Date: Mon, 27 Apr 2009 10:33:17 -0400
From: montrealormolu@aol.com
Subject: The Glance - chapter 16

John glanced up nervously. What time was it? Again? He waited for the two
Wardens, the senior lay officials of the parish, to come into his
office. He was going to tell them. He didn't know how it was going to go,
but he was going to tell them. He'd thought it through with the bishop;
first, tell the wardens, then the Vestry (the parish council), then the
parish at large. So, tonight was the night to get it started.

There was a knock on the door, and then the wardens came in. He stood up
and shook hands with both of them. "Come in, come in. Please sit down. I've
something to tell you both before we meet with the rest of the Vestry.."

The two wardens looked at each other nervously. Was Father John going to
tell them that he was leaving the parish? That's what this kind of meeting
usually meant.

"Guys, I want first to tell you that I'm not planning on leaving, so you
can breathe more easily...at least I hope you can. Then, I want to share
with you something about myself. "

He paused and took a deep breath. "Guys, I'm gay."

He found that he was holding his breath, waiting for their response. What
would they say?

Harry Gordon broke the silence first, as usual, "Father, that doesn't come
as too much of a surprise, to tell you the truth.  And it doesn't make too
much difference to me. I guess I'm wondering why you decided to tell us
that."

John nodded his head in acknowledgement and turned to look at Roger, his
other warden. "Roger ... ?"

Roger looked at the floor, twisting his hands together, and then he looked
up. "Well it comes as a surprise to me. I would never have guessed. I just
don't think about those kinds of things. I'm not too sure how to think
about it now. And I wonder why you're telling us now. Is there a problem we
need to know about?"

John shook his head. "No, Roger, there's no problem. I'm not doing anything
with one of the kids in the parish, and I haven't been caught by the cops
doing something else." A small, almost bitter smiled played across his
face. "I've fallen in love. And I would like to be more open with you and
the rest of the parish about who I am. I'm tired of hiding from you all."

Both wardens looked at Father John with some surprise. "Oh ..." escaped
from Roger. Harry didn't say anything at first, then, "Are congratulations
in order, Father? Are there wedding bells in the offing?"  Roger looked
confused, "But didn't he just say that he was homosexual?"  Harry looked at
his colleague with surprise, "Yes, he said he was gay, but gay people can
fall in love, too, and even get into committed relationships."

Roger just looked more confused. "I don't know about all this. You're my
priest, Father John, but I just don't know." He shook his head again.

"Does the bishop know?"

"Yes. I told him a little while ago. And he knows that I planned on telling
you and the vestry tonight."

"Well, good for you, Father," said Harry "Is there anything else we need to
go over before the meeting? If not, then let's go in." He got up and
started for the door.

"Roger, are you alright?" asked John.

"No, Father, I'm not. I just don't know what to think about all this. And I
don't know what the rest of the vestry will think, either. This is going to
be difficult for a lot of us."

"I know, Roger, I know. I hope that we can work through this together."

They all got up and walked out the door, going down the hall towards the
meeting with the rest of the Vestry.

Father John shook hands with people as they came in, working the room just
as he had done for so many years.. He knew them all, had been in their
homes, had counseled some, married others, baptized their children, knew
some of their secrets. He just didn't know how they would react to his
news.

The meeting went on as they usually did. They read the minutes, heard the
financial report, spent some time catching up with news and events around
the parish and upcoming, and then moved into the formation part of the
meeting, a time when they learned something new and worked on it. John had
often led this part of the meeting in the past, and had decided to do that
tonight.

"I want us to move towards something else right now. I had some news for
the wardens earlier, and I wanted to share that with you, too. I've met
someone who has become very important to me, and it's time to let you in on
it." He paused, looking down at the table, and then looked up again,
"There's really no easy way to do this, so let me come right out with
it. I'm gay, and the person I've met is another man."

There was a kind of stunned silence around the table, several people looked
at each other, some just looked right at him, smiling. One person
immediately began clapping. "Well, congratulations, Father. I'm really
happy for you. When do we get to meet the lucky man?"

"Thank you, Martha. I appreciate your support. I hope you'll all get to
meet him soon. But first, we need to check in with everyone else." He
looked around the room. "Anyone?"

Harry started, "As I told you in your office, I couldn't be happier for
you. Being the Rector of a large parish is very daunting and I've worried
about you over the years not having someone to share that with. I'm glad
you've found someone and I hope that it will work out well for both of
you."

"But," began one of the others, "but, he said he was a homosexual. How can
we have a sinner as the Rector of the church? How ..."

Roger quickly interrupted, "Wait a minute! I'm not comfortable with this
either. But we're all sinners. Every priest we've ever had has been a
sinner." He looked around the room at the others, "Some of the sins we've
all known about, and some we haven't. So, while I have a lot of trouble
with this, let's not drag a red herring into this discussion." Roger sighed
deeply, "I'm not comfortable with this, at least not yet. I don't think I
know any homosexuals – at least not until now. I don't know what to
think about this. What does the Bible say, what does the Church say, what
does the bishop think? Those are all questions which are running around my
head. But I do know that Father John is the same person today as he was
yesterday. Yesterday I would have trusted him with pretty much
anything. He's always been there for me and my family. Today, well he's the
same person and I can still trust him. It's just that I now know him better
than yesterday and I still need to work that out."

"But he's a homosexual and everyone knows about them ... what about our
kids? What ..."

"Oh, for God's sake, don't drag that into this discussion!" Harry was
getting up tight, "Father John has done more to support our youth program
than any other priest we've had. The kids love him, and he loves them. I
trusted him with my sons before, and I'm going to trust him still. This is
crazy. He's gay, not a pedophile!"

The conversation swirled on, going from one to another, sometimes two
talking at the same time. John kept silent, letting them talk themselves
out, watching and listening. He could see that some were going to have a
lot of trouble with this, and that others would take it in stride. When he
judged it right, he interrupted once again.

"I think the main decision for the Vestry, as a policy body, is to help me
work out how to inform the rest of the parish. I want to remind us of our
confidentiality commitment. This needs to stay in this room until we figure
out how to tell everyone else. So, how should we do that?"

One of the vestry who had been quiet for most of the discussion looked up,
"Father, let's put our cards all on the table. Are you planning on staying
on as Rector? Are you planning on having your lover move in with you?"

"The answer is yes to both those questions. We have talked about moving in
together and making this a more permanent relationship. It's still early
for us, so we're going to take it slow, but yes, that's where we're
heading. And yes, I plan on staying on as Rector."

"Father, this is going to be hard for this parish. Some people will leave;
some will do it publically, some will just fade away. This is going to
affect our budgets and our plans together as a parish. You've told us that
the bishop knew you were going to tell us tonight. I assume that you've
also discussed with the bishop the possible financial consequences of this
decision."

John nodded his head.

"So, our task as a vestry is to manage the news. Once you've said it, as
you have tonight, you can't put the cat back in the bag. So, how are we
going to manage this for the best possible outcome?"

Silence fell over the group. Everyone was deep in thought, trying to move
past their own personal responses and begin to think about the parish as a
whole. How could they work through this with everyone else?