
Irene Monroe: Will Rev. Bernice King’s ‘Bully’ Pulpit at SCLC
Bash Gays?
Commentary by Rev. Irene Monroe
Rev. Bernice King has been bestowed the honor to
be the eighth president and first women to head the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC).
Co-founded by her father, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., the Rev. Bernice King may be a legacy pick for SCLC, but
unfortunately she will not be carrying on his legacy.
As a matter-of-fact, given the homophobic vitriol
Rev. Bernice King has spewed out over the years the LGBTQ community is bracing
to see what next she’ll say and do given the bully pulpit she now has.
Because Rev. Bernice King has been rumored for years
to be a lesbian, her track record concerning LGBTQ civil rights has been less
than humane and antithetical to both legacies of her parents.
For example, Rev. Bernice King’s most audacious sign
of desecrating her father’s legacy was the December 2004 march titled “Stop the
Silence,” promoting an anti-gay agenda.
Beginning the protest march by lighting a torch at
her father’s grave site and then passing it on to her spiritual mentor and the
march organizer, Bishop Eddie Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church who
proudly carried the lit torch in a two-mile march through Atlanta with thousands
of followers, Rev. Bernice King adamantly stated that the march was not against
LGBTQ people. It’s a “need for God’s People to stop being silent” and being
“about God’s business of speaking up for the Kingdom of God,” King told The
Associated Press.
However, contrary to her claims, the first goal of
the march listed on the church’s website promoted a constitutional amendment to
protect marriage “between one man and one woman”.
On speculating about her father’s viewpoint on
marriage equality let us not forgot one of Rev. Bernice King’s sanctimonious
moments of ranting and railing against it when she stated that “I know in my
sanctified soul that he (Dr. King) did not take a bullet for same-sex marriage.”
Bernice dishonored her mother’s civil rights legacy
by holding the funeral at Bishop Long’s church, which Julian Bond, the national
NAACP chairman, didn’t attend.
“Mrs. King was a strong supporter of gay and lesbian
rights,” Bond to AP. “Her husband was a strong believer in helping the poor and
preached a theology of contempt for seekers of material goods -- and lived his
life that way. The pastor of the church where she was funeralized led an
anti-gay march through Atlanta – sadly, Mrs. King's youngest daughter, an elder
in his church, accompanied him. We cannot know what Mrs. King's wishes were for
a funeral – she probably had no choice about church or minister – but I did have
a choice – and while I have an abiding respect for my former neighbor and
friend, I chose not to be in that church.”
SCLC has an outstanding legacy of championing the
civil rights of African Americans. But it has not expanded its reach beyond
racial discrimination. And attempts to do so have been admonished by
SCLC’s national board.
For example, Reverend Eric P. Lee, president of the
Los Angeles chapter of the SCLC and the author of the book, Marriage
Equality: Proposition 8, The California Divide was called on the carpet by
SCLC’s national board last year for his advocacy in favor of LGBTQ marriage
equality during California's heated Proposition 8 controversy.
Comprised mostly of conservative clergymen and some
churchwomen, SCLC remains in an intentional time warp. With its refusal to
speak on present-day issues not only plaguing the African American community but
plaguing all Americans, SCLC exists as a visiting museum tethered to the 1960’s
civil rights era rather than exist as an organization faced toward the
challenges of today.
For example, King’s oldest son, Martin Luther King
III, was president of SCLC from 1997-2004. He failed to join the national fight
against HIV/AIDS, ravaging African American communities, because he “felt
uncomfortable talking about condoms,” the L.A. times reported in 2001.
SCLC’s religious rhetoric against LGBTQ citizens
chokes progress, hinders equality, and allows religion-based bigotry to
flourish.
“The SCLC cloaks its support for inequality in
religious rhetoric. I often hear the argument that religious African Americans
are somehow required to be homophobic and to oppose marriage equality because of
their deep commitment to Christian doctrine, practice, and belief. But this
ignores that the primary distinguishing characteristic of African American
Christianity is its rejection of oppressive biblical interpretation in favor of
embracing a liberating and loving God,” Melissa Harris-Lacewell, professor at
Princeton, wrote on the blog, The Notion.
While many in the LGBTQ community now gasp at the
reality of Rev. Bernice King being at the helm of SCLC, I gasp at SCLC’s
audacity to still call itself a civil rights organization.
© 2009
Irene Monroe
OTHER COMMENTARIES BY IRENE MONROE
Irene Monroe: Child Witches and Gay, Transgender Youth. A Commentary for Hallowe’en by Rev. Irene
Monroe. This Hallowe’en many American children will dress up as witches. And we’ll hear their
laughter and see their smiles as they joyfully go from door-to-door trick-or-treating.
(UK Gay News, October 30, 2009)
Irene Monroe: Non-Tolerance for Gays at Morehouse. Commentary by Irene Monroe.
These dress-code offenders wear baggy pants, du-rags, flash their “bling bling” like gold chains, and
“decorative orthodontic appliances” like gold teeth, and tattoos, bringing too much of black urban
ghetto life to an elite college that fashions itself as the paragon of black manhood.
(UK Gay News, October 23, 2009)
Gay Rights March: Out of My Black Church, Into the Streets. Commentary by Rev. Irene Monroe.
I will not be in church this Sunday, but I will be in a place where my spiritual self will be fed.
I will be participating in the National Equality March (NEM) this Sunday, carrying the banner of Faith in
America, an organization that is working to stop bigotry disguised as religious truth.
(UK Gay News, October 9, 2009)
Black Gays in US Are Tying the Knot. Commentary by Rev.
Irene Monroe. More and more lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, and queer people of African descent are
marrying. An idea that was once thought of as an
anathema to black queer identity, marriage, in our LGBTQ
communities, is being celebrated and on the rise. And
many of us are now proudly walking down the aisle to tie the knot.
(UK Gay News, October 6, 2009)
Religion: Let the Episcopal Church Say ‘Amen
Ted ‘I’m not Gay’ Haggard: Issues With His Homosexuality.
Commentary by Rev. Irene Monroe. After a publicity junket promoting the HBO documentary,
The Trials of Ted Haggard, which landed him on Oprah and Larry King
Live, fallen evangelical star Haggard has risen from public obscurity to
tell us he’s not gay. He’s “heterosexual with issues.” (UK Gay
News, February 7, 2009)
Gay is NOT
the New Black. Commentary by Rev. Irene Monroe. If you are
African American and gay, and fighting alongside your white LGBTQ brothers
and sisters for queer civil rights, the notion that “Gay is the new black”
is not only absurdly arrogant, it is also dangerously divisive. In a
presumably “post-racial” era with the country’s first African American
president-elect, it’s easy for some to assume that race doesn’t matter.
(UK Gay News, December 16, 2008)
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