Quotes by Malcolm Boyd
- I have glaucoma, so use eye drops both morning and night.
- I have osteoarthritis, which especially affects my knees.
- Jesus is an example. We have other examples, including many of our ancestors as role models who understood the inner meaning of our orientation.
- Also, I walk and hike in several different nearby parks near our home several early mornings a week.
- I find Jesus my confidant and companion, brother and savior; our relationship is intimate, vulnerable, demanding yet comfortable and reassuring.
- Real answers need to be found in dialogue and interaction and, yes, our shared human condition. This means being open to one another instead of simply fighting to maintain a prescribed position.
- Our essential differences from the norm are both huge and deeply offensive to those among us who wish to be quietly integrated into society without particular reference to our nature.
- Yet through history gays have always dominated religious life and churches.
- Seriously, however, I learn a lot about my physical life in the aging and changing of my body.
- By my definition, prayer is consciously hanging out with God. Being with God in a deliberate way.
- I feel that I communicate best when I am not deliberately being linear. Along this same line, I feel some of the best sermons I've ever heard were in the theatre rather than the pulpit - as, for example, in the Theatre of the Absurd.
- However one might pray - in any verbal way or completely without words - is unimportant to God. What matters is the heart's intent.
- Five days a week I drive from our home to the Episcopal Cathedral Center of Los Angeles where I have an office, my computer, and a wonderful sense of community - especially nurtured by the presence of several younger gay men and women who are good friends.
- But generally I am fine with a capital F; probably in extraordinary shape for a man of my age.
- Entrenched scriptural literalism is, in my opinion, completely out of touch with reality.
- Speaking for myself, my very integrity as a human being needs to include my freedom to explore who I am both spiritually and sexually. Not just to explore - but to practice.