The Cathedral of Hope â an LGBTQ±affirming United Church of Christ in Dallas, Texas â has made a concerted effort to defend the queer community from âpersecution,â as the state government targets drag queens and transgender people.
The church recently held a service where they blessed drag queens and pledged to âstand for justice, proclaim love, and protect the rights of all people.â
While about three dozen protestors stood outside of the church hurling slurs and threats, approximately 850 people attended the service.
âAnyone check the weather today?!â one protester screamed. ââCause it might rain fire and brimstone on this church and burn every homo inside!â
But for the ugliness on display outside, the congregation filled the building with love and âradical inclusivity.â
âWe recognize that all people are made in the loving image of God, no matter who they are, how they dress, express themselves, or who they love,â the pastor intoned during the service. âWe celebrate this divine diversity and commit to lifting up the voices of the LGBTQ+ community and creating spaces where everyone can thrive.â
As one worship leader noted as the pastor gave communion, âDrag queens are often targets of hate and violence.â The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, in particular, were singled out for particular honor due to their lifesaving work during the AIDS epidemic.
âThese Sisters were at the bedsides of men dying of AIDS,â Rev. Dr. Neil G. Thomas said. âThey bring humor, they bring activism, they provide and bring a level of spirituality that many of us have had taken away from us. Despite the humor, they take their spiritual work very seriously.â
The service was a response to recently passed legislation meant to make a drag a crime. The law, passed by Republicans, has been challenged in court by civil rights groups and blocked repeatedly by federal courts.
The law punishes drag performers and venues with a $10,000 fine if they allow a minor to see a âsexually explicitâ performance. Such a performance is defined as one in which âa male performer [is] exhibiting as a female, or a female performer exhibiting as a male, who uses clothing, makeup, or other similar physical markers and who sings, lip syncs, dances, or otherwise performs before an audience.â
Lawyers from the Texas Attorney Generalâs office argued that because the law didnât specifically mention drag, it wasnât discriminatory to drag performances. However, in June, Gov. Greg Abbott Âź shared a story about the lawâs passage that contained the headline, âTexas Governor Signs Law Banning Drag Performances in Public,â and added the comment, âThatâs right.â Many state politicians who supported the law also publicly stated that it was meant to target drag, specifically.
But would the law apply to churches? Thatâs unclear.
âMy kid was here,â the lead pastor said. âI donât have the right to choose to bring my kid to church when there are drag queens?â
So you think something philosophical in nature has a black and white right or wrong about what to believe in? Like I said itâs not science itâs religion/philosophy
Just because you imagine something doesnât make it real.
What an awful reduction of what was being discussed. You canât prove me wrong, I canât prove myself right. Hence philosophical.
If you canât prove yourself right, youâre wrong by default. Onus of proof and all that. For someone so interested in philosophy you sure have a poor understanding of it.
Is this going to be productive?
Youâve gone so far bro youâve accidentally came out for the other side. My sister is trans, this isnât up for debate itâs a fact. She also had genetic testing done and sheâs completely normal to her birth gender. She now has no actual proof beyond how she feels and believes. Does that mean sheâs wrong because of onus of proof and all that?
What the does any of that have to do with anything being discussed here? Youâre literally spouting gibberish.