U.S. Evangelicals on the Defense Over Uganda’s New Anti-Homosexuality Act
http://sojo.net/blogs/2014/03/04/us-evangelicals-defense-over-uganda%E2%80%99s-new-anti-homosexuality-act
by Sarah Pulliam Bailey 03-04-2014 | 4:52pm
American evangelicals are denouncing a new Uganda law
that criminalizes homosexuality, reiterating a position that many have
held for years but which has nonetheless drawn scrutiny and skepticism
from critics.
Sarah Pulliam Bailey writes for Religion News Service. Via RNS.
Russell Moore at the Washington offices of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission. RNS photo by Adelle M. Banks
Decrying
laws in countries such as Uganda and Russia, Russell Moore, president
of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty
Commission, said he knows no evangelicals who would support legislation
like Uganda’s.
“We always must balance a fear of
Western cultural imperialism with a responsibility to speak to global
human rights around the world,” said Moore, who has also denounced
Russia’s anti-gay laws because he has adopted sons from Russia.
“Those
of us who hold to a Christian sexual ethic don’t want to see those who
disagree with us jailed; we want to see them reconciled to God through
the gospel.”
The timing of Uganda’s legislation coincided with heated debates in the U.S. over the proposed legislation in Arizona
that would have allowed businesses in the state to deny services to
people who are gay if they felt that serving them would violate their
religious rights.
“The situations in Uganda and Arizona
are galaxies apart,” Moore said. “I think that in Arizona and several
other states, in an attempt to preserve our religious liberties,
regardless of how we agree with how it’s being done, can hardly compare
with persecution around the world.”
California
megachurch pastor Rick Warren, too, posted on his Facebook page on
Sunday (March 2) denying allegations that he ever supported the Uganda
bill. In 2009, Warren posted an “encyclical video” on YouTube saying he opposes the criminalization of homosexuality.
“Last week, the nation of Uganda passed a bad law, which I have publicly opposed for nearly 5 years,” Warren wrote. “I still oppose it, but rumors persist because lies and errors are never removed from the internet.”
Evangelical
humanitarian organization World Vision has opposed the bill since 2009,
arguing that it could hamper efforts to reduce HIV/AIDS. “More people
would be reluctant to seek, receive or even provide care and compassion
out of fear of being reported,” the organization said in a statement.
“This would also make their families and children even more vulnerable.”
Uganda is not the only country to criminalize same-sex relations. The United Nations estimates that 78 countries ban homosexuality.
Since
the law passed, Uganda has been hit with substantial aid cuts from
Western nations; the World Bank has postponed a $90 million loan for the
country’s health systems. Secretary of State John Kerry has likened
Uganda’s law to South Africa’s apartheid-era ban on interracial unions.
Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana, president of the Pontifical Council for
Justice and Peace, said Tuesday that “homosexuals are not criminals” and should not receive a sentence of life in prison.
Media
reports have connected the bill to a 2009 conference in Uganda, at
which three Americans condemned homosexual behavior and promoted therapy
for same-sex attraction. One of the men, Scott Lively, a Massachusetts
pastor and head of Abiding Truth Ministries, said that he is not
responsible for the bill.
“It’s a very insulting
argument, that somehow an American evangelical pastor is so powerful
that I’ve overwhelmed the intelligence of an entire government and
turned them out to do my will,” Lively said. “The Ugandans knew what
they wanted to hear.”
He said he does not support the bill in its final form.
“I
have mixed feelings about the final law,” Lively said. “I support the
portions that increase penalties for homosexual abuse among children,
intentionally spreading AIDS through sodomy. The penalties in the law
for simple homosexuality are still too harsh.”
He said
that if he had power to implement legislation in the U.S., he would make
laws related to sexuality similar to new marijuana laws, where the
government would be prohibited from advocating and promoting it but
advocates who practice it would left alone. He said he also would have
recommended reparative therapy, the disputed belief that sexual
orientation can be changed.
“There are many who are
compelled to same-sex behavior, like alcoholism or any other behavioral
disorder,” Lively said. “The government should be concerned with helping
them overcome their problems and not just punish them for it.”
Initial
opposition to the bill was strong among evangelicals, but it gradually
faded due to “Uganda fatigue,” said Warren Throckmorton, a professor of
psychology at Grove City College.
“Early on, Rick Warren
went out on a big way against the bill, and he still got blamed for it
at times. Some of the vigor early on was worn down over time,”
Throckmorton said. “The bill came up and then died several times. Just
when you thought it was gone and over with, the Ugandan parliament
passed it in the middle of the night, so to speak.”
He said he would have expected a more vigorous response from evangelicals who have a stake in Uganda.
“Evangelicals
have missionaries there, televangelists have shows on TV there. There
is a substantial American Christian presence there,” Throckmorton said.
“From the Ugandans’ point of view, the bill was passed as a way to make
Uganda a more Christian nation; evangelicals could’ve been more vocal by
saying, ‘This is not how it’s done.’”