[Erin Swenson, Co-Moderator, National MLP Board, received the
2005 Lazarus Project Award on February 26, 2005 at the Lazarus Banquet in Pasadena, CA. Susan
Craig, pastor, United University Church, Los Angeles, offered the introduction to Erin prior to her keynote address. Susan's introduction and Erin's keynote speech follow below. The remarks were well received, and a
spontaneous standing ovation erupted
after Erin spoke. Special thanks to the
Lazarus Project for honoring Erin with this 2005 Award, and congratulations to Erin!]
INTRODUCTION TO ERIN SWENSON
Susan Halcomb Craig
In Amy Bloom’s book “Normal” [Random House, New York 2002], she
writes, “I sometimes think…our culture is like the Church in the days of
Galileo. We will not see, and we will silence and mock, even banish and punish,
those who say that what is, is”. How glad I am, then, to be here tonight,
passionately engaged in seeing and naming what is; and in celebrating all of
us for who we really are.
Presbyterians are fond of saying we’re Reformed and always
reforming: but tonight we’re being trans-formed and trans-forming! How fortunate we
are that the wonderful Erin Swenson’s here to lead us, trans-actors and
trans-gressors alike! And that the Lazarus Board had the far-sighted and faithful
vision to make tonight happen. Thank you.
So let’s imagine a contemporary Jesus, whose dear friends been
entombed for, oh say four days. Imagine this Jesus summoning community members
to remove the boulder blocking the tomb’s entrance, and calling loudly, “
Eric, come out!” And then the miracle: divine power being what it will be, it’s
Erin who comes forth: Erin, re-created, rebirthed and new; Erin, for whom
coming out and coming into herself was truly resurrectional.
Many of us already know dear Erin—and all of us have her bio
tucked into our evening programs. So we know that after 23 years of ordained
service in the Presbyterian Church, Erin became the first known mainstream
Protestant minister to transition from male to female while retaining her ordained
status in the denomination. Erin is accomplished as theologian and
psychotherapist; as Ph.D. author and educator; as More Light Presbyterians’ Co-Moderator and
counselor; as father/mother and devoted family member, wise woman and friend.
You can tell she’s the T in my BLTG sandwich, that’s for sure!—and you can
Google her for the rest!
Since we’re here to listen to Erin now, I’ll close with a
passage from Leslie Feinberg’s “TransLiberation: Beyond Pink or Blue” [Beacon
Press, Boston, 1998]. It’s from an address reprinted in 1998 given to the annual
Texas “T” Party. I think it has something to say to us all, and especially as
we prepare to greet Erin.
Feinberg writes; “…radio and television interviewers still
repeat the same questions to me again and again. ‘But were you born male or female?
Why do you think you are the way you are? Were you born this way? Was your
mother overbearing? Did your father want a boy? [or a girl?]’…
He/she continues: “I don’t think the point is: Why are we
different? Why have we refused to walk… [the] narrow path, but instead demanded the
right to blaze our own? The question is not why we were unwilling to conform…
“The real burning question is: How did we ever find the courage?
From what underground spring did we draw our pride? How did each of us make
our way in life…to this room where we have at last found others like ourselves?”
And Feinberg closes: [You may ask] “What do we have left to give
each other?...I think we have a whole world to give back to each other."
Dear Erin, you have the world to give us. So let the rumpus begin!
_____________________________________
Life Beyond the Comma
The Reverend Dr. Erin Swenson
February 26, 2005
Thank you. There is no way that any one person can be so honored, and this
award is clearly for all those who are bridge-builders. When Donn Crail called
and said that the Lazarus Board had made this choice, it came completely out of
the blue for me. I of course said, “yes” I would be here with you tonight.
Then shock set in as I found myself thinking about the countless people who
have worked for so many years, the ones I have worked beside at General
Assembly, and those who serve the church, both PCUSA and Universal in every capacity
imaginable. So in accepting this award I also know it is not mine… I can only
hold onto it for all of us… a witness to stories told and untold of offering,
sacrifice, and love that springs from the lives of so many of God’s most
beautiful children.
It was one of those phone calls you put off as long as possible, yet there I
was in the basement apartment in our home actually pressing the buttons on the
phone. Everything inside me did not want to do it, and still my fingers
pressed until the ringing sound emanated from the earpiece. A moment later and I
was talking with the chair of our Presbytery’s Committee on Ministry.
“Hello?”
“Hi, Lloyd. This is Eric Swenson. You probably don’t know me, but I am a
minister member of the Presbytery, a pastoral counselor. I’m calling to inquire
how one goes about changing their name on the roll of Presbytery.”
“Sure I know you,” came the reply. “Well, it’s really not too hard. You
just need to send a letter to the committee stating the name you want changed,
and we take it from there.”
“I see.”
“By the way, what are you wanting to change your name to?”
“Uhh… Erin Katrina Swenson.”
“Why would you want to change your name to that?”
“I am actually changing my gender expression to female, and thought that this
would be a better name.”
Silence.
After an awkward pause he responded, “I see… I’m going to have to get back
to you on that…”
This happened in 1995, as I was in the midst of rearranging my life from one
lived in the masculine key to one lived in the feminine, and the “church piece”
was the one I had dreaded the most. The phone call led to a letter in which
I was required to outline just exactly what this process was, and what I
intended regarding my ordination. I am sure they were not comforted by my request
that my ordination be continued, yet that was what I wanted. The Committee on
Ministry was up to the task, and gathered a list of reading materials, listened
to experts, and finally interviewed me before recommending to the Presbytery
in June 1995 that my name be changed without changing my status as an ordained
minister in good standing.
The Presbytery wasn’t buying it, however. As the motion came to the floor,
one of my colleagues rose to make a substitute. He wanted the request sent back
to the committee for further study… you know, the Presbyterian version of the “
deep six.” He went on to explain that there had been no other Presbyterian
minister that had made such a change, and that this move would set a precedent
for the entire denomination, perhaps for all of Protestantism. He argued that
the church’s acceptance of people who had changed gender had never been
established.
I didn’t know it at the time, but it HAD been done before. When the bible
study for the 215th General Assembly arrived in my mailbox a couple of years ago,
I dutifully read the assigned passages. The theme of the GA was “A house of
prayer for all peoples” and the study was of Isaiah 56.
Now if you are a lectionary preacher, you will be facing this text in late
summer of this year. And if you follow the lectionary you will be reading Isaiah
56:1, 6-8. That’s verse one, and then jumping to verse 6. Now commas are
often used in lectionary readings to skip parts of a passage that add little to
the meaning, or to pull logical units out from their background, so the comma
isn’t unusual at all. But there are also times when the comma is used in other
ways, and it so happens that this comma bears fully on the perspective of my
colleague who believed that my predicament in the church is novel.
At the risk of making this sound like a sermon… I would like to look
carefully at this for it bears witness to what we are doing here tonight. First, allow
me to read the passage as the lector arranged it for us, the way you
preachers might use it this in Year A, Proper 15, if you follow the comma:
Thus says the LORD: Maintain justice, and do what is right, for soon my
salvation will come, and my deliverance be revealed…And the foreigners who join
themselves to the LORD, to minister to him, to love the name of the LORD, and to
be his servants, all who keep the sabbath, and do not profane it, and hold
fast my covenant-- these I will bring to my holy mountain, and make them joyful
in my house of prayer; their burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be
accepted on my altar; for my house shall be called a house of prayer for all
peoples. Thus says the Lord GOD, who gathers the outcasts of Israel, I will gather
others to them besides those already gathered.[1]
Now these are powerful words indeed. They come at a place and time in the
life of Israel when the question of membership in the church is foremost. The
Jews had been scattered for a generation throughout the ancient world in what we
know as the Babylonian Exile. The temple, the church, had been demolished in
587, bringing despair among the people. Now, however, the people were returning
to Jerusalem, and the temple was being rebuilt.
But there was a problem because so many of the Jews had been scattered for so
long. While they had maintained their worship of Yahweh and kept the law,
they had also been absorbed into the cultures in which they lived. They had
become foreigners with different dress, language, and custom… strangers among their
own people. The Deuteronomic Law was clear that foreigners were not to be
allowed into the holiest places in the temple where the sacrifices were offered.
They were allowed only in the outer courtyard where the women and children
gathered. So when God declared through the prophet that these foreigners would
be allowed in, and that their sacrifices would be accepted, it was radical
indeed. One could imagine Jesus himself nodding in pleasure that those who had
been cast out were now embraced fully with full membership in the church.
Funny thing about commas, though… pesky little things that can change the
whole meaning of a statement. A book on punctuation by Lynne Truss was published
a couple of years ago that made the best seller list on the strength of a
comma. In fact the title of the book was from a now famous joke:
A panda walks into a café. He orders a sandwich, eats it, then draws a gun
and fires two shots in the air.
“Why?” asks the confused waiter, as the Panda makes towards the exit. The
Panda produces a badly punctuated wildlife manual and tosses it over his
shoulder.
“I’m a Panda,” he says, at the door. “Look it up.”
The waiter turns to the relevant entry and, sure enough, finds an explanation.
“Panda. Large black-and-white bear-like mammal, native to China. Eats, shoots
and leaves.”[2]
By adding one little comma to this simple statement about a Panda’s eating
habits, our cute bear is turned into a hungry and impatient potential
executioner. It might be argued that our comma, the one in the Revised Common
Lectionary, doesn’t really change the meaning of the prophecy. I would like you to judge
for yourself. Here’s the part of Isaiah 56 that is hidden in the comma:
Happy is the mortal who does this, the one who holds it fast, who keeps the
sabbath, not profaning it, and refrains from doing any evil.
Do not let the foreigner joined to the LORD say, "The LORD will surely
separate me from his people"; and do not let the eunuch say, "I am just a dry tree."
For thus says the LORD: To the eunuchs who keep my sabbaths, who choose the
things that please me and hold fast my covenant, I will give, in my house and
within my walls, a monument and a name better than sons and daughters; I will
give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off. [3]
For us… ones so clearly left out, removed from the places of worship and
community, these words are life-giving. Every TG gathering I have read this to has
been filled with amazement and tears of joy. How have we as the church become
a community where these people, so honored by God that they would have a
place and name better than sons and daughters, are stuffed behind a damned comma?
As Isaiah brings this to us God’s intention is anything but to hide us, but to
make sure that we are honored and remembered. So why are we hidden in the
comma?
Could it be fear?
That’s what it was for me. I was certain, at the age of 10 when I first knew
I was different from other little boys, that I would never fully belong to the
human race. Terrified by this truth, I endeavored for the next three and a
half decades to hide… not behind commas, but behind the appearance of being
normal.
In my fear I constructed myth to explain my quirk. I developed the idea that
all boys wanted to grow up to be girls… it was just a secret. The trick was
that when you grew up and fell in love with a woman that all the desire to BE a
woman was refashioned into the love bond between you. (Remember that this was
the 1950s, and same-sex attraction was also still well hidden behind commas
and everything else it could hide behind.) This is the old idea of completion in
heterosexual bonding taken to new depths… and I know that now, but it
comforted me. So that when I fell in love with Sigrid at the age of twenty I was
cured instantly. She was (and still is) a wonderfully strong and handsome woman,
and it worked. I was cured, at least for awhile and until about three months
after our wedding, when I found myself standing alone in our bedroom dressed in
Sigrid’s clothes devastated that I was not only NOT cured, but I had entangled
my beloved in my web of fear-laden deceit. It took 25 years for me to finally
get honest with her… time to have children and build as normal an appearing
life as I could. I was, in fact, quite successful. As a middle-class white male
I found admittance to just about all of the “holy places” of life. I was a
successful psychotherapist, honored by my peers and blessed by a robust and
growing practice. I was a vital part of a number of ministries that spanned
denominations and churches in Atlanta, developing the first successful premarital
workshop in the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta and spearheading an equally
successful movement in the state legislature to reform professional licensing in our
state. I was flying high, well hidden behind the very large “comma” of my
normalcy.
But those closest to me knew otherwise. While my public life seemed to soar,
my private life descended into inevitable depression. Twenty years of my own
therapy, the best antidepressants, and endless hours of solitude and prayer
could not stave off the advancing darkness. Sigrid, my beloved, finally had her
fill and through painful tears told me that she would be leaving me… that she
loved me and always would, but could not let my depression destroy her spirit.
Darkness set on my life with no apparent hope for a new dawn… depression moved
to despair as I began to consider suicide.
And then an unexpected thing happened. Despair became the harbinger of hope
for me as I had to accept that I could hide no longer. My life slid from behind
my own personal “comma” as I came out to family, colleagues and friends,
discovering in each new encounter that truth, like birth, is messy, life-giving,
and often painful.
I decided that a gender transition was necessary to my continued health and
well-being, and began the process that eventually led to that Presbytery
meeting where I was sent back to the committee. Sixteen months later the church
voted for the second time on my continued ordination, and this time the “comma”
fell from the page as the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta approved my request,
186 to 161.
It is no simple victory, however, for there are many who continue to be
afraid. This is why this award tonight is so important to all of us, for it
signifies your willingness to help the church stop using commas to hide uncomfortable
truth. In the ten years since my gender transition literally hundreds of
transgender Christians have contacted me to find out if it’s really true. “Yes,”
I tell them, but with hesitation. “The church was willing to accept me, but it’
s not so simple.” We as a denomination continue to be uncomfortable with
people whose gender identities are non-normative. I think of this as the church’s
struggle not with people like me, but with itself as the church. Our
denominational resources continue to be devoid of any distinctively transgender
materials for pastoral care. When the word transgender is brought to the floor of our
General Assembly, commissioners still rise to question what that really
means. And our own statements about ordination standards and marriage speak
exclusively to humanity lived in the binary identities of male or female. There is no
room for people like me, whose identities cannot be so easily categorized.
So there is much work to do beyond the comma. And I thank God that you and
people like you make it possible to carry on.
Thank you very much.
Erin Swenson
[1] NRSV.
[2] Truss, Lynne. Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to
Punctuation. 2003, Gotham Books. The quote can be found on the outside back dust
jacket.
[3] NRSV.
Ref: http://www.mlp.org/article.php/20050304100322703