I fully welcome and celebrate the Church of England’s
decision to move towards an official liturgy for trans people, but I think an
element of the discussion has been missing. We are talking about giving
ministers a liturgy to use, but we have not spoken about giving them advice or
training on the pastoral care needed around administering these services and the
feelings that they may arouse in family members, which will need to be handled
with sensitivity.
I have spoken before on this blog about the feelings that
were aroused in me when my husband had this type of liturgy within a service.
Whilst it was a time of great celebration, it created feelings of real dissonance
in me. I was suffering from feelings of ambiguous loss and had had no formal
way of acknowledging that. For me, the naming liturgy felt like a funeral as
well as a celebration. It was formally celebrating the “new” identity of Karl
which implicitly meant his “dead” name was truly that, as was the “old identity”.
One aspect of the debate not being fully acknowledged or
explored at the moment is the impact on family and partners who are supportive
but are having to deal with the feelings of dissonance and ambiguous loss we
have been talking about.
We need real work doing not just on the pastoral care of
trans people but of their families too. Churches will often be welcoming
families who are on a journey, not just the trans people.
Now, I get this is a sensitive subject – I have been in
rooms where when I have spoken about this there has been difficult emotion.
There have been trans people who have been rejected by families and there have
been trans people who have felt guilt about the journey others have had to take
with them. On line I have had trans people who have said what I am saying seems
to reject trans people.
I want to be clear, my husband’s transition is the best
thing ever to have happened to him and I have seen him flourish as a result of
no longer having to repress who he is. We have a Hungry Caterpillar money box
which celebrates the butterfly emerging. I am 100% supportive, but I had to go
through a grief process as a result of this and those feelings of loss that
family, particularly, go through needs to be recognised. We need to produce
resources which help those coming alongside in churches to understand the
complexity of these situations and how to pastorally approach them.
This is excellent. As parents of a transgender child we have experienced that seeming loss of 'our child', gone through that grief and now, thankfully, seen that they are now as God truly intended. We now have joy. The support provided by Diverse Church Parents, LGBT Lincs etc has been invaluable to us. Pastoral support to families is so beneficial. What I would like to add is that as parents we feel a pain but the pain felt by the transgender individual is also so real. I would not dare to equate them for how could I even start to express that pain. At times we found it so difficult to express our thoughts and feelings as both of us were desiring acceptance of 'our pain', when really love was the only real answer.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article. Thank you for sharing your own experience and for discussing this important subject so articulately.
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