Queer Experiences of Religion: How Marginalization within a Religion Affects Its Queer Members
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Religiosity
Religion and Psychological Distress
1.2. Marginalization
Queer Religious Marginalization
1.3. The Current Study
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Measures
2.2.1. Queer Status
2.2.2. Psychological Distress
2.2.3. Life Satisfaction
2.2.4. Strength of Faith
2.2.5. Marginalization
2.3. Procedure
2.3.1. Quantitative
2.3.2. Qualitative
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative Analysis
3.2. Qualitative Analysis
3.2.1. Ideals
I much preferred the doctrine of Orthodoxy but knew there was no place for my queerness there. Ever since then, I have not affiliated myself with any one denomination over another, and instead think of myself as ‘just Jewish’. I still struggle with accepting my queerness knowing what I do about Torah Judaism, and have not returned to any Orthodox spaces because I know I would be marginalized.
Growing up the church would always say things like it was evil or against God for me to like girls, dress androgynously, or have dreams or goals that did not involve motherhood and marriage. My family was very religious and I got dragged to things a lot and was always told they would pray for me or pray that I would find salvation for my ‘sins’. I was always a good kid, never drank or did drugs, was not promiscuous, gave to the poor, did volunteer work, etc but simply because I was LGBT I was never good enough because of my ‘sins’.
For the longest time I thought I can’t be LGBTQ AND religious. I could either have the dangerous, exciting, glittery, smoky haze of being queer or the soft, wholesome light of faith, but not both. I didn’t come out til I was 13 as bisexual–my youth pastor told me that so long as I never acted upon feelings for the same sex, I would go to heaven. Like this was just my cross to bear.
I’m really lucky because, in the Buddhist community I’m part of, people are cool with me being non-binary. Buddhism is all about understanding and kindness, so the folks around me are supportive…This acceptance lets me be myself without feeling left out. Buddhism’s teachings about being mindful and compassionate really help create an environment where everyone, no matter their identity, is treated with respect. It’s nice to see how Buddhism can be a way for people to come together and accept each other, making it easier for me to be true to who I am.
3.2.2. Actions
Positive Valence
Our local congregation is overwhelmingly queer (we joke that we have one or two token straight folks), we participate in local pride events all throughout the state, we attend queer cultural events. I myself am a member of our local Rocky Horror cast and several members of our congregation are regular attendees at our shows.
Negative Valence
As a Christian, it’s really hard to be gay, and even harder to express a gender identity outside of cis. I realized I was queer when I was about 13 years old and it terrified me, because I grew up understanding that my religion looked at gay people as an abomination, or something to be disgusted by. It was painful, and a journey. But now, I feel more at peace knowing that the God I believe in is not that way.
Thankfully, I have always been around progressive members of my own faith so acceptance of my queer identity has always been a privilege for me. But there is still that fear that the moment I step out of my own small community, that I will experience prejudice from those in the broader sense of my religion. I suppose that’s why I’m often scared to truly immerse myself in my faith.
I am out to a considerable amount of people and I am always misgendered and dead-named. I hate that even my family will not respect my identity, so I try hard to distance myself from them. I find myself more accepted by people I barely know than my whole family.
I went to a Korean Roman Catholic church. A majority of the attendees and priests were Korean, the Saint we honored was Korean, and even the Sunday school program was taught by Korean teachers. I mention this because the way queerness was treated in my church was impacted both by culture and religion. The only priest who treated queerness with positivity or at the very least neutrality was the only priest in our church who wasn’t Korean. Among everyone else, queerness was kept hush hush and many things that were considered ‘terrible’ or ‘immoral’ were kept under wraps. I didn’t even have the opportunity to explore my queerness until I left my church, and it was after I left that I felt such a weight lifted off of me.
As I became more open about my identity growing up, many members of my family disowned me and called me the ugliest things imaginable in the name of “love” for the same god I believe in. I went to college in a very Christian/religious community where many people actively voiced their hatred/disgust/contempt for queer people under the guise of religion. However, I stand firmly in the belief that Jesus’ teachings were about loving, accepting, and extending grace to the marginalized.
Mixed Valence
4. Discussion
4.1. Experiences with Marginalization
4.2. Concealing Stigmatized Identities and Marginalization
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Item | Frequency | Percent |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Woman | 297 | 47.4 |
Man | 219 | 35.0 |
Non-Binary | 104 | 16.6 |
Prefer to self-describe | 4 | 1.0 |
Transgender Status | ||
Transgender | 60 | 9.6 |
Non-binary | 102 | 16.3 |
Cisgender | 464 | 74.1 |
Sexuality | ||
Straight/Heterosexual | 331 | 52.9 |
Attracted to multiple genders | 192 | 30.7 |
Gay/Homosexual | 74 | 11.8 |
Asexual or aromantic | 29 | 4.5 |
Predictor | Outcome/ Interaction | b | SE | t | p | 95% CI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mediation | ||||||
Queer status | Distress | 2.87 | 0.40 | 7.25 | <0.001 | [2.09, 3.65] |
Life satisfaction | −0.76 | 0.23 | −3.26 | 0.001 | [−1.22, −0.30] | |
αβ (strength of faith) | 0.07 | 0.05 | [−0.003, 0.19] | |||
Moderation | ||||||
Strength of faith | Distress | 0.42 | 0.19 | 2.22 | 0.027 | [0.05, 0.79] |
Life satisfaction | −0.31 | 0.11 | −2.75 | 0.006 | [−0.53, −0.09] | |
αβ (marginalization) | −0.01 | 0.01 | −1.55 | 0.123 | [−0.03, 0.003] |
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Baird, R.; Hutchins, C.H.; Kosanovich, S.E.; Dabbs, C.R. Queer Experiences of Religion: How Marginalization within a Religion Affects Its Queer Members. Sexes 2024, 5, 444-460. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5040032
Baird R, Hutchins CH, Kosanovich SE, Dabbs CR. Queer Experiences of Religion: How Marginalization within a Religion Affects Its Queer Members. Sexes. 2024; 5(4):444-460. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5040032
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaird, Rebecca, Camryn H. Hutchins, Seth. E. Kosanovich, and Christopher R. Dabbs. 2024. "Queer Experiences of Religion: How Marginalization within a Religion Affects Its Queer Members" Sexes 5, no. 4: 444-460. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5040032
APA StyleBaird, R., Hutchins, C. H., Kosanovich, S. E., & Dabbs, C. R. (2024). Queer Experiences of Religion: How Marginalization within a Religion Affects Its Queer Members. Sexes, 5(4), 444-460. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5040032