Showing posts with label Troy Perry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Troy Perry. Show all posts

Faith as a grain of mustard seed: Troy Perry had it

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Eight months before the Stonewall Riots - our LGBT call to freedom from police, political and religious oppression - Rev. Troy Perry invited 12 friends on the quiet Sunday morning of Oct. 6, 1968, to his small Los Angeles apartment to pray, sing and just celebrate communion together.

So began the first Metropolitan Community Church. Within a year, those 12 celebrants became 1,500, with Sunday services held in larger and larger venues.

A clarion call that God's love includes gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered people spread from city to city across America. Four years after Rev. Perry's venture into unchartered waters of faith, the Metropolitan Church of Detroit met for the first time in downtown Detroit's Central Methodist Church, joining the nationwide LGBT spiritual movement. Back then, the pastor was Rev. Nancy Wilson, now moderator of the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches.

Now, 35 years later, MCC-Detroit - with a membership nearing 200 - is celebrating its founding with dinners, a dance and Sunday services with Perry preaching, as he says, "the good news of inclusively; the sharing of God's spiritual grace for all, regardless of race, color, creed, age, gender or sexual orientation."

At 67, Perry, who retired as Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches' founder and moderator in 2005, is as busy as ever. Perhaps busier.

The former Baptist preacher (ordained at age 15) turned Pentecostal evangelist, turned "God's Gay Liberator" - as well as the author of several books, including longtime best-selling autobiography "The Lord in My Shepherd and Knows I'm Gay," and religious advisor to two White House presidents on four occasions for AIDS-related issues and hate crimes - recently was honored with a Doctor of Divinity degree from the Episcopal Divinity School, Cambridge, Mass. It was his third such degree.

He also recently returned from Singapore, where the government refused to allow him to preach, since male homosexuality - but not female - is taboo. But Perry managed to "preach" in a unique way. But more on that in a minute.

Those who have heard Perry know he's a dynamic, charismatic preacher, a power-house speaker. "The Billy Graham of Gay Liberation," some have dubbed him. He's also a tireless human rights advocate (Fellowship churches are now known as Human Rights Churches); an outspoken believer in safe, adult sexual freedom; and a supporter and member of the leather community.

Like MCC-Detroit's pastor Rev. Mark Bidwell, Perry was married, divorced, has two children and, as a young man, was kicked out of his home church for his homosexuality. It was a traumatic experience for both men.

In 1969, Perry performed the first same-sex marriage in America. In 1970, he filed the first-ever lawsuit seeking legal recognition of same-sex marriage. He lost. But since then, Fellowship ministers have performed more than 6,000 same-sex marriages.

Asked about the founding of the first MCC Church, Perry recalls, "I knew that I wasn't starting another Pentecostal church. I was starting a church that would be truly ecumenical. I had asked the religious backgrounds of those first 12. They were Catholic, Episcopal and of various Protestant sects. I fervently sought to serve a really broad spectrum of our population.

"It would have to be a church that most could understand and easily identify with and accept diversity as not being unusual or odd," he continues. "It seemed to me that it should be traditional, almost like those churches attended in childhood, not too different from that."

His fledging church took out an ad in the Advocate, a small paper in the area, and received great coverage. While the new church was news in the gay community, most mainstream papers ignored it, Perry says - especially religious columns. Yet people kept flocking.

"We were still holding services in my home and my house was bursting at the seams," he recalls. "We were looking for another place. We needed help on all fronts. I needed other theological minds to shape the way things were developing.

"It seemed nothing could stop us. We all felt the thrill of discovery - a new Pentecost outpouring - and the occasional clumsiness of growing pains. We knew that we stood on the threshold of great things. People came out of the shadows, out of the closets, out of the half-world."

It seemed they were drawn to the faith community. The talent flowed in: Pianists. Choir directors. "Family members - like my own dedicated and supportive mother," Perry adds.

"Our church provided a feeling of freedom to worship. We knew that we were on God's side because God loved us, too. We excluded no one. We welcomed all. We still do."

Heterosexuals came to the first services, he says; they still do today, comprising at least 20 percent of the congregation. Worldwide, there are 300 congregations in 22 countries and a membership of more than 250,000. It all amounts to an annual income of $24 million.

"Our mustard seed of faith has becomes a sheltering tree of strength, political activism, and spiritual solidarity," he says.

Perry was part of a recent six-member delegation to Southeast Asia. The delegation was scheduled to conduct speaking engagements, workshops and worship services in Malaysia and Singapore, and meet with LGBT rights groups.

"I've had enough experiences for three lifetimes," Perry muses, "but this was the first time an entire country banned me. I was allowed to enter but told that I could speak only one-on-one with individuals." In other words: No preaching.

"But all over the world I've observed over and over: The LGBT community always finds creative ways to make our voices heard," he says. "In spite of oppression and intimidation, we always find ways to get out the message that all people deserve equality under the law, that all of God's children - including gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender persons - that all are worthy of dignity."

While the Singapore government may have banned him from speaking out, Perry notes, the event's organizers saw to it that his voice was heard. They announced that, while Perry couldn't deliver a speech or sermon, he could answer one-on-one questions. So, from 9 p.m. to midnight, he answered one question after another. Many, many questions.

"Of course, I answered out loud in front of the audience - so I was actually able to share far more information than if I had preached a half-four sermon," Perry says. "There's a saying that when a door closes, God opens a window. When Singapore officials slammed a door shut in our face, Singapore's LGBT activists opened a window - with a breathtaking view of dignity, human rights and, for many, new-found faith."

Rev. Perry will preach at Metropolitan Community Church of Detroit at 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. on Sunday, Sept. 23. The 35th anniversary dinner will take place the evening before, Saturday, Sept. 22 at Park Place in Dearborn.

OPENPRESS: Singapore Bans Speech by Gay Activist Rev. Troy Perry, Founder of MCC Church (Aug 31)

Friday, August 31, 2007

Singapore Bans Speech by Gay Activist Rev. Troy Perry, Founder of MCC Church

Published on: August 31st, 2007 02:07am by: JimBirkitt

Veteran gay activist Rev. Troy Perry banned from speaking in Singapore; local gay activists circumvent speaking ban to share gay rights message.

Los Angeles, CA (OPENPRESS) September 1, 2007 -- During 40 years of gay rights activism, Rev. Dr. Troy D. Perry, founder of the predominantly gay Metropolitan Community Churches, has been picketed, taunted by Right Wing extremists, and arrested for civil disobedience. Perry knows what it is to be the target of hate mail campaigns and the recipient of death threats. Occasionally, a church or organization has canceled a speaking engagement by the outspoken gay rights leader.

But recent actions by Singapore marked the first time an entire country had banned Perry from public speaking engagements.

Rev. Perry was part of a recent six-member delegation to Southeast Asia from Metropolitan Community Churches. The delegation, led by Rev. Pat Bumgardner, chair of the Moderator's Global Justice Team of MCC, was scheduled to conduct speaking engagements, workshops, and worship services in Malaysia and Singapore, and to meet with gay rights groups.

"I've had enough experiences for three lifetimes," said Perry, "but this was the first time an entire country banned me from public speaking. I was allowed to enter the country and told that I could speak one-on-one with individuals, but I was banned from delivering my public speech." Perry was scheduled to deliver a speech, "Metropolitan Community Churches and the Gay Christian Witness" before a coalition of LGBT rights and LGBT pride groups.

Gay male homosexual sex is illegal in Singapore, though lesbian sex in private is not criminalized. Penalties for male homosexual acts, while seldom enforced, are severe.

"All over the world I've observed it time and time again: the LGBT community always finds creative ways to make our voices heard in spite of oppression and intimidation. We always find ways to get out the message that all people deserve equality under the law, and that all of God's children, including gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender persons, are worthy of dignity and God's love."

Despite the intimidation, the public event took place as scheduled in Singapore City on August 8 -- with Rev. Perry and Rev. Bumgardner in attendance. Organizers identified three plainclothes police officers in the audience.

"The Singapore government may have banned me from delivering my speech, but the event's organizers saw to it that my voice was heard," said Rev. Perry.

LGBT activists had prepared a PowerPoint presentation of Rev. Perry's life with photos from the pictorial book, "Troy Perry: Pastor and Prophet," including pictures of Perry with Archbishop Desmond Tutu, U.S. President Bill Clinton, U.S. Senator Diane Feinstein, and other religious, political, and social leaders.

Then they read aloud passages from four books authored by Rev. Perry. "They used the words from my writings to give me voice and to share my beliefs about human rights for LGBT people," said Perry.

"But what happened next was simply a stroke of genius," he enthused.

"The organizers announced that, while I couldn't deliver my public speech, I had been told I could answer one-on-one questions from individuals. So for the next three hours, from 9 PM to midnight, I answered one individual question after another. Of course, I was answering them out loud in front of the audience, so I was actually able to share far more information than if I had only delivered my speech," said Perry.

"There's a saying that when a door closes, God opens a window. That's also true of LGBT activists," said Perry. "When Singapore officials closed a door, Singapore's LGBT activists opened a window."

"I am so proud of LGBT activists across Singapore and Malaysia. They are working to secure the human rights of LGBT people in their countries and are doing so in the face of great cultural and political opposition," added Perry. "And let me also say how thankful I am for spiritual activists such as Rev. Pat Bumgardner, senior pastor of Metropolitan Community Church of New York, and Rev. Boon Lin Ngeo, the first openly gay clergyperson in Malaysia, who were part of the recent MCC team. They are working hand-in-hand with national and regional activists to further social and spiritual justice across Southeast Asia."

Rev. Dr. Troy D. Perry founded Metropolitan Community Churches in 1968, one year prior to the Stonewall Riots. Today Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC) is the world's largest and oldest Christian denomination with a primary, affirming ministry to lesbians, gays, bisexuals, and transgender persons. Known as "The Human Rights Church" for its commitment to social justice, MCC has almost 300 local congregations in 28 countries. Additional information on MCC can be found on-line at www.MCCchurch.org or by writing to info@MCCchurch.net.

To Arrange Media Interviews With
Rev. Dr. Troy Perry or Rev. Pat Bumgardner, Contact:

Jim Birkitt
Communications Director
Metropolitan Community Churches
P. O. Box 691728
West Hollywood, California 90069

For More Information, Visit:
www.MCCchurch.org