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Personal Statement: Pride Month

I recognise the month of June as Pride Month and stand proudly alongside my brothers and sisters in the LGBTQ+ community. For me, Pride is more than a celebration; it’s an opportunity to affirm the dignity, worth, and humanity of people who have too often faced prejudice, exclusion, or misunderstanding. It’s a reminder that every person deserves to be treated with kindness, respect, and compassion, regardless of their sexual orientation, gender identity, background, faith, ethnicity, or life experience.

Throughout my life, I’ve come to believe that our shared humanity is far more important than the labels that can sometimes divide us. We may not all see every issue in exactly the same way, but we can choose to listen, to learn, and to treat one another with grace. A healthy and caring community is built not on uniformity, but on mutual respect and a commitment to ensuring that everyone feels valued and welcomed.

This website and my social media accounts are safe and inclusive spaces where people from all walks of life can engage in conversation, share experiences, and explore ideas without fear of hostility or discrimination. I want them to be places where marginalised voices are heard, where differences are respected, and where empathy is encouraged. This commitment extends not only to the LGBTQ+ community, but also to all those who have experienced exclusion or disadvantage in any form.

At the heart of this statement is a simple conviction: we’re all human, and every human being deserves respect, dignity, and the opportunity to flourish. During Pride Month, and throughout the year, I remain committed to that principle.

Embracing Christian Unity

There’s a quiet urgency in Paul’s appeal to the church in Corinth (1 Corinthians 1:10-18), a voice that still reaches tenderly and truthfully into our own divided moment. “I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another in what you say and that there be no divisions among you.” He isn’t asking for bland uniformity, he’s inviting a scattered people to gather their lives around one living centre, shaped by grace rather than rivalry. The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity calls us to hear that invitation anew, not as a burden, but as a gift.

We recognise the ache of fractured witness because we live with it. We’ve heard the labels, “I follow Paul,” “I follow Apollos,” “I follow Cephas,” or their quieter modern equivalents that reveal themselves in loyalties, assumptions, and subtle pride. Paul’s piercing question still stands before us, “Is Christ divided?” The answer remains no, yet our habits can suggest otherwise. Unity doesn’t mean pretending our differences don’t exist, it means choosing, again and again, to let Christ be at the centre rather than our preferences.

Paul gently, firmly, draws our gaze to the Cross, that holy place where all human boasting is undone. For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. Here, at this strange intersection of suffering and love, we discover the true ground of our oneness. We’re not united by style, politics, or tradition, but by shared surrender and shared hope.

This week becomes a practice of turning towards one another with humility. It’s a time to listen more deeply, to bless more readily, to notice the grace of God alive in communities not our own. Unity grows quietly, in prayers whispered for neighbouring churches, in conversations softened by kindness, in the courage to believe that the Spirit is still at work, patiently weaving us together.

May we remember that our oneness isn’t something we manufacture. It’s a gift we receive with gratitude, tend with care, and live out with joy, for the sake of Christ and for the healing of the world.