For background, let me say that Ray and I had four kids in ten years, and they are all loved and wanted. When Ray came out to us, our oldest was 29 and married, and our youngest was 19 and a freshman in college. They all graduated from a conservative Christian university, and were very involved in ministry/missions. It was a terrific shock to all of us that Ray was gay, and we all had a lot to learn about what this meant. We all ended up changing our views as we understood that you don't choose your sexual orientation, and that you do choose what you believe.
Our family is pretty tight, and we really like being with each other. My counselor once said that we probably insulated ourselves with each other, partly because of Ray's career. I don't know if that is true, but I do know that we have stuck with each other, even when it was tough to hold up our heads and face the world who knew Ray, versus who we knew Ray to be.
So, although I haven't asked each one of the kids what they think, I did ask our youngest, Sara, since she was a teenager when this big event changed our lives forever: "Did you ever wonder if you were meant to be, since your dad is gay?" I don't know how I put it, but it was something like that.
Sara replied that just this week the subject had come up with a co-worker. She told her friend that the whole thing doesn't, or hasn't ended, that there is always more to deal with. Even though she is fully accepting of her dad (and glbt people), there is always someone who hasn't heard, doesn't know, or will react with uncertainty regarding her dad. But she also told her friend, "My parents probably have a better working relationship that some parents who stay together." And to my question, she looked at me and said, "No, never, not at all."
So, below I have copied most of what my e-mailer wrote, and I have also included my reply. I hope this is helpful.
the question:
Carol, I am a big fan of your ex-husband's music and I enjoy your blog. I have a question. How do you address self-esteem issues related to the children of mixed-orientation marriages? ... I am haunted by a conversation with a Christian teenager who was the product of such a marriage. His anguish, basically, was that if it was never really God's will that Mom and Dad be married to one another, then it was never God's will that he be born. I basically answered him that God can bring good, even marvelous, results out of bad situations, and that God can "hit straight with a crooked stick," to use an old saying.
I don't know if I handled that conversation well or not. What would you say to a young person who is struggling with whether or not he or she was meant to be born due to the fact that they are the product of a mixed orientation marriage?
my reply:
Thanks, *********** ! And that's a good question, one I've never addressed on the
blog. I went to one of my kids for help in answering, to see if it has
ever occurred to her that she was never in God's will to come into
existence/been born. Fortunately, she didn't look at it that way. She
knows how her dad believed the fundamentalist doctrine, how well he did
in following what we were taught, and how much he tried. (It might also
help that I've helped her understand through my own understanding.)
I
think you answered the questioning teenager as well as you could.
Since his/her parents had put it like that (that they never were in
God's will to be married) that would be how the teen would look at it as
well. What an awful thought, trying to figure out if your birth was never meant to be. But I would also think that any child
who was caught in her parents' divorce, to whom it was explained "we
never were in God's will" - whether it was an unplanned pregnancy, a
mismatched couple in whatever situation, that that child might assume that he/she TOO were never "supposed to be."
Rather,
in many cases, two people DO love one another, and hard as they try,
one is gay. No, they probably shouldn't marry (I firmly think this
way), but in many, many cases, church dictates 1) marriage is supreme,
2) family is the ultimate goal for all (no matter the innate sexual
orientation, 3) and that gay can change if you love each other/pray/want
to. Church leaders (fundamentalist ones) teach these things, and gay
people who are trying to do the right thing, follow the instructions, despite
what their gut tells them.
So,
from my point of view, I would never tell my kids that God didn't mean
for us to be together. I believe, in my case, that God did bring us
together, for some reason I don't always understand. Some purpose that is very real...(because there is more to my story that I don't fully try to explain on
the blog). I know, 100%, that God knew and understood Ray's orientation,
and God also knows how much we put into our marriage. (I also probably
question God's wisdom in doing this, probably at least every other day.) And
even though I don't understand, I believe that the love I felt for Ray
(and his feelings for me) are real, and that our kids are fully intended
in the great scheme of things.
Probably,
if I were honest, I'd tell those parents to be careful how they explain
their own actions to the vulnerable kids. I'd want them (the parents) to understand and explain how they got together, why they married, and reiterate their love for their kids.
I would also add this: Just
like God didn't make a mistake when he created gay folks, he didn't make
a mistake in who this kid's parents are.
Thanks again, for writing. :)
5 comments:
carol, your four kids are the reason why god allowed you to stay married for so long, they are all so beautiful and outgoing, and such positive witnesses for the lord.
Jenny
Hey Carole...
I like your summary of what churches too often dictate.
I'd add a 4th: That self-accepting LGBT folks will lose their church, their family, and any hopes of a family of their own.
Thankfully, we know how things are changing, that families of strong faith can be affirming, that gay folks do form healthy families.
It's no surprise LGBT people who grew up in strong families, loving their faith communities, have a long history of silently, hopefully entering mixed orientation marriages. The alternative was pretty bleak.
In that context, I hope it's meaningful to the kids of mixed orientation marriages that they were hoped for and deeply wanted by both of their parents. The relationship between their parents had also been yearned and fought for despite fundamental challenges.
My kids (young adults now) aren't there yet. My decisions to marry and to come out (10 years apart) were both attributed to selfishness on my part; hopefully things will come around to where they want a relationship with me again some day.
Thanks for the good thoughts, Carole...
Carole, my sister and I interviewed Ray on our show Tuesday and through that I found your blog. There's so much I hadn't realized about what people in these situations are going through. I think you're a very strong woman and a GREAT spirit and voice for good. There are many disenfranchised Christians out there--who somehow or another found themselves in condemnation--either put there by others OR by themselves. I don't think a God of love and grace would ever want that. I'm not involved in any religion, but I am a person of faith, and I thank you very much for being a voice of healing here. May God bless every step you take along your journey. Linda
Great thoughts, Carol, and thanks for sharing them! :)
I don't think all mixed-orientation marriages are the same, and I hesitate to issue a blanket, dogmatic statement that all things are God's will (although I more than half believe that).
But it is also my interpretation of my own experience as a straight spouse in a mixed-orientation marriage (we didn't have kids and were married for only a few years) that our being together, and being married, was God's will. This stretches my categories of understanding--to contemplate that God would have willed us to get married and also willed us to come apart and find other partners, but this is what I believe. So many good things have come out of the whole story, both the being married part and the coming out and coming apart part. (Both of us are also exceedingly thankful for our respective girlfriends as wonderful gifts from God!) It is all part of God's unfolding plan for our lives, and watching that plan unfold continue to be an adventure and an opportunity for praise!
Blessings, grace, and peace,
Scott
Took me a while to find you but I was glad I was able to. Just so you know before you read any further, this won't be an attack on you or on Ray. More like a confession of sorts I guess.
When I found out Ray way a homosexual I was disappointed, not hateful as some have been. I noticed a change coming over him in the media and it did not surprise me to find out of Ray's lifestyle. I have just about all of his older CDs, Thank You was actually the first Contemporary Christian song I had ever heard and the impact Ray’s music had on my life was always positive.
Like others, I judged Ray. Sorry to say, I found him guilty. Of what I still don't know but I put his music away. I didn't overreact as some did and destroy them as they were gifts to me by my family. I almost gave them to a local library as they were just sitting there on the shelf but again, they were gifts so I did not give them away.
Just last week struggles came as they do in all Christians’ lives and God laid one on me that I didn't expect when He said I have an unforgiving heart. Honestly, I argued with God as I'm sure a lot of Christians do when things don't go their way. Almost as I thought those words about me not being unforgiving two words came to my mind - Ray Boltz. God laid it on my heart that I judged Ray and it was wrong. I was unforgiving to him and I had no right to judge him, I guess the “speck in your brother’s eye” applies here in my case.
I won't get into Ray's lifestyle; I know the verse in the Bible about man with man and all that. I will agree to disagree with folks about homosexuality and I won’t go into it here except to say that I believe that, based on the Word of God, that homosexuality is nothing more than another sin. I know you and others see it differently so let's agree to disagree and continue to be brothers and sisters in Christ. Do I believe homosexuals will go to Heaven? Absolutely, if they claim Jesus as their Savior. Do I believe homosexuals will go to Hell? Absolutely, if they deny the Son of God. But this is more about me than Ray, so hear me out because I know you fiercely defend Ray.
I look on homosexuality as just another sin and I look at sin as a straight line, no one sin is worse than another with the exception of denying Jesus. Somehow we place Christian singers on a pedestal and are shocked when we find out they are just as human as the rest of us. I’ll never forget the main stream media’s hysteria over the revelation that Sandy Patti had an affair and how it “rocked the Christian world”. It didn’t “rock the Christian world” and neither did Ray’s change the Christian world in a negative way.
Today I got down Ray’s CD’s and loaded them onto my computer and I must say that Thank You and One Drop of Blood still brings tears to my eyes. So I discovered the music is the same, still uplifting, still Godly, still relevant. Ray is, according to what God has revealed to me these past few days, still the same Ray as the one on these CDs and I had no right to judge. I fully realize Ray is unaware of my attitude towards him but I am hoping you could maybe pass this along to him and allow me to say thanks for his music and his ministry to me. And I dare say I owe him an apology for being so judgmental and I wish him continued success in his career. One day when we are all walking those streets of gold I’d like to point to Ray and say “There goes a man of God who ministered to me.”
Blessings to you for your stand, and your ministry to Ray and the rest of us who love him so dearly.
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