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a farm on the peninsula 🌱
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Reflecting today on the circumstances that led me to create this blog.
If you’re suffering from religious trauma, if you’re still in love with Christ but can’t stomach the church without tasting bile, if you’re fresh from the fire: it gets better. You may not ever find another church home. You may not find Christ in the church, or anywhere near it.
But if you still want to, you can find Christ elsewhere. And, over time, what drove you to tears time and time again will, eventually, be something that you can handle thinking about.
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It’s been a hot minute since I’ve posted anything to this blog. Life is good - I’m in the career I want to be in, my pets and my family are doing well, and aside from job-related stresses I’ve been sort of happy.
I still don’t go to church. I’ve started following some pastors on TikTok, though, and I thought I’d share their TikTok names, in case anyone else wanted a faith outlet that doesn’t ask for money or demand that you tolerate emotional abuses. They’re not all Methodist, but I’ve found that I’m more or less okay with that.
@pastor_g
@pastorem
@pastorfromok
@pastorkelley
@thisqueenpastorlovesyou
@pastornatalie
@goodshepherdabq
@rev_lydiawesome
@revbrandanrobertson
@revbethany
@revmaggie
@revsornchai
@rev.mary
@knothead9620
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It’s been more than a year since I set foot in a church. I don’t actually feel all that bad about it, but I recognize that my life has become a lot less spiritual since everything that’s happened. The thing is, I don’t think the pandemic had anything to do with it - if I’d wanted a spiritual community at a distance, I could have found one. But my own personal pain, the politicization of the church in America, and the refusal of my church to embrace ALL of God’s children just make having a spiritual community unattractive.
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The God of the Story
I think the thing that I’ve come around to is that there are really three different Gods that are worshipped in the Christian religion.
There’s the God of Scripture. This is the God that you see worshipped in the most fundamentalist churches - the God of rules and laws and hellfire and brimstone, where any mistake or deviance means your certain eternal damnation. This is the God that shuns gay people, or nonbelievers, or nonconformists as less-than. This is the God that says you are worth more if you fit the mold and fall in line.
There’s the God of Prosperity. This is the God that can be bought, the God that says you are owed riches and material luxury and wealth. This is the God that says that there is something wrong with you on a spiritual level if you lack wealth or luxury, the God from which miracles can be bought and salvation comes from regular donations.
And then there’s the God of the Story. This is the God that’s easiest to miss when you read the Bible, because so many churches will tell you to focus on the God of Scripture. This is the God that favors second-born sons and prostitutes. This is the God of second chances, the God that forgave His people over and over again, no matter how many times they turned away. This is the God of kindness, the God that feeds the hungry and ministers to criminals. This is the God that forgave the biggest betrayals and chose mercy in the most desperate of times.
I choose to believe in the God of the Story.
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This piece was shared recently in a Methodist group on Facebook that I’m a part of; it resonated strongly with me as a Christian who always loved the “love” part of the Bible the best.
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You know, what I find most interesting about Morris’s experiences in the 80′s is that Christianity has yet to entirely erase those roots of the Social Gospel. I think that one reason that Christian millennials are rejecting the black-and-white, us-versus-them philosophy is that we were raised in a faith where:
(1) televangelists and pastors and our parents tell us to pray to God for ourselves, and that we live in a world where everyone is out to get us but God will make us rich if we’re good enough
(2) the Gospel itself shows Jesus living modestly, helping the unfortunate, reaching out to the sinners around him, and rejecting the religious authority figures as corrupt and out of touch
(3) we sing hymns in church dedicated to love (They’ll Know We Are Christians) 
(4) we sing hymns in church dedicated to service (Here I Am, Lord)*
(5) we constantly see missions to other nations - not just for evangelism, but for providing necessities to under-supplied communities - as the best example of Christian action.
(6) literally everyone is inundated with “What Would Jesus Do?” bracelets.
We were taught simultaneously to despise the secular world and reach out to it, to hate the ungodly and love them, to do what Jesus did and isolate ourselves from the bad in the world. 
Of course, when faced with a duty to two mutually exclusive options - love and hate - we made choices. And many of us chose love, because frankly love is easier than hate.
* - Okay, so Here I Am Lord was written in 1981, during the shift Morris talks about; and it wasn’t an evangelical hymn, it was Catholic. But it is explicitly about service, and evangelicals use it now so shush.
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Depression vs. Healing
As it turns out, untreated what-is-probably-depression makes church-hunting a lot harder. It also, paradoxically, has made it harder for me to feel the same kind of pain and hurt that I used to feel surrounding my former church. There’s a certain amount of energy I have in a day, lately, and right now feeling those feelings takes too much energy, so I just... don’t.
I mean, sure, when I think about it, I rationally know that my feelings are still hurt, that I still feel as if there’s things left unresolved that I can’t fix or resolve. But it feels like it’s all happening with a different me, not the real me, not the me that I’m currently experiencing being. That’s probably unhealthy, but it is what it is. 
On my less self-reflective days, I interpret this sensation as me “getting over it.” That’s not what it is, though, and as Christmas draws near I still find myself dreading the process of trying to figure out where Christmas Eve services are going to happen. I got to side-step Easter due to the pandemic. 
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Bitterness  & Healing
As time wears on since I left my little church, I find I deal with a lot of bitterness. Every little reminder of that church is either met with a reluctance to part with it because parting with it feels like letting the church win, or else it’s met with a vehement desire not just to discard, but to destroy. So I either hang onto things that bring me nothing but painful memories, or I encourage my own destructive desires, which only makes me feel more bitter because I’m usually not a destructive person and I don’t like who I am when it comes to them.
Reclaiming things is healthier for me. I recently started graphic design again. It’s just a hobby for me, I’ve never been amazing at it, but I only ever did it for the church before. I have a Cricut now, and I’m making things to show love to myself, my home, my family, and my friends. It’s revived my interest in it, and it’s made me cherish my collection of graphic resources and fonts again.
It’s hard to reclaim everything, but trying feels better than not.
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Story time! It’s long, so my reflections are under the cut. 
TLDR: I’m hopeful but cautious. This may be what keeps the UMC a viable denomination, if it can pass General Conference 2020, because right now we’re a church of divided theology, and neither side is going to compromise their beliefs.
Long before I left my former church, back in 2015, I was at church preparing for the following week’s VBS when I got a news alert on my phone about the Supreme Court’s Obergefell v. Hodges. At the time, I kept my elation mostly to myself - I didn’t know how the pastor at the time would feel about it, and I didn’t want anything to dampen my mood. Just over two months prior, I had defended my undergraduate thesis, which argued that bans on same-sex marriage were unconstitutional, and proposed one thread of reasoning that I thought the Court might reasonably adopt, and while my research advisor and my thesis advisor had both thought I was dead wrong, I was pleased to be proven right (and, of course, pleased that the Court was taking steps to fix what seemed to me to be an ongoing injustice in the United States).
See, I had left the Catholic church, in part, over the same-sex marriage issue. While I’m not LGBTQ+ myself, I felt that the issue was one of fundamental fairness and compassion - and it was important to me that it be resolved. The Methodist church also didn’t support LGBTQ+ rights, but it had always seemed less vehement about it than the Catholic church, so I always kind of just hoped that the change was coming. 
In 2016, with the same-sex marriage issue broiling in advance of General Conference, I took an interest in how the UMC underwent changes for the first time. My pastor’s encouragement of that interest started me on the path toward serving at Annual Conference in my area, but I read news from General Conference 2016 praying for a resolution. The debate, and the protests, left an impression on me, and I had real hope heading into my Annual Conference that year that the compromise - the Way Forward Commission - could actually work.
At Annual Conference, I heard the story of bishops meeting late at night, summoning people from both sides of the debate, to try and find a way to avoid a schism. And at the time, “schism” was a scary word - could the UMC survive a split? I also encountered the Reconciling Ministries Network for the first time. They gave me a rainbow stole; I wore it happily. I also saw my pastor wear one, and for the first time I really believed, not just hoped, that change was on the horizon.
Things stagnated, then, though I had the pleasure of getting to really know a woman who brought their adopted daughter to Children’s Church every Sunday, and occasionally her former foster daughter as well. She was in a lesbian relationship, and especially after I started law school she opened up to me frequently about how frustrating it was for her and her partner to constantly be viewed with more suspicion than an average straight couple. It was one of the reasons, she implied, that her partner didn’t regularly attend church.
In came a new pastor. He was friends with our former pastor, so I had high hopes for him. As my previous posts will display, the hopes were misplaced on a personal level, but we actually had somewhat compatible politics. The Way Forward Commission came out with their three plans.
The Traditional Plan would retain anti-LGBTQ+ language in the Book of Discipline, and strengthen disciplinary measures against gay and lesbian clergy members.
The Connectional Conference Plan would form three sub-churches: one for traditionalists, one for progressives, and one for “unity”-minded churches and clergy. 
The One Church Plan would remove the anti-LGBTQ+ language and permit local churches and clergy to express their conscience on the matter.
And in February of 2019, a special session of the General Conference voted on the Traditional and One Church Plans. I had school obligations those days; I ignored a good chunk of my classes to follow the news. I knew - I just knew - that the One Church Plan would succeed. I had already formulated my arguments to my local church as to why we should embrace our LGBTQ+ brothers and sisters. It was the perfect compromise; I never expected it to fail.
But General Conference 2019 voted it down. At the time, this is what I wrote, and I stand by it today when I think back on it:
“I cannot fathom a church that would choose divisiveness and alienation over compromise and compassion. We waited three years in the hope of progress. The delegates gave us nothing but regression.
The United Methodist Church is dying, at least in the United States. Fewer and fewer people are joining. More are leaving. I don’t understand the reasoning behind choosing to alienate and reject people who are begging for inclusion and acceptance.”
The next day, Reconciling Ministries tweeted that they had been informed by the General Conference staff that the area now had “police with their guns and security with pepper spray (or similar) roaming and ready for action.” What it sounded like - and sometimes appearances are everything - was a violent precautionary measure, aimed at intimidating those who had supported the One Church Plan, and who vehemently opposed the Traditional plan, so that those who wanted inclusion and compassion would sit down, shut up, and take what was coming quietly. I felt sick at the time, and still feel sick thinking about it now.
I was in class during the vote on the Traditional Plan, ignoring my professor as I watched Twitter and Facebook for the news. And by the time I got home, I had recognized why passing the Traditional Plan bothered me so much: John 8:3-11. 
For those who aren’t Bible buffs, John 8:3-11 recounts the story of the Pharisees bringing Jesus a woman caught in the act of adultery, then punishable by stoning. When the Pharisees demand that Jesus tell them what to do, he famously responds: “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” Of course, no one could live up to Jesus’s standard. Those hoping to stone the woman disperse and, when the woman observes that her accusers have left, Jesus sends her on her way: “Neither do I condemn you.”
Back in February, I summed it up like this, and I can’t really think of a better way to phrase it now:
“To declare that clergy members who do their earnest best to live the life God calls them to live should be punished because we disagree with their moral determinations is arrogant. We allow liars to be clergy. We allow those who speak unkindly to be clergy. We allow it, even if these sins happen more than once.
Why is the sin of loving the wrong person worse than lying? Worse than being unkind? And even if you believe that the sin is worse, who are we as humans to overrule what Jesus said about justice and mercy?
In my heart of hearts, I can find no rationale for pushing to increase enforcement of the anti-LGBT language in the Book of Discipline other than hatred for that which the Traditional Plan’s supporters do not understand. Jesus calls for compassion; and, as a church, we have no right to ignore that call.”
As time wore on, I observed one more thing: if God calls a lesbian woman, or a gay man, or anyone else, to the clergy, who are we as humans to deny that calling? Who are we to tell God that he called the wrong person? How arrogant and presumptuous must we be under the Traditional Plan?
In February, things were drawing toward the end at my church. But in the days following General Conference 2019, I found myself heartened by the message on the marquee sign outside: “ALL MEANS ALL.” My pastor signed an open letter to the church condemning the Traditional Plan, and one of the women in the church whom I’d thought was genuinely a good friend told me that she, too, was broken over the decision, but had resolved to fight for something better.
My co-teacher and I made the decision on Sunday to talk to the kids about the decision of the General Conference. It was difficult - remember, one of our students had lesbian parents - but, we felt, it was necessary. And I have never been more inspired than when our little kids expressed their confusion and outrage over a decision that, to them, made no sense. One little girl expressed confusion at how something as basic as the freedom to love someone and get married to them could be controversial.
The little acts of resistance, the outrage from the kids, it all came together to reignite my own hope.
In the months that followed, just about everyone expressed their opinions. In the Washington Post, a queer clergywoman summed it up: “We queer clergy begged our fellow Methodists to love us. They voted no.” On Facebook groups, on Reddit, and in person, the heretofore forbidden s-words became more common: splitting. separation. schism.
A prominent minister on the traditionalist side, less than a month after “winning” at General Conference 2019, made clear that unity, compromise, and compassion were never an option. Mainstream UMC posted his e-mail in full - in summary, he gloated over the traditionalist win at General Conference 2019, and suggested that those who opposed it should leave, as their continued presence in the UMC is an embarrassment. 
And talk of schism, and of separation, has continued to simmer, until now. Now, the water’s reached its boiling point. We have a plan. We have the Way Forward we were promised. And at General Conference 2020, at least the way I see it, the delegates have two options: stop the pot from boiling over, or ignore the problem and hope we can clean up the mess in 2024. 
Membership in the Methodist Church in the United States has been dropping for years. Increasingly, young adults looking for churches veer away from churches that preach or even merely accept exclusion and intolerance. Splitting the church, accepting that we cannot compromise on issues of love and compassion, seems to me to be the only way to prove that we mean it when we say “Jesus is Love.” It seems to me that this is the only way to prove that we’re convinced of our own beliefs, that we’re serious about welcoming everyone, that we’re a church of love, and inclusion, and protection of human dignity.
So long as it passes. 
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On Trying to Leave a Church
When I left my small Methodist church earlier this year, I didn’t go alone. Caught up in the same drama were several close friends who fell prey to the same pseudo-political games and, like me, ended up more or less pushed out.
My response was to knee-jerk pull away everything I possibly could. I asked to be removed from the membership rolls and the church newsletter. I’d crafted some advertising materials for the church; I asked that the church never use them again (except for distributing a church directory that has already been completed & printed - I was fine with re-prints because I deeply respected the woman who would be taking over it).
One friend tried to resolve the matter by reaching out to the district superintendent and the bishop, hoping not to be welcomed back, but to stop the responsible parties from crushing anyone else. She received an e-mail back from the DS offering to meet with her, but when she tried to set up a date to talk to him, he never responded.
One friend tried reaching out to the pastor, to raise the issue of the cruel methods that his flock was using to achieve their ends, he flatly told her that what the church leadership was doing was not his problem or his responsibility. He claimed to have talked to the DS, and had been assured that he’d done his job.
She tried reaching out to the DS herself; no response. I tried reaching out, too; no response.
So all of us began work on extracting our lives from the church. So many things had to be found that hadn’t been donated, but had been left there for some time due to expediency reasons. Little things like arranging for the return of building keys, or meeting a trustee so we could retrieve items from storage, became serious, tactical conversations: who would go? When? What of what we had purchased for the church was already technically donated, even if it had never been inside the church building? What to do with the supplies for VBS that had already been purchased?
And the little things. Driving by the church hurt for a long time, but was the added gas expenditure of going around really worth it? How to handle reminders from Facebook of what happened at the church two, three, five years ago without tears or anger? What to do with Christmas gifts from years past that now feel hollow and empty?
(Answers, in order: sometimes; ignore them and watch kitten videos on Youtube; Marie Kondo)
And so on to finding a new church, which was a beast all its own, especially understanding that the bishop didn’t care and the DS apparently thought what had happened was just fine, or at least that the pastor’s side was the only one he needed to hear.
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Christmas Card
You sent my family a Christmas card, and you told us you missed us.
And I want to believe that’s true because I missed you for a long time.
But you gutted everything we started and threw it away as soon as we were gone.
Do you want us, or do you want numbers to report to the conference as “growth”? Do you want me, or just any body that fits in a chair for Sunday morning?
It seems to me like you want me without my fire, without my passion, and without my ideas.
And if that’s all you want, I want to buy you a mannequin for Christmas because they’ll do a better job than me at keeping quiet.
Or maybe this Christmas card is for appearances. Maybe you just want to seem like the bigger person.
Or maybe you really do regret throwing us away. Maybe you just don’t know how to do what we did. Maybe you’re seeing the obstacles we worked our way over and around and you’re realizing that it wasn’t as easy as it may have seemed from the outside, from the volunteers who only stayed for a few respectable hours then left before the work is done.
But, frankly, it doesn’t really matter why you sent the card. I just want you out of my life.
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The Invasiveness of Church
So, since leaving the little church that broke my heart, I’ve slowly realized, more and more, how unhealthy my relationship was with the damn place. It infected every part of my life; especially around holidays, there’s not a tradition or store or day left untouched by what are now incredibly painful memories. Christmas Eve used to be spent at two separate services (the family service had a “pageant” for the kids and the candlelight service needed childcare) and now the idea of going to one service feels like an emotional burden. Graphic design? I nearly cried when I opened up Photoshop to make a Christmas card for my friend’s brother because normally around this time I’d be designing handouts for the kids. Some of the moms that I’m still friends with on Facebook have posted about their kids’ holiday shenanigans, and now I’m avoiding Facebook because I hate that I haven’t seen these kids in over half a year. Dollar Tree is a little painful to think about, for fuck’s sake, just because I spent so much time in there buying supplies for church events. 
Let me be a lesson to you: don’t define a majority of your identity on a single relationship. Relationships are fragile, and your identity shouldn’t have to crumble with them. 
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As a millennial myself, I’m not particularly surprised by this.
Organized religion increasingly feels hollow and insincere in a world where religious leaders play politics both within and without the church, literally everything important turns into another power struggle, and no one seems interested in discussing the important questions.
Pretty much every public religious figure treats their religious text of choice as if they, and they alone, definitely have it all figured out. And if their interpretation (which is definitely, 100% correct, mind you) happens to benefit their interests at the expense of other people, then that’s fine, because it’s religion and therefore it’s good. Televangelists are what most people see of organized religion, and frankly most televangelists seem to be interested first and foremost in what you and God can do for them.
Which isn’t what religion is supposed to be, or what it has to be, but it’s often what it looks like in the here and now.
On a personal level, organized religion is designed astonishingly well to break faithful hearts. If I didn’t have someone to pull me back into church (someone whom I care about deeply, and want to support), I probably wouldn’t ever attend church, between the heartache religion has inflicted on me on a personal level and the disgust I get watching it on an organizational level.
(Story under the cut, because it’s rambling and still fueled by a lot of pain. TW: parent death)
I grew up Catholic, and I left the Catholic church in college because, increasingly, Catholic doctrine started having more holes than substance (at least, to me and my reading of the Bible) and none of the priests I reached out to were willing to give me anything more substantial than “the Bible says so,” even when I couldn’t find where the Bible actually said anything about the matter at hand.
Add on the longstanding problems in the Catholic church (where priests’ jobs have been repeatedly placed ahead of innocent children’s physical and psychological wellbeing, and the few authority figures who try to take local action keep getting told to wait for a comprehensive plan), and, well… I realized that I was getting more stress than fulfillment, and I felt like an outsider every time I went to Mass, so I stopped going.
So I turned to Methodism, because I was raised to be a Good Christian Girl™ and not going to church just wasn’t really an option. I ended up really involved in the Methodist Church in the mid-2010’s, and particularly in the children’s program at my own small church. And that was great for a while.
My conversion to Protestantism was always a sticking point between me and my mother, and I will always regret that a difference of religion meant that many of the times I saw her in the last months of her life were filled with bitter, frustrated arguments.
The day I finished the long process of writing and defending my undergraduate thesis, I drove 3 hours to my hometown with my roommate (a friend from my pre-college years), and didn’t go home because I was too proud of my pro-same-sex-marriage thesis (this was pre-Obergefell) and too tired to put up with another argument about my Protestantism, my liberal views, and my different interpretation of the Bible from the priest at my former church. I called her, told her I was done, that I’d done well, and that I’d see her the next evening, but I was going to crash with my roommate at her parents’ house.
My mother died the next afternoon, before I could call her again. I missed my last chance to see her because I feared another fight about religion. I would give anything to take that decision back.
My father was not thrilled at my conversion, but he’s come around since my mom passed away; he supports me finding a place where I feel spiritually filled, I think more or less because he’s lonely and he’s afraid to lose me (but I won’t ever let a difference of religion come between us). He volunteers at the church I went to as a child, and, up until the events that led to me leaving my small church, he always supported our kids’ programs to.
Although my church always had problems that left me frustrated, I got a lot of fulfillment out of teaching the kids in the church. But then, in 2016, I ended up as an Annual Conference delegate, and I think that’s where things started to spiral, happy as I was to go at the time.
AC was great, and I’m a law-brained sorta person, so all that legislation was wonderful. But I also had the opportunity to see the gritty reality of a world where religion is designed to make money, not just to fill spirits. Churches that don’t make money - even if they don’t lose any - can be closed, regardless of the negative effects, if someone in power thinks that a different kind of church can be more profitable. And if people at AC express dismay over the results? They’re probably good Christians, or they wouldn’t be at AC. Call for a prayer so they’ll shut up and you can move on.
But, you know, power corrupts. So I went back to my small church to try and fix everything I could on a local level, because I while I couldn’t fix the United Methodist Church, I could fix MY church. And, as an AC delegate, I had a spot on the Church Council to help with that goal. But, as it turns out, sometimes even people on a local level really just want the church to make more money. My dream (shared with a couple other church members, admittedly, but by no means all) was to use our children’s program to reach unchurched and underserved kids and bring them to Jesus. That, unfortunately, is not a financially profitable dream. Kids cost money, and unchurched kids are usually not rich ones. And their families often don’t come for more than the children’s events - and they only come for the children’s events because it’s free babysitting.
So every step was like clawing my way out of quicksand. Getting volunteers was like pulling teeth. Getting supplies was usually a matter of “do what you can with the church budget, and donate the rest.” Without volunteers, setup became “work until you’re about to pass out, go home, sleep two hours, then come back and finish before the kids get here.” Meanwhile, programs meant to draw in rich retirees from our community (so that they could give donations while they were in the building, of course) had more volunteers than they needed, and no one questioned whether practically every single man in the church was going to stay after on Sunday to help set up.
And the pastor at the time really was great. But they were a peacekeeper; any problems that arose always had two sides, and always ended in whatever decision kept the status quo because the status quo was safe, and easy.
But then the next AC came, and my pastor retired. The pastor that replaced them had wanted to retire, but had been encouraged by the district superintendent to take on our church instead, as a “part-time full-time assignment.” And I hoped and prayed that they’d bring with them change, but I should’ve been more careful with what I wished for.
They cannot tell the truth to save their life. They would approach me about an issue that was “very important” to them. We’d talk, and come up with a solution. At Church Council, without fail, the pastor would come in and insist that, in fact, we had decided on some entirely different plan. The pastor rarely showed up at children’s ministry events, so getting volunteers got even harder (why care about VBS if the pastor doesn’t?). Slowly, but surely, the church eroded every program I had helped put in place, watering it down or trying to monetize it. So, the Book of Discipline actually mandates a YA representative have a spot on the Church Council. For a while, I and one other millennial (also an AC delegate) fulfilled that role. But the pastor felt it was more important to send the church treasurer, so he could learn to make more money for the church. And that was fine; I and the other millennial approached the pastor at the end of the year about having a YA rep on the council either way (I’d always gone as an at-large delegate; our church was small enough that we only needed 1 lay delegate), and he more or less told us that the Book of Discipline didn’t apply when it was inconvenient for the church.
That’s where I realized that the bridge I was standing on would, inevitably, crumble. But I told myself it was worth trying to fix what was wrong. So I tried. And for a short time, I thought my biggest problem was going to be ensuring that the 2019 General Conference decision didn’t change the way my church embraced its LGBT members.
This new year had brought someone I’d always viewed as a friend into a position of authority in the church. I was excited for her, and I really hoped and prayed that she could do good for the church, and that we could work together to build an inclusive church with a healthy outreach to the underserved and unchurched, things I had always thought she agreed with me about (because she’d told me to my face that she did).
But no sooner did she take the reins than she implemented the volunteer dress code. Which was a far worse thing than it sounds.
We live in Texas. The dress code? No tank tops, no shorts. Ever. Apparently, some anonymous complainer had, at some point, seen an underwear slip or a bra strap. And rather than talk to the volunteers, they wrote a policy. Side note, apparently skirts of any length were fine for women.
Goodbye VBS. I can’t in good conscience ask anyone to monitor children outside, in June, in Texas, in full-length jeans and a t-shirt.
Also, no going barefoot in the sanctuary, ever, for any reason. I was one of two people who regularly shed my shoes during kids’ events where we used the sanctuary. But rather than talk to me about it, it was better to make a policy about it that literally everyone I spoke to knew was a rebuke.
Then, in one of the brand-new children’s oversight committee meetings, they decided to dismantle the children’s program bit by bit. Children’s church? Cancelled. Apparently, we were running a renegade program without pastoral approval anyway.
VBS? “If we can’t charge for it, let’s just cancel it. Add on a few lies about how poorly it was run (by me, in part) to make it seem like a logistical problem.” The children’s director objects to a sexist-worded dress code and refuses to impose it on those under her? “Fire her, no need to look at whether there’s a problem. Make the volunteers (including me) sign the policy before you’ll let them teach the kids on Sunday. Remind them explicitly that this is a prerequisite to working with the kids, so that they don’t feel they have any choice if they want to say goodbye, because they already know that it’s over and they don’t want to blindside the kids.”
I posted about it on Facebook in my frustration and pain at watching them tear apart everything I’ve tried to do for kids that I love like they were my family. I received a termination letter in my e-mail the next day. They proceeded to send a newsletter to the entire church (except me and my family) informing the church that I had been removed as a volunteer for lying on Facebook. No goodbye for the kids. No warning. They couldn’t handle public dissent.
I hadn’t told a single lie. I dared the person who drafted the newsletter to tell me where I lied. No answer.
Of course I left. And it still hurts to walk into a church building. It still hurts to see the kids on my FB feed. I’m still friends with a few of the moms, because I still love their kids. And it will keep hurting me, because I trusted my church. And even though I still go to church now and then, I know damn well not to trust anyone inside.
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Some days, I think of my old church and I
j u s t
manage to not be bitter and hurt. I know, rationally, that not being there is better for me. It was toxic, and I hadn’t been getting any kind of spiritual fulfillment out of it for a long time.
But some days, it’s all I can do to keep from crying, and I wonder whether churches are even worth trying. After all, churches have a LOT of downsides, even aside from the pain they have the power to inflict. Sometimes, it feels like I’d be doing better to just listen to music and read the Bible at home.
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How to Be a Small-Church Methodist
Step One:
Fall in love with civics; the Methodist church is full of it. Thrive off of the legal structure of the Methodist church; let its ins and outs fascinate you and draw you in. After attending Annual Conference as a delegate, get on the Church Council. Thrive off of being in a position to use your voice to make a difference for the kids in your church, because your church never put much focus on the kids. Believe you can be the difference you wanted to see in your world.
Step Two:
Get used to doing civics while the rest of the people in your church want you to Sit Down™, Shut Up™ and Don’t Rock the Boat™. God forbid you bring new ideas to a church whose membership was dwindling. God forbid you suggest that ministries that don’t bring in donations are still worth investing in.  God forbid you suggest that the way things have been done since the 1980′s isn’t necessarily the way things should be done in the 2010′s. And God forbid you get offended when your ministry (the kids) gets continually sidelined and ignored so that the church can bring in more People Who Donate Money™ (i.e., adults with retirement funds and nothing better to do).
Step Three:
Burn out. Begin dreading going to church, but keep going because you care about the people there. Each time there’s a snide comment about a new program you helped set up, let it go because at least the kids are happy with it. Each time you see twelve volunteers for a money-making event, but struggle to get even four or five volunteers for a kids’ event, let it go, because you’re smart and you can make do. Bend your life around the church so that everything gets done; who needs sleep when you’re serving God?
Step Four:
Begin to realize that, even if you put the majority of your free time and energy into a church, it doesn’t mean that anyone in the church’s leadership wants you there in the first place. Wonder why you bother; then, remember you bother because it matters to the kids and they want you there. Lose count of how many times people agree with you that, sure, the kids are important, but then tell you that you need to reign in your ideas because the kids don’t Make Money™. They’re not important. Realize that no one actually cares that your programs bring in poor and unchurched kids in numbers your church has never seen.
Step Five:
Eventually, realize that not only does the leadership not want you there, they’ll do anything they reasonably can to shut you out and make you leave. Begin to notice the little things that pile up to push you out. New ideas and no money doesn’t make the leadership like you; it makes them want you gone before your enthusiasm for outreach ministry catches on. Lose count, quickly, of how many times the pastor lies to your face. Realize, too late, the power play that has happened to ensure you’re no longer on church council and can’t keep interfering with the church’s plans to Make Money™. 
Step Six:
Struggle to believe the pastor when he says that, no, definitely not, no one’s trying to push you out of the church. Have hope anyway that things will get better. Be good, and be polite, when people bring policies to the table that specifically target you and your ministry, and be patient when you have to explain to them - repeatedly - why their policies don’t align with what they say they want to achieve. Recognize that their goals aren’t what they say they are, and that they’ve been lying to you.
Step Seven:
When things come to a head and you have to leave, still manage to be surprised at who, exactly, joins in to ensure that you won’t ever come back. Be surprised at the lies that the leadership tells you, and the lies they tell others about you, to justify their policies and their decisions. And, when you express your despair at seeing the church you love turn into one of the most painful things to ever happen to you, somehow manage to be surprised that the leadership uses it as fuel to push you out further. Be surprised again when they begin lying to the rest of the church about why you left. Be surprised at who believes them, and who doesn’t.
Step Eight:
Spend months healing, and trying to find a new small church that feels like home. Realize that you no longer feel safe in a small church and join a big church instead. 
Step Nine:
Don’t actually go to church, at least not regularly. People you never see can’t hurt you.
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How I Left the Catholic Church
I was born and raised in the Roman Catholic Church, from birth up to college. And I was pretty devout, though I was never confirmed because my parents couldn’t afford it. Sure, sometimes the Church took positions I didn’t understand, but they were the Right Church, so it must be right, right?
I never really loved Mass. It was one of those things that you do because you have to, but religion isn’t really meant to be enjoyable, right? It’s just a means to an end - you go, so that you can check that box and you don’t end up burning in hell. I never really felt like God acted directly in my life, but I assumed that it worked that way for everyone.
I started reading fan fiction in high school. And at first, I rolled my eyes in moral indignation at homosexual relationships in fan fiction, because it was a sin, right? But for some fandoms, the most interesting stories only come in slash-flavored romance, so I read them “for the story.” I particularly remember an old Phoenix Wright fic that turned the main characters into superheroes. And, over time, I found myself wondering - what, really, was so different about these relationships?
Enter college. I went to a Protestant-affiliated college, much to my parents’ delight, because Protestant was better than Secular. My roommate was a Methodist who turned out to be the best friend I could imagine. Sure, we always had our differences, but I found that I could rely on her even where I couldn’t rely on my parents. 
At this Protestant College, I also took a lot of Bible classes (because they were required). And, you know, reading the Bible and learning about its history means you actually start to learn something about the historical and linguistic nuances of the text. And over time, I began to question some of the things I’d always been taught - where did we get the idea of some particular threshold of sin that meant God no longer wanted you? Where did we get the idea that homosexuality was someone worse than all the other sins that were legal? What justification was there for condemning unbaptized babies? Could infallible authority ever be safely vested in one human being? If I could violate other laws in the Old Testament, could I get a tattoo? Were there circumstances where abortion could be morally justified?
And, over time, I stopped going to church, until I started going, just part time, whenever I felt like it, to the church my friend attended. First just to hang out, then to help with VBS, then to help clean up the nearly-abandoned children’s wing. And then, slowly, every week, as we started teaching the church’s handful of kids, and we started running VBS when the previous children’s director stepped down, and we started running new events to encourage the church to grow.
And teaching kids about the Bible taught me more about my faith than I could have imagined. For once, I could go to church, and feel like God was actually there, actually watching, actually participating. I felt a little like a child, bringing the class’s accomplishments to a parent - This child understood the lesson about fairness, God! Look at how good they’re doing!
Eventually, we asked about how General Conference worked in the Methodist church, because my friend and I were curious. And to our surprise, we were invited to be Annual Conference delegates - the previous regular delegate had resigned for health reasons. The only requirement was that I officially join the church, so I did. And we went, and I found myself living off the feeling of being immersed in my religion, not in an abstract sense, but in a real, concrete sense - I could talk about what, in concrete terms, God was directing me to do. It was intoxicating. 
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