When Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker‘s PTL ministry and Heritage USA theme park crashed and burned in the 1980s, their son Jay was sent into a dizzying downward spiral of drugs, alcohol and running from God.
Now the pastor of Revolution NYC, an alternative church in Brooklyn, N.Y., Jay Bakker’s new book, Fall to Grace probes the power of God’s grace to “revolutionize” believers’ relationships with God, each other and larger society.
Most provocatively, Bakker makes the case that homosexuality is neither a sin nor incompatible with an authentic and robust life of faith. Bakker, 35 and sober, spoke by phone from his home in Brooklyn. Some answers have been edited for clarity and length.
Q: When were you first aware of gay people and homosexuality writ
large?
When I look back now, I knew folks were gay — assistants and
people who worked at Heritage USA, a guy my sister hung out with in high
school. I remember one of my best friends in high school came out to me
and that I was in total shock.
When I was about 12 or 13, people started “coming out” and talking
about it more and more. It happened really fast in my life. There were a
lot of gay teenagers and gay people around me growing up.
There are so many GLBT (gay-lesbian-bisexual-transgender) people
involved in Christian television and in gospel music. There always have
been. Don’t ask, don’t tell. I think the church started that.
Q: Your mother is considered something of a gay icon. Why do you
think that is?
I always knew gay people loved my mom, even before the public
“fall.” She did an interview with someone with AIDS in 1983, she was
talking to an openly gay minister on her TV show. The gay community
showed her more love than the church. Marginalized people are the best
at showing love and grace because they’ve been shown it the least.
I asked one of my gay friends, “Why are you guys so nuts for my
mom?” Of course, there was the makeup and she was funny and silly and
loving, but she was also a survivor, he told me. She was a survivor by
being who she was and didn’t compromise. She survived and didn’t change
under pressure, even when people made fun of her.
Q: Why do you think homosexuality provokes such a strong, some might
say fearful, reaction from many Christians?
For some of the same reasons that divorce did. I think it’s “the
unknown.” It’s a group they’ve counted out for so long. We have to take
responsibility for pushing these people away from the church and pushing
them into the dark. Christians have found excuses to alienate and
discriminate against a group.
We can barely handle our own sexuality. We’re so focused on
homosexuals so we don’t have to look at our own sexuality. Christians
are afraid of sex. People get mean, and they toss their morals out the
window. They’re not acting lovingly. They confuse this righteous anger
and judgmentalism with love.
A lot of faith is based on fear. And it’s based on control. It’s
based on “do the right thing and don’t do the wrong thing.” It isn’t
based in love.
Q: How does grace play into conflicts about homosexuality and how
has grace affected your life
The foundation was definitely laid by my folks. When PTL fell, I
didn’t see anything of grace and forgiveness. But they kept telling me,
`You’ve gotta love people. You’ve gotta treat people well and put them
above you.’ Maybe they didn’t always live it out, but there were
definitely points at which my parents showed me that.
Grace has grown and changed in my life. I was always told the more I
read the Bible, the more black-and-white things would become. And they
haven’t; they’ve become more gray. But grace has allowed that to happen
and not freak me out. I understand God’s love better. Grace is one of
those things that continues to evolve.
Grace also gets you into trouble because it teaches you to follow
your convictions — and that’s where you get screwed and condemned by
other people. Grace is much bigger than that. The beauty of grace and
acceptance is just this constant, ever-changing, beautiful thing that
gets better and better. It might not get easier, but it definitely
covers more than I once thought.
This Q&A originally appeared as “10 Minutes with Jay Bakker” via Religion News Service.