Texas congregation acted out of principle, not malice, pastor says
Kathleen Wright holds an image of her brother, Cecil Sinclair, who recently passed away, on Friday, Aug. 10. Relatives of Sinclair, a gay Navy veteran, say they are upset that a megachurch canceled his memorial service 24 hours before it was to start.
Please contact the church; let them know what they did was wrong!: 2500 E. Arbrook Blvd, Arlington, TX 76014
P.O. Box 150478, Arlington, TX 76015
Phone Number: 817.394.3000
Fax Number: 817.394.3001
Email here: ChurchEmail
http://www.churchunusual.com/general-email.html
Tony Gutierrez / AP msnbc
ARLINGTON, Texas - The High Point Church in Arlington, Texas canceled a memorial service for a Navy veteran 24 hours before it was to start because the deceased was gay.
Officials at the nondenominational High Point Church knew that Cecil Howard Sinclair was gay when they offered to host his service, said his sister, Kathleen Wright. But after his obituary listed his life partner as one of his survivors, she said, it was called off.
“It’s a slap in the face. It’s like, ’Oh, we’re sorry he died, but he’s gay so we can’t help you,”’ she said Friday.
Wright said High Point offered to hold the service for Sinclair because their brother is a janitor there. Sinclair, who served in the first Gulf War, died Monday at age 46 from an infection after surgery to prepare him for a heart transplant.
The church’s pastor, the Rev. Gary Simons, said no one knew Sinclair, who was not a church member, was gay until the day before the Thursday service, when staff members putting together his video tribute saw pictures of men “engaging in clear affection, kissing and embracing.”
‘It’s not that we didn’t love the family’
Simons said the church believes homosexuality is a sin, and it would have appeared to endorse that lifestyle if the service had been held there.
“We did decline to host the service — not based on hatred, not based on discrimination, but based on principle,” Simons told The Associated Press. “Had we known it on the day they first spoke about it — yes, we would have declined then. It’s not that we didn’t love the family.”
Simons said the decision had nothing to do with the obituary. He said the church offered to pay for another site for the service, made the video and provided food for more than 100 relatives and friends.
“Even though we could not condone that lifestyle, we went above and beyond for the family through many acts of love and kindness,” Simons said.
Wright called the church’s claim about the pictures “a bold-faced lie.” She said she provided numerous family pictures of Sinclair, including some with his partner, but said none showed men kissing or hugging.
The 5,000-member High Point Church was founded in 2000 by Simons and his wife, April, whose brother is Joel Osteen, well-known pastor of the 38,000-member Lakewood Church in Houston. Now High Point meets in a 432,000-square-foot facility in Arlington, near Dallas.
Wright said relatives declined the church’s offer to hold the service at a community center because they felt it was an inappropriate venue. It ultimately was held at a funeral home, but the cancellation still lingered in some minds, she said.
PLEASE CONTACT THE HIGH-POINT CHURCH AND LET THEM KNOW YOU THINK THEIR DECISION TO DENY SERVICES FOR A FELLOW BEING BECAUSE HE WAS GAY WAS CERTAINLY NOT CHRIST-LIKE AND JUST PLAIN WRONG!
2500 E. Arbrook Blvd Arlington, TX 76014
P.O. Box 150478 Arlington, TX 76015
Phone Number: 817.394.3000 Fax Number: 817.394.3001
General church E-mail here: ChurchEmail
http://www.churchunusual.com/general-email.html
Other email addresses:
1 comment:
this is their bullshit statement:
http://www.churchunusual.com/statement.html
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