Ash Wednesday is an appropriate time to reflect on the sins of the church and state against queer people, including the execution of thousands for homosexuality over the past 1,000 years.
Christians traditionally put ashes on their foreheads as a sign of repentance on Ash Wednesday, which is observed today (Feb. 22) this year. The ashes can also serve as a sobering way to remember and repent the church’s role in executions for homosexuality, including the burning of “sodomites.”Terrence Weldon of Queering the Church is doing extensive research on the whole sad history of execution of queer people. He is assembling a chronology called “Burned for Sodomy” with the goal of listing all those killed for homosexuality in church- or state-sanctioned executions. It stretches from the 13th century almost to the present.
Some of the executions for sodomy have been recorded by artists. The image at the top of this post shows John Atherton, Anglican bishop of Waterford and Lismore, and his lover John Childe being hanged for “buggery” in 1640 in Dublin, Ireland. The bishop was executed under a law that he helped to institute! The picture comes from an anonymous 1641 booklet titled “The Shameful End of Bishop Atherton and his Proctor John Childe.” The title tries to shame and blame the victims, but I believe that the shame belongs to the church and society who killed them for who and how they loved.
Four additional historical images are presented below to remember and honor these whose lives were desecrated and cut short.
The Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa found homosexuality among the Native American chiefs at Quarqua in Panama. He ordered 40 of these two-spirited people thrown to his war dogs to be torn apart and eaten alive to stop the “stinking abomination.”
Five Catholic monks were burned to death for homosexuality on June 28, 1578, in Ghent, Belguim.
A total of 96 gay men were executed for sodomy in the Netherlands years 1730-31.
For the first 1,000 years of church history, Christianity was relatively tolerant of homoerotic relationships. Then came campaigns against heresy, which often used the terms “heresy” and “sodomy” interchangeably. Then hostility began to be directed specifically at same-sex erotic behavior. Weldon locates the fateful period when the atrocities began in a well researched overview titled “Lest We Forget: The Ashes of Our Martyrs”:
In 1120, the Church Council of Nablus specified burning at the stake for homosexual acts. Although this penalty may not immediately have been applied, other harsh condemnations followed rapidly. In 1212, the death penalty for sodomy was specified in in France. Before long the execution of supposed “sodomites”, often by burning at the stake, but also by other harsh means, had become regular practice in many areas.
The church contributed to the deaths of thousands for homosexuality over the next 700 years. Witch burning occurred in the same period and claimed the lives of countless lesbian women whose non-conformity was condemned as witchcraft. (Current events in Uganda prove that some are STILL using Christianity to justify the death penalty for homosexuality up to the present day.) As Weldon concludes,
Obviously, the Catholic Church cannot be held directly responsible for the judicial sentences handed down by secular authorities in Protestant countries. It can, however, be held responsible for its part in fanning the flames of bigotry and hatred in the early part of the persecution, using the cloak of religion to provide cover for what was in reality based not on Scripture or the teaching of the early Church, but on simple intolerance and greed.
It is important as gay men, lesbians and transgendered that we remember the examples of the many who have in earlier times been honoured by the Church as saints or martyrs for the faith. It is also important that we remember the example of the many thousands who have been martyred by the churches – Catholic and other.
Milder forms of anti-LGBT persecution continue in the church. Now it is common to freeze LGBT people out of church leadership positions. Chris Glaser writes about the exclusion from clergy roles as a “fast imposed by others” in the following prayer based on the practice of fasting during Lent, the season of individual and collective repentance and reflection between Ash Wednesday and Easter.
One: Jesus,
our fast has been imposed by others,
our wilderness sojourn their choice more than ours.
Many: Our fast from the sacraments,
our fast from ordination:
our only choice was honesty.
One: With the scapegoats of the ancient Hebrews,
sexual sins of generations
have been heaped upon our backs,
and we have been sent away,
excommunicated, into the wilderness to die.
Many: Yet we choose life,
even in our deprivation
One: Jesus, lead us to discern our call
parallel to your own:
rebelling against the boundaries,
questioning the self-righteous authorities,
breaking the Sabbath law
to bring healing.
This prayer comes from “Rite for Lent” by Chris Glaser, published in Equal Rites: Lesbian and Gay Worship, Ceremonies, and Celebrations. Glaser spent 30 years struggling with the Presbyterian Church for the right to ordination as an openly gay man before he was ordained to the ministry in Metropolitan Community Churches in 2005. He recently launched a new blog for progressive Christian reflections at chrisglaser.blogspot.com.
It is horrifying to remember the "burning times," especially for those like me who count ourselves as part of the Christian tradition. Let us rise from the ashes with these verses from the Bible:
Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit within me.
For thou hast no delight in sacrifice; were I to give a burnt offering, thou wouldst not be pleased.
[Psalm 51: 10, 17]
Is such the fast that I choose,
a day for a you to humble yourself?
Is it to bow down your head like a rush,
and to spread sackcloth and ashes under you?
Will you call this a fast, and a day acceptable to God?
Is not this the fast that I choose:
to loose the bonds of wickedness,
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked, to cover them,
and not to hide yourself from your own flesh?
Then shall your light break forth like the dawn,
and your healing shall spring up speedily.
[Isaiah 58:5-8]
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Related links:
“Burned for sodomy” (Queering the Church)
Lest We Forget: The Ashes of Our Martyrs (Queering the Church)
The blood-soaked thread (Wild Reed)
List of people executed for homosexuality (Wikipedia)
BURN BABY BURN: A Knight, a Squire, a Bishop, a Steward, Five RC Monks and Millions of murders initiated by bigots at Church! (Eruptions at the Foot of the Volcano Blog)
The Gay Holocaust (Matt and Andrej Koymasky)
Gay chronicles from the beginning of time to the end of World War II (Len Evans)
A History of Homophobia, 3 The Later Roman Empire & The Early Middle Ages (Rictor Norton)
A History of Homophobia, 4 Gay Heretics and Witches" (Rictor Norton)
Homosexuality in Eighteenth-Century England: A Sourcebook (Rictor Norton, editor)
“Pilloried” - a poem by Andrew Craig Williams
Book: Homosexuality and Civilization
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Image credit:
Ash Wednesday Service in Westminster Cathedral by Mazur at the Catholic Church in England and Wales
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This post is part of the LGBT Holidays series by Kittredge Cherry at the Jesus in Love Blog. The series celebrates religious and spiritual holidays, holy days, feast days, festivals, anniversaries, liturgical seasons and other occasions of special interest to LGBT and queer people of faith and our allies.










6 comments:
Thanks for this Kitt. I actually wrote a poem about this back in 2008. You can read it here: http://andrewcraigwilliams.blogspot.com/2008/02/pilloried.html
Your poem is moving its understated and very human simplicity. It provides a first-person insight that was missing from the historical info in this post. I added a link to your poem as part of the post. Thank you, Andy, for sharing your vision and compassion.
Nice job as always Kitt. I learn so darn much reading this blog, and all of it stuff I really *want* to know, even when I'd really rather sort of not know. How absolutely fascinating that someone's actually trying to compile a list of *everyone* who's actually listed in any historical record as having been legally executed for being gay. What an undertaking - and where else would I ever find out about it, if not here?! You're creating such an immense and useful resource - many thanks, yet again. Oh, and I really like that responsive prayer, and your scripture choices for the day, too.
Don't forget real Christians were killed by the heretical Catholic "Church" as well.
The anonymous comment raises an interesting issue, but I’m not sure what is meant. Certainly sodomy was not the only “heresy” that led to church-approved execution. Then as now, the definition of “real Christians” seems to be in the eye of the beholder.
CJ, thanks for your affirmation. This was a hard post to research and write, and yet it seems important to remember the past, lest in the words of philosopher George Santayana we be condemned to repeat it.
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