Opening the Doors to LGBTQ Within Churches

Opening the Doors to LGBTQ Within Churches

WASHINGTON D.C. – Within the shadows of the gargoylestudded steeples of the Washington National Cathedral are an artist at work, a military state funeral training session and people roaming the halls of a church with cell phones glowing.  

Washington National Cathedral. Photo by Sam DeFusco, Teen Observer.

The Washington National Cathedral has strived to present itself as a community that is accepting and open to all individuals aspiring to discover their own path. In 2013, the Cathedral announced it would perform same-sex weddings, two years before gay marriage was legalized nationally by the Supreme Court during the Obergefell v. Hodges case. In January, the Cathedral announced it would become a sanctuary for immigrants, welcome transgender people, and not use a gender pronoun for God.

Steve Saphos, a volunteer verger within the National Cathedral, said, “The sole purpose of the Cathedral is to stand out as an introduction between the people and God.”

Saphos said that the church has grown from an exclusive institution that rejected people who went against their beliefs into a more inclusive community. “We started this tradition that we were going to welcome everybody, ” he said.

Saphos believes that the church thrives on the sense of community as people of all race, ethnicity, religious belief and self identity are being welcomed to appreciate the art as well as use the church to find their own religious path.

The idea of acceptance and openness to the LGBTQ community within churches has become a developing and progressing topic. There are many churches that may be attempting to become a progressive community, but there are still aspects of their religious beliefs holding them back. The Glide Memorial United Methodist Church is unique in its own way as they elected not only the first woman to serve as senior pastor, but also the first openly-lesbian bishop was elected; however, they still found that their beliefs kept her from obtaining her title.

As of March 2018 the “One Church Plan” was devised to let individual churches and clergy determine whether or not they would allow same-sex marriages to be held in their church. This ultimately puts the church in the driver’s seat in determining the course of progression the church decides to take.

People like Bishop Karen Oliveto of San Francisco, California, a lesbian who was elected senior pastor at the Glide Memorial United Methodist church in San Francisco in 2016, are attempting to break away from the church’s original past.

Oliveto did not easily obtain her title as the bishop of the Glide Memorial United Methodist church. In an interview with National Public Radio’s Lulu Garcia-Navarro, Oliveto revealed that her consecration was being reviewed by the Judicial Council based on limits on the role of LGBTQ people within the church.

Oliveto said, “So they found my nomination in order. They found my election in order, my assignment in order. Where they raised question was around my consecration.” Consecration is the action of ordaining someone to a sacred office, typically that of a bishop. 

Bishop Karen Oliveto of Glide Memorial United Methodist Church. Photo by David Zalubowski.

According to NBC news, her election was being reviewed due to the church law that bans the consecration of “a self-avowed practicing homosexual bishop.” The church’s high court ruled the consecration unlawful, but the Judicial Council has allowed Oliveto to retain her post. 

As of 2015, the Pew Research Center reported that many well-known religious affiliations and churches such as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is a Mormon community, and the Orthodox Jewish Movement were listed as prohibitors of same-sex marriage. The United Methodist Church was also present on this list during 2015.

According to the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), “The rise in support for same-sex marriage particularly over the last few years, has led to a milestone: Today a majority of all racial and ethnic groups favor allowing gay and lesbian couple to marry legally.” This growth of support is revealed in the decline of religious resistance as religious affiliations such as Evangelical’s opposition has dropped from 71% to 58% since 2013 according to the PRRI.  Opposition among Mormons around the idea of same-sex marriage has also dropped from 68% to 53% as of 2014.

As churches begin to move towards a stronger sense of progressiveness, the Washington National Cathedral is already a step ahead in taking pride in their supportive community.

When asked what Saphos of the National Cathedral would say to other churches or religious beliefs that are not as open to the LGBTQ community and are trying to reach that goal he said, “Well I guess the thing that we always want to stress is each individual is on their own path to God.”

 

Gas leak at AU sparks evacuations

 

 

Firefighters stand outside Abbey Joel Butler Pavilion to ensure no cars go through the area. They swept the various buildings to check gas concentration and clear each building for reentry. Photo by Sam DeFusco, Teen Observer.

WASHINGTON — A gas leak at American University Wednesday morning sparked the evacuation of central campus, closed roads and disrupted university businesses for almost two hours. No one was harmed.

Construction workers believe they hit an unmarked gas line as they were working on an underground utilities project, according to David Osborne, AU’s Director of Energy and Engineering.

“The contractor was digging to put in the underground hot water lines as part of this big project,” Osborne said. “My understanding is they called out missed utilities before the day they were supposed to, and they ended up hitting a line that was either wasn’t marked or wasn’t where it should be, which caused it to break.”

The construction workers immediately notified campus police, Washington Gas and the fire department, and worked to seal the leak at the excavation site behind the McKinley Building, Osborne said. Police sent out an evacuation alert at 8:32 a.m. and sounded a campus-wide alarm at 8:50 a.m.

In the cafeteria, the calm eating and clanking of dishes paused as an alarm suddenly sounded and drowned out the noise of the dining hall. Students began to stand up in confusion and quickly make their way upstairs to evacuate the dining hall, some leaving their belongings behind. Workers in the campus Starbucks grabbed bagels and coffee to go.

“I was in the terrace of McKinley when the fire alarm went off at around 8:50,” said McKenna Solberg, a student attending a summer communications program at AU. “Another Comm kid and I left the building and there was caution tape all around outside and a really potent smell of gas.”

The rotten-egg smell of gas wafted over groups of evacuated students gathered on the quad in front of the Mary Graydon student center, as they waited to be relocated. Some wondered aloud why they were congregating so close to a building that could potentially explode. Several fire trucks arrived on the scene.

Campus police closed McKinley Hall, Butler Pavilion, Bender Arena, Sports Center Garage and shops in the pavilion tunnel. The police conducted a sweep to make sure that everyone was out of the buildings, then closed off the area with yellow caution tape.

Caution tape blocks the road underneath Abbey Joel Butler Pavilion after people were evacuated because of a gas leak that started from a construction site. People were barred from the area until the gas leak was contained. Photo by Sam DeFusco, Teen Observer.

Summer program teachers and counselors led the students to unaffected buildings to continue their classes.

“I have 150 students here on campus and 16 classes and so we needed to move a number of classes and spaces, but fortunately, we had already gone over the proper protocol, which is that we meet out on the Quad,” said Sarah Menke-Fish, the director of AU’s Discover the World of Communications program. “They broke out into classes and sections. I found immediate spaces that they could go to.”

AU police sounded the all clear at about 10:15 a.m., reopening all buildings and roadways.  Ian Greenlee, Lieutenant of Police Operations for AU, said no one was harmed and there will be no long-term effects from the gas leak. According to Greenlee, all of the necessary and proper protocols were followed to contain the leak and evaluate the air quality of each of the affected buildings. Gas should be restored by end of the day, though the use of hot water may be further affected, along with possible cooking operations.

[This report was compiled by Prof. Farley’s Professional Newswriting class.]