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Home > 2007 > AugustChristianity Today, August, 2007  |   |  
The Gay Shibboleth
Opposition to homosexual behavior may now be a bar to high office.



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As a member of the United Methodist Judicial Council, physician James Holsinger voted with the majority to affirm Methodist teaching that bans practicing homosexuals from ordination. Holsinger also wrote a white paper for the denomination 16 years ago on the health hazards of gay sex and on the biological complementarity of the human sexes.

Should that bar him from serving (as President Bush desires) as U.S. surgeon general? It's not surprising that homosexual-activist groups like Human Rights Campaign think so. But most of the major Democratic presidential candidates agree. John Edwards was particularly harsh: "In a profession dedicated to healing and compassion, it cannot be hard to find a qualified candidate for surgeon general who sees all human beings as equals. … Holsinger's anti-gay writings and beliefs suggest that he will undermine, not advance, the cause of equality and fairness in health care."

The Boston Globe called for Bush to withdraw his nomination, since "no one should go into the job with a record of discriminating against people because of their sexual orientation." A Washington Post editorial called Holsinger's white paper "bigotry masquerad[ing] as science" and mocked him for this sentence: "In fact, the logical complementarity of the human sexes has been so recognized in our culture that it has entered our vocabulary in the form of naming various pipe fittings either the male fitting or the female fitting depending upon which one interlocks within the other."

"Is he a doctor or the Ace Hardware man?" asked the Post. Satirist Stephen Colbert went further: "For years, we have tolerated smoking just like we currently tolerate homosexuality. But the surgeon general alerted us to the dangers of smoking with warning labels. With Holsinger at the helm, we can use the same approach for homosexuality. Every gay man and woman should come with a label: 'Warning! Plumbers have found homosexual behavior to be dangerous and unnatural.'" The Bush administration didn't exactly rush to Holsinger's defense. "That was not his belief. It was not his opinion. It was a compilation of studies that were available at that time," a spokeswoman said. "Over the last 20 years, a clearer understanding of these issues has been achieved." The spokeswoman added, "It should be noted that in 1991, homosexuals were banned from the military, and several years before that, homosexuality and Haitian nationality were considered risk factors for HIV/AIDS."

Contrast this with, say, 2007, when the military still bans "persons who demonstrate a propensity or intent to engage in homosexual acts" and gays and Haitians are still at high risk for HIV infection.

So some things don't change. But tolerance for dissent on homosexuality apparently has. The Holsinger denouncements and the White House's assertion that Holsinger couldn't possibly have meant what he wrote suggest that opposition to homosexual behavior is becoming a disqualification from serving in high public office.

That's a remarkable change from even a few years ago, and we're not alone in seeing it. "On no issue is history moving faster than on 'gay rights'—an already antiquated term for full and equal participation and acceptance of gay men and women in American life," Michael Kinsley wrote in Time.

On the other hand, as of press time, Holsinger hadn't been rejected yet, and other newspaper editorials, along with Holsinger's medical colleagues (including some homosexuals) are defending him as fair, professional, and compassionate. Still, affirmation of homosexual behavior seems to be shifting from an in-group shibboleth to an unwritten requirement for American leadership.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 29 comments.See all comments
Ex-Gay Watch   Posted: July 12, 2007 11:24 AM
Contrary to CT's insinuations, the objections to Holsinger relate not to his detailing of the hazards of same-gender sex per se. The objections center around Holsinger's imbalanced portrayal of the hazards: Opposite-gender couples engage in the same hazardous forms of sex as gay men; Holsinger neglected to state the hazards for heterosexuals. Furthermore, Holsinger promoted notions regarding the causes and treatment of homosexuality that might have been OK in 1991 but have since been scientifically disproven. Were I him, I would have advocated for homosexuals to remain celibate; I would not have advocated for expensive politico-religious therapies that add to sexual strugglers' confusion and self-doubt. The nation needs a surgeon general who is grounded in sound science. Holsinger may indeed be such a person nowadays, but his 1991 paper suggests he would put health and life at risk through selective ignorance of the hazards of sexual behavior.

Hoist by your own Petard   Posted: July 13, 2007 3:42 PM
I hav enever been a supporter of Litmus Tests and I am not now. However, radical christian conservatives insured that this day would come when they forcibly legitimaized the practice of using Litmus Tests on political appointees in the 80's and 90's. At that time you, this magazine and most of those supporting this article and it's position today, thought that there was nothing wrong with intolerantly forcing your specific and narrow beliefs on any who wanted to hold public office. America was told by you that this was NOT religous intolerance on your part, it was just good family values. We told you then what the problem was with using temporal power to intolerantly enforce your religious beliefs: YOU would not always be in power and someday the tables could be turned. Well guess what; today is that day. And it will not stop here, the Atheists are feeling their oats and they are looking for payback for 40 years of dogmatic creationism. Welcome to the world that YOU created.

Rgordon   Posted: July 19, 2007 3:24 PM
It's disingenuous for religious leaders to fret that the big, bad gay agenda is limiting religious "freedom." The enormity of the discrimination that gays and lesbians have faced--and still face--must be very difficult to imagine for somebody born as a heterosexual into a majority religion. If you were that concerned about personal liberty, where was your outrage when Matthew Shepherd was murdered? Or Harvey Milk? Or when scores of gays in "Christianized" African nations are tortured and imprisoned for no other "crime" than that of being gay? No, I have a hard time crying over the terrible social barriers that must be endured by Christians in America.

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