LGBT Activists Using Sparkles to Distort Pentecost

Bags of glitter to be used for Glitter and Fire during Pentecost.
Share:

The “tongues of fire” Christians believe rained down on Pentecost just got a whole lot flashier with “Glitter and Fire,” a new project intended to promote the acceptance of LGBT people in the church.

Pentecost — which will be marked by most Christians on June 4—comes from the New Testament’s Book of Acts. After his death, Jesus’ disciples met to discuss how to continue his ministry. Suddenly, “they saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them.”

The disciples were “filled with the Holy Spirit” and began speaking in foreign tongues. They then departed to plant churches throughout the Roman world, making Pentecost the “birthday” of the Christian church.

Fast forward to today’s Pentecost, add a specially crafted liturgy, prayers, blessings and bags of red, gold, orange and black glitter to make what Parity, a New York-based LGBT advocacy group, hopes will be a way to affirm LGBT Christians.

“Pentecost’s liturgical color is red, but the other colors are there to represent diversity, which is what Pentecost is all about,” said Marian Edmonds-Allen, Parity’s executive director.

The glitter—which Parity will send to any interested congregation or ministry at no cost—can be mixed with oil for anointing or wrapped in paper and tossed in the air to rain down on people in special “glitter blessings.”

Neither is part of the usual Pentecost observance. And that, Edmonds-Allen said, is the point.

Parity has played with glitter before. Its “Glitter Ash Wednesday,” held for the first time this year, provided churches with special purple glitter to mix with the usual palm ash as a way of showing support for the equality of LGBT Christians. According to Parity, glitter was sent to 200 congregations in 29 states and three countries.

Both the Ash Wednesday and the Pentecost projects are collaboration between Parity and Queer Virtue, an LGBT-affirming organization founded by Rev. Elizabeth Edmund, an Episcopal priest and activist.

Although several major Christian denominations welcome and affirm LGBT members and clergy, others do not. The Episcopal Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Presbyterian Church (USA), the United Church of Christ and Metropolitan Community Church have full inclusion, but the United Methodist Church remains divided on the issue. {eoa}

© 2017 Religion News Service. All rights reserved.

Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

93-Year-Old’s Remarkable Vision About Heaven

https://youtu.be/VwgeJspIIlc 93-year-old Doris Sumner’s supernatural experience with God has changed her entire life. Sharing her testimony through Seeking His Presence Ministries, Sumner says this vision started during a time of meditating and reading the Word of God with her husband....

5 Strong Solutions to Protect Your Mind

By Kenza Haddock A recent new mental-health related TikTok trend has gained traction across the app’s approximately 1.5 billion followers, claiming to “help” people overcome the pain of intrusive thoughts. The TikTok trend encourages users to give in to their...

Mandisa’s Celebration of Life Ceremony to be Livestreamed

Christian artist Mandisa Hundley will have her life and legacy celebrated this weekend after her death on Thursday, April 18. As The Tennessean reported, Hundley, more affectionately known as Mandisa by fans, will be celebrated in two different services. The...

Can You Honor Your Parents Without Obeying Them?

By Rabbi Eric Tokajer We live in a broken world filled with broken families—families in which many sons and daughters have been raised to believe in the G-D of the Bible and to be responsible to live by the Ten...

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top