11/19/10-by Bridgette P. LaVictoire
Sometimes you just have to start a story with a heavy sigh. . .and this is one of those. The Human Rights Campaign has shown a complete lack of reading comprehension recently when they stated that the Mormon Church had removed same-sex attraction from the church’s policy on sin. They had not.
Recently, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints did stop counseling lesbians and gays from seeking reparative therapy, but they still maintain that acting upon same-sex attraction is a grave sin that should not be considered at all. HRC spokesman Scott Guequierre stated “This is a big deal, this is huge. This is a great step forward for the church and I recognize that. I just hope we can work with them to come even further.” It is a huge step, but the Mormons still do not see homosexuality as normal.
Scott Trotter, spokesman for the Mormon Church, stated “The HRC’s representations of the changes in the new handbook are simply absurd.”
Here is the Human Rights Campaign’s statement:
WASHINGTON – The Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation’s largest civil rights organization dedicated to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) equality, today recognized that the Mormon Church removed same-sex attraction as a sin in church policy. The new policy, released by church leaders last Saturday, for the first time does not call for professional counseling for those who experience same-sex attraction. The American Psychological Association and American Psychiatric Association have both concluded that same-sex attraction is normal and that “reparative” therapy — like the kind formerly advocated by the Mormon Church — is unhealthy and harmful.
While still claiming that “homosexual behavior violates the commandments of God,” the new policy differentiates between same-sex behavior, to which they continue to object, and attraction, which the church is able to rationalize. A summary of the policy changes can be found here.
“The new guidelines clearly show that advocacy efforts pay off with real change,” said HRC President Joe Solmonese. “We spoke out against the harms of so-called ‘reparative therapies’ on LGBT young people. Church leaders heard us and responded by dropping their recommendation that such discredited interventions be forced on LGBT and questioning youth.”
“We continue to disagree with the Mormon Church about fundamentally important issues like full respect for the marriages of same-sex couples, but we are encouraged that our advocacy has paid off with real movement that will help save young lives,” said Rev. Harry Knox, director of HRC’s Religion and Faith Program.
Last month Boyd K. Packer, the president of the Mormon Church’s Quorum of Twelve Apostles, called same-sex attraction “impure and unnatural,” and claimed that it can be corrected. Packer characterized same-sex marriage as immoral. Packer’s inaccurate and dangerous rhetoric came on the heels of the suicides of a number of teenagers who were victims of anti-gay bullying or harassment. Packer, who is 86 and one of the church’s most senior leaders, made his statements to a crowd of 20,000 — with millions more watching via satellite transmission — during the church’s 180th Semi-annual General Conference in Salt Lake City.
HRC immediately called on Packer to correct his dangerous statements. Over 150,000 members and supporters signed an open letter to Packer and HRC President Joe Solmonese delivered the signatures to Church headquarters along with representatives from Equality Utah, the Utah Pride Center, Affirmation: Gay and Lesbian Mormons, and the Utah Psychological Association.
The Human Rights Campaign is America’s largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.
The HRC may bill itself as American’s largest LGBT civil rights organization, but it also has a reputation for being the least effective and most hated from within organization. Back when Boyd K. Packer made his statements, the HRC was offered one of the more tepid condemnations of his statements.
In layman’s parlance, this was one big cock up. (That idiom was not meant to be ironic nor is it innuendo. Sorry, I’m more British than American in my language use.)
Keppler
November 21, 2010 at 1:59 am
The HRC was laughable before, and they’ll be laughable again. Nothing new here.
Janice
November 20, 2010 at 1:09 pm
Fingers aren’t working again. Meant to type HRC, not JRC.
Need more coffee!
Janice
November 20, 2010 at 1:08 pm
First, as a Brit myself, it was refreshing to see a British term like ‘cock up’..
Second, nothing surprises me when it comes to JRC or Joe Solmonese. Neither has a clue nor do I think that either cares anymore.
I think we’ve all known that for a very long time now.
Bridgette P. LaVictoire
November 21, 2010 at 5:08 pm
Janice,
My great-grandmother was basically raised at the Court of St. James. She was the ward of an ambassador, and learned Victorian English. My grandfather learned English from her, and my mother from him, and I from her. It drives my teachers crazy that I tend to be more British in my English than American.
And you’re welcome