1. Homosexuality in the
Church - A New Situation
Israelite-Jewish traditions, together with an almost unanimous
Christian voice, have for millenia judged homosexual behavior to
be contrary to the will of God, and destructive to human
community. At times they did so against pervasive cultural trends
in societies where homosexuality was an accepted practice, at
other times they succeeded in molding public attitudes and social
mores and laws. The situation today is radically different. The
Gay/Lesbian campaign for public recognition of homosexuality as a
morally and legally legitimate lifestyle has not only made deep
inroads into the media and into cultural institutions, but it has
produced an advocacy in the Church which calls for a new
reformation in which homosexuality is affirmed as a Christian
form of life, demanded by the Gospel and infused with God's
spirit.
Some examples can illustrate the new situation. In a statement of
January 22-23, 1993, the Synod of the Northeast expressed the
belief that the Presbyterian Church USA "should repent its
already identified sin of homophobia" implying in this statement
that the church's opposition to homosexuality, which had informed
christian teaching and practice for centuries, was not only
wrong, but sinful. At the same period, in one of our student
publications at Princeton Theological Seminary, issue after issue
contained letters by students who said they were coming out of
the closet, that they had found homosexuality to be a gift of God
which they were celebrating with thanksgiving, and that they were
charging anybody who would question their sexual orientation with
hypocrisy and with disobedience to the spirit of the Gospel,
which offers God's all-inclusive grace to everyone without
distinction. The debate has reached the point at which the
defense of the traditional stance of the church regarding
homosexuality is declared morally reprehensible. A group
organized in January 1995 which calls itself "Semper Reformanda"
identifies advocacy for the Gay/Lesbian movement with the pursuit
of justice which is mandated by the Gospel. The group's founder
stated in a telephone interview their concern for justice and
peace: "whether it be justice on behalf of women or other
marginalized people - gay and lesbian people. It's part of our
obedience to Jesus Christ to bring justice in the life of the
world, and that that's an essential part of the mission of the
church" (The Presbyterian Outlook, July 10, 1995, p. 3). With all
due respect to fellow Christians who hold different opinions, it
has become impossible to avoid the problem whether a
self-assertive and open homosexual lifestyle is a form of
confessing and living the Gospel, whether it is a denial of the
Gospel, or whether it is a neutral question which has nothing to
do with the Gospel one way or another.
2. Unambiguous Biblical Condemnations of Homosexuality
There is virtual agreement among all who participate today in the
homosexuality debate that Old and New Testament contain some
unequivocal condemnations of homosexual practice. These sentences
are:
"You shall not lie with a male as with a woman: it is an
abomination" (Lev 18:22).
"If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have
committed an abomination: they shall be put to death: their blood
is upon them" (Lev 20:13).
"God gave them up to degrading passions. Their women exchanged
natural intercourse for unnatural, and in the same way also the
men, giving up natural intercourse with women, were consumed with
passion for one another. Men committed shameless acts with men
and received in their own persons the due penalty for their
error" (Rom 1:26-27).
"Do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of
God? Do not be deceived! Fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, male
prostitutes, sodomites, thieves, the greedy, drunkards, revilers,
robbers - none of these will inherit the kingdom of God" (1 Cor
6:9-10).
The condemnation of the law applies for those "who kill their
father or mother, for murderers, fornicators, sodomites, slave
traders, liars, perjurers" ( 1 Tim 1:9-10).
It is debated which precise social behavior is meant by
"male-prostitutes" and "sodomites" in the last two quotes but it
is not controversial that they include homogenital
activity.
Other passages in Old and New Testament are often understood to
incriminate homosexuality also: the gang-rapes told in Gen
19:1-11 and Judg 19-21 may not see the homosexuality involved in
the narratives to be the crime deserving punishment, although
Jude 7 is evidence that in New Testament times the story of Sodom
and Gomorrah was read as prime illustration of "sexual
immorality" and "unnatural lust". We will omit discussion of any
ambiguous passages.
3. The Ethos of Human Sexuality in the Bible
The few unambiguous condemnations of homosexuality in the Bible
are surrounded by a fairly broad stream of texts which speak of a
very high evaluation of human sexuality. There is an ethos of
sexual life in Old and New Testament which must not be left out
of consideration when the issue of homosexuality is discussed.
The terribly dark shadow cast over homosexual activity in the
Bible can only be understood as the contrast of the great light
which is shed on the creation of male and female which elicits
the judgment "very good" by its Creator (Gen 1:31). It is my
contention that a great many discussions of the issue of Gay and
Lesbian claims in relation to the Biblical message suffer from
the virtual isolation of this problem from the positive sexual
ethos in Scripture. We shall, therefore, first sketch this
positive ethos which is the necessary backdrop for the Biblical
judgments of homosexuality.
There are four passages in the New Testament which deal with
important aspects of the relation between men and women by
appealing to the creation stories in Gen 1 and 2. The four
passages are: Mark 10:2-9 and Matthew 19:3-9; 1 Corinthians
6:12-20; 1 Corinthians 11:2-16; Ephesians 5:21-33.
a) Mark 10:2-9 and Matthew 19:3-9: Pharisees challenge Jesus with
the question whether it is lawful for a man to divorce his wife.
Jesus' answer goes over the head of Mosaic legislation back to
the creation stories. He says, "from the beginning of creation
`God made them male and female' (Gen 1:27). `For this reason a
man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife,
and the two shall become one flesh'" (Gen 2:24). Jesus' answer
recalls an order of sexuality older and more pristine than later
law. "From the beginning" alludes not only to a distant past but
to the bedrock of human sexuality as God's creation. The drive
which causes a man to leave behind his old family unit to form
with his wife a new union of life (Gen 2:24) is grounded in an
antecedent act of divine creation, the calling into being of a
single human being in the two different forms of male and female
(Gen 1:27). As God's creation there is only one human being who
exists in two separate, distinct, and different forms of male and
female; and vice versa, they are in their separateness,
distinction, and difference one single human being. In this
simultaneous oneness and duality, male and female together are
the image of God, receive the blessing of God and the
unrestricted approval of their Creator to be "very good" (Gen
1:28, 31).
b) In 1 Cor 6:12-20 Paul has to contend with a group in the
Christian community that considers it perfectly legitimate for a
man to hire the services of a prostitute. Paul's uncompromising
"no" to prostitution is, again, grounded in an appeal to the
creation of Adam and Eve: "Do you not know that whoever is united
to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For it is said, `The
two shall be one flesh' (Gen 2:24). But anyone united to the Lord
becomes one spirit with him" (v. 16). In contrast to the
Corinthian party which considers genital activity to be a purely
biological function, comparable to the digestive process (v. 13),
Paul argues with the creation narrative that the physical union
of a man and a woman establishes a bond in which their very
selves, their personhood are involved, analogous to the bond
between a member of Christ and the Lord himself.
c) 1 Corinthians 11:2-16. This section deals with a question of
hair-style and head-dress during communal worship. The
circumstances addressed in this passage are obscure and all
reconstructions are hypothetical. I follow one such hypothesis
which sees the issue in an attempt of some Corinthian women to
pray and prophecy in public worship (v. 4) in a manner
demonstrating that the difference between male and female is done
away with if one lives in the Spirit of God. Therefore, they cut
their hair in a fashion usual for men and they discard a
head-dress identifying them as women. Paul argues for a retention
of the custom, not in order to endorse a hair-style and a
dress-fashion, but to counter the claim that the difference
between male and female is no longer valid in the new creation.
To that end he appeals extensively to the creation story: Man
brings glory to God, as the female brings glory to the male (v. 7
alluding to Gen 1:27); woman was made from man and in order to
complement man who, without woman, would be utterly alone and
helpless (vs. 7-8, referring to Gen 2:18-24), but man and woman
are co-dependent on each other, woman coming out of man but man
also coming out of woman (vs. 11-12). The point of the argument
is the insistence that faith in Christ, the new being in God's
spirit, does not eliminate God's good creation of human life in
the essential difference of male and female.
d) Ephesians 5:21-33 goes as far as to say that the love and care
which husbands and wives exercise for each other are a mystery
which embodies in the form of actual, mundane history the
transcendent love and care which unite Christ and his Church. And
again this is said to give final validity to God's creation of
male and female as partners because "for this reason a man shall
leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the
two shall become one." (Eph 5:31 citing Gen 2:24).
The mystery of seeing in the union of an earthly marriage,
understood as the unity of two who are essentially different, an
image of the union of Christ and the Church, picks up on the
frequent use of marriage metaphors for the relation which unites
God and God's people both in Old and New Testament. For the
prophet Hosea, the infidelity of Israel toward her god is
expressed in the image of a divorce: God as husband is divorced
from Israel as wife (Hosea 1-3). The very marriage of the prophet
is to be an enactment of the loathsome union between a faithful
husband and a faithless wife as the palpable earthly reflection
of the history through which God suffers with his people, and the
restoration of God's covenant with Israel is presented as a new
betrothal (Hosea 2:16-20). Jeremiah compares the positive
relation of Yahweh and Israel's youth in the wilderness to the
devotion and love of a bride to her bridegroom (Jer 2:2) and
Ezekiel likens God's totally unmerited mercy toward Israel to the
rescue of an abandoned baby girl by a man, and their subsequent
marriage (Ezek 16 and in different form and expanded to two women
in Ezek 23). The New Testament has inherited, expanded, and
enriched this imagery. Paul can say that he has betrothed the
Corinthian Christian community to Christ as a chaste virgin to
her one husband (2 Cor 11:2). The new heaven and the new earth in
Rev 21 are cast into the picture of the coming down from heaven
of a new Jerusalem as the bride of Christ. In Jesus' parables and
sayings, the image of the wedding feast is used to describe the
arrival of the kingdom of God in the world. Jesus's coming is the
entry of the bridegroom at the wedding feast (Mark 2:19). People
invited to enter into the kingdom of God are presented as guests
invited to the nuptials of the King's son (Matt 22:1-10), and the
story of the virgins, (Matt 25:1-13) uses the same imagery.
Of course, in all these texts, in Old and New Testament alike,
the figures of bride and bridegroom, husband and wife, of wedding
feast and wedding guests, together with their negatives
faithlessness, divorce, and harlotry are images. We are dealing
with metaphors, similes, parables which are not directly
identified with the reality to which they refer. But this
cautionary sentence must, at the same time, be put positively.
The sexual images, metaphors, similes, and parables in Old and
New Testaments have the power to express in words a truth which
without these words would forever remain mute and unknown. The
language of God and God's people as bridegroom and bride, as
husband and wife, is creative in the extreme. It calls into being
a vista in which the existence of a marriage, and in it the
confirmation of the prior dignity of human life in the polarity
of male and female, is elevated to become a reflection of the
wonders of God's relationship with us, of God's fidelity to us,
of God's destiny for us. This produces an ethic in which human
sexuality is enabled to be an imprint of God's covenant with his
people. But this ethic is predicated on the unalterable polarity
of male and female. In the covenant God remains forever clearly
and unalterably distinct from us as our creator, as our Lord, and
as our redeemer. The union between God and humans in the covenant
is a bond between two clearly and eternally distinct partners.
Exactly for this reason can God's covenant with the world be
mirrored and expressed only through a human bond in which the
unity of the partners preserves and honors the essential polarity
between them.
4. Homosexuality in Rom 1:26-27
Homosexuality is not much of a problem in Old and New Testament.
The positive ethos of the divine creation of the human as male
and female is so strong that only a few and isolated judgments of
homosexual practices are needed. Only at one point has the issue
been drawn into a theological argumentation, but at that point
homogenital practice becomes no less than the showcase for the
ills of a world which has rejected the knowledge and praise of
God the Creator. The passage is Rom 1:26-27 and, here again, the
appeal to the creation story in Gen 1 and 2 is crucial.
Rom 1:18-3:20 offers a long indictment of human failing which
leads to the conclusion that, in the light of the revelation of
God's power of salvation in the Gospel (1:16-17), no human being
is justified by their own accomplishments in God's sight (3:20).
The opening section, 1:18-32, deals with Gentile religion and
morality. Gentile religion is foolishness (1:22) because it
imagines God in the likeness of created beings (1:23). The first
lie of idolatry is immediately followed by moral degradation.
"Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to
impurity, to the degrading of their bodies among themselves"
(1:24). Religion and ethics belong together, but for Paul they
are yoked in a way that ethics is outcome and consequence of
religion. In the case of Gentile religion the primal error of
substituting the honor of the immortal and invisible God with
images of creation is followed by its necessary consequence in
the degradation of morality. The very showpiece of this moral
degradation is homosexual activity (1:26-27).
The indictment of homosexuality in Rom 1:26-27 is linked to the
preceding argument against idolatry through the repetition of the
word "exchange" which is used three times. Paul states, first of
all, as a general principle the Jewish conviction that Gentile
religion is corrupt because it substitutes ("exchanges") the
glory of God for the veneration of images of mortal beings.
Gentile religion "exchanged the glory of the immortal God for
images resembling a mortal human being or birds or four-footed
animals or reptiles" (1:23). The sequence "human being, birds,
four-footed animals and reptiles" echoes Gen 1:26 which says that
the human being will have dominion over the fish of the sea, over
the birds of the air, over the cattle, and over the reptiles. The
appeal to Gen 1:26 serves Paul to emphasize that in the fatal
substitute of the true God for images, the human being idolizes
the very animals which in the story of creation were to be
subject to human dominion.
The first "exchange" of legitimate for illegitimate worship is
followed by a second in which the moral implications are also
introduced. Gentiles "exchanged the truth about God for a lie and
worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator" (1:25)
which is the reason that God gives them up to their own desire
leading to the degrading of their bodies (1:24). The phrase
"degrading of their bodies" in the second mention of the
"exchange" is not specific. In the third step involving the
"exchange", however, the specificity is palpable: "Women
exchanged natural intercourse for unnatural, and in the same way
also the men, giving up natural intercourse with women, were
consumed with passion for one another" (1:26-27). Paul uses words
for "men" (arsenes) and "women" (thleiai) in these verses which
are otherwise not used in his letters (except in Gal 3:28). The
words derive from the vocabulary of the creation story in Gen
1:27 where the one human being (anthropos) is said to exist in
the form of the union of two, male and female (arsen kai thly).
The three uses of the phrase "exchange" coordinate idolatrous
religion and homosexual activity. Idolatrous religion substitutes
the worship of the only true God for objects unworthy of
veneration, and homosexuality substitutes the relationship
established by the Creator with a relationship that has no
foundation in God's creation. There is a precise analogy between
the exchange of the Creator for creatures, and the exchange of
the Creator's act in ordaining the union of male and female for
the union of members of the same sex.
5. The Modern Debate about Bible and Homosexuality
The unambiguous condemnation of homosexual practice in some
Biblical passages is not disputed today. But its implications for
modern Christian ethics, and for the practice of pastoral care
and the ordinances of the churches, is sharply controversial. I
conclude by offering some theses about Biblical teaching on
homosexuality in the modern context.
a) Homosexuality and the Sexual Ethos of the Bible
It is a fundamental mistake, in my view, to discuss Biblical
statements on homosexuality in isolation from the positive ethos
of human sexuality in Scripture. As bits and pieces of Old
Testament legislation, and of Jewish heritage in the New
Testament, the sparse references to homosexuality could well be
attributed to the social conditions of a distant past. But seen
against the foil of the extremely high valuation given to the
counterpoint of maleness and femaleness in God's creation in the
Bible, the sole attribution to time-bound modes of social norms
cannot be maintained. On the background of the positive ethos of
human sexuality in Old and New Testament, homosexuality becomes
inescapably a denial of the goodness of God's creation.
b) Love-Ethic and Sexual Ethos
It is said in the debate today that the New Testament insists on
an ethic of love to which everything else is subordinate. Love
embodying the Gospel, it is argued, breaks down legalistic
barriers and reaches out particularly to the disadvantaged and
the oppressed. The validity of this insistence must be recognized
without reservation. But it does not at all follow from it that
Christian ethical thought, and ethical practice, must be
restricted to the bare injunction to love without consideration
of the concrete forms of exercising love which correspond to the
Gospel. Love is the fulfillment of the law, but this love is not
without its embodiment in actual concrete areas of human life.
"Love is the fulfilling of the law" ... but this love fans out
into the concrete forms of commandments "you shall not commit
adultery; you shall not murder; you shall not steal; your shall
not covet" (Rom 13:9-10). Neither Old nor New Testament assume
that human common sense, or a natural goodness of moral
sensibilities, lead everybody to a universal understanding of
what it means to love. Rather, love must be thought through and
practiced in accordance with the act and word of God in which
love receives its distinctive form. And in this context - it must
be stated with unambiguous harshness - sexual relations between
male and female are not comparable in kind or in value to
relations between same-sex partners. Heterosexual unions are an
emanation of God's creation: homosexual unions practice the
denial of it.
c) Call for a New Reformation
The modern dispute about homosexuality in the Church has produced
the argument that we must be open to changes. The history of the
Church demonstrates that it is necessary, from time to time, to
re-evaluate time-honored traditions and to alter accustomed
positions. It is often said that the abolition of slavery and the
recognition of women as fully equal partners with men are issues
in which Bible-supported positions had to be given up. Against
this claim it must be kept in mind that, first, nowhere in Old or
New Testament is it indicated that being a member of a given
race, or being a woman, is in conflict with being a part of God's
good creation, but homosexuality is said to be in that conflict.
And, second, while both slavery and a patriarchal society are
presuppositions in much Biblical literature, they are
counterbalanced by other aspects of Biblical teaching which have
been used successfully by advocates of the abolition of slavery
and of women's rights; but no such counterbalance exists in the
Bible concerning homosexuality. In regard to homosexual activity
there is no Biblical evidence which might soften the unambiguous
stand adopted in the Bible.
d) Homophobia versus Heterophobia
Defenders of the heterosexual norm today find themselves accused
with regularity of homophobia, an attitude that has lately been
elevated to the rank of a deadly sin. But the overused word
"homophobia" has caused a blindness to a whole set of other
factors in our society which could well be characterized as
heterophobia. There is among us a spirit, and very much so in the
midst of our Christian communities, which makes men and women
distrustful and antagonistic toward each other. Males advocate
"male bonding" as their recipe for salvation and women seek
refuge in the idea of a "women's church" in which a special
feminist theology based on genuinely feminine experiences ought
to be established. There is, in my assessment, a massive outbreak
of heterophobia among us today, and the cry for the recognition
of homosexuality in the church is one manifestation of it. One
illustration, a quote from a statement by Kate Millett in 1970:
"Women's liberation and homosexual liberation are both struggling
toward a common goal: a society free from defining and
categorizing people by virtue of gender and/or sexual preference.
`Lesbianism' is a label used as a psychic weapon to keep women
locked into their male-defined `feminine role'. The essence of
that role is that a woman is defined in terms of her relationship
to men. A woman is called lesbian when she functions
autonomously. Women's autonomy is what women's liberation is all
about." (From Mary A. Kassian, The Feminist Gospel, Wheaton:
Crossway Books, 1992, pp. 84f.)
e) Grace and Forgiveness
It is said very often today that the exclusion of homosexual
practices from permissible forms of sexual activity in the church
amounts to a contradiction of the free and unmerited grace of
God, and constitutes therefore a denial of the all-inclusive
claims of the gospel. But the dynamics of New Testament ethics
drive toward the sanctification of human life, not to the
indiscriminate approval of any form of conduct. Why have all New
Testament authors, who are after all the very origin and source
for our knowledge of God's mercy and grace, insisted that there
are necessary boundaries to Christian freedom outside of which
freedom turns into enslavement? The Jesus who turns to sinful
people is also the great healer who restores sick life to health
and as the healer he has also instructed his community with a
conduct becoming to discipleship. None of us can claim freedom
from sin, and none of us has the right to hurl condemnations at
sinners as though he or she had any ground for faith but the
sheer mercy of God. But the healing community of the great healer
would abandon the mission if it did not diagnose sickness for
what it is, and call for the rejuvenation, indeed the
regeneration, of life in the discipline of faith.
f) Modern Psychosexual Theory and the Bible
A point often made in the modern debate about homosexuality in
the Church is the observation that Old and New Testament had no
knowledge of the difference between a homosexual orientation and
homosexual acts engaged in by heterosexually oriented people. The
observation is correct but it misses the point for two reasons.
First, Paul in Rom 1:26-27 does not speak of individual Gentile
life- stories but of a dominant orientation, which establishes a
characteristic pattern for a whole community. Comparable would be
the dominance of the theory of the superiority of Aryan people
over German history between 1933 and 1945. Without the domination
of that racial theory German history in that period cannot be
understood. But that does not mean that all individual Germans
during that period adopted the Aryan theory. Second, the notion
of sexual orientation, or sexual preference, is based on the
individualistic idea that sexuality is determined by personal
inclination or choice: what individual desire dictates is the
decisive norm for sexual conduct. Biblical sexual ethos is
irreconcilable with this individualistic approach. The Biblical
view of human sexuality as the union between male and female
posits a relationship with all its consequences as the core of
sexual relations. Part of these consequences is the lifelong
acceptance of the gift and the challenge of the other, the
procreation and rearing of children and the care for the family.
All of that involves that human sexuality is, as God's creation
of male and female, bound up with community and, therefore, with
unselfish service, with discipline, and with the will to
subordinate individual desires, including sexual urges, to the
well-being of others.
g) Ordination and Civil Rights
The ordination of a person to the Ministry of Word and Sacrament
is not a civil right. Therefore, the question of the ordination
of self-affirming and practicing homosexual persons cannot be
made a civil rights issue. The Church reserves the right to
establish requirements for ordination, which have nothing to do
with civil rights. One such requirement is the achievement of a
theological degree as a prerequisite of ordination. The setting
of a boundary, which excludes some persons from ordination, is,
for that reason, no infringement of a civil right.
h) The Grace of God and Homosexuality
The prohibition of the ordination of self-affirming and
practicing homosexual persons is not tantamount to their
exclusion from the Christian community. Christian congregations
are communities in which sinners of all different kinds are
invited to receive forgiveness, healing, and purpose. I have
myself knowingly and willingly handed out the bread and wine of
communion to persons whom I knew to be homosexuals. I have every
intention to continue that practice. Ministers of the Church have
no right to restrict the grace of God. But that does not mean
that the ministry of the Church endorses the attempt of the
Gay/Lesbian movement to promote homosexual practices as an
alternative life-style. The grace of God is the power, which
makes creative choices possible, which affirm life as God's
creation. Far from eliminating human responsibility, it is the
free grace of God, which alone enables heterosexual and
homosexual sinners to make decisions in favor of life. That
includes homosexual persons who, by the grace of God, can find
new avenues of personal choices through which they can enrich the
life of the Christian community in ways possible only for
them.
(Copyright:2002. Probe Ministries)
Ulrich Mauser, educated in Germany and Professor of New Testament
at Princeton Seminary, has taught at three theological schools
during his career, serving as academic dean at one of them. All
along he has focused on the meaning of the scriptures for what we
actually believe and do as a people of faith. His books and
articles focus not on texts by themselves but on their
theological meaning, often in relation to real world issues. His
most recent book, for instance, is The Gospel of Peace: A
Scriptural Message For Today's World. During the last two years,
Professor Mauser has joined some of his colleagues at Princeton
to issue public statements on burning issues in the church: one
of these focused on the ordination of homosexuals. He is not the
sort of Bible scholar who hides in the library.
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