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- From: eshepard@orion.oac.uci.edu (Ed Shepard)
- Subject: Re: Homosexuality and Christianity
- Nntp-Posting-Host: orion.oac.uci.edu
- Message-ID: <eshepard.721949754@orion.oac.uci.edu>
- Newsgroups: soc.motss
- Lines: 245
- References: <1992Nov11.182815.8566@spdcc.com>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 21:38:09 GMT
-
- Hi,
- Here is an article published in a local gay newsletter.
- Hope it helps those who want to know more about this issue.
-
-
-
- There are no homosexuals in the Bible.
-
- Ruth and Naomi were no lesbians. David and Jonathan weren't gay.
- Neither were Jesus and John, the men of Sodom, cult prostitutes,
- slave boys and their masters, nor call boys and their customers.
-
-
-
- THE BIBLE IS AN EMPTY CLOSET
-
-
-
- "The issues about Homosexuality are very complex and are not understood
- by most members of the Christian Church," according to Bernard Ramm of
- The American Baptist Seminary of the West. This evangelical
- authority on biblical interpretation says that, "To them, it is a vile
- form of sexual perversion condemned in both the Old and New Testaments."
- But as Calvin Theological Seminary Old Testament scholar
- Marten H. Woudstra says: "There is nothing in the Old Testament that
- corresponds to Homosexuality as we understand it today" and as
- SMU New Testament scholar Victor Paul Fumish says: "There is no text on
- homosexual orientation in the Bible." Says Robin Scroggs of Union Seminary:
- "Biblical judgments against Homosexuality are not relevant to today's debate.
- They should no longer be used . . . not because the Bible is not authoritative,
- but simply because it does not address the issues involved. . . . No single
- New Testament author considers [Homosexuality] important enough to write his
- own sentence about it." Evangelical theologian Helmut Thielicke states:
- "Homosexuality . . . can be discussed at all only in the framework of that
- freedom which is given to us by the insight that even the New Testament does
- not provide us with an evident, normative dictum with regard to this question.
- Even the kind of question which we have arrived at . . . must for purely
- historical reasons be alien to the New Testament."
- Ideas and understandings of sexuality have changed greatly over the
- centuries. People in biblical times did not share our knowledge of
- customs of sexuality; we do not share their experience. In those days there
- was no romantic dating as we know it today; marriages were arranged by fathers.
- The ancients, as MlT's David Halperin notes: "conceived of 'sexuality'
- in non-sexual terms: What was fundamental to their experience of sex was not
- anything _we_ would regard as essentially sexual: rather, it was something
- essentially social --- namely, the modality of power relations that informed
- and structured the sexual act." In the ancient world, sex was "not
- intrinsically relational or collaborative in character; it is, further, a
- deeply polarizing experience: It serves to divide, to classify, and to
- distribute its participants into distinct and radically dissimilar categories.
- Sex possesses this valence, apparently because it is conceived to center
- essentially on, and to define itself around, an asymmetrical gesture, that of
- the penetration of the body of one person by the body, and, specifically, by
- the phallus of another. The proper targets of [a citizen's] sexual desire
- include, specifically, women, boys, foreigners, and slaves --- all of them
- persons who do not enjoy the same legal and political rights and privileges
- that he does." In studies of sex in history, Stanford classics professor John
- Winkler warns against "reading contemporary concerns and politics into texts
- and artifacts removed from their social context." This, of course, is a basic
- principle of biblical hermeneutics. In spite of all of this, some preachers
- continue to use certain Bible verses to clobber lesbians and gay men today.
- Let's take a closer look at these texts.
-
-
- GENESIS 1:27
-
- "God created people in His own image. In the image of God he created them;
- He created male and female."
-
- This text celebrates God's deliberate and equal creation of persons who are
- male and persons who are female. Such a sense of equal creation was not typical
- in the ancient world. According to Eastern Baptist Seminary professor Douglas
- J. Miller: "Crude natural law ideas are . . . read into . . . the early
- chapters of Genesis....This view [supports] the 'physicalist' ethical model
- upon which heterosexism is built....This view of creation is based upon the
- obvious anachronism of reading 13th century definitions of nature into ancient
- Hebrew texts." Those who use Genesis 1:27 against homosexuals should note
- Paul's statement in Galatians 3:28 in which he is emphatic that there is now
- no theological significance to the heterosexual pair "male and female."
- According to evangelical Pauline scholar F. F. Bruce: "Paul states the
- basic principle here; if restrictions on it are found elsewhere . . . they
- are to be understood in relation to Galatians 3:28, and not vice versa."
-
-
-
- GENESIS 19 (cf. 18:20)
-
- The story of Sodom and Lot's duty of hospitality to his guests.
-
- According to evangelical Bible scholar William Brownlee: "'sodomy' (so-called)
- in Genesis is basically oppression of the weak and helpless; and the oppression
- of the stranger is the basic element of Genesis 19:1-9." Yale's John Boswell
- notes that "Sodom is used as a symbol of evil in dozens of places [in the Bible]
- but not in a single instance is the sin of the Sodomites specified as Homo-
- sexuality." Listen to the prophet Ezekiel (16:48-49) on the sin of Sodom:
- "As I live, says the Lord God, . . . This was the sin of your sister city of
- Sodom: she and her suburbs had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease,
- but did not help or encourage the poor and needy. They were arrogant and this
- was abominable in my eyes." (Cf. Matthew 10:15) The men of Sodom tried to
- dominate the strangers at Lot's house by subjecting them to sexual abuse.
- Such attempted gang-rape is about humiliation and violence, not same-sex
- affection.
-
-
- DEUTERONOMY 23:17-18
-
- "You shall not lie with men as with woman: it is abomination."
-
- "Abomination" (TO'EBAH) is a technical cultic term for what is ritually unclean,
- such as mixed cloth, pork, and intercourse with menstruating women. It's not
- about a moral or ethical issue. This Holiness Code (chapters 17 - 26)
- proscribes men "lying the lyings of women." Such mixing of sex roles was thought
- to be polluting. But both Jesus and Paul rejected all such ritual distinctions
- (cf. Mark 7:17-23; Romans 14:14,20). The Fundamentalist Journal admits that this
- Code condemns "idolatrous practices" and "ceremonial uncleaness" and concludes:
- "We are not bound by these commands today."
-
-
- LEVITICUS 18:22 (20:13)
-
- "There shall be no female cult prostitute of the daughters of Israel nor
- a male cult prostitute of the sons of Israel."
-
- These terms, KEDESHA and KADESH, literally mean "holy" or "sacred." There is no
- Hebrew derivative of the word "Sodom" in this passage; the King James Bible
- supplied it erroneously. The Hebrew words here are references to the "holy"
- female and eunuch priest-prostitutes of the Canaanite fertility cults, of which
- Israel was to have no part. Moreover, Louisville Presbyterian Seminary Bible
- scholar George R. Edwards notes that "No prophet uses the noun for male cult
- prostitute or discusses the activity such a person pursued. The prophets, in
- fact, are as silent on the subject of homosexual acts as is the whole tradition
- of the New Testament teaching of Jesus. This is," he says, "a very significant
- silence."
-
-
- ROMANS 1:26-27
-
- Pagan "women exchange natural use for unnatural and also the [pagan] men,
- leaving the natural use of women, lust in their desire for each other, males
- working shame with males, and receiving within themselves the penalty of
- their error."
-
- Furnish gives us perspective in turning to the writings of Paul. "Since Paul
- offered no direct teaching to his own churches on the subject of homosexual
- conduct," says Furnish, "his letters certainly cannot yield any specific
- answers to the questions being faced in the modern church.... For Paul neither
- homosexual practice nor heterosexual promiscuity nor any other specific vice is
- identified as such with 'sin.' In his view the fundamental sin from which all
- particular evils derive is idolatry, worshiping what is created rather than the
- Creator, be that a wooden idol, an ideology, a religious system, or some
- particular moral code."
- In Romans 1, Paul is ridiculing pagan religious rebellion, saying that the
- pagans knew God but worshiped idols instead of God. To build his case, which
- he'll turn against judgmental Jews in chapter 2 --- he refers to typical
- practices of the fertility cults involving sex among priestesses and between
- men and eunuch prostitutes such as served Aphrodite at Corinth, from where he
- was writing this letter to the Romans. Their self-castration rites resulted in
- a bodily "penalty." Catherine Krueger comments in the Journal of the Evangelical
- Theological Society that "Men wore veils and long hair as signs of their
- dedication to the god, while women used the unveiling and shorn hair to
- indicate their devotion. Men masqueraded as women, and in a rare vase painting
- from Corinth a woman is dressed in satyr pants equipped with the male organ.
- Thus she dances before Dionysus, a deity who had been raised as a girl and was
- himself called male-female and 'sham man.'" Krueger continues: "The sex
- exchange that characterized the cults of such great goddesses as Cybele
- [Aphrodite, Ishtar, etc.] the Syrian goddess, and Artemis of Ephesus was more
- grisly. Males voluntarily castrated themselves and assumed women's garments.
- A relief from Rome shows a high priest of Cybele. The castrated priest wears
- veil, necklaces, earrings and feminine dress. He is considered to have
- exchanged his sexual identity and to have become a she-priest." As such, these
- religious prostitutes would engage in same-sex orgies in the pagan temples all
- along the coasts of Paul's missionary journeys. "Paul's conception of
- Homosexuality," as Thielicke points out, "was one which was affected by the
- intellectual atmosphere surrounding the struggle with Greek paganism." Says
- Scroggs: "The illustrations are secondary to [Paul's] basic theological
- structure" (Cf 3:22b-23, Paul's own summary), and Furnish adds: "homosexual
- practice as such is not the topic under discussion." Doesn't what Paul says in
- the beginning of Romans better describe these pagan orgies he meant to
- ridicule than it does the mutual love and support in the domestic life of
- lesbian and gay male couples today?
-
-
- I CORINTHIANS 6:9 & TIMOTHY 1:10
-
- Paul's reference to malakoi and arsenokoitai.
-
- Evangelical New Testament scholar Gordon D. Fee of Regent College says that
- these two terms are "difficult." The Fundamentalist journal admits: "These
- words are difficult to translate." Of arsenokoitai, Fee says: "This is
- its first appearance in preserved literature, and subsequent authors are
- reluctant to use it, especially when describing homosexual activity." Scroggs
- explains that "Paul is thinking only about pederasty, . . . There was no other
- form of male Homosexuality in the Greco-Roman world which could come to mind."
- Ancient sources indicate that the malakoi were "effeminate call boys." Though
- Paul seems to have coined arsenokoitai, it refers, perhaps, to the call boys'
- customers, although nobody knows for sure. Paul's main point, however, is
- clear: Christians who slander and sue each other in pagan courts are just as
- shameful as robbers, drunkards, the greedy, and the malakoi and arsenokoitai
- (whatever they were). The other kind of pederasty in Paul's day was that of the
- slave "pet boys" who were sexually exploited by adult male owners. The desired
- boys were prepubescent or at least without beards so that they seemed like
- females. These men had wives for dowries, procreation and the rearing of heirs.
- They had "pet boys" for sex - hardly the picture of gay relationships today.
- The Bible is an empty closet. It has nothing specific to say about
- Homosexuality as such. But the Bible has plenty to say about God's grace to
- all people and God's call to justice and mercy. Jesus summarized God's law in
- these words of scripture: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart
- and with all your soul and with all your mind . . . [and] you shall love your
- neighbor as yourself." (Matthew 22:37-39).
-
-
- SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER STUDY:
-
- John Boswell "Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality"
- (University of Chicago, 1980);
-
- George R. Edwards "Gay/Lesbian Liberation : A Biblical Perspective"
- (Pilgrim, 1984);
-
- Victor Paul "Furnish The Moral Teaching of Paul"
- (Rev. ed. Abingdon, 1985);
-
- David M. Halperin, John J. Winkler, Froma I. Zeitlin (Eds.) "Before Sexuality:
- The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World"
- (Princeton, 1989);
-
- David M. Halperin "One Hundred Years of Homosexuality and Other Essays on
- Greek Love" (Routledge, 1990);
-
- Donald J. Miller and Robert E. Romanelli, "Heterosexism and the Golden Rule,"
- Journal of Gay & Lesbian Psychotherapy, 1 (4) 1991;
-
- Robin Scroggs "The New Testament and Homosexuality"
- (Fortress, 1983);
-
- John J. Winkler "The Constraints of Desire. The Anthropology of Sex and Gender
- in Ancient Greece" (Routledge, 1990).
-
- If you would like to learn more, write to Dr. Ralph Blair, 311 E. 72 Street,
- New York, NY 10021. He is the founder of Evangelicals Concerned, a national
- organization dedicated to assisting lesbian and gay men and churches better
- understand Homosexuality and the good news of God's grace and peace. Dr. Blair
- is the editor of a quarterly literature review on religion and Homosexuality
- which will be sent to you free upon request.
-
-