Charity Commission says ‘Yes’ to LGBT-affirming Christian network

Open Table means everything to me. It has truly saved me.
— Gail, from Warrington's Open Table community *
THE OPEN TABLE LOGO AND INVITATION TO ‘COME AS YOU ARE’

THE OPEN TABLE LOGO AND INVITATION TO ‘COME AS YOU ARE’

OPEN TABLE NETWORK (OTN), a growing partnership of church communities hosted by and for LGBT people, has just been awarded charitable status.

The first OTN community began 13 years ago because many church congregations do not offer a kind or an honest welcome to people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer or questioning, intersex, and asexual (LGBTQIA).

From a gathering of just six people at St Bride’s Church, Liverpool, in 2008, it became a network in 2015 when other churches asked for help to create safe spaces where LGBTQIA people, their families and friends can feel welcomed and affirmed. In the words of the Open Table Network slogan, to ‘Come as you are’.

There are now 18 OTN communities, supporting hundreds of people a month in England and Wales, with more coming soon.

Leading lights in the movement toward a more inclusive Church have welcomed the growth of OTN, and are delighted by its new charitable status. OTN has the support of seven patrons:                                                                                         

  • Reverend Doctor Barbara Glasson, former President of the British Methodist Conference.

  • Right Reverend Cherry Vann, Bishop of Monmouth, Church in Wales.

  • Reverend John Bell, social justice activist, hymn-writer, Church of Scotland minister.

  • Reverend Doctor John Bradbury, General Secretary, United Reformed Church.

  • Pádraig Ó Tuama, Catholic poet, broadcaster, theologian and peace-maker.

  • Right Reverend Paul Bayes, Anglican Bishop of Liverpool, Co-Chair of the Global Interfaith Commission on LGBT+ Lives.

  • Reverend Doctor Rachel Mann, trans Anglican priest, writer, broadcaster.

The name Open Table emphasises the welcome of each unique, self-governing, non-judgmental community. It is a sign of OTN’s commitment to make everyone ‘more than welcome’.

The network currently supports churches within five Christian traditions to host Open Table communities, in Baptist, Church of England, Church in Wales, Methodist, and United Reformed churches. It will support any inclusive church which shares its Vision, Mission and Values, to recognise the integrity and potential of LGBTQIA+ people.

A recent survey of OTN’s members showed that welcoming LGBTQIA+ people to build community has significantly reduced their social isolation and improved their well-being.

Open Table communities typically meet monthly, within respectful, loving and safeguarding guidelines, welcoming people from any faith who need a spiritual home.

The Right Reverend Cherry Vann, the first lesbian bishop in the Church in Wales, and in a civil partnership, said:

It’s an honour and a privilege to support the LGBTQIA+ community in this way. I know from my own experience how important it is to have safe spaces where we can not only meet together but gather to pray, worship, explore faith and enjoy fellowship with others openly and without fear.

Reverend John Bell, a Church of Scotland minister, said:

Having moved in my life from fearing I was gay to not wanting to be anything other than gay, I’m keen to encourage other people to feel the same way about themselves, and Open Table is a good place to help that to happen.

Trans Anglican priest and writer Canon Rachel Mann, said:

It seems to me that at a time when there is so much hatred, so much violence, increasing anxiety and fear, we need the Open Table Network more than we ever have, because the Open Table Network models God’s abiding, inclusive and wondrous love.

Reverend Doctor John Bradbury, General Secretary of the United Reformed Church, said:

It’s often not easy as LGBTQIA+ folk to find places where we can be welcomed simply as we are and enabled to worship God, live lives of discipleship, witness to Christ’s love and serve within the world. Open Table offers a space where we might do that, as people made in the image of God, as followers of Christ, as those who need to know ourselves as beloved.

Pádraig Ó Tuama, poet, theologian and peacemaker, said:

The Open Table Network is so important because to have a situation where you can walk in knowing that you’ll be met in the fullness of yourself - in the fullness of your sexuality, in the fullness of your story, in the fullness of life, in the fullness of your curiosity about faith, and in the fullness of your interest in being part of a community - all of these things are irreplaceable and vital.

The Right Reverend Paul Bayes, Bishop of Liverpool, said:

We talk a lot about love and inclusion, but what matters most is that people should know what it feels like. It feels like people together. It feels like love and friendship shared. It feels like Open Table.

Reverend Doctor Barbara Glasson, former President of the British Methodist Conference, said:

Open Table is the clue to how the church should be. It should be a table that’s open for all, that all are welcome, and we find there the hospitality of Jesus who opens his arms wide for us and wants us all to be loved and included.

To find out more about OTN, please contact Kieran Bohan, OTN Coordinator.

* Read Gail’s story, and other personal stories from OTN members.