Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Not This Fruit

 My mind has been whirling with thoughts about my faith journey that I haven't been able to form them into cohesive sentences about one subject in particular. But today, I watched a video of a woman who extended her heart to those watching about how it pains her to see horrible comments made by church members about marginalized people who are just trying to find room at the table. The very people for whom Jesus would have been fighting to save a seat.

The video sent me back to last year when BYU changed its honor code policy surrounding gay and lesbian relationships, sparking joy and celebration from the LGBTQ+ community on campus. I scrolled through Facebook that day stopping on an article from Deseret News. The report itself wasn't hateful, but I'd made the mistake of letting my eyes linger on the comment section. I couldn't believe what I was reading. It was as if the keyboard warriors forgot that people exist behind the label. Worse than that, they utterly disregarded the gospel of Jesus Christ, the very name they took upon themselves when they were baptized, a name they weaponized to justify their bigotry. After all, didn't Jesus tell the sinners to go and sin no more? Only, that was Jesus, the lone man who claimed to be even remotely capable of keeping hypocrisy at bay because he was supposedly, divinely perfect.

I remember sifting through the hate wondering how I could reconcile staying in a church I wasn't even sure held the absolute truth when this rhetoric was literally hurting people through violence and even suicide. I could continue to put a band-aid over my doubts about Deity and continue to foster community within the church, but knowing the people who sat next to me in the Relief Society room felt this way about other human beings made me feel physically ill. Community wasn't worth it for the fruit that came of it: hypocrisy and hate.

Anyone who tells their family that they can't stomach being active in a church that makes members feel comfortable reciting words of a document to people who live differently will likely be met with the sentiment: "The church is perfect. The people are not."

If only that were true.

When someone says this, they treat the subject as if there's this chasm between gospel and culture. But the two are undoubtedly connected. The culture is the fruit of the church. There is a reason members believe and say certain things because they were taught it from the pulpit. The bigotry we see on social media from devout members who faithfully attend the temple every month, pay a full tithe, sign up to feed the missionaries religiously is the fruit of a church that says evil is running rampant throughout the world and it's up to the righteous to shine their light, only it's far from pure. There are particles of judgment floating aimlessly in their path. Judgment wholly justified by what leaders have taught them.

I know what it's like. I was there. I would shine my light against bigotry and then turn around and sneer at the person who just got a new tattoo or posed with a cup of coffee in their hand while showing their shoulders on Instagram when I knew they were endowed and were meant to be wearing garments. But they were apostatizing. I was within my right as a righteous member of God's chosen church to be worried for their salvation. Fruit of the church.

I considered leaving, but I wasn't sure if I should. I was still holding on to that sense of self. This was my whole life. I toyed with the idea of maybe paying my tithes not to the church but to other charities since the church would get involved in things I wholeheartedly denounce. I thought about never going to church and only doing Come, Follow Me. Only, that solidified in me what I didn't believe for myself.

It got to be unbearable, the hypocrisy within myself and which other members exuded. I realized it wasn't worth it to continue faking my belief in deity to be this person: one who fights for one group who just wants to live their truth while sentencing another to a cage when all they want to do is live their truth. It just didn't make sense, and it wasn't healthy for me to continue living that way. It certainly wasn't fair for the people I was judging (and secretly jealous of if we're being honest). It was time to find a new path, a rockier, harder one. But the one worth the heartache.

It was time to leave The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. So I did.

I don't wish ill will on the church. I really don't. In fact, I hope it changes. I hope that one day, there will be leaders high in the ranks that will shift the culture of the church to be one of true, unconditional love, one that will welcome every single person and family with open arms, lacking in checklist items to be met in order to find full fellowship and charity within their walls. While I do not believe in the divine foundation of the church, I do believe in love, and I hope one day the church will find it to extend to others.

Sunday, January 3, 2021

God is Love & Love is God

My identity has taken a huge shift in recent months. I vocalized my standing with the church and made a very conscious decision to disassociate myself and my family from it. For being taught that leaving is the easy way out, I sure have been having a different experience. It has been anything but. I am wandering as I reconstruct and redefine my spirituality. That's okay. Some beautiful things can be found when we take a moment to look around us, discover the new, and revel in the grandeur life has to offer. I am looking for the right place to land.

I was on Instagram the other day when I came across an IGTV video by Morgan Harper Nichols. The post invited me to screenshot the video at any time to claim my word for the year. I stumbled upon the perfect word for myself.

Within (noun): an inner place

As I have grappled with the idea of Deity as I have known it throughout my life, this word could not have come at a more perfect time of reflection. I have been waist-deep in considering what makes a person spiritual. Is there an all-knowing God? Do I subscribe to the notion that Jesus saves?

Well, yes. 

...and no.

I think it's complicated, and I have yet to learn more about the origin of religion as I have known it. I'm leaning more towards the idea that I have the Divine within me. I am Divine.

This may sound weird (and frankly big-headed), but hear me out.

We are made of the stuff of eternity, the universe, of matter that can neither be created nor destroyed. Yes, one day we will be given back to the earth, and that gives rise to the idea that we are worth nothing, and because we are worth nothing, we must cater our lives to something Greater.

What is that Something? My answer is Love, and the capacity to give it freely and feel it deeply lives within all of us. For me, I don't need a personified mediator to extend compassion and empathy to others. I don't need a list of rules set in literal stone or plates of gold to know what is right, wrong, good, bad, beautiful, or ugly in the world because I can feel it all within me.

So that's where I am with God, Deity, the Greater Than I. Where do I stand with Jesus? Where can I turn for peace? Where is my solace?

I turn to love, to kindness. The two things Jesus himself advocated for during his ministry. I absolutely subscribe to the notion that love always wins, and that Jesus was a beautiful teacher who taught that I should learn to reconcile my experiences with my inner self. Of course, he always talked about God rather than the self, so naturally, I have some thoughts.

My absolute favorite scripture in all of the New Testament is Romans 8: 38-39.

"For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God."

This scripture has ruminated in my mind for several weeks as I have contemplated where my beliefs lay in the grand scheme of things. As I expressed previously, I believe that the idea of God is, in essence, Love.

But if nothing can separate me from Love, then that must mean that Love lives within me. There's that word again: within. Love goes everywhere I go. Love sees everything I see. Just as with the idea of a literal, physical God, anyone can choose whether to invite Them into their everyday conversations and experiences. Same with Love.

I am not perfect. Boy, do I know I am not perfect. But if there is anything I have learned about myself through this journey of healing, self-discovery, and transitioning my faith it's that I have this innate need to love people. That desire comes from within because it's from within that an immense power to change the world resides.

Victor Hugo famously said, "To love another person is to see the face of God." I get chills every single time I hear it because it is a universal truth that Love is greater than all of us. It transcends time and space. It is a power we all possess to see the good, to be the good.

We are not helpless creatures walking this earth in a vain attempt to walk golden hallways in Some Faraway Palace in the clouds. If we are individual powerhouses of Love, imagine what a world full of people who recognize they have the same power within them would be like.

Hate would be gone. Wars would end. Compassion would reign.

Maybe it's wishful thinking that any of these things could happen, but as I see more and more people advocate on their social media platforms, sounding a call for more understanding, listening, and learning, maybe we really could change the world just as hoped for through a second coming of a savior.

We have the capacity within us to save humanity if only we allow ourselves to fall into our humanness and love simply, with no conditions, readily willing to sacrifice our comfort for the pains of another to vanish. We can be one. We can be whole.
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