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- <text id=91TT1923>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: Of Church Pews and Bedrooms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 70
- Of Church Pews And Bedrooms
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Richard Brookhiser
- </p>
- <p> The Protestant churches seem obsessed with sex these
- days. Not that their interest in the subject is new. Puritan
- disquisitions on sex were so plainspoken that early 20th century
- editions of them had to be bowdlerized. But the terms of today's
- discussion are revolutionary--not Why do men sin? but Why
- shouldn't they party? Traditional strictures against
- homosexuality, premarital sex (once called fornication), even
- adultery, are up for theological debate. The Presbyterians in
- conclave assembled gave thumbs down to the new morality; the
- Episcopalians gave thumbs sideways; the United Methodist Church
- and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America will not be far
- behind in giving their thumb signals. Bees do it; do Wasps?
- </p>
- <p> Roman Catholics have caught the bug too (as in so many
- other areas, liberal American Catholics find themselves playing
- catch-up with their Protestant soul mates). Their arguments over
- sex are complicated by the fact that the Vatican, the ultimate
- source of authority in their church, is not known for taking its
- cues on matters of discipline from Gallup polls or what it
- hears on Oprah. Or from Protestants.
- </p>
- <p> The obvious secular explanation for this hubbub is that
- America's churches are internalizing the mores of a developed
- society. Once the automobile, the college dorm and the Pill
- became almost universally available, it was inevitable that men
- and women would start their sexual careers earlier and build up
- longer and more varied resumes. It was also inevitable that the
- churches would adjust to the new reality. If that meant
- adjusting traditional interpretations of the Ten Commandments,
- so be it.
- </p>
- <p> Like most obvious secular explanations, this one is
- shallow. American churches don't just passively receive ideas
- from the general culture. They also stimulate them. (Thomas
- Jefferson wrote about the "wall of separation" between church
- and state in a letter to a group of Baptist political allies.)
- If America's pews ring with debate about America's bedrooms,
- that is because the churches have their own reasons for
- grappling with the subject.
- </p>
- <p> What we are witnessing is in fact a clash between two
- earnest and articulated theological impulses. Traditionalists
- and innovators disagree about sex because they disagree about
- the universe, and about God.
- </p>
- <p> Defenders of tradition are often accused of blindly
- upholding the social status quo. That is selling them short.
- Even the most conservative American churches have assailed
- aspects of the status quo, from dueling to saloons to the
- 12-hour workday. Instead the sexual conservatives see themselves
- as defending divinely given guides to human behavior.
- Fundamentalists look for these instructions primarily in
- scripture, such as St. Paul's comments on homosexuality.
- Conservatives who are not fundamentalists can agree that the God
- who made covenants with ancient Israel and with the church wants
- sexuality to be restricted to the covenant of matrimony.
- </p>
- <p> The sexual radicals, on the other hand, are not simply
- looking for divine justifications to make whoopee. They
- represent the latest phase of a 200-year evolution of German and
- American Romantic theology, which sees God not as a transcendent
- Other, giving us texts or examples, but as the ground of our
- being. God, the Romantics believe, is within us; the purpose of
- religion is to enable us to make contact with him (or her). As
- Ralph Waldo Emerson, the Unitarian minister turned essayist and
- lecturer, put it, "That which shows God in me, fortifies me.
- That which shows God out of me, makes me a wart and a wen." A
- century after Emerson, his heirs have decided that
- self-fortification can come through sex--gay or straight,
- married or un-. Today's Romantics say, with Walt Whitman, "God
- comes a loving bedfellow and sleeps at my side all night."
- </p>
- <p> These two positions are not intellectual fashion
- statements that track rises or falls in the incidence of
- sleeping around. Nor are they matters of degree, which can be
- compromised by living and letting live. Their proponents face
- each other across a fissure in philosophical bedrock.
- </p>
- <p> Each side also faces internal contradictions in its own
- position. The question the radicals must answer is, Why are they
- Christians at all? Many radicals argue that the way to religious
- empowerment was pioneered by Jesus as if he were a kind of Kit
- Carson of the soul. But who needs pioneers once the frontier is
- opened? It often seems that the radicals cling to Jesus for the
- sake of the name ID and some pretty 19th century buildings
- erected in his name.
- </p>
- <p> Traditionalists, meanwhile, must realize (and some do)
- that even if they are willing to defy the spirit of the age,
- they cannot ignore it. Churches that tell their flocks to live
- a traditional sexual life, without helping them find
- alternatives to the singles scene or the gay subculture, are
- meeting their responsibilities less than halfway.
- </p>
- <p> Unbelievers have an interest in this religious faction
- fight, if only because so much social policy revolves around sex
- and its consequences. Are America's Christians (still more than
- 85% of the population, according to a recent survey) going to
- order their erotic lives by rules and their inevitable
- accompaniment, guilt? Are they going to order their erotic lives
- at all? Samuel Johnson once contrasted preachers who deplored
- intoxication because it "debases reason, the noblest faculty of
- man," with preachers who warned drinkers that "they may die in
- a fit of drunkenness." (Johnson preferred the preachers who did
- not mince words.) If America gets a generation of preachers who
- boost sex because it gets you close to God, how will that affect
- the number of single-parent families or of AIDS cases?
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the disputants are primarily motivated not by
- policy considerations, but by what they believe to be right.
- That is what makes this fight so all-American, and so angry.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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