Guide to the Ralph Carter Papers
Open for research.
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Materials marked “Digital” in the Collection Inventory may not be available on Pearl or in their entirety.
Ralph Campbell Carter, Jr. grew up in Chipley, Florida. His family was active in the First Presbyterian Church of Chipley. He served as a Youth Advisory Delegate from the Florida Presbytery to the 116th General Assembly (GA) of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS) in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in 1976. At that time, he wondered if he was the only gay Presbyterian in his denomination. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial Engineering in 1979 from Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. During his sophomore year, he attended Druid Hills Presbyterian Church on Sunday mornings and discovered the newly formed First Metropolitan Community Church that met Sunday evenings. He attended evening worship and Bible study with gay people at First Metropolitan, where he was offered the opportunity to explore the seven known anti-gay “clobber” passages with gay-affirming challenges to traditional interpretations.
In 1979, Carter moved to Rochester, New York and began working for the Xerox Corporation where he would spend the rest of his working career. He started as an Associate Industrial Engineer for two years and steadily progressed upwards to hold various positions until his retirement in September 2018. In 1991, he received a Master of Science degree in Manufacturing Systems from Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York.
After moving to Rochester, Carter started attending a joint Dignity (Roman Catholic) and Integrity (Episcopal) weekly gathering for LGBTQIA+ people. It was at a Dignity-Integrity meeting that he met his soon-to-be partner, Van Van Zanten, a member of Calvary St. Andrews Parish (Episcopal-Presbyterian). Carter also attended a monthly potluck supper sponsored by the Genesee Valley chapter of Presbyterians for Gay Concerns (PGC). He soon discovered Rochester's Third Presbyterian Church, a tall-tower church. He became a member in the fall of 1979. At the PGC gatherings, he learned that several group members were upset that the 1978 United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. (UPCUSA) GA completely overturned the recommendation from the two-year undertaking of its Task Force to Study Homosexuality, which focused on whether to ordain practicing homosexuals. The task force's majority report/statement, a recommendation to reaffirm the historic power of sessions and presbyteries to decide who to ordain, was rejected. Instead, the GA voted to approve the minority statement, which offered “Definitive Guidance” that homosexuals may not be ordained to any of the offices of the church. In response to the actions of the 1978 GA, the West-Park Presbyterian Church in New York City adopted a statement opposing the actions of the 1978 GA and specifically welcomed LGBTQIA+ people to full membership. Other churches followed suit. In 1979, PGC decided to call these congregations More Light Churches. By the end of 1980, there were 13 More Light Churches nationally, and four of them were in Rochester.
Carter learned that prior to his move to Rochester in 1979, the PGC chapter had identified and visited several congregations to speak with their sessions, including Downtown United, John Calvin, Third Presbyterian Church, Calvary St. Andrews, Twelve Corners, Westminster, and a few others. Each congregation was invited to formally welcome lesbian and gay members and to join other like-minded congregations around the country as More Light Churches. Third Presbyterian Church had committed to respond to the PGC (which was renamed Presbyterians for Lesbian/Gay Concerns [PLGC]) by spring 1980.
Meanwhile, the Associate for Mission for the Genesee Valley Presbytery attended the PLGC chapter meeting in early 1980 to encourage the group to apply for mission project funding for the lesbian/gay community. From this evolved a Presbytery-funded project from 1981 to 1988: CREATE*: Justice for Lesbian/Gay Persons, an ecumenical LGBT civil rights advocacy network in Upstate New York. The proposal required the group to report to the Presbytery every six months. As the time approached for the first such report, one of the ministers in the group indicated he would lead a discussion regarding Scripture if another person would share a personal story. In order to ethically share his coming out story to Presbytery, Carter felt obliged to first come out to the four pastors of his Third Presbyterian Church congregation. All four accepted him.
In order to address Third Presbyterian Church’s 1979 commitment to PLGC to make the congregation more welcoming to lesbians and gays, the Session secretly authorized an undisclosed study group to consider issues of human sexuality from 1981 to 1982, specifically homosexuality, teenage sexuality, older adult sexuality, abortion and divorce. The person who agreed to chair the study group did so with the condition that a gay person be included in the group to assure some modicum of authentic consideration. Since Carter had come out to the pastoral staff by this time, he was invited to join the study group.
Carter gradually came out formally to the Third Presbyterian Church study group. The group convinced the Session to offer a Theologian-in-Residence weekend on the topic of human sexuality for the congregation. Reverend Dr. Peggy Way of Vanderbilt Theological Seminary led the congregation in a weekend conversation about issues of human sexuality, from which two primary issues emerged: homosexuality and divorce. The Sunday following Peggy Way’s visit, during the debrief meeting with interested congregants, two task groups formed: one related to support for families experiencing divorce, and the other on homosexuality. The Task Group on Homosexuality determined that in order for the congregation to fully discuss homosexuality, which could take a long time, a Gay and Lesbian Support Group should be formed for gay/lesbian members of the congregation and their families. The Session authorized the Support Group in 1983, with the understanding that the facilitator would report back to the Session periodically. The Support Group was active for several decades.
For the next several years, the congregation engaged in multiple study series, utilizing materials from PLGC and the increasing number of More Light Churches. In 1986, the Third Presbyterian Church Session authorized a group within the Session to lead internal discussion. The Session scheduled a vote in early 1987 on whether it should declare Third Presbyterian Church a More Light Church. The week prior to the Session’s vote, the Sunday Forum held a gathering. Members were asked for their input prior to the upcoming Session meeting. The next week, on January 13, 1987, the Session voted to adopt a More Light statement and authorized the formation of a More Light Committee of Session to oversee implementation of its commitment.
Carter has served at Third Presbyterian Church, first as an unordained “Deacon Assistant” and then as a Trustee. In 1990, he was included in the slate of Elder nominees to be voted on during the congregational meeting following worship. He was elected and ordained as an Elder in 1990. In August 2012, after 32 years together, Carter and Van Van Zanten were legally married at Third Presbyterian Church, the third same-gender couple to do so. Carter has served at the Presbytery of Genesee Valley as a Council member and as the chair of the Committee on Nominations from 1999-2005 and 2012 to 2018. In addition, he served as chair of the Committee on Nominations for the Synod of the Northeast from 2008 to 2010.
Carter was involved in many aspects of the More Light Movement within the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (PC(USA)) separate from Third Presbyterian Church. Besides his involvement with the Rochester chapter of PLGC starting in 1979, Carter was the first liaison from PLGC National to Presbynet in 1986. He served on the Steering Committee of the More Light Churches Network (MLCN) from its inception in 1992 to mid-1996, and then continued on as Resource Coordinator through 1998 at which point MLCN merged with PLGC to form More Light Presbyterians (MLP). Carter served on the board of MLP for two single terms, 1999 and 2000, and then for four additional three-year terms: Class of 2003, Class of 2008, Class of 2011 and Class of 2016, totaling 14 years of service. For both MLCN and MLP, Carter managed the mailing of information packets from the early 1990s to 2004. He also researched and maintained the MLP lending library of books, videos and study resources from 1999 to 2004. He was presented with MLP’s David Sindt Award at the Welcoming Presbyterians Celebration Dinner on June 26, 2004 at the 216th General Assembly meeting in Richmond, Virginia. In 2013, he served on the MLP Movement Study Task Force.
For a more extensive biographical overview of Ralph Carter, please consult the Index to the Ralph Carter Papers created by Barry Smith. The index is also available in Box 1, Folder 1 of the collection.
The Ralph Carter Papers document the More Light Movement in the Presbyterian Church. This is a movement for full membership and full participation in the Church for persons who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning, intersex, and asexual (LGBTQIA+) including the rights of ordination as deacon, elder, and minister, as well as the right to same gender marriage.
This collection was curated and processed by Barry Smith, the historian at Lincoln Park Presbyterian Church (Chicago, Illinois). The collection chiefly documents Ralph Carter's involvement with a number of organizations advocating for LGBTQIA+ inclusion in the Presbyterian Church. Materials include organizational and programmatic records (correspondence, minutes, publications and printed items, reports, and other records) for Presbyterians for Lesbian/Gay Concerns (PLGC), the More Light Churches Network (MLCN), More Light Presbyterians (MLP), CREATE*: Justice, and That All May Freely Serve (TAMFS). Other materials document Carter's life in Rochester, New York, specifically his involvement in Third Presbyterian Church, including that church's More Light efforts. Additionally, there are audiovisual materials (chiefly audiocassettes) mostly pertaining to the Lazarus Project, Reverend Jane Spahr, and the Fifth More Light Conference.
For a more extensive overview of the collection and the work done to process or add to the material, please consult the Index to the Ralph Carter Papers created by Barry Smith. The index is also available in Box 1, Folder 1 of the collection.
To browse this collection's digital content visit Pearl.
Materials marked “Digital” in the Collection Inventory may not be available on Pearl or in their entirety.
The Presbyterian Historical Society holds additional resources related to this collection:
Researchers should also consult RG 521 (David Sindt Papers) for additional material related to the More Light Movement and LGBTQIA+ inclusion in the Presbyterian Church.
Researchers should also consult RG 548 (More Light Presbyterians Records) for additional material related to More Light Presbyterians.
Researchers should also consult accession no. 19-0604 (Third Presbyterian Church (Rochester, N.Y.) More Light Committee oral history, 18GB; available in Pearl) for additional information related to Ralph Carter and Third Presbyterian Church's More Light work.
Received from Barry Smith in 2023.
After 2016, when Ralph Carter completed his sixth term on the board of More Light Presbyterians (MLP), he donated all his More Light related materials, dating back to the 1980s, to MLP. These were then held by MLP's then Executive Director Alex McNeill. In 2020, McNeill asked Lincoln Park Presbyterian Church's historian, Barry Smith, if he would mind taking possession of these materials to determine if they had any historical value. Smith agreed to review the Ralph Carter Papers, and McNeill delivered four large bins to Smith in 2021. Smith reviewed all the materials, and over several years, organized and indexed them.
Collection processed in 2021-2023 by Barry Smith, Lincoln Park Presbyterian Church Historian. Smith created an extensive index to the Ralph Carter Papers, available here and in Box 1, Folder 1. The index includes Smith's annotations on Carter's papers, his work with processing the collection, and the history of the movement for LGBTQIA+ inclusion in the Presbyterian Church. Parts of the index were edited and uploaded in 2023 to create this online guide by Nicholas Skaggs, Processing Archivist. Collection is part of the Pam Byers Memorial Collection.
Ralph Carter Papers, RG 543, Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Box | Folder | Description | Alternative Formats |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Index to collection; list of deceased More Light Saints, 2023 | Digital |
1 | 2 | Biography; list of oral interviews; photographs (printouts) of Ralph Carter, 2010-2023 | |
1 | 3 | General reference materials (PC(USA), More Light Movement, LGBTQIA+), 1974-2023 | Digital |
1 | 4 | Presbyterians for Lesbian/Gay Concerns (PLGC), 1982-1989 | Digital |
1 | 5 | PLGC, 1990 | |
1 | 6 | PLGC, 1991 | |
1 | 7 | PLGC, 1992 | |
1 | 8 | More Light Churches Network (MLCN), 1992 | |
1 | 9 | PLGC, 1993 | |
1 | 10 | MLCN, 1993 | |
1 | 11 | PLGC, 1994 | |
1 | 12 | MLCN, 1994 | Digital |
1 | 13 | PLGC, 1995 | |
1 | 14 | MLCN, 1995 | |
1 | 15 | PLGC, 1996 | |
1 | 16 | MLCN, 1996 | |
1 | 17 | PLGC, 1997 | Digital |
1 | 18 | MLCN, 1997 | |
1 | 19 | PLGC, 1998 | |
1 | 20 | MLCN, 1998 | |
1 | 21 | More Lights Presbyterians (MLP), 1999 | |
1 | 22 | Forms from churches approving MLP bylaws and joining MLP, 1998-1999 | |
1 | 23-24 | MLP, 2000 | |
1 | 25-26 | MLP, 2001 | |
1 | 27 | MLP - 213th General Assembly (Louisville, Kentucky), 2001 | |
1 | 28-29 | MLP, 2002 | |
1 | 30 | MLP - 214th General Assembly (Columbus, Ohio), 2002 | |
1 | 31 | MLP - Welcoming Churches Project, 2001-2002 | |
1 | 32 | MLP, 2003 | |
2 | 33 | MLP - 215th General Assembly (Denver, Colorado), 2003 | |
2 | 34 | MLP and That All May Freely Serve (TAMFS) - Consultation on collaboration or merger, 2002-2003 | |
2 | 35 | MLP, 2004 | |
2 | 36 | MLP - 216th General Assembly (Richmond, Virginia), 2004 | |
2 | 37 | MLP, 2005 | |
2 | 38 | MLP, 2006 | |
2 | 39 | MLP, 2007 | |
2 | 40 | MLP, 2008 | |
2 | 41 | MLP, 2009 | |
2 | 42 | MLP, 2010 | |
2 | 43 | MLP, 2011 | |
2 | 44 | MLP, 2012 | |
2 | 45 | MLP, 2013 | |
2 | 46 | MLP, 2014 | |
2 | 47 | MLP, 2015 | |
2 | 48 | MLP, 2016-2022 | |
2 | 49 | "Open Hands" magazine - MLCN and MLP ecumenical editions [chiefly printouts of covers], 1993-2002 | |
2 | 50 | MLP - "More Light on..." handouts, circa 1999-2009 | |
2 | 51 | MLCN - More Light resource packets, 1993-1997 | |
2 | 52 | MLCN / MLP - More Light Lending Library, 1995-2005 | |
2 | 53 | Third Presbyterian Church (Rochester, New York) - More Light actions, 1980-2003 | |
2 | 54 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1981 | |
2 | 55 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1982 | |
2 | 56 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1983 | |
2 | 57 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1984 | |
2 | 58 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1985 | |
2 | 59 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1986 | |
2 | 60 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1987 | |
2 | 61 | CREATE*: Justice - Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 1988 | |
2 | 62 | Welcoming Presbyterians in the Genesee Valley (New York) Presbytery, 2000-2005 | |
2 | 63 | That All May Freely Serve (TAMFS) - National, 1993-1998 | |
2 | 64 | TAMFS - National - First National Leadership Conference, 1999 | |
2 | 65 | TAMFS - National, 2000-2002 | |
2 | 66 | TAMFS - National, 2003-2004 | |
2 | 67 | TAMFS - National, 2005-2020 | Digital |
2 | 68 | Photographs - PLGC and MLP Board photographs; Tabernacle United Church activities; Presbyterian Promise activities, circa 1985-2023 | Digital |
2 | 69 | Ralph Carter notes (from meetings and presentations), circa 1980-2003 | |
2 | 70 | "More Light Update" newsletters, 2007-2010 | |
Compact discs (CDs and DVDs) | |||
3 | none | "Three Sisters Lunch," GA, 2003 | |
3 | none | "Great and Mighty Things: Celebrating That All May Freely Serve," undated | |
3 | none | "Hard Wired? The Science of Sexual Orientation," by Doug Nave, distributed by the Covenant Network (updated to 2006), 2002-2006 | |
3 | none | "God's New Family: Stories of More Light Presbyterians," 2008 June | |
Videotapes (VHS) | |||
3 | none | "A Place at the Table: Mt. Auburn Presbyterian Church (Cincinnati, Ohio)," 1995 | |
3 | none | "Can We Just Talk About It: The Church and Homosexuality," featuring Ben Johnson (host), Thomas Pritchard, Walter Brueggemann, Charles Cousar, CTS Press, 1996 | |
3 | none | "Called by God, Denied by Us," by Treyva Estler and the Gay-Lesbian-Straight Affirmation Group of Westminster Presbyterian Church (Des Moines, Iowa), undated | |
3 | none | "Whose Church Is It, Anyway? A Discussion of what role lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people can claim in the institutional church," Albuquerque Public Access Cable TV, as the PC(USA) concluded its 208th GA, Don Schrader (host), Lawrence Reh, Charles Booker-Hirsch, Howard Warren, 1996 July 5 | |
3 | none | "Out of the Silence: A Traveling Reconciliation Play," a project of Witness for Reconciliation, Noe Valley Ministry Presbyterian Church (San Francisco, California), including an enclosure with detailed contents list, 1994 November | |
Audiocassettes - The Lazarus Project (most at West Hollywood Presbyterian Church, Los Angeles, California) | |||
3 | none | "Homophobia - A Pastoral Response," Howard Rice, and "Sex and Spirit: A Theology of Integration," Dorothy Donnelly, Homophobia: Christians Respond, 1981 October | |
3 | none | "Coming to Our Senses," Virginia Ramey Mollenkott, and "Reflections of an Irish Catholic Homosexual," Brian McNaught, 1982 October 23 | |
3 | none | "Lesbian Spirituality," Jane Spahr, and "Churchphobia Conference Questions and Answers," 1982 October 23 | |
3 | none | "Christianity and Social Tolerance," John Boswell, 1983 October 22 | |
3 | none | "How the Church Determines Truth and Morality and its Effect...," 1983 October 22 | |
3 | none | "I. A Special Grace: Gay Christian Role Models," John Boswell, 1984 October 13 | |
3 | none | "II. Traditional Christian Morality and Its Meaning for Untraditional Christians," John Boswell, 1984 October 13 | |
3 | none | "III. The Good, the Bad, the Ugly and the Western Religious Tradition," John Boswell, 1984 October 14 | |
3 | none | "Paul's Condemnation of Sexual Love Relationships Between Women," Bernadette Brooten, and "My Sister, My Spouse: Women-Identified Women in Medieval Christianity," Ann Matter, 1985 November 30 | |
3 | none | "Mary, Myth and Mysticism: The Past Transformation into the Future," Ann Matter, and "The God in Whom I Do Not Believe," Bernadette Brooten, 1985 November 30 | |
3 | none | "The Abandonment of Children," John Boswell, 1986 March 13 | |
Audiocassettes - Fifth More Light Churches Conference | |||
3 | none | "Keynote Address" by Byron Shafer, Friday evening, 1989 April 28 | |
3 | none | "Worship by Roger Wilson and Shafer Keynote Feedback Panel, Q&A," Saturday, 1989 April 29 | |
3 | none | "[First Year] Report on GA Special Committee on Human Sexuality," by Dan Smith, Saturday evening, 1989 April 29 | |
3 | none | "No Less a Gift - A More Light Sermon" by Byron Shaffer [Side B has another recording of the Dan Smith's April 29th GA report], Sunday, 1989 April 30 | |
3 | none | "Of Equal Value" prompting by Byron Shaffer, conclusion of More Light Conference, Sunday, 1989 April 30 | |
Audiocassettes - Jane Spahr (at Downtown United Presbyterian Church) | |||
3 | none | "Janie Spahr [Candidating Sermon]" [two tapes - both appear to be blank], 1991 November 24 | |
3 | none | "Janie Spahr Sermon," after the GA PJC ruled against Janie's call, 1992 November 29 | |
3 | none | "Jane Spahr Comm[issioning] Service," as evangelist for That All May Freely Serve, 1993 March 6 | |
3 | none | "Janie Spahr Sermon," 1993 July 11 | |
Audiocassettes - Miscellaneous (at Downtown United Presbyterian Church) | |||
3 | none | "9:50 [Adult] Class," with Stuart Pollock, Clerk of the Northeast Synod PJC, and W[infred] Clark Chamberlain, member of the GA PJC who discussed the Janie Spahr-Genesee Valley Presbytery case with an emphasis on the polity issues, circa 1992-1993 | |
3 | none | "Sermon: Seeking a Welcome in Inhospitable Times," by Johanna Bos, Downtown United Presbyterian Church, 2000 January 30 | |
3 | none | "Sermon," possibly Mel White, Downtown United Presbyterian Church, 2001 April 22 | |
3 | none | "Downtown United Presbyterian Church Full Service Tape," sermon by John Fife, 2001 November 18 | |
3 | none | "Sermon Tape," Pat Youngdahl at Downtown United Presbyterian Church, starting there as a co-pastor, 2004 June 6 | |
Audiocassettes - Miscellaneous | |||
3 | none | "The Church and Homosexuality," address by Isabel Rogers, and "The Church and Homosexuality: Three Personal Testimonies," distributed by the PCUS, undated | |
3 | none | "Virginia Mollenkott - PLGC Luncheon," and "Q&A from Audience," 197th GA, 1985 | |
3 | none | "AIDS: Can a Compassionate Church Respond? – Part II" by Eugenia Hancock, at the Social Welfare Ministries Conference, PHEWA Biennial, San Antonio, Texas [there is no Part I], 1987 January 27-February 1 | |
3 | none | "Cursing the Blessed Tie," George Edwards, United University Presbyterian Church (Los Angeles, California), 1988 April 23 | |
3 | none | "Worship with Lisa Larges Preaching," Third Presbyterian Church (Rochester, New York), 1996 June 9 | |
3 | none | "Gene Bay's Sermon on Amendment B," presumably at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church (Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania), 1997 April 6 | |
3 | none | "Irene Monroe," at Third Presbyterian Church (Rochester, New York), 2000 June 4 | |
3 | none | "Hudnot Sunday Sermon, Rev. Dr. Laird Stuart Preaching," Third Presbyterian Church (Rochester, New York), 2001 February 25 | |
3 | none | "Westminster Sermon," given at an unidentified More Light Church, 2001 April 29 | |
3 | none | "Cultural and Institutional Violence: LGBT," an unidentified workshop with panelists introduced by Ralph Carter [very poor sound quality], undated | |
Floppy disk | |||
3 | none | Unlabeled, undated | |
Ephemera | |||
3 | none | Ralph Carter's nametag from the 217th GA, 2006 | |
3 | none | TAMFS pendant of the TAMFS/National logo with rainbow neck strap, undated | |
3 | none | Oversize sticker: "All Are Welcome in God's House," distributed by Diane Engster at the TAMFS Rock Stars Conference, 2015 April |