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‘Welcome’ is so much more than a word on the church noticeboard or weekly notice sheet
With the Living in Love and Faith (LLF) resources approaching publication, we are sharing an extract from David Runcorn's book Love Means Love. Love Means Love published in June this year coinciding with the original publication date for the LLF resources. In this extract David reflects on the experiences of Christians who have struggled '...or are no longer able to accept, traditional understandings of what the Bible teaches on same-sex relationships'.
Many of us find ourselves living with a dilemma. We are Christians for whom the Bible is read and reverenced as the guiding authority for life and faith. On the particular issue of sexuality, however, we struggle with, or are no longer able to accept, traditional understandings of what the Bible teaches on same-sex relationships. This is an uncomfortable place to be.
We can feel dishonest as we quietly dissent from the apparent ‘plain meaning’ of certain parts of the Bible or from the convictions we hear preached in church or from views expressed in our own communities. It is hard to gauge our numbers for we have often struggled to know how to bring our voices and questions to this highly conflicted debate. My own experience suggests that we are a significant and growing group.
We are vulnerably aware that our questions present an unsettling challenge to the way the Bible has long been read and understood on this subject. We find it unsettling too. After all, those who believe that the Bible is clear in condemning same-sex relationships have a long history on their side. They can also appeal to what seems to be the ‘plain meaning’ of the texts. However, these familiar readings are being increasingly challenged. One effect of this is that our questions here extend beyond one particular issue: we are confronted with how we read the Bible at all. Another challenge we face is that, by opening up this discussion, our fellowship with one another is tested. In having come to believe, as I do, that love means love and that committed same-sex expressions of love may be blessed and good in God’s eyes, I am painfully aware that some of my dearest friends hold a different view.
Some of us belong to churches that believe the Bible forbids same-sex relationships and are very upfront in declaring this. Questions on this issue are not welcome. It takes a certain courage to even raise them in such contexts, especially if we do not feel trained or equipped to do so. For lack of somewhere to explore our questions with others, many of us stay silent, privately dissenting from the prevailing view in communities we call our spiritual home. Some have left churches over this issue; some have been asked to leave.
Across all the traditions there are many other churches that have never expressed a particular view on sexuality but where open and informed discussion has yet to happen. It is a painfully divisive issue. Church leaders and their communities can be tempted to avoid the subject for fear of the conflict it causes, but this silence serves no one well. I have heard too many stories, for example, of parents with a child who is gay or folk who are themselves gay, simply unable to share something so central to their lives with fellow church members for fear of what the reaction would be. Silence also means that people are not being enabled to grow in faith and confidence, to develop an informed understanding of the Scriptures or to read and interpret them. Silence does not communicate nothing. It can and does result in a steady loss of confidence in the Bible as a source of truth, guidance and wisdom.
There are among us those whose personal journeys of faith and identity have left their relationship with the Bible badly damaged. Quite simply, some of us have not found our own story told, loved or understood there and have been left feeling judged and unwelcome. In the absence of being shown any other way of reading and understanding the Scriptures, some have finally given up on them altogether.
We need to open up this discussion without anxiety. We need to learn how to love without fear as we explore new patterns of relating and belonging. We have not been here before. There are still too few open, exploratory places where Bibles can be studied, difficult questions asked, understanding tested out, wounds healed and differences faced respectfully. There are examples of local support and training events designed to help church communities understand what ‘welcome’ actually means in this context, but more are needed. ‘Welcome’ is so much more than a word on the church noticeboard or weekly notice sheet.
Does the Bible really condemn same-sex relationships?
Many Christians wrestle with this question. Here, in his compassionate, cogent book, David Runcorn outlines how someone can support same-sex relationships on the basis of the Bible, not in spite of it.





