony toons who are attempting to control the dialog, never a good thing.
I especially like this: