Thursday, July 1, 2010

"I Hugged a Man in his Underwear!"

 No, not me...I should be so lucky.

A post-Pride post.  This brought tears and hope to this old soul. I know nothing about the Marin Foundation, but to me, it seems they are on the right path.
I hugged a man in his underwear. I think Jesus would have too.

I spent the day at Chicago’s Pride Parade. Some friends and I, with The Marin Foundation, wore shirts with “I’m Sorry” written on it. We had signs that said, “I’m sorry that Christians judge you,” “I’m sorry the way churches have treated you,” “I used to be a bible-banging homophobe, sorry.” We wanted to be an alternative Christian voice from the protesters that were there speaking hate into megaphones.

What I loved most about the day is when people “got it.” I loved watching people’s faces as they saw our shirts, read the signs, and looked back at us. Responses were incredible. Some people blew us kisses, some hugged us, some screamed thank you. A couple ladies walked up and said we were the best thing they had seen all day. I wish I had counted how many people hugged me. One guy in particular softly said, “Well, I forgive you.”

Watching people recognize our apology brought me to tears many times. It was reconciliation personified.

My favorite though was a gentleman who was dancing on a float. He was dressed solely in white underwear and had a pack of abs like no one else. As he was dancing on the float, he noticed us and jokingly yelled, “What are you sorry for? It’s pride!” I pointed to our signs and watched him read them.

Then it clicked.

Then he got it.

He stopped dancing. He looked at all of us standing there. A look of utter seriousness came across his face. And as the float passed us he jumped off of it and ran towards us. In all his sweaty beautiful abs of steal, he hugged me and whispered, “thank you.”

Before I had even let go, another guy ran up to me, kissed me on the cheek, and gave me the biggest bear hug ever. I almost had the wind knocked out of me; it was one of those hugs.

This is why I do what I do. This is why I will continue to do what I do. Reconciliation was personified. 

Read the whole piece. You will not be disappointed. The rest is HERE.

And so it goes.
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5 comments:

  1. That's powerful. Thanks for posting this one!

    ReplyDelete
  2. You have inspired me to hug as many men in underwear I can find this weekend. bi

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's always nice when people come to their senses!

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  4. I saw this article myself and was very moved. Thanks for sharing and spreading the word that there are those people of faith who get it.

    ReplyDelete

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