This book was recommended to me by a number of friends, some of whom heard Andrew Marin speak at a college event. I bought it on their recommendation, then it sat on my desk and on my shelf for a couple of years, until I picked it up and read it yesterday and today.
Marin's book is challenging and helpful, seeking to find a way to bridge the divide between Evangelical Christianity and the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered community, a divide that has a long and storied history, and persists thanks to stereotypes and bad actions on both sides. Rightly so, Marin calls on Evangelicals to be the first to budge, asking us to listen, to repent of our bad actions and attitudes, and to actively look for ways to build connections with people who have long felt rejected by God.
Marin asks the provocative question of whether the top priority of Evangelicals relating to GLBT folks ought to be challenging their sexual orientation, or whether it ought to be introducing them to Jesus Christ, who loves them. I know that the answer many Evangelicals would give is, "both!" but the truth is, if we try to do both at the same time, the latter rarely seems to happen. GLBT folk come in to the conversation believing that God hates them, and that the Evangelical person hates them, and often begin talking (when they will talk at all) primed to bolt as soon as the "sin" word is mentioned.
Marin proposes that instead of answering closed-ended questions with the "yes" or "no" answers the questioner is looking for, Evangelicals pursue a strategy of listening to other people's stories, and broadening out the question beyond yes and no.
I'll be honest, that approach both appeals to me and frightens me. The appeal comes from its intention to treat people as people - and more than that, as people loved by God, and more than that, as people who are desperately seeking a relationship with God - and that is how I believe the Bible portrays them. But the Bible also portrays us all as people willing to keep blinders on in order to prevent God from actually taking control of our lives. Marin calls Evangelicals to respond in love, but I recognize that some times, love means being willing to say hard things. Still, from my work as a pastor and missionary over the last twenty years, I know that the "hard things" are rarely heard and responded to well unless there is a foundation of love and respect out of which they are said.
Marin addresses key questions that hover over every conversation about homosexuality and Christianity, and tackles the "Big 5" Bible passages that address homosexual activity. But in each case, he doesn't give a "yes" or "no" answer, instead opting to broaden the conversation to include deeper issues. This is both great AND problematic, as many reviewers have pointed out. Great, in that it allows the conversation to get to some of those broader issues, but problematic in that it can also feel slippery and dishonest if done primarily to avoid conflict or to obfuscate and temporize.
It's a book that's well worth reading, that raises more questions than it answers, and that challenged me, personally, on many levels.