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How a Megachurch Worked Through the Situation When a Church Leader Came Out as Gay
Christian Post ^ | 03/11/2014 | Morgan Lee

Posted on 03/11/2014 2:17:37 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

In the past decade, many Evangelical churches across the country have increasingly had to wrestle with how to engage members of their congregation who identify as LGBT. But this dilemma has not remained only at the lay level.

In 2012, the leadership staff at the southern California megachurch, Calvary Community Church (CCC), had to grapple with their church's convictions on homosexuality, when Kevin McCloskey, one of the members of the executive team revealed that he was gay and that he would be also be divorcing his wife of 17 years.

Executive Pastor Curtis Johnson declined to speak specifically with The Christian Post about the McCloskey case but agreed to share a more general perspective about how church leadership approached the situation, which resulted in McCloskey's termination. Referring to his former colleague multiple times during the interview as a "friend" and "good guy," Johnson said that CCC leadership sought to make its decision through the lens of its mission.

"[Our church] is striving to live and love like Jesus, the Jesus of the Scriptures, the Son of God, who embodies both truth and grace in fullness. [This] is what we try to emulate when we live and love like Jesus," said Johnson.

Johnson and senior pastor Shawn Thornton engaged McCloskey after he confronted them about his homosexuality. In an essay for the Advocate, the former church leader wrote that he and his bosses "had very good conversations. They were shocked to learn about my sexual orientation and were genuinely concerned for my family and me and all we were going through."

The church stopped short affirming McCloskey's desire to be in a relationship with another man and did not stray from its convictions that that the "lifestyle of homosexuality" was a "sin," though Johnson said that he did not see it as more egregious than pride or acting on heterosexual feelings of lust.

Indeed, Doug Lemen, CCC's Director of Welcome and Connections, said that one message that the church wanted to send to McCloskey was that he as a "person still has tremendous value."

Speaking more generally, he added, "[They have] tremendous value to Christ and to us and that can't be discounted in whatever happens because…they are who they are and they are to us someone whom we have grown to cherish, care for, admire, etc. So I would say [making that point] really becomes the struggle."

"It's not a discount," Lemen added. "It's still someone who is part of your family and whatever happens in a situation like this or others that could be of another nature, it is still a part of your family that you are dealing in a level of separation."

Johnson used the example of CCC's homeless ministry to illustrate one of the lessons that experience had taught him in the process.

"One thing we've grown in is not to make our determinations on a category or a label of what would be people. Take the label 'homeless'…not all homeless people are the same. Not by a long shot. Some are temporary, some are long term, there are various reasons why people are homeless, and yet, at that point in time they all be homeless but they are very, very different."

"We at CCC open doors to category but we minister to them individually. Some are so warm and the story is heartbreaking, and some might be gaming the system and have being doing so for years, but our doors are open to both of them," said Johnson.

Johnson warned against "labels [which] turn into politics. That is not something that we want to be engaged with. We want to be engaged with theology of the heart of what God wants."

While CCC leadership stands by its decision to terminate McCloskey, it has not been an easy one for the former church leader to swallow.

One of the things that perplexed him most was that throughout the time that he was struggling silently with his sexual orientation, McCloskey was simultaneously moving up in his position at the church, and when he confronted Thornton and Johnson, the church was on the verge of creating its own team for him to manage.

"It can't be true that someone who is gay is turning their back on God and at the same time being blessed in ministry and being heaped upon with promotions and responsibilities," McCloskey said.

"None of it was fake. I was being my true self. I believed in the calling of the work I was doing there, and I think all the people that I worked with, and all the pastoral staff felt the same way," he added.

For the former church leader, the core of his frustrations came from the failure of the church leaders to "find ways to love the gay community, to embrace them, and maybe even find ways to disagree with them." Instead, McCloskey said during his tenure at CCC, he had watched it keep individuals who had had previous gay experiences from serving in church leadership, volunteering or becoming members.

McCloskey questioned why the church could not treat the LGBT population in the same way it treated those who had been divorced.

"The church doesn't want anyone to get a divorce. There is much more teaching in the Bible about divorce and the dangers of getting a divorce and the few exceptions when divorce is allowed but almost everyone in the church has experienced divorce at some level. There were a number of people on our staff who had gone through a divorce and were still on our staff team," said McCloskey.

"But the church has not said, 'You're not welcome here.' 'You can't become a member here,'" he said. "In fact, they have created ministries to walk along side of people who have gotten a divorce and to care for them and to love them and to help them feel not alone."

McCloskey believes there is a way for the church to "continue to have its stance, which is 'We don't believe that God has ordained gay relationships'," but welcome in the LGBT population.

"[The church could say,] 'If you as a thinking, Bible-believing person have come do a different conclusions, we can respect you, we can welcome, we can walk along side you, we can support you. We may draw a line at marriage, but why we can't disagree on that topic when there's lots of others that we disagree on and still allow each other to serve side by side?'" asked McCloskey.

"These are loving people at Calvary. I know them well. Many of them are my friends. But I think when it comes to this issue it stems from a lot of fear and fear of the unknown," he added.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: gay; homosexualagenda; homosexuality; megachurch; pastor; sin

1 posted on 03/11/2014 2:17:37 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

He wanted to live as a practicing homo. They fired him, good call.


2 posted on 03/11/2014 2:22:53 PM PDT by xone
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To: SeekAndFind

This guy knew he was a fraud when he filled out paperwork to work there.


3 posted on 03/11/2014 2:23:16 PM PDT by Sybeck1
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To: SeekAndFind
"[The church could say,] 'If you as a thinking, Bible-believing person have come do a different conclusions, we can respect you, we can welcome, we can walk along side you, we can support you.

There are many biblical doctrines that Bible-believing Christians may disagree on in good faith. The sin of engaging in immoral sexual activities such as sodomy, pederasty, bestiality, divorce, adultery, fornication, incest, etc. is not one of them. The text, both in individual proof texts, and in the structure of both the Old and New Testaments, just doesn't permit any other interpretation.

For any church to open its doors and welcome as members individuals who deliberately lead a lifestyle that celebrates (and demands other to celebrate) what God has repeatedly described as sin is to renounce Christ's image for the church and embrace the world's image. If a church is supposed to say that God didn't really mean that little verse in Romans 1:26-27, the totality of verses that celebrate marriage as between man and woman only, the Law regarding homosexual acts as abomination, then it cannot rely on scripture to provide any meaning at all.

The attempt to clutch at divorce as an equal sin that is nonetheless accepted by the church is grotesque. No one enters marriage intending to divorce. Providing Christian support for divorcees who never want to do it again is radically different from providing Christian support for gays who want affirmation and support for their sin.

4 posted on 03/11/2014 2:36:59 PM PDT by FateAmenableToChange
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To: SeekAndFind
“It seems like, to me, a vagina -- as a man -- would be more desirable than a man’s anus," Robertson told GQ. "That’s just me. I’m just thinking: There’s more there! She’s got more to offer. I mean, come on, dudes! You know what I’m saying? But hey, sin: It’s not logical, my man. It’s just not logical.”

...come on dude!! ...it's just not logical!

5 posted on 03/11/2014 2:41:56 PM PDT by TexasCajun
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To: xone
"He wanted to live as a practicing homo. They fired him, good call."

I like your clear, no-nonsense approach. Too bad it took all the waffling, hand-wringing and kumbaya "we still love ya bro...oops, we mean that in a good way" crap. But, ultimately they fired him. I wonder what they mean by, "...he still has value." Value to his lover? Value as a bad example?

6 posted on 03/11/2014 2:49:27 PM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88
"...he still has value." Value to his lover? Value as a bad example?

Of these three, I can comment on two of them. The first: He has 'value' in the sense that Christ died for him and desires him to repent, turn from his sin and live. Doesn't look like he was interested in that path so they rightly fired him. In this regard, the third reason becomes valid.

I question the clown in his reasoning that while he had a secret 'that one engaged in bad behavior wouldn't have prospered in his ministry'. Does not manifest evil prosper in this world? The sign of a hardened heart.

7 posted on 03/11/2014 3:07:22 PM PDT by xone
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To: Dutchboy88

RE: “...he still has value.” Value to his lover? Value as a bad example?

How about value as a human being made in God’s image whose values can be redeemed?


8 posted on 03/11/2014 3:23:27 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

“revealed that he was gay and that he would be also be divorcing his wife of 17 years.”

Poor woman. I hope she has a solid walk with the Lord and a good support base.


9 posted on 03/11/2014 3:37:33 PM PDT by uptowngirl
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To: SeekAndFind
"How about value as a human being made in God’s image whose values can be redeemed?"

Sorry, too much TV and not enough biblical reading. Your description is not to be found in Scripture. Cain was rejected, Esau was hated, Pharaoh was hardened...shall I go on? There is, according to Paul, no distinction between the man and the resultant behavior. The adulterer is denied faith, the incestual man is to be pushed out of a fellowship, not because they are unsalvageable (any more than we are), but because their behavior is evidence that they are being presently excluded. We are to allow God to grieve them and bring them back (if He wishes), but we are not to slather love and affection all over them and confuse the issue. You have watched too much Joel osteen. He is not teaching truth.

10 posted on 03/11/2014 6:57:33 PM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: Dutchboy88

Maybe you are reading too much of one passage forgetting the OTHER passages in scripture.

Did Jesus Christ reject being friends with sinners ( even as he did not condone their sin)?

Let’s not forget, Jesus said “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.” (Luke 5:29-32).

Aren’t we supposed to follow His example as His disciples?

The church did the right thing in firing the man because he was unrepentant. But the objective is to pray for him, and hope for his repentance, not give up on him totally.

THAT’s what I mean by the man being redeemed. It has nothing to do with Joel Osteen.


11 posted on 03/11/2014 7:09:06 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
"In an essay for the Advocate, the former church leader wrote ..."

That one subtle detail pegs him as an arrogant activist. He has sided with the enemy of God by submitting to a godless, reprobate homo-activist publication.

12 posted on 03/12/2014 3:01:59 AM PDT by fwdude ( You cannot compromise with that which you must defeat.)
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