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Escaping God's Closet: The Revelations of a Queer Priest
 
 
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Escaping God's Closet: The Revelations of a Queer Priest [Hardcover]

Bernard Duncan Mayes (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

March 2001

He survived a turbulent childhood in war-torn London, earned degrees with honors from Cambridge University, was ordained in the Church of England, became an Anglican worker-priest, and emigrated to the United States.

He has been a prolific broadcaster for the BBC, helped organize the Public Broadcasting System in America, was a founding chairman of National Public Radio, and became a senior management consultant for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

He designed and directed the first system of suicide and crisis counseling centers in California (a model for later centers nationwide) and helped found the Parsonage, an Episcopalian ministry on behalf of gay rights in the Castro section of San Francisco. And all the while, Bernard Duncan Mayes struggled to reconcile his views on sexuality--and his experience as a gay man--with his theological and cultural beliefs.

In an entirely honest and engaging voice, Mayes offers considerably more than autobiographical recollections of his life as priest, journalist, university teacher and administrator, and gay rights activist. Throughout Escaping God's Closet, Bernard Mayes recounts how social and doctrinal oppression posed fundamental challenges to his own belief system, but led him to revelations about sexuality, Christianity, and the nature of human existence itself.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

This fascinating memoir by a gay British priest begins in London in 1929, when Bernard Mayes emerged from his heavily sedated mother, and, according to the practice of the day, was sequestered by doctors for a month, returning to her sickly and fretful. By turns political, confessional, and spiritual, Mayes's tale is entertaining and well written. Coming of age during the rise of Nazism in Europe, he began having affairs with boyhood chums, then moved on to seminary where the "pad, pad, pad of feet and the rustle of cassocks down the ever-creaking corridors during the night was not always evidence of devoted meditations." A gay priest in a culture where love "is damnably suppressed, denied, and hidden ... to please intellectual tyrants claiming to speak for God," Mayes eventually helped found a small congregation of like-minded gay and lesbian Christians in the Castro district of San Francisco, in the years just before the outbreak of AIDS.

All the elements of a blockbuster movie are here--sex, oppression, and the Sturm und Drang of romance--set against a wider historical backdrop. Mayes's introspective retelling of his journey--from his staid Anglican roots, to a tour of the American South at the height of the civil rights movement, and finally to the gay mecca of San Francisco--should resonate with anyone who appreciates the ways in which history is both made and reflected in our private lives.--Jack Connolly

From Publishers Weekly

Halfway through his memoir, Mayes picks up a young man on the street in San Francisco and only barely escapes being murdered: "I did not thank God. His role in this was clearly ambivalent and my rage grew. Why should natural acts of flirting and sexual ecstasy... always be under the threat of violent death?" But the occasional homophobic violence Mayes encountered in his quest for a life that fulfilled his spiritual and erotic needs is small measure next to his growth as a person and in his ministry. Born in Britain in 1929 and drafted into the army at age 20, Mayes studied to be an Anglo-Catholic priest although he knew he was attracted to men. Committed to social justice work and a member of the worker-priest movement, he also began writing for the BBC as a religious and social commentator. After being offered a job with the celebrated Judson Church in Greenwich Village in 1958, Mayes relocated and within two years moved again to San Francisco, where in 1961 he created the first suicide hotline in the United States, and where he continues to be a BBC commentator on U.S. culture. San Francisco also offered a whole new sexual world. Mayes writes movingly of his erotic adventures at the baths, of the S&M and drag cultures and of his newly forming theology of sexuality: "The principle of unity is no where better expressed than in passions of sexual intercourse." Honest, forthright and written with a literary bent that does not sidestep the more difficult questions of sexuality, theology, sin and personal redemption, Mayes's memoir is an important addition to the literature of gay liberation and religion as well as frank look into contemporary San Francisco's gay history and mores.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 301 pages
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press (March 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813920043
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813920047
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,666,840 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A sweeping book, March 17, 2002
This review is from: Escaping God's Closet: The Revelations of a Queer Priest (Hardcover)
Bernard Mayes is a visionary. Escaping God's Closet is a book of startling scale, as it is more than an autobiography. It's a thesis on what existence means, with Mayes's life presented as the evidence. Everything is connected, we are all mutually interdependent...and we must all escape "God's closet" in order to form the ties that bind and ultimately help us to survive.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I survived the previous century and we have entered another. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
suicidal people, gay people
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Francisco, New York, United States, House Church, Robert Newman, Second World War, Washington Square, Bailey Piers, Church of England, Koinonia Farm, Los Angeles, Greenwich Village, Harvey Milk, Life Force, Thomas Jefferson, Tribal Radio, White House, First World War, John Williams, Langley Field, Nathan Shaw, Polk Gulch, Private Mayes, American South, Camera Two
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