• Why the Church of the Nazarene Should Be Fully LGBTQ+ Affirming

  • By: Thomas Jay Oord, Alexa Oord
  • Narrated by: Virtual Voice
  • Length: 16 hrs and 43 mins
  • 2.0 out of 5 stars (2 ratings)

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Why the Church of the Nazarene Should Be Fully LGBTQ+ Affirming

By: Thomas Jay Oord, Alexa Oord
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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Publisher's summary

This book fundamentally changes the game for the Church of the Nazarene.

A growing number of people are calling for fresh conversations about sexuality and gender. And many want fundamental change. This book gives voice to those people.

There are strong reasons the Church of the Nazarene should become fully LGBTQ+ affirming. The writers of these essays – whether queer or straight – lay out those reasons, share their experiences, and explain why change is needed.

Love rests at the heart of the denomination’s view of God. And yet its statement about human sexuality does not support the ways of love.

At least in America, the Church of the Nazarene is rapidly shrinking. Many people are leaving the denomination because of its views on LGBTQ+ matters. According to research, in fact, the holiness movement is the worst at keeping young people.

This book offers hope. Hearing the voices of queer people, allies, and scholars is a crucial step toward transformation.
For love to win in the Church of the Nazarene, change is needed.

ENDORSEMENTS

“We Nazarenes have a peculiar origin story. The pioneers of our movement didn't agree. Even where some of the most important tenets of faith are concerned, our founders couldn't and didn't agree. But they prioritized being (and staying) together, in the hopes that what united them would be stronger than what would divide them. In that same spirit of hopeful inclusiveness, these writers dream of a tent large enough to house our differences. May we learn again the power of dignity, inclusion, diversity, breadth, and love.”
- Jon Middendorf, Senior Pastor at Oklahoma City First Church of the Nazarene

“These essays are the start of a much needed conversation for the church and LGBTQIA+ community. At times they are not easy to read - you may agree with some things and not with others. But the generations coming behind us (some as authors in this book) need us to hear and engage with their hearts. Read them, let their emotion soak in. And then start talking about it!”
- Bruce Barnard, Elder in the Church of the Nazarene

ABOUT THE EDITORS

Thomas Jay Oord is a theologian, philosopher, and scholar of multi-disciplinary studies. Oord has been an ordained elder in the Church of the Nazarene for more than 30 years, taught at two Nazarene institutions of higher education, and published many books through the denomination’s publishing house. A best-selling author, Oord currently directs doctoral students at Northwind Theological Seminary.

Alexa MacKenzie Oord is a graduate of Harvard University and Simmons University. Oord currently serves as an Administrative Assistant in Undergraduate Student Life at Columbia University in New York. She also works as Senior Editor at SacraSage Press.

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The authors attempt on fostering change within the church through emotionally charged essays.

This book contains more than 90 essays that are compiled in three categories: Queer writers, Allies to the Queer Movement, and Scholarly Writers who are in support of the Queer Community. That is it!

The authors introductory commentary is nothing more than an overview of the essays provided with a comment that their hope is for change within the church. There is no closing remarks or summation by the author, the book gas lights then just ends.

My overall takeaway of this book: A current Nazarene pastor (the author) solicited Pro-LGBTQ+ (former attending pastors, members, or congregants) for nothing more than their own reasoning for leaving or being removed from clergy service due to their relieved queer identity and life choices. Save your money and visit some pro-gay blogs. You will get the same anti-church essays, however this is presented specifically towards the Nazarene Church by a Nazarene Pastor.

I admit these essays were the authors best attempt to advocate for misguided beliefs and half-truths.

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