Coming out as Parents: You and Your Homosexual Child

Paperback
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Author: David K. Switzer

ISBN-10: 0664256368

ISBN-13: 9780664256364

Category: General & Miscellaneous Religion

This complete revision of Parents of the Homosexual helps parents understand their feelings and reactions to the knowledge that their child is a homosexual. Suitable for counselors and clergy too.

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How do parents respond to the knowledge that their child is gay or lesbian? David Switzer, in a complete revision of his best-selling Parents of the Homosexual, helps parents understand their feelings and reactions to that knowledge and clarifies what it means to be homosexual. He explores recent scientific, social, and biblical information about homosexuality, emphasizes the need for reconciliation, and deals with common parental responses to a child's disclosure. He also provides a listing of additional resources for further assistance. This book is for parents of gay or lesbian children as well as for pastoral counselors and clergy engaged in family outreach. Children, too, can benefit as well, from understanding their parents' struggles with this issue. Library Journal When gay men and lesbians decide to tell their parents of their sexuality, they have probably already made many trips to the library and (one hopes) found many up-to-date resources on gay sexuality, history, and health. But too often parents find themselves with a severe information deficiency on receiving the news. These two books address the topic of homosexuality specifically for parents of gay children. Beyond Acceptance is the better book. The authors enthusiastically endorse P-FLAG (Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) as central to their counseling, effectively re-create typical meeting discussions that address the outrage, fears, and emotional distress many parents feel when a child comes out. Libraries that already have a previous edition of Beyond Acceptance (LJ 5/1/86) should consider buying this revised edition, which has an additional chapter on AIDS among other updates. Switzer, a theologian and counselor who has assisted many men and women in coming to terms with their sexuality and also has ministered to many parents of gays, aims his book at religiously conservative parents. He argues that sexual orientation is neither the parent's nor the child's fault; and, if parents must see their gay child as a trial of faith, love and Christian compassion rather than condemnation and hatred should be their response. Switzer uses biblical references throughout to placate and comfort even the angriest of parents. Both books are recommended. All public libraries need a copy of Beyond Acceptance, and libraries serving more conservative communities should consider Coming Out as Parents.A. Arro Smith, San Marcos P.L., Tex.

PrefaceviiIntroduction11.Oh, No!62.We've Lost Our Child133.Is Our Child Really Gay?264.Where Does the Fault Belong?395.Where Did We Go Wrong?456.If Our Child Only Loved Us497.What Will People Think?548.What Causes Homosexuality Anyway?629.But Doesn't the Bible Condemn It?7110.What Does Our Child Want of Us?87Notes96Additional Resources98

\ Library JournalWhen gay men and lesbians decide to tell their parents of their sexuality, they have probably already made many trips to the library and (one hopes) found many up-to-date resources on gay sexuality, history, and health. But too often parents find themselves with a severe information deficiency on receiving the news. These two books address the topic of homosexuality specifically for parents of gay children. Beyond Acceptance is the better book. The authors enthusiastically endorse P-FLAG (Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) as central to their counseling, effectively re-create typical meeting discussions that address the outrage, fears, and emotional distress many parents feel when a child comes out. Libraries that already have a previous edition of Beyond Acceptance (LJ 5/1/86) should consider buying this revised edition, which has an additional chapter on AIDS among other updates. Switzer, a theologian and counselor who has assisted many men and women in coming to terms with their sexuality and also has ministered to many parents of gays, aims his book at religiously conservative parents. He argues that sexual orientation is neither the parent's nor the child's fault; and, if parents must see their gay child as a trial of faith, love and Christian compassion rather than condemnation and hatred should be their response. Switzer uses biblical references throughout to placate and comfort even the angriest of parents. Both books are recommended. All public libraries need a copy of Beyond Acceptance, and libraries serving more conservative communities should consider Coming Out as Parents.A. Arro Smith, San Marcos P.L., Tex.\ \