Christianity is the Reason the U.S. is So Homophobic, But Here's How We Can Fix It

Impact

Tortured, beaten, and mutilated with swastikas carved into his body, Daniel Zamudio died on Tuesday March 27 in a hospital in Santiago, Chile for being gay. Thousands of other men and women in Chile suffer the same ordeal because the country does not currently have anti-discrimination laws, and many people in the U.S. experience discrimination against gays as wellJust this week, a high school principal removed a boy from a school-wide competition in Southern California because he made a comment advocating gay marriage. 

While Chile suffers from a lack of laws protecting gay rights, the U.S. suffers from a homophobic culture, which is largely attributable to Christian teaching.

To change this culture, the government should sponsor school programs that teach the Christian religion emphasizes tolerance. This curriculum would allow Christians to continue practicing their religion, while also treating LGBTs with dignity. These kind of programs would reduce homophobic bullying.

Homophobic bullying is often caused by people believing they need to "correct" homosexual behavior through bullying. This tradition stems from many Christians' misinterpretation of the Bible that argues that men and women should have distinct male and female characteristics, respectfully.

This perspective often creates negative views of homosexuality that ends in bullying. Bishop Gene Robinson describes how even non-religious people believe God thinks of homosexuals as abominations. A curriculum that teaches that Christianity values tolerance would change Christians’ misinterpretations away from negative notions of homosexuality.

This kind of program would be covered as a youth development program under the Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families. The most recent statistics show that homophobic and transphobic violence rose 13 percent between 2009 and 2010, and murders of gay people rose 23 percent during the same period. A national curriculum could directly counteract this trend.

Importantly, this kind of class would not not violate U.S. laws enforcing the separation of church and state. This policy would not impose Christianity on other peopleit would simply teach how the Bible actually calls Christians to tolerance.