I wrote it six months ago and I have to say that such a lot has happened in the last six months that some of my perspectives on my own story have changed. When I say at the end that "surprises keep coming," well they really do and they seem to happen with increasing regularity at the moment. My faith is very different to how it was six months ago and at this point it could go in almost any direction - although I don't think it will ever move back to faith in the literalistic truth of the religious stories.
Also, six months on I do not identify as a lesbian. I've been able, thanks to a lot of thought and discussions with friends, to be able to accept that I am asexual. And when you're ace, words such as heterosexual, lesbian, bisexual, pansexual and so on kind of lose their meaning in your life. Yep, asexual. This is me, coming out, yet again!
So this is Clare's Story. I think it was edited a little to fit into the journal - I sent them something about 50% longer than the submission guidelines requested.
My name is Clare. I am transgender and
lesbian, truths I only accepted in 2013, a process including great
highs, difficulties, triumphs and an examination of every part of my
life.
At an early age I knew I was different
and didn't fit into the life I was meant to be living. It wasn't
long before I'd worked out that I wasn't just different, but what was
thought of as bad – in my gender and also in my neuro-diversity.
From early childhood I knew shame about my identity and attempted to
suppress everything I believed to be shameful, to create a persona to
imprison the one already there and live as the kind of person I
thought would be acceptable.
I managed to suppress myself so far
that I didn't even know that I am female. Clues arose sometimes and
because I felt so guilty I hastily squashed them. I would try make
up, cross dress and have all kinds of dreams, desires, interests and
fantasies but I'd learned such things were evil so I came to
intensely hate myself. Inevitably this contributed to decades of
mental health problems.
My upbringing was outwardly normal and
balanced, a stable home with two parents and a brother. But that
balance could not compensate for what was going on inside or for the
way I was consistently told that certain things were wrong; the times
I was told “Don't be stupid, that's for girls.” Life as a
teenager became inner torture. Life cannot be good when every day
there is an enormous shadow blocking out the sun. I turned from
being a child who didn't smile much into an inwardly bound person
with constant low lying depression and major depressive episodes.
Then I discovered Christianity. Or at
least one version of it. I converted through an evangelical,
Pentecostal, born-again experience. I hadn't expected that but it
gave me much that I'd never had before: solidity, meaning, hope. But
it wasn't all good. I didn't convert based on the conviction that
God loved me. I couldn't really deal with that concept. I converted
largely because that brand of evangelicalism was pretty much the only
religion that agreed with what I already believed – that I was
evil, some kind of monster, an aberration. My new faith taught me
that I was right, that I was so evil that I deserved to burn
painfully for eternity. But it gave comfort because it turned out
everyone else deserved that too – but there was hope for all of us.
That form of Christianity wrecked any
self-esteem I had left. When somewhere deep down you know you're
transgender, queer, it's hard to be part of a faith that teaches how
evil that is. Many can tell stories of how churches – not Jesus –
have hurt them greatly. My first church had many ministry tapes from
a so-called gay cure ministry. As a young, enthusiastic convert I
swallowed the message and didn't dare to question it – because that
would have been to question “God's word”, to despise God, to
despise that one hope. I became thoroughly Biblically (as we saw it)
homophobic and transphobic, hating myself even more. I don't condemn
myself for my homophobia because with the inputs I had I couldn't
have believed anything else. But I deeply, deeply regret things I've
thought and said.
Coming to terms with accepting myself
as female and lesbian took a long time and a series of near miracles.
I almost don't know how I got from there to here. When I came out I
had good and bad experiences in churches. The people in my local
church were supportive, though I was told it would be “inappropriate”
for me to continue to preach or lead anything. That hurt, but it
worked out well, causing me to walk away from that life and find a
wide open space to learn more about myself and about my faith.
I'd been attending another church too
and got called in for a “talk” with the pastor. He called me an
abomination (based on Deuteronomy 22:5) and said that he couldn't
conceive that I was any kind of Christian at all unless I repented of
my gender. He said lots of other things that were highly unpleasant.
But by that time I was secure in myself and certain that I was not
condemned for being who I am and his words did nothing to destroy me.
In a way I'm glad to have experienced that because it gives at least
some insight into what other people have gone through and continue to
suffer in many churches. But I do worry and weep for LGBT+ people
who are raised in places like that and endure sheer hell.
Overall I've been very fortunate in faith. My wife sent me to get support from Northern Lights Metropolitan Community Church. So in June 2013 I went to a service, one of the many scared people who come through the door. It's one of the best things I've ever done. MCC is now home and the people there are cherished family. It's been very difficult at times and through everything MCC has been a rock of support. No matter how low I've been, no matter how much I struggled with faith and dealt with the pain I'd lived in because of my faith, the people there have stood by me and held me.
Overall I've been very fortunate in faith. My wife sent me to get support from Northern Lights Metropolitan Community Church. So in June 2013 I went to a service, one of the many scared people who come through the door. It's one of the best things I've ever done. MCC is now home and the people there are cherished family. It's been very difficult at times and through everything MCC has been a rock of support. No matter how low I've been, no matter how much I struggled with faith and dealt with the pain I'd lived in because of my faith, the people there have stood by me and held me.
I spent a year preparing to leave MCC
and to walk away from Christianity forever. But in October 2014 that
changed. I surprised myself and formally became a member of the
church, publicly renewing my baptismal vows a week before, something
that for me was a necessary step.
I needed this renewal for two reasons.
Firstly, I was baptised under another name, another gender, and was a
very different person then. My present is a changed life from my
past. I'd love to be re-baptised as Clare but of course that's not a
theological option because baptism is a one time event. I couldn't
be baptised again but I needed to publicly express that, as Clare,
those vows I made as “him” still stood, more firmly than they
ever did in the past.
The second reason was even more
important to me than the first. Over the previous eighteen months my
Christian faith died a slow and painful death. Church services were
torture for me. The church put up with my many words, my complaints,
my deep pain through that process. I cannot thank them enough for
supporting me through the death of my faith and through everything I
said, and felt, and did.
My faith deserved to die. It really
did. Good riddance to it! Not because of any doctrines or dogmas
that were or weren't attached to it. But because the root of my
faith was self-hatred, self-denial, self-rejection – arising from a
firm belief that I was no good. Much of that came from received
beliefs about my gender and consequently my near-constant urges to
self-destruct. My faith helped to destroy me, helped me to eradicate
myself, for twenty-three years. It was immensely important to me but
it crushed me.
Eventually I was able to leave that
faith behind, and rest secure in a faith that excluded any personal
God. The plan was to leave MCC and never look back. That was the
only future I could see. But throughout the whole journey I still
believed in MCC, her vision, her people, and the place of healing
that the church is. And, solely because of certain of the people, I
stayed.
Many people noticed a not so subtle
change in me since the start of October 2014. At church one evening
everything suddenly clicked. I could sing the songs, pray the
prayers and knew it was OK to receive communion again for the first
time in a long while. And I was extremely surprised that night to
find myself on my knees, hands in the air, lost in worship and
thankfulness to the God I didn't believe in. The “God of
Surprises” entered again and renewed my world, my heart.
Faith returned. It's a new faith.
Brand new. It's a far healthier faith, one that accepts the love of
God, and one that can honestly say with the Psalmist;
I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
Wonderful are your works;
my soul knows it very well.
Wonderful are your works;
my soul knows it very well.
As I renewed my baptismal
vows it was my freedom to be Clare, to be authentic, that I
celebrated. But more than that I celebrated my return to faith. A
purer faith. A very different faith than that I had before. Based on
self-love rather than self-condemnation, on authenticity rather than
self-squashing, on freedom, on love, on grace, on hope, on
acceptance, on inclusivity, on joy, on light and life and on so much
more.
The story continues.
Surprises keep coming and my faith is going in unexpected directions.
I am wildly unorthodox, have a spirituality that embraces all kinds
of things that I would have condemned in years gone by. And yet I
now seriously call myself more of a Christian than I ever have been.
A Christianity of love, light, and life not constrained by dogma and
doctrines. A Christianity of freedom and joy rather than my previous
false Christianity of law and self punishment. In short:
Hallelujah! For I am set free.
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