I need to try, I need to make an attempt to put into words, to even come close to describing how it feels, what it means, to be able to begin to reclaim part of my journey set aside left behind, because it felt no longer mine it belonged to someone I no longer was the good little baptist girl both the one who only pretended belief hoping to belong and the one who truly believed, who chose her path who followed a calling, who made that her life how could it belong to me, the queer me, the one know I am now so I did what I do best, compartmentalize it away (forty years of practice, it is my default coping skill) out of my story like it never was real like my story of faith began the day I walked my queer self back into a church drastically different from what I'd known drawn by a longing I didn't understand, didn't want, and couldn't ignore any other option hurt too much, too complicated too confusing, too tied up in an understanding of faith that calls me heretic, unrepentant sinner, damned to hell for learning to love who I was created to be, who I always was for not being able to tick the required boxes of belief for being unapologetically queer problem is those parts of my journey have shaped me they inform who I am, what I believe they've left scars that make me hesitant to trust, to engage some from bad theology, some from my conscious choice to cut myself off from my history and put that part of my life back into a closet but then ... music and a way of being church that feels familiar brings unexpected tears, a longing for something I miss? this church so different, not in form, but in practice this place, this choir, this priest welcomes all of you always - no hiding required then ... unpacking boxes moved more than once paper and books and music from a lifetime long past much let go, it no longer serves, definitely doesn't spark joy but at the piano not touched in years too tied up with the life no longer mine I wander through the song books fingers touch keys stumbling at first but finding confidence tears stream, voice breaks, fingers cease their motion the same lyrics that spoke before speak more loudly now God knew the truth of who I was when I had no conscious clue the words that showed me truth then still show me truth now that I was known and loved before I knew myself my queer self hidden but there and known and loved in the me pretending to believe in the me following a calling to serve in the me who thought that part of life gone, never to return it's still mine but I hear the words differently now it's easier to hear when you're not hiding I explore more, give myself permission to connect to try an expression of faith closer to what I knew before it's terrifying, but there is being known, being seen for who I am there is welcome and compassion and people who understand I breathe more deeply than in the six years since I found my way back to faith more fully than I have in the ten years since I wrote my way out of the closet the first time Six years ago on a Saturday night Christmas Eve, I accidentally found my way home Six years later on another Saturday night Christmas Eve, I found my way home again on four separate paths one for the part of me that was Pastor Karen to my kiddos now long grown to adulthood one that feels like the home where I found my own faith the first time one for the part of me that revels in worship contemporary and free one that is home where my queer self found faith again maybe I don't need those from earlier in my journey to accept who I am now though some have and I am grateful for that grace maybe I need to give myself permission to be all of who I am not only as queer me but as queer me whose journey of faith looks like more than one single path
It’s taken me since Christmas Eve to put this into something that feels close to capturing the shift that’s been happening.
With much gratitude to those who have been pastors, guides, mentors and friends along the path in all of its parts. There are too many to name, but some, both recent and so very not recent, need special mention for their part in my faith journey over the years and especially in these last few months.
To Devona, to my Spring Garden family back in the day (John, Rick, Margaret and Blake), to Wilkie, to Gene, to Shannon and Brian, to my St. John’s home now (Alastair, Patrick, Gillian, Kevin, Bill, Ruth, Stephanie and John), to Daniel, to Matt and the Monday night crew.