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When Daniel Helminiak wrote "What The Bible Really Says About Homosexuality" he had several goals in mind. "I wanted a book that would be short, inexpensive, easily accessible and would put out information that would counter what's coming out from the religious right," he said. Mission accomplished. The book has been a perennial bestseller at gay bookstores like Outwrite here in Atlanta and Lambda Rising in Washington, DC. Helminiak calls the success of his short, inexpensive book on the Bible and homosexuality, "astounding" and telling. "These issues are much more important to the gay and lesbian community than anyone has ever allowed," he explained in a recent interview with Southern Voice. "We, ourselves, tend to downplay religion because it's so critical, but a lot of us, in our hearts, are still struggling with questions and we need someone to help us through them." The book has served that purpose. Helminiak says he's spoken to many people who bought several copies of the book to give to family, friends and co-workers who are struggling to understand homosexuality in light of fundamentalist interpretations of scripture, and the growing viciousness of attacks from the religious right. The popularity of the book also points to a hunger for spirituality in the gay and lesbian community despite the rejection by mainstream religion. Helminiak believes gays and lesbians already have a deep understanding of spirituality. "There is a lot of honesty and goodwill in our community. That is the core of spirituality. We are a good people. We'd have to be honest to do what we're doing. It would be much easier to cop out and pretend and go along with the rest." What that innate understanding of spirituality needs is guidance. That's what Helminiak offers in his new book, Religion and The Human Sciences, An Approach via Spirituality. "What I do in my book is spell out the criteria for what is healthy spiritually," he said. "It will help the gay community to recognize the fact that we're okay, to rejoice in the spiritual sensitivity that's already there." To spell out the criteria, Helminiak explores the gap between psychology and theology. For so long, psychology has refused to deal with spirituality, deeming it a "religious" issue. Theology often co-opts psychology in a way that bolsters its claim to ultimate truth, but tends to play down the value of the human experience. Helminiak suggests the missing link between the two is an honest spirituality. "My own grappling with the issues led me to this," said Helminiak. "For the gay and lesbian community, which has felt rejected by religion from the start and still feels condemned, many have left religion but still seek some spiritual sustenance. My approach allows gays and lesbians to develop a whole spirituality." That whole spirituality is based on what Helminiak calls, "human authenticity." Helminiak says this is a different approach from the fundamentalists who say you have to believe in Jesus and say Jesus is Lord. Helminiak points out a complete spirituality is more than just a belief. He cites the parable of judgment in Matthew 25:34-45:
"What's fascinating is that the people who are being praised did not even know of Jesus. What mattered was how they acted. That's spirituality, whether it has to do with God or not," Helminiak observed. "There's something basic to being a human being that requires us to be open minded, willing to question and pursue things, to marvel to be in awe, in reverence, to be honest about things to be good-willed," he continued. "That to me is the core of spirituality. That's what leads people to talk about God. If you take marvel and awe to its ultimate conclusion then you realize that we stand before absolute mystery. People will call that mystery God." But, a final belief in God is not necessary for ultimate spiritual fulfillment, Helminiak stressed. "Being a good, genuine human being is the most important thing. If it turns out you don't believe in God, I don't think God would mind."
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What the Bible Really Says About Homosexuality Religion and the Human Sciences : An Approach Via Spirituality The Human Core of Spirituality : Mind As Psyche and Spirit
Other Writings By Candace Chellew:
Battling For The Heart of Christianity
Freeing The Pulpit So All May Freely Serve
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