SDA Kinship Resources

Spenden

Think of giving
not as a duty
but as a privilege.
—John D. Rockefeller Jr.

Spenden

Neues Buch veröffentlicht

Christianity and Homosexuality: Some Seventh-day Adventist Perspectives
Holen Sie sich Ihre
Kopie schon heute!

twitter_button
SDA Kinship Intl. on Facebook
 

 

Who's Online

Wir haben 1196 Gäste online
Drucken E-Mail
Homosexuality:  Can It Be Changed?

In the past, the Seventh-day Adventist church has been committed to the disease model of homosexuality and it has funded “treatment programs for homosexuality.74  These programs have been disastrous (to be addressed).  Unfortunately, vestiges of this “treatment” mentality remain within some institutional Adventist circles as recent Adventist books and affiliated publications suggest.75,76  A more charitable view is struggling to emerge by membership consensus: homosexual orientation is real, is at best morally neutral, but lifelong celibacy remains required for church community acceptance and any possibility for personal salvation.30,76,77  It is uncertain whether this view will survive or continue to evolve.  Therefore, it is understandable that many Adventists (particularly parents of gay and lesbian youth) still labor under the hope (false) that they might “change” the sexual orientation of a loved one.

Some Christian communities have continued to debate the possibility of "treating homosexuality" and some continue to support such "treatment centers" or "treatment support groups."  These so-called "change therapies," also known as "reparative therapies" or "ex-gay therapies," have significant ties to Adventism.  As late as 1986, institutional Adventism financed the reparative therapy efforts of Colin Cook and Homosexuals Anonymous.  When it was discovered that Cook was involved in sexual relationships with many of the young men he was attempting to "help," the Adventist church withdrew its support.78  Similar efforts by Cook a decade later in a different location resulted in similar improprieties.79   Despite a pattern of abuse and unethical conduct, Colin Cook continues to reinvent himself and his so-called ministry.  He continues to be active in the Seventh-day Adventist church and has started his ex-gay program, FaithQuest, once again.80  Colin Cook's work frames the issue of the legitimacy of "reparative therapies" and whether or not such efforts are routinely successful in changing a person's sexual orientation.

Even among people who are genuinely motivated to alter their sexual orientation  from a standpoint of either personal desire, religious convictions, or concerns of homophobic prejudice, accountable real change is nil.81-88  "Ex-gay" change efforts may be helpful in redirecting a conflicted heterosexual or bisexual person who has experimented with homosexual activity back to heterosexual relationships.  Among homosexual oriented people motivated to "change," these "ex-gay" change programs may be successful in changing sexual behavior, but do not succeed in changing sexual orientation.

What does this mean?  It means that homosexually-oriented individuals will continue to be erotically stimulated by homosexual ideation, but may not necessarily act on it.  It also means that homosexually-oriented individuals will not be erotically stimulated by heterosexual ideation, but will make every effort to pretend otherwise.  And, it is this dishonesty which remains at the discredited core of all "change therapies."  On the whole, psychotherapy directs clients to live honest and fully integrated lives rather than dishonest and denial-laden fragmented lives.  While credible studies are admittedly few, five-year and longer independent follow up reviews of “change therapy” patients reveal that most remain homosexual or bisexually oriented and many return to homosexual behaviors.89-91  Because these studies are still based on research subject self-reporting, bias and dishonesty remain problematic--and the studies need to continue for a longer period of time (many may be able to sustain “change” for a short period of time).

In a recent highly publicized verbal report by Robert Spitzer, a psychiatrist at Columbia University, there has been a suggestion that some homosexuals can change.92  Spitzer is noteworthy because he helped steer the 1973 decision by the American Psychiatric Association to declassify homosexuality as an illness.  Spitzer interviewed 200 individuals referred to him by Christian organizations self-described as “changed.”  Most of the research subjects had already been in change programs for more than ten years.  Spitzer announced that 66% of the men and 44% of the women interviewed had arrived at what he called reasonable “heterosexual functioning.”93

Several issues here are worth noting.  First, “heterosexual functioning” is about a behavioral shift and does not necessarily imply a genuine change in sexual orientation or homosexual desire.  Second, because this study was based on a single telephone interview, Spitzer reminds his audience that he “has no proof that participants were honest.”93  Third, Spitzer was very concerned about how his research might be misconstrued and “twisted by the Christian right.”94  In a series of follow up interviews, Spitzer said:

Our sample was self-selected from people who already claimed they had made some change.  We don’t know how common that kind of change is...  I’m not saying that this can be easily done, or that most homosexuals who want to change can make this kind of change.  I suspect it’s quite unusual.95  I suspect the vast majority of gay people would be unable to alter by much a firmly established homosexual orientation.96  The kinds of changes my subjects reported are highly unlikely to be available to the vast majority (of gays and lesbians)...(only) a small minority--perhaps three percent--might have a “malleable” sexual orientation.94

Despite highly touted success rates claimed by some “change therapy” centers, it is notable that these centers have not shared, replicated or published a single study in an independent scientific peer reviewed journal forum.  Furthermore, even researcher Robert Spitzer, cooperating with Christian “ex-gay” groups, had “great difficulty” finding people who claimed to have changed their sexual orientation--this despite the fact that ex-gay groups claim that “thousands have left homosexuality.”97  It is also noteworthy that change programs can be very expensive (particularly if the “process” takes more than ten years) to say nothing of the harm some of these programs inflict.98  Sensational claims do capture media attention, but scientific information is obtained by more reasonable methods.

Because none of the “change therapy” centers have allowed independent professional peer review of their client outcomes, others have conducted their own studies.  In 2002, Ariel Shidlo and Michael Schroeder published a review of 202 gay/lesbian volunteer “consumers of sexual orientation conversion interventions”.130   These were gays and lesbians highly motivated to “change” their sexual orientation (therefore, not a random cross-sectional analysis) and willing to participate in a series of telephone interviews.  Many enrolled in Shidlo and Schroeder’s study to “prove the success of their Christian program” and were willing to be followed for many years.  While the study intends to follow these individuals for ten years, the five year review was revealing.  176 perceived themselves as having “failed conversion therapy” outright.  In other words, despite an average of 118 conversion counseling sessions over an average period of 26 months, 176 out of 202 (87%) individuals were still involved in homosexual activity by their own admission.  Of the 26 remaining individuals, 18 admitted that they were attracted to the same gender, but were engaged in less homosexual behavior or attempting celibacy.  8 described themselves having more opposite gender attraction at five years – or about 4% – but were not necessarily involved in an active heterosexual relationship.  Shidlo, Schroeder and others have surmised that of these eight individuals, some may be genuinely be bisexual (would Adventists accept bisexuals?) or they may simply be able to sustain lifelong celibacy.  It is noteworthy that Shidlo and Schroeder’s percentages correlate well with Spitzer.  These percentages are certainly less than the 85-95% “cure rates” often cited by “Christian reparative therapists” or the organizations that support such efforts.  Shidlo and Schroedger’s ten year review should be interesting as long term follow-up studies have been lacking.  

Perhaps most daunting (and cruel) to the Christian homosexual as it relates to Christian-sponsored "change" or "reparative therapies" is that "success" of the therapy is dependent on the perceived moral commitment of the individual.  In other words, those who simply cannot overcome their sexual orientation (essentially all) are simply blamed for a poor, inadequate, or insufficient relationship to God which allows evil to continue invading their lives.  Descriptions of these hellish journeys have been published.88  Within gay Adventist communities, the efforts to "change" sexual orientation have been extraordinarily cruel, and I know some of these battered survivors.  That some of these Adventist gay men and lesbian women survive at all is a testimony to grace.

It is worth reiterating that since the early 1970's, the "treatment" of homosexuality as a disease (unless conducted in a valid academic research setting) is not supported by the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, or the American Medical Association (see Appendix B).  Should reparative therapy be advocated by licensed health care professionals outside of an academic research setting, local medical societies and state regulatory agencies should be notified for possible malpractice.

 


 

30.  Caron Oswald.  “Shining the Promise of Hope From San Francisco — God’s Rainbow,” in the Pacific Union Recorder.  December 2001, 12-15.

74.  Ralph Blair.  "The Real Changes Taking Place."  Open Hands, Fall 1986 (vol 2, no 2), with post-script dated Winter 1987.

75.  Victor J. Adamson.  “That Kind Can Never Change!” Can They...?  Lafayette, Louisiana: Huntington House Publishers.  2000.

76.  B.B. Beach and John Graz.  101 Questions Adventists Ask.  Nampa, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 2000, 55-56.

77.  Kate McLaughlin.  "Are Homosexuals God's Children?"  The Adventist Review, April 1997, 26-9.

78.  Ronald Lawson.  "The Troubled Career of an 'ex-gay' Healer, Colin Cook:  Seventh-day Adventists and the Christian Right," in a paper read at the meeting for the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, San Diego, California, November 1997.

79.  Virginia Culver.  "Sessions with Gays Criticized," in the Denver Post, 27 October 1995, 1A, 8A-9A.

80.  Colin Cook.  “FaithQuest Perspectives Newsletter,” July 28, 2001. 

81.  CW Socarides.  Homosexuality.  New York:  J Aronson, 1978, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

82.  I Bieber, HJ Dain, PR Dince, et. al.  Homosexuality:  A Psychoanalytic Study.  New York:  Basic Books, 1962, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

83.  JL Liss, A Welner.  "Change in Homosexual Orientation" in the American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1973; 27: 102-4, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

84.  FX Acosta.  "Etiology and treatment of homosexuality:  a review" in Archives of Sexual Behavior 1975; 4: 9-29, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

85.  EM Pattison, ML Pattison.  "'Ex-gays': religiously mediated change in homosexuals" in the American Journal of Psychiatry, 1980; 137: 1553-62, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

86.  DC Haldeman.  "Sexual orientation conversion therapy for gay men and lesbians:  a scientific examination" in JC Gonsiorek, JD Weinrich, editors, book:  Homosexuality:  Research Implications for Public Policy.  Newbury Park, California:  Sage, 1991, 149-61, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14:  923-930.

87.  J Nicolosi.  Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality.  Northvale, New Jersey:  J Aronson, 1991, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

88.  Boston Lesbian Psychologies Collective, editors.  Lesbian psychologies:  explorations and challenges.  Urbana:  University of Illinois Press, 1987, cited by RC Friedman, JI Downey, in the New England Journal of Medicine 1994; 14: 923-930.

89.  "Answers to Your Questions About Sexual Orientation and Homosexuality:  Can Therapy Change Sexual Orientation?" a brochure for the American Psychological Association, 1990.

90.   Mel White.  Stranger at the Gate:  To Be Gay and Christian in America.  New York:  Simon and Schuster, 1994.

91.  Ariel Shidlo and Michael Schroeder.  “Changing Sexual Orientation: A Consumer’s Report,” in Professional Psychology:  Research and Practice.  Vol 33(2002), No. 3, 249-259.  

92.  Shankar Vedantam.  “Studies on gays yield conflicting conclusions,” in the Washington Post, May 9, 2001, A14.  (on the American Psychiatric Association meetings in New Orleans, Louisiana, May 9, 2001).

93.  “Study: some gays can go straight,” Associated Press report, on MSNBC Health, May 9, 2001.

94.  Dahir Mubarak.  “Why are we gay?”, in the Advocate, July 17, 2001.

95.  Carol Lin, interviewer.  “Psychiatrist Discusses Study Into Homosexuals Adopting Heterosexual Lives,” from Cable News Network (CNN) Live at Daybreak, aired May 9, 2001.

96.  Robert Spitzer.  “Commentary:  Psychiatry and Homosexuality”, in the Wall Street Journal, May 23, 2001.

97.  Paul Varnell.  “Those Not Very ‘Ex’ Gays”, in the Chicago Free Press, May 16, 2001.

98.  Ben Kemena.  “Changing Homosexual Orientation?  Considering the Evolving Activities of Change Programs in the United States,” in the Journal of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, Vol 4, No 2 (2000).

130.  Ariel Shidlo and Michael Schroeder.  “Changing Sexual Orientation: A Consumer’s Report.”  Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 33(3), 249-259.  2002.

Zuletzt aktualisiert am Montag, 14. Mrz 2011 um 02:07 Uhr
 

Member Login

           |