Sunday, March 30, 2008

My Life as a Christian Fundamentalist

When I was about 12 years old, my oldest brother joined an independent, fundamentalist, bible church in Manhattan. My brother is 10 years older than me, so I looked up to him a lot. Subsequently, I started attending the church with him. By my high school years, my brother and I were both fixtures at the church. He was a deacon and in charge of sound production and I was highly active in the youth group. I even went to the church's high school for my senior year. By my senior year I highly regarded as a good christian and even won the school's Most Spiritual award.

When it came time to pick a college, I really didn't know what to do. Jerry Falwell's Liberty University offered 50% scholarships to anyone from my church that wished to attend and it seemed like the answer that I was seeking. I visited the school with a group of other teenagers and frankly, loved it.

The school really inundated its students with religious meetings in addition to the typical class load. There following were all required:
- Sunday morning service,
- Sunday evening service,
- Monday night prayer group (small groups held in the dorms),
- Wednesday night service,
- Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning chapel services,
- Bible classes during your freshman and sophomore years, and
- A required christian service class usually requiring 2 or 3 hours weekly.

I quickly became a prayer leader. Eventually, I became a resident assistant (RA), which was good because it came with a $12,000 scholarship that covered tuition, room and board and up to $200 worth of textbooks. What a godsend that was. Obviously the competition for these positions is huge so they put us through a very rigorous process before selecting just a few. More is expected of RAs at Liberty U than of typical universities since the RAs are also supposed to be the dormitory's mommy and daddy, first line spiritual counsellor, and the primary enforcers of the schools many, many rules that would have shocked most students of other schools.

I definitely struggled with my sexuality while in school, even as I counselled others. Luckily, my mind compartmentalized my gayness such that I could survive in this homophobic environment without being completely traumatized. Somehow even as I would occasionally go through cycles of buying gay porn then destroying it, there was a part of me that had no idea that I was gay.

Interestingly enough what drove me from the church had nothing to do with my sexuality, but my eventual inability to accept the judeo-christian version of God. My argument is as such, if God exists, then he must be as far above us as we are above an ant. Therefore, our understanding of the nature of God, his desires, his motives, and his goals must be as incomprehensible to us as an ant trying to understanding that humans must go to work to buy braces for their kids and pay the mortgage. Hell, my dog can't even understand why I have to leave every morning. I don't say this to try to convince anyone, which I know would be futile, but to describe how I came to believe what I believe.

Anyway, I am not saying that god doesn't exist, because I have no way of knowing. I only state that I cannot buy the image of god that has been taught to me. It just seems way to convenient. It seems exactly like what god would be if humans invented him. I now consider myself agnostic.

3 comments:

Ian said...

Hey GNDC, I like your thoughts on this topic. For someone like me, who has yet to reconcile my sexuality with my faith, your point of view is refreshing, and gives some help for a occasionally spiritually bereft, struggling man.

Don't you find it interesting that, despite gays always have been QUITE visible in the Black Church (your never married choir directors, deacons, deaconesses, and so forth), everyone all of sudden wants to pretend we're this great evil?

Hmm. I think the African American community bought into a load of crap someone sold us! We've sold ourselves short.

I'd love to read more about your experiences at Liberty University. A friend of mine went to Liberty and is a TOTAL automaton drone! Faith is an expression, NOT a brainwashing. Just my thoughts.

Great blog! I'm adding your blog to my blog roll. I'll definitely continue reading.

I also admire your courage to let it "all hang out." I couldn't fathom myself in the same position. Being naked in front of others, with the exception of the person I'm shagging up with, terrifies me! LOL.

Kudos bro.

Ian said...

Hey GNDC, I like your thoughts on this topic. For someone like me, who has yet to reconcile my sexuality with my faith, your point of view is refreshing, and gives some help for a occasionally spiritually bereft, struggling man.

Don't you find it interesting that, despite gays always have been QUITE visible in the Black Church (your never married choir directors, deacons, deaconesses, and so forth), everyone all of sudden wants to pretend we're this great evil?

Hmm. I think the African American community bought into a load of crap someone sold us! We've sold ourselves short.

I'd love to read more about your experiences at Liberty University. A friend of mine went to Liberty and is a TOTAL automaton drone! Faith is an expression, NOT a brainwashing. Just my thoughts.

Great blog! I'm adding your blog to my blog roll. I'll definitely continue reading.

I also admire your courage to let it "all hang out." I couldn't fathom myself in the same position. Being naked in front of others, with the exception of the person I'm shagging up with, terrifies me! LOL.

Kudos bro.

nudeindc said...

You know, although I managed to get throught the Liberty experience relatively unscathed, it is really not a pleasent place to be gay. I remember quite a few people being expelled and losing so much money merely because of their feelings. I remember my first year as an RA, there was a feelow RA, white guy named Steven from Pennsylvania. I was immediately attracted to him and although we moved in different circles, we became casual, but good friends. I loved talking to him and he appeared to light up whenever we had a chance to talk. Unfortunately, we never became too close because he was expelled. I remember being hurt by this whole thing and really wanting nothing more than to help him and comfort him, but that was impossible because once expelled, they ship you out in about 10 seconds flat. I've always wondered what happened to Steven.

I've also knew other guys there that were obviously gay. It seems they were always friends, but somewhat distance. I guess looking back on it, it wouldn't have been good for me neither them for us to have mixed too much given that I was supposed to be an enforcer and they were committing a sin that the school equated with killing babies.

Anyway, I didn't accept my sexuality until I reached 24. In some ways, I wish I had come to terms earlier, but I also realize the hell I would've went through if I had. Growing up was difficult and confusing enough as it was I guess.

I still get the Liberty almuni information and even still keep in contact with a few friends, but I've really have nothing besides history in common with the place anymore.