Department of Sociology, California State University, Chico, Chico, California, USA.
J Homosex. 2010;57(10):1303-33. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2010.517076.
Homosexuality has become a divisive issue in many religions and congregations. Like many other fundamentalist denominations, Jehovah's Witnesses condemns homosexual acts, thoughts, and feelings. Consequently, gay and lesbian Witnesses experience not just stigmatization and conflict between their sexual and religious identities in the social world, but also a nearly impossible task in their inner world. This inner task adds a new facet to our understanding of stigma (Goffman, 1963). This study explores the written narratives of a subset of gay and lesbian former Jehovah's Witnesses who were able to comprehend, negotiate, and, in most cases, resolve their multifaceted stigmas and conflicts through struggle, self-determination, and eventually connecting with networks of peers who faced or are facing similar stigmas. This research contributes to other work on the intersection of religion, family, and homosexuality; in particular, the findings have implications for the study of other strict fundamentalist religions.
同性恋在许多宗教和教派中已经成为一个分裂的问题。像许多其他原教旨主义教派一样,耶和华见证人谴责同性恋行为、思想和感情。因此,同性恋和女同性恋见证人不仅在社会世界中经历了他们的性和宗教身份之间的污名化和冲突,而且在他们的内心世界中也面临几乎不可能完成的任务。这种内心的任务为我们对污名的理解增添了一个新的方面(Goffman,1963)。本研究探讨了一部分同性恋和女同性恋前耶和华见证人的书面叙述,他们能够通过斗争、自我决定理解、协商,并在大多数情况下解决他们多方面的污名和冲突,最终与面临或正在面临类似污名的同龄人网络建立联系。这项研究有助于其他关于宗教、家庭和同性恋交叉问题的研究;特别是,研究结果对其他严格的原教旨主义宗教的研究具有启示意义。