If you've been told going to church and being gay don't mix, the Rev.
Ray Bagnuolo will tell you otherwise. He's openly gay and he's a minister. He's also the chaplain and minister director for That All May
Freely Serve, a Rochester, New York-based group that serves LGBT churchgoers and their families and advocates for them within the Presbyterian Church (USA). This Sunday, he'll lead the 10 a.m. mass at Old Stone Church. Bagnuolo hopes to inform members about the recent changes in the church and advocate acceptance. “I’m looking forward to having the ability to join folks in worship at the Old Stone Church,” he says.
Religious Roots: Bagnuolo grew up Roman Catholic. Once he realized he was gay, he struggled with Catholic doctrine and personally experienced some Catholics' lack of
acceptance of the LGBT community. “This church that I grew up
loving had these things they were saying to me that I didn’t quite understand,”
Bagnuolo remembers. “I realized that I didn’t need to be in an abusive
relationship with the church to be in a relationship with God.”
Positive Changes: In June, the Presbyterian Church voted to allow its pastors to perform same-gender marriages. “I’ve done a
couple of marriages since,” Bagnuolo says, “and I’ve been able to say, ‘By the authority of the
Presbyterian Church (USA).’” The church amended its constitution, defining marriage as between two people instead of between a man and a woman.
Hurdles that Remain: Although
society has come a long way, Bagnuolo says, changing hearts and minds is often
difficult. “A young man in college was outed,” he says. “His parents asked him if it was
true, and he decided to say yes. Two days later they met him at his door with a
shoebox. In the shoebox was his license, his insurance policy for the car and
some other papers. They told him, ‘You’re no longer our son, you no longer live
here, and you need to go now.’ That still happens and worse.”
Good Company:
“Loneliness is the worst of all conditions, especially when you’re struggling,”
Bagnuolo says. That All May Freely Serve has developed a grassroots
network of supporters nationwide who are ready to help anyone who might be in
need of a lending hand or a shoulder to cry on. “We say, ‘Find out what they need, make sure
they know they’re not alone, and let them know that they are loved by God,
whatever name God might be know to them.”
2 comments:
Thanks for this piece. Just a clarification: the church is currently voting to ratify the change to the constitution. If the amendment passes by a simple majority of the 173 presbyteries in the church, the definition for marriage will be changed to being "...between two people, traditionally a man and a woman." We expect voting to be completed by late Spring 2015. Pastors in the Presbyterian Church (USA), by a large majority, were given immediate authority at this assembly to marry same gender couples in states where those marriages are legal. Truly, this are powerful and significant changes.
God bless you Ray!
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