Outrage Magazine Voices The Only Online Filipino Gayzine
Inside Outrage Magazine
Pride Manila Chorus

Gay Gene
Rev. Michael Angelo A. Sotero
Metropolitan Community Church-Metro Baguio

Reclaiming Equal Rights
By Mike dela Cruz
PUBLISHED: DECEMBER 2009

Rev. Myke Sotero, MCCMB

 
  Zest Magazine

Now as the pastor, “keeping the flock together is a challenge faced by any pastor. Being an open house church, people just come and go. Many have other priorities in their career (though I’m okay with that),” he identifies as a challenge for MCCMB, adding that there is also the problem of finding financial sources, so that “my partner and I rely on our personal money for the needs of the church during our regular worship services.  I have opened my home for this purpose but members find it inaccessible and impractical to attend MCCMB services due to the distance of my home from the city’s Central Business District.”

Slowly, but surely, the church has been growing, though.

Rev. Myke Sotero, MCCMB  

“I was hesitant to come out upon entering the seminary. I kept the nature of my ministry to myself and tried to test the waters (to check) how my co-seminarians would react when they learn that I’m with a gay church. Although I’m aware that the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP), which manages the seminary I was in, possesses many progressive minds, half of it is still conservative. A gay seminarian may send the institution panicking, (and I may) get kicked out from their halls," Myke Sotero recalls.

 
Rev. Myke Sotero, MCCMB  
   

“Being a relatively young congregation, the biggest achievement that I could think of is the successful conclusion of the Baguio Pride Week, where MCCMB took an active part in organizing and sponsoring an ecumenical Pride mass before the parade,” says Myke, recalling that the gathering “was also the day I was installed officially as MCCMB’s interim pastor.”

Myke is now also an active member of the Baguio Pride Network (BPN), which the MCCMB is part of. The BPN is the broadest LGBT network in the city which spearheads the annual LGBT Pride activity in Baguio City.
“I’ve have become more spiritual now that I’m a pastor than before I joined the MCC. It helped me in my understanding of the Scriptures and critical of all the things I learned from my Catholic faith. The experience had been liberating for me. I’m free of the blind dogmas and beliefs now that I learned of God’s unconditional and universal love for all His children,” Myke says.

The LGBT community, says Myke, still has a lot to do.  There’s the “division and politics of the LGBT community, (which) I frown upon.  It is like a slap on our own faces,” he says.  Still, “I am inspired by the uniqueness and free-spirited people in it. We’re not afraid to speak our minds out and we have a way of saying it with a touch of class and sophistication.”

Among the key issues he believes the LGBT community has to focus on are: equal rights, HIV-AIDS, and hate crimes. “The LGBTQIA community needs to claim its rights denied to us for so long. We are not asking for special privileges but just affirming the same rights accorded to the straight community, e.g. marriage rights; we should also focus on the campaign for HIV and AIDS awareness as gay men are vulnerable to the disease, and an increasing number of gay men are contracting the virus due to unsafe sexual practices; and with hate crimes (increasing), we should do all we can to help in the campaign to put an end to hate, fueled by wrong Christian doctrines and homophobia.”

Myke adds: “The MCC ministry is in itself an advocacy to unite the community of LGBT religious to fight for their rights as members of society. It reassures the community that God’s love for them is universal and unconditional, dispelling the common belief that being gay is sinful. The MCC offers a sanctuary for the LGBTs if they feel alienated by their church’s intolerance of people who are different. We preach the theology of love, inclusion and ecumenism and everyone is welcome to build a lasting relationship with God without changing their sexual preference. And with love, we could overcome hate, homophobia and bigotry in our society.”

 
1 | 2
   
 
Zest Magazine
 
Inside Outrage
 
OTHER ARTICLES - ON THE MOVE
 
Inside Outrage Mag

Copyright © 2009 re:define Publishing