Current:Home > FinanceHe feared coming out. Now this pastor wants to help Black churches become as welcoming as his own -Aspire Financial Strategies
He feared coming out. Now this pastor wants to help Black churches become as welcoming as his own
View
Date:2025-04-24 18:33:04
It was daunting when the Rev. Brandon Thomas Crowley, at age 22, replaced a beloved pastor who had ministered to one of suburban Boston’s most famed Black churches for 24 years.
It was more daunting — at times agonizing — to reach the decision six years later, in 2015, that God wanted him to tell his congregation that he was gay.
To his relief, most of the worshippers at Myrtle Baptist Church in Newton, Massachusetts, embraced him. Crowley’s career has flourished, and he has now written a book — “Queering the Black Church” — that he hopes can serve as a guide for other congregations to be “open and affirming” to LGBTQ+ people rather than shunning them.
Crowley, 41, was born in Atlanta and raised in Rome, Georgia. He admired the preachers he heard as a child, especially at Lovejoy Baptist Church, his home congregation.
One Sunday, however, the pastor preached a fiery sermon against homosexuals.
“He called them all types of names, using derogatory phrases and really describing it as a detestable group and a sinful thing, and I just sort of knew he was talking about me,” Crowley said in an interview. “That was my first introduction to really knowing the beauty of who I am as a queer person.”
Crowley said his great grandmother repeatedly assured him that he was made in the image of God. She also told him about getting pregnant at 14 — and breaking away from her own church after refusing its demand to apologize to the congregation.
“She would say, ‘God loves you,’” Crowley recalled. “She said, ‘They almost made me take my own life when I was pregnant, but I came to know a God beyond the church, and I’ve got beyond what these preachers say.’”
Nonetheless, throughout this period, Crowley felt he was called to be a Christian pastor — a preacher of the social justice gospel.
Believing he had to hide his sexual identity in order to pursue that calling, he began dating a girl at Lovejoy.
He had still not come out by the time he entered Morehouse College in Atlanta, joining its Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel Assistants program. While at Morehouse, he said, he experienced his first serious romance with a young man, but led his family to believe it was a non-romantic friendship.
After graduating from Morehouse, Crowley was accepted by Harvard Divinity School. He considered abandoning his dream to be a preacher, and instead “write books about the Black church being dead.”
But one of his friends, convinced of his spiritual talents, encouraged Crowley to apply for the open pastorate at Myrtle Baptist — less than 10 miles from the divinity school.
Soon after he expressed initial interest, Crowley said, he received word that he was “exactly” what Myrtle’s search committee was seeking. He recalled his inner reaction: “I was, like, ‘What are y’all talking about? Like, I’m gay! This can’t happen.’”
But he stayed in the running for the job — even breaking away from a weekend Gay Pride party in Miami to get back in Boston in time to preach at a service attended by the search committee.
Before long, Crowley was named a finalist. His closest mentors were split over whether he should tell Myrtle’s leaders about his sexuality or stay quiet on that topic while doing a good job as preacher. He chose the latter course — and operated that way for six years after his election as Myrtle’s new senior pastor in 2009.
But over time, Crowley said, he realized “I could only really do the work of God if I operated from a place of real authenticity.”
He also found love in the church. Crowley first met Tyrone Sutton, his partner of three years, when he was guest preaching. Sutton was sitting at the organ. On one of their first dates they sang and played music together.
Periodically during his life, Crowley said, he heard a voice he believed was coming from the spirit of God. He says it first spoke approvingly of his same-sex attraction as a child in 1993, after he was rebuked by a relative for saying that a male character on a sitcom was “so fine.”
“God doesn’t like that,” the relative said. But Crowley recalls hearing the voice tell him that God had made him that way. He says he heard it again at age 12, beckoning him to a life in ministry. And years later, as an adult, he said it would guide him through the emotional process of breaking up with a girlfriend after telling her about his homosexuality.
But those occasions all occurred in private. In the spring of 2015, Crowley says he was sitting in Myrtle’s pulpit one Sunday when he heard the voice speaking to him — telling him it was time to come out.
“Are you crazy? These people are going to put me out,” Crowley recalls telling the voice that was urging him to share the truth.
But minutes later, a tearful Crowley did just that — announcing to his congregation, “I am a proud, Black, gay Christian male.”
“We already knew, reverend,” one church mother told him. “We were just waiting on you.”
Some congregation members decided to leave Myrtle after the announcement, but mostly there was strong support for the pastor. Myrtle’s pews swelled with new members, many of them gay, and Crowley felt emboldened look beyond Newton and take aim at the broader realm of the Black Church.
This year, his first book, “Queering the Black Church: Dismantling Heteronormativity in the African American Church,” was published by Oxford Press.
In the book, Crowley recounts more than a century of Black Christian preaching that was often laden with homophobic diatribes, and broad characterizations of homosexuality as sinful. He notes that the Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Sr. crusaded against homosexuality during his 1908-1936 leadership of New York’s Abyssinian Baptist Church — one of the most prominent Black churches in the country.
Myrtle, celebrating its 150th anniversary this year, takes pride in its progressive, inclusive congregation, but many Black churches and denominations in the U.S. remain opposed to celebrating same-sex marriages or ordaining openly LGBTQ+ clergy.
The Rev. Karmen Michael Smith, who wrote “Holy Queer,” about the gift of being a gay Black Christian, and lectures frequently on the topic, said he’s not as optimistic as Crowley that Black churches can be “queered.” For many members of the LGBTQ+ community, Black churches are the site of trauma and exclusion, he said.
“Those folks aren’t coming back,” Smith said.
It remains a volatile issue in some quarters. The African Methodist Episcopal Church, for example, is expected to vote at an upcoming national meeting on a measure which would allow AME pastors to conduct same-sex marriages.
While pastoring at Myrtle, Crowley earned a Ph.D. from Boston University’s School of Theology. He hopes to become a professor as well as a preacher, he said via email, “further serving my Queer and Black communities in both spiritual and scholarly contexts.”
The Rev. Martha Simmons, an expert in Black preaching and founder of the advocacy group Women of Color in Ministry, became a mentor for Crowley after appearing at Morehouse as a guest speaker. She describes him as perhaps the most gifted of all the students she has encountered in her career.
“The most impressive thing about Brandon is that it’s really hard to be queer in a Black Baptist world, and that’s what he’s been in for most of his adult life,” Simmons said. “And he handles it all so well.”
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Flag football gives female players sense of community, scholarship options and soon shot at Olympics
- Man arrested in stabbing at New York’s Grand Central Terminal charged with hate crimes
- Russell Hamler, thought to be the last of WWII Merrill’s Marauders jungle-fighting unit, dies at 99
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Top Wisconsin Republican wants to put abortion laws on a future ballot
- New Toyota, Subaru and more debut at the 2023 L.A. Auto Show
- Sources: Teen tourists stabbed in Grand Central Terminal in apparently random Christmas Day attack
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Human remains, artificial hip recovered after YouTuber helps find missing man's car in Missouri pond
Ranking
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- What is hospice care? 6 myths about this end-of-life option
- Blue Jackets' Zach Werenski leaves game after getting tangled up with Devils' Ondrej Palat
- Khloe Kardashian Unveils New Family Portrait With Kids True and Tatum
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- When will you die? Meet the 'doom calculator,' an artificial intelligence algorithm
- North Korea’s Kim vows to bolster war readiness to repel ‘unprecedented’ US-led confrontations
- Shakira celebrates unveiling of 21-foot bronze statue of her in Colombian hometown
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
A helicopter crashes into a canal near Miami and firefighters rescue both people on board
Texas has arrested thousands on trespassing charges at the border. Illegal crossings are still high
2 Australians killed in Israeli airstrike in Lebanon, says Australia’s acting foreign minister
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
TikToker Mikayla Nogueira Addresses Claim She Lost 30 Lbs. on Ozempic
Gaming proponents size up the odds of a northern Virginia casino
Amazon Prime Video will start showing ads in January. Will you have to pay more?
Like
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Emma Heming Shares Sweet Tribute to Husband Bruce Willis Celebrating 16 Years Together
- Denver police investigating threats against Colorado Supreme Court justices after ruling disqualifying Trump from holding office