AllianceQ

AllianceQ - the Disciples LGBTQ+ Alliance is more than 40 years old. We educate and equip faith communities for understanding, affirming, and including LGBTQ+ persons. AllianceQ advocates alongside LGBTQ+ organizations to urge nondiscrimination and address queer issues. We aim to elevate the voices of affirming faith leaders to change the social landscape. The Alliance engages in ongoing anti-racism work, seeking to bridge the gap between racial, ethnic, gender, and sexual diversity, as movements for racial justice and LGBTQ+ liberation have interconnected histories.

Listen to long-time Alliance members Allen Harris and María “Cuca” Pérez discuss the magic of relationship in doing this work.

HISTORY OF THE ALLIANCE

It was at the 1977 General Assembly in Kansas City that the late Carol Blakley of Caldwell, Idaho, a Disciple mother of a gay son, broke silence and called all Disciples to name the reality that LGBTQ+ and affirming persons are our sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, parents, congregants, pastors and staff. 

Sparked by that moment, a small group of gay and lesbian Disciples began to coalesce. The first—secret—meeting was held at the St. Louis, Missouri, General Assembly in 1979. The meeting was held away from the Assembly site and those who gathered only used first names. For eight years, meetings continued. At a pre-assembly event in October 1987, in Louisville, Kentucky, the organization was named: the Gay, Lesbian, and Affirming Disciples Alliance.

We acknowledge that language and identity are ever-evolving—and so is our ministry. The name GLAD Alliance was bold and daring in 1987, but less inclusive than the mission and ministry pursued. Then, the organization sought a title that intentionally named the four aspects of our community that have historically joined together: L, G, B, and T. But title that left room for growth. Leaders adopted “The Disciples LGBTQ+ Alliance” in 2017 to represent an expansive community represented by a range of initialisms. 

Q claims our pride in the face of oppression and Q includes those who do not claim the binaries or boxes of L, G, B, and T.

+ reminds us that there will always be yet another neighbor to include.

+ reminds us that we cannot do our ministry without affirming friends and allies.

+ reminds us that we cannot do our ministry without the individuals and groups who also find themselves in the margins.

AllianceQ is our moniker. We are a member-based organization and every body is invited to be part of our movement for wholeness. We are setting a place at the table for every body.

OUR RELATIONSHIP TO THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

While AllianceQ is not a general ministry of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), we covenant with the denomination to recognize the changing context of congregational life and ministry and seek a wider embrace of persons of all gender expressions and sexual identities. The 2013 General Assembly meeting in Orlando passed a resolution stating that the Church welcomes all, and for the first time, included sexual orientation as an identity that should not be denied the radical welcome of Christ and Christ’s church. The 2019 General Assembly meeting in Des Moines passed a resolution inviting the whole church to educate itself about transgender and gender-diverse persons.  

The identity statement of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) says: “We are Disciples of Christ, a movement for wholeness in a fragmented world. As part of the one body of Christ, we welcome all to the Lord’s Table as God has welcomed us.” And so we celebrate our identity as Disciples.

TIMELINE

1977

The General Assembly supported the civil rights of gay and lesbian people (GA-7747) and Carol Blakley gave her moving speech in support of her gay son, stirring the beginnings of affirmation

1979

General Assembly agreed that “The ordination of persons who engage in homosexual practices is not in accord with God’s will…”

The first (secret) meeting of gay and lesbian Disciples

1981

First Disciples ordinations of openly gay or lesbian persons  Christine Leslie ordained by University Christian Church, Berkely, CA

Debra Peevey ordained by Lafayette Christian Church, Lafayette, CA

1985

Peace rally and march at Des Moines General Assembly

1986

Findlay Street Christian Church in Seattle became first congregation to openly affirm the membership and full participation of gays and lesbians

1987

First newsletter, Crossbeams, published in January, edited by Allen V. Harris.

Organization formed and named in October, GLAD: the Gay, Lesbian, and Affirming Disciples

1989

GLAD had a visible presence at the Indiana General Assembly with two booths in the exhibit hall, an interest group and after session, an informal dinner and ad hoc choir; a banner read, “The Body of Christ is Living with AIDS” and GLAD held an AIDS prayer service

First “rumblings” about permission given to GLAD to have booths in the exhibit hall and the use of the Disciples chalice on a logo

1990

Controversy grew as visibility grew

1991

Michael Kinnamon, a public ally, was not elected General Minister and President; the only time in the history of the DOC that a GMP nomination was not confirmed by the Assembly 

Open + Affirming Ministries Program officially created by Laurie Rudel and Allen V. Harris as co-developers

Historic ordination and call of the first openly gay Disciples minister Rev. Allen V. Harris

1992

GLAD Alliance, Inc. incorporated in Indiana on March 18

1993

About 80 GLAD members participated in the March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian and Bi Equal Rights

Dr. Richard Hamm, public ally, was elected as General Minister and President

1997

Disciples Justice Action Network formed with Randy Palmer representing GLAD

The GA called for “Reflection on the Participation of Gay and Lesbian Persons in the Life of the Church” (GA-9719)

1998

40 ministries had declared themselves to be open to and affirming of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people

2005

The GA “denounces all forms of spiritual and physical violence against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons” (GA-0517)

2009

First edition of Building an Inclusive Church Toolkit formally published

2013

GA-1327, “Becoming a People of Grace and Welcome to All”

2014

19 ministries added to the Open + Affirming Ministry Program, including the first primarily African American congregation to join (Liberation Christian Church, St. Louis, MO) and the first Disciples seminary to join (Brite Divinity School, Ft. Worth, TX).

First Canadian congregation, Sugarbush Christian Church in Guelph, Ontario, joins the O+A movement

2015

GLAD doubles its membership at the General Assembly, 561 members, largest to date

2017

GLAD renamed The Disciples LGBTQ+ Alliance with the moniker AllianceQ

2019

GA-1929, “An Invitation to Education for Welcoming and Receiving the Gifts of Transgender and Gender-Diverse People”

2020

Expanded programming with Colors of Hope podcast

Adapted BIC training to a virtual presentation during the COVID-19 pandemic

Hosted first annual virtual Pride worship service, RIOT: Turning Over Tables

Established the Salt and Light Endowment Fund with a major gift from Eugene Brink and his estate

2021

Designed a Virtual Pulpit Supply (VPS) program

Exceeded a $30,000 fundraiser goal honoring the 30th anniversary of the historic ordination and call of the first openly gay Disciples minister Rev. Allen V. Harris

Produced the Being Brave Together: Facing Brokenness video series with Disciples Justice Ministries

Revised the mission and vision and identified values and organizational priorities

2022

Published Colors of Hope: A Devotional Journal from LGBTQ+ Christians

Hosted the first annual Colors of Hope Retreat

2023

Launched Community Groups

Hosted first annual Transgender Day of Visibility Vigil with ecumenical partners

TIMELINE

1977

The General Assembly supported the civil rights of gay and lesbian people (GA-7747) and Carol Blakley gave her moving speech in support of her gay son, stirring the beginnings of affirmation

1979

General Assembly agreed that “The ordination of persons who engage in homosexual practices is not in accord with God’s will…”

The first (secret) meeting of gay and lesbian Disciples

1981

First Disciples ordinations of openly gay or lesbian persons  Christine Leslie ordained by University Christian Church, Berkely, CA

Debra Peevey ordained by Lafayette Christian Church, Lafayette, CA

1985

Peace rally and march at Des Moines General Assembly

1986

Findlay Street Christian Church in Seattle became first congregation to openly affirm the membership and full participation of gays and lesbians

1987

First newsletter, Crossbeams, published in January, edited by Allen V. Harris.

Organization formed and named in October, GLAD: the Gay, Lesbian, and Affirming Disciples

1989

GLAD had a visible presence at the Indiana General Assembly with two booths in the exhibit hall, an interest group and after session, an informal dinner and ad hoc choir; a banner read, “The Body of Christ is Living with AIDS” and GLAD held an AIDS prayer service

First “rumblings” about permission given to GLAD to have booths in the exhibit hall and the use of the Disciples chalice on a logo

1990

Controversy grew as visibility grew

1991

Michael Kinnamon, a public ally, was not elected General Minister and President; the only time in the history of the DOC that a GMP nomination was not confirmed by the Assembly 

Open + Affirming Ministries Program officially created by Laurie Rudel and Allen V. Harris as co-developers

Historic ordination and call of the first openly gay Disciples minister Rev. Allen V. Harris

1992

GLAD Alliance, Inc. incorporated in Indiana on March 18

1993

About 80 GLAD members participated in the March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian and Bi Equal Rights

Dr. Richard Hamm, public ally, was elected as General Minister and President

1997

Disciples Justice Action Network formed with Randy Palmer representing GLAD

The GA called for “Reflection on the Participation of Gay and Lesbian Persons in the Life of the Church” (GA-9719)

1998

40 ministries had declared themselves to be open to and affirming of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people

2005

The GA “denounces all forms of spiritual and physical violence against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons” (GA-0517)

2009

First edition of Building an Inclusive Church Toolkit formally published

2013

GA-1327, “Becoming a People of Grace and Welcome to All”

2014

19 ministries added to the Open + Affirming Ministry Program, including the first primarily African American congregation to join (Liberation Christian Church, St. Louis, MO) and the first Disciples seminary to join (Brite Divinity School, Ft. Worth, TX).

First Canadian congregation, Sugarbush Christian Church in Guelph, Ontario, joins the O+A movement

2015

GLAD doubles its membership at the General Assembly, 561 members, largest to date

2017

GLAD renamed The Disciples LGBTQ+ Alliance with the moniker AllianceQ

2019

GA-1929, “An Invitation to Education for Welcoming and Receiving the Gifts of Transgender and Gender-Diverse People”

2020

Expanded programming with Colors of Hope podcast

Adapted BIC training to a virtual presentation during the COVID-19 pandemic

Hosted first annual virtual Pride worship service, RIOT: Turning Over Tables

Established the Salt and Light Endowment Fund with a major gift from Eugene Brink and his estate

2021

Designed a Virtual Pulpit Supply (VPS) program

Exceeded a $30,000 fundraiser goal honoring the 30th anniversary of the historic ordination and call of the first openly gay Disciples minister Rev. Allen V. Harris

Produced the Being Brave Together: Facing Brokenness video series with Disciples Justice Ministries

Revised the mission and vision and identified values and organizational priorities

2022

Published Colors of Hope: A Devotional Journal from LGBTQ+ Christians

Hosted the first annual Colors of Hope Retreat

2023

Launched Community Groups

Hosted first annual Transgender Day of Visibility Vigil with ecumenical partners