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A UMNS Report
By Linda Bloom*
1:00 P.M. EST Nov. 18, 2010
The Rev. David Weekley prepares the elements for Holy Communion on his
first Sunday morning at Sellwood United Methodist Church in Portland,
Ore. A UMNS photo by Tina Todd, Sellwood UMC.
View in Photo Gallery
The Rev. David Weekley thinks it’s difficult for the church to have meaningful conversations about sexual and gender identity.
So, for years, the Portland, Ore.,-based United Methodist pastor,
husband and father of five kept his own secret about having been born a
girl but never feeling like one. Then, on Aug. 30, 2009, he decided it
was time to start telling the story of his experience as a transgender
man, beginning with his own congregation.
Now, Weekley wants to widen the discussion about sexuality throughout
the denomination, despite what he perceives as an increasing reluctance
to discuss such issues. The recent refusal of the United Methodist
Judicial Council to reconsider its 2005 decision upholding a pastor’s
right to reject someone as a member of his church is an indication of
the urgent need for conversation, he said.
He has even written a book about his own experience, now in the final
editing stages, which he hopes can be used as a conversation starter
once it is published by Wipf and Stock of Eugene, Ore.
Some church members believe there has been more than enough
conversation on the topic. The Rev. Thomas Lambrecht, a United Methodist
pastor from Wisconsin and a representative of Good News, an unofficial
United Methodist evangelical caucus, said “the continued focus on
sexuality issues” is a reflection of western culture rather than a
theological imperative.
“What we need to focus on is becoming disciples of Jesus Christ and living that out in a variety of ways,” he added.
Conversation, however, can take issues of sexuality out of the
cerebral and into the personal, says the Rev. Troy Plummer, executive
director of the Reconciling Ministries Network. While some segments of
society, as well as some churches, are having those conversations, “it
mostly feels like the church wants to avoid conflict and discomfort” on
issues of sexuality, he noted.
Such discomfort is familiar to Weekley, one of the few transgender
pastors in The United Methodist Church. The denomination’s book of law
currently has no prohibitions against ordaining transgender persons, and
Weekley remains in good standing with the Oregon-Idaho Annual
(regional) Conference.
Making the change
His own transformation – from female to male and from alienated
Christian to ordained pastor – began in 1972, when the 21-year-old
started the gender-reassignment process at University Hospitals in
Cleveland. After completing the medical transition in 1975, he attended
graduate school at Miami University of Ohio and started searching for a
faith community.
Walking into a United Methodist congregation in Oxford, Ohio, and,
like John Wesley, finding “my own strange warming of the heart
experience there” on World Communion Sunday was the first step in
Weekley’s faith journey, he recalled.
Volunteers from the Sellwood United Methodist Church and community
cleaned the church kitchen in preparation for the Northwest Gender
Alliance Thanksgiving Dinner. A UMNS web-only photo by Tina Todd,
Sellwood UMC.
The journey took him from serving as a volunteer at the campus
ministry center to studying at Boston University School of Theology to
beginning the ordination process in 1982. He became an elder in the
Oregon-Idaho Conference in 1984.
Weekley said he never buried his former identity, but often wrestled with the issue of when and how he should share his story.
“One of my hopes was by working quietly with people, trying to be a
good pastor, it would give people a lot of opportunity to get to know me
as a pastor.” Then, when he did share his story, he reasoned, “it would
have a positive impact.”
A 2008 pilgrimage to Minidoka, a World War II internment camp in
Idaho – with members of Weekley’s mostly Japanese-American congregation
at Epworth United Methodist Church in Portland – made him start to think
it might be the right time to go public about being a transgender man,
especially since his children were now young adults and able to
understand it.
“At the internment camp, I saw the impact of being able to talk about
their lives and laugh and cry together about their experiences,” he
said. “That congregation seemed like a place that could resonate with my
experience.”
Indeed, the congregational support was immediate. “The day of the
service, people broke into applause at the end of my message.” Later,
however, a small group of members seemed to complain more often to him.
“I was never sure whether it had to do with my being transgender and
sharing that … but it eventually led to my decision that it was best to
move,” he said.
Reviving the conversation
Today, Weekley appreciates being in a two-point charge – Sellwood and
Capitol Hill churches in Portland – where members were aware of his
transgender identity right from the start.
Since his revelations in 2009, the transgender pastor has received
hundreds of responses “from people all over the country, even outside
the country, telling their stories to me, thanking me for speaking for
them.”
What troubles him is probably 90 percent “had their own stories of
feeling estranged and alienated from their faith communities.”
Weekley was disappointed when the denomination’s top court declined
to reconsider Judicial Council Decision 1032 at the end of October.
Decision 1032 stated that a United Methodist pastor has the right to
determine local church membership, even if the decision is based on the
person’s sexual orientation.
The Rev. David Weekley speaks at an “All Means All”
training event in Eugene, Ore. A UMNS web-only
photo courtesy of Deborah Maria.
While he understands not wanting to usurp the authority of the
pastor, “when I think about the bigger picture, I wonder if the case
would have been the same if it had been about ethnicity or race or
gender,” he said.
“As a pastor, I can’t imagine telling someone who wants to be part of our faith community that they weren’t welcome,” he added.
Lambrecht, who had participated in the Judicial Council’s oral
hearings on the matter, said he felt the council acted with integrity
“in terms of upholding church law and recognizing the separation of
powers between the legislative and judicial areas of our church.”
Evangelicals are satisfied with the church’s current positions on
human sexuality, he said, but he expects that efforts will be made to
change those positions at the denomination’s 2012 legislative assembly.
“The continued discussion of this issue, we feel, detracts from
focusing on more important issues like the Call to Action report and the
movement of encouraging vital congregations,” Lambrecht said.
The Reconciling Ministries Network, an unofficial group that
advocates for United Methodists of all sexual orientations, filed briefs
related to several of the petitions before the Judicial Council.
Plummer argued on the organization’s website that undoing a judicial
decision such as Decision 1032 falls within the bounds of the council’s
work.
“This intentional refusal to right an obvious wrong is the latest act
of discriminating hurt directed by The UMC toward LGBT (lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender) people,” he declared.
Weekley wishes the denominational discussion on sexual identity would
adhere more closely to the Wesleyan quadrilateral, which uses
scripture, tradition, reason and experience as a basis for theological
reflection.
He believes the church is ignoring the current scientific research
related to the issue of choice and the origins of sexual orientation and
gender identity. “It seems that reason and experience are missing from
this conversation,” he said.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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