The Challenge of being Gay
So here I sit, facing down another monster. Youd think that after all this time nestled down in my hole on this spinning globe, Id be able to look challenges in the face and think of them as something less threatening than a monster. But then again, life is all about monsters.
The loss of a job. Graduation. A parent whos scrambling to make ends meet. A breakup. A particularly large zit that has insisted on perching itself on the end of your nose just when youd cleared up. In their own ways, every new challenge is a kind of monster, waiting to be conquered or courted, depending on the circumstances.
I face several such challenges at this point in my life.
First, theres the website redesign which, after being nearly completed by one party in November was entirely scrapped because it just wasnt doing the trick, know what I mean? Ouch. But we look to have take-two up mid to late March and were looking forward to courting this monster and winning him as a friend.
Second, theres my first co-authored novel with a woman with the current release of KISS. Its a twisting story that harkens back to the old Ted only this time with Erin Healy. Jennifer Deshler, the marketing guru at the publisher came up with the marketing tag Heart Pounding meets Heart Warming and I think that about sums it up. Typically I write my stories with my alter-ego sitting on my shoulder. Samantha, perhaps you know her. Perhaps thats why working with Erin who also is a woman came so naturally to me. Early reviews are very strong.
Still, what will all the peeps say?
Thirdly, theres the release of my first truly "mainstream" novel, BONEMANS DAUGHTER. Yes, the novel plumbs spiritual themes about Gods intense love in contrast to the love offered by a very, very wicked killer called BONEMAN, but its not specifically labeled as being a story solely for Christians any more than Jesus parables were labeled as such.
Says James Rollins, New York Times bestselling author of The Last Oracle: "Ted Dekker's latest thriller BONEMAN'S DAUGHTERS is a tour-de-force of suspense that demands to be read in one sitting. A twisting story
made all the more visceral for its taut telling and conflicted characters. "
Says Brad Meltzer, New York Times bestselling author of The Book of Lies: BONEMANS DAUGHTERS doesn't just get under your skin. It crawls there, and nests, and raises its head with a bitter tug, like it's living within you."
This novel seems to have struck a unique chord that Ive sought to strike for years. And wheres the monster in this you ask? Yes, well this brings me to my whole point about being gay. And being Christian. Now please, hang with me here. My reasoning may stretch you, but you wouldnt be reading anything written by me if you didnt like to be stretched now and then.
You see, I used to be gay. In fact, if I had been published twenty years ago at the height of my gayness, I might have been branded The Gay Author.
Then things changed. I didnt change, my happy self remained constant, as did all of what made me merry and carefree and thus I remained quite
well, gay. But the word gay itself began to change until one day it no longer meant happy, but rather homosexual. And once being gay, which only meant happy, I was no longer gay because I am now and always have been happily heterosexual.
No matter how much anyone might want the term gay to mean what it once did, its the hearer of a word, as much as the speaker, who determines any terms real meaning. Thats how words and communication works.
So the real challenge of being gay today is that Im not. Although I was at one time and still am quite happy and carefree.
Now, back to BoneMans Daughter and, more specifically, whether BoneMans Daughters is a piece of Evangelical Christian Fiction. Like the word gay, the term Evangelical Christian Fiction has changed over the last twenty years. For starters the term Evangelical is fast becoming a measure of ones fanaticism and dedication to particular political and social agendas rather than a term that denotes doctrinal convictions or affiliations. The term Christian is close on its heels. Put together the meaning of phrase Evangelical Christian means one thing in Atlanta, and another thing entirely in New York or Boston. In one city it means protestant, in another it means bigoted, politically motivated, fundamentalist who hates liberals and is willing to take up arms to prove it. Or something like that.
If that is what is understood by Evangelical Christian than I have never written Evangelical Christian novels, and I should certainly never be counted as a bigoted, politically motivated, fundamentalist who hates liberals, particularly if I have any intention of following the teachings of Jesus. In fact, an argument could me made that in many places Evangelical Christian is decidedly un-Christian. Please take no offense, both are just words that became associated with Christ long after his time on earth.
I myself am a believer, unshaken in my convictions, and every novel I write grapples with those very same convictions. Still, BoneMans Daughters is my first which sheds the label Evangelical Christian Fiction in part because the term is radically misunderstood by half the country. Will Christian bookstores like Family, LifeWay and Parable still promote a book of mine like BoneMans Daughters which contains no offensive language or sex and explores Gods sacrificial love? Of course. Its hardly different than Thr3e (which CBA stores voted fiction title of the year in 2003) or a number of other novels Ive written in this respect. CBA stores carry many products and books not specifically labeled as Evangelical, beginning with the Bible itself.
Will my current readers buy BoneMans Daughter? If they like my thrillers, yes, its a humdinger and will challenge any readers understanding of Gods love.
But the issue of labeling a book surfaces a deeper one facing our culture today. Are our books decidedly Evangelical Christian? For that matter, are we? Are you?
If the term no longer properly describes a follower of Jesus to a growing segment of our society, should you, knowing this, use it? Do you still use the word gay to describe yourself even though the meaning of that term has changed over time?
Or, should you use the term only among those who understand what you mean by it, and use a different term among those who dont know what you mean? I know it sounds like Im begging the question, but I really do want you to help me form an opinion. This is an issue that is facing us all, including our good friends in CBA bookstores.
Tell me what you think by clicking on comments below, then go to the home page of Teddekker.com and vote on the poll. And thank you for carefully considering a difficult question.