MESSAGE FROM ORTHODOX YOUTH TO THE CHURCH: STOP. HURTING. US.

On July 1 of this year the above video was posted to the Facebook page of the Orthodox Church in America’s 19th All-American Council, which was held last year. In it the winsome Dima Rentel exuberantly announces the launch of his continent-wide listening tour on behalf of the OCA to talk “to priests, youth, young adults, parents, camp administrators, and everyone else in between, to hear what you guys want out of youth ministry.”

What the Orthodox Church’s LGBTQI kids and young adults—together with their moms and dads, brothers and sisters, grandmas and grandpas—want from youth ministry can be summed up in three short words: Stop. Hurting. Us. Read More


A BED UNDEFILED: SEXUAL LOVE AND THE ASCESIS OF ORTHODOX LIFE by Giacomo Sanfilippo

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A Bed Undefiled: Foundations for an Orthodox Theology and Spirituality of Same-Sex Love

by Giacomo Sanfilippo (Peter J. SanFilippo)

Introduction
Sexual Love and the Ascesis of Orthodox Life

After many centuries of a predominant monastic preoccupation with complete sexual abstinence in the theological and spiritual literature of the Orthodox Church—even while the ordination of married men to the priesthood and the permanent diaconate as the norm for parish ministry underwent no decline—the modern and postmodern eras have witnessed a felicitous reclamation of erotic love in the writings of non-monastic Orthodox theologians, both ordained and lay. Apart from the recurrent theme of human eros as a metaphor worthy of God’s love for mankind in both the Old and New Testaments, this development traces its roots at least as far back as the preaching of John Chrysostom on marriage. A late 4th/early 5th-century contemporary of Augustine and celibate himself, Chrysostom astonishes modern readers who encounter for the first time his positive valuation of human sexuality independent of its procreative function. Read More



HOLY TRADITION AND THE LOVE OF GOD: SEXUALITY AND GENDER IN CONTEMPORARY ORTHODOX THEOLOGY by Phil Dorroll

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You cannot stop being a Christian if you love Christianity and Christ.

Olga Mark in For I Am Wonderfully Made” (FIAWM)

This short essay contains some of my reflections on current debates over LGBT identity in Orthodoxy. I think that some criticisms of LGBT-affirming Orthodox thought miss some of these thinkers’ main arguments. I offer the following as a short analysis of these arguments.

Main Argument

One of the key theological insights of LGBT-affirming Orthodox theology is that the act of re-engaging with Holy Tradition is an act of love in imitation of the love of the Persons of the Holy Trinity. Reconsidering what the Tradition might have to say about contemporary moral issues is neither an act of betrayal nor an act of malice toward Tradition. It is an act of love for Tradition that is patterned after the love that constitutes God’s very being. This, I argue, is what LGBT-affirming Orthodox theology has to teach us about Orthodoxy itself.  Read More