With a focus on mainline Protestants and gay rights activists in
the twentieth century, Heather R. White challenges the usual
picture of perennial adversaries with a new narrative about
America's religious and sexual past. White argues that today's
antigay Christian traditions originated in the 1920s when a group
of liberal Protestants began to incorporate psychiatry and
psychotherapy into Christian teaching. A new therapeutic orthodoxy,
influenced by modern medicine, celebrated heterosexuality as
God-given and advocated a compassionate "cure" for
homosexuality.
White traces the unanticipated consequences as the therapeutic
model, gaining popularity after World War II, spurred mainline
church leaders to take a critical stance toward rampant
antihomosexual discrimination. By the 1960s, a vanguard of clergy
began to advocate for homosexual rights. White highlights the
continued importance of this religious support to the consolidating
gay and lesbian movement. However, the ultimate irony of the
therapeutic orthodoxy's legacy was its adoption, beginning in the
1970s, by the Christian Right, which embraced it as an age-old
tradition to which Americans should return. On a broader level,
White challenges the assumed secularization narrative in LGBT
progress by recovering the forgotten history of liberal
Protestants' role on both sides of the debates over orthodoxy and
sexual identity.