EXACLTY!
You know what it tells me as a celibate (trying to be chaste) gay/ssa guy. It tells me one again that for a large subset of Christian organizations I’m not welcome because of my cross. They make no effort whatsoever to distinguish between the inclination and the acts (most people rarely do). So it is going to tell young teens struggling with this particular cross two things. One that they must keep their secret at all costs or risk losing everything, two if it is ever found out, don’t expect support but expect to be ostracized and removed from the Christian community.
These probably are the least helpful statements for anyone who is struggling with what to believe:
I understand that welcoming is a buzzword now but there are so many better ways to express what I think he meant (at least hope he meant) as not excluding people but not changing its Church beliefs.
Sounds like he’d want to kick out students struggling if they had the ability to do so. If that wasn’t his intention, he needs to work on his wording. LGBT/ssa, especially, LGBT/ssa Christians feel pretty darn marginalized, misaligned, and not to mention animosity by many. If you are trying to help one lead a life glorifying God, this is not a way to encourage them.
They wonder why most people who struggle with this particular cross loss faith. When Christian fellowship feels more like an enemy than a family bounded by blood and love of Christ, when you fear telling your own family for fear of disownment, when different Christian leaders blame natural disasters on you, when the fall of society is blamed on you, when you contemplate suicide because if other Christians treat you poorly God couldn’t possible love you either, your personal cross becomes like an anchor and is even harder to carry.
End minor rant, it’s by God’s grace that I have faith when there is so much culture war **** like this.