Wednesday, June 17, 2015

The Perspective of One 30-year old Virgin Bachelor on Marriage and Romance in the United States

The first thing that non-Christians who stumble upon this blog need to keep in mind while reading it is that I'm a religious wacko.  I believe that I am occasionally led by God, and that through following this leading, I can partner with God in the good that God is doing in the world (and I believe you can too, but that's another story).  This is the reason I get up in the morning. I am trying to devote my entire life to it.  The only thing that sets me apart from the guys who blow themselves up in public areas is that I believe God is a God of love who wants us to better love each other.  If I sound irrationally radical, please keep this in mind throughout what follows.  I also need to apologize to any readers of this blog for the length of this first post.  I will post much smaller posts in the future, but needed a little more space to properly kick start the discussion on this topic.  Also, you’ll need to read to the end to get my version of a Biblical view of love and marriage.

Anyway, when I graduated from high school, I felt that, for several reasons, God was calling me to celibacy.  I wasn't sure how long this calling would last, but I felt like I should treat it as though it were lifelong until further notice.  It has now been twelve years since I last had a romantic relationship or even went on a serious date.  There have been moments where this has been really hard.  I have had times where I felt very lonely, and very afraid of future loneliness (which is even harder).  I have felt awkward around families.  I have had restless evenings born of the worry that I will someday become unable to care for myself, and have no one who loves me to take care of me.  However, as hard as it has been at times, it hasn't been as hard as many people assume.  Any emotional difficulty always passes.  For the most part, my community and my church have assuaged my fears.  And there is no part of my decision to live a celibate life that I regret for long.[1]

Now, as a 30-year old heterosexual virgin bachelor, much of what I could write on the subject of marriage and romance in our culture can and should be ignored.  However, I do feel like, as much as is possible, I represent something of an outside perspective on this issue, and there are a couple things I have noticed that I would like to add to the broader discussion of the Evangelical community.

For me, the first fomenting of these ideas came from late '07 to late '08 when I was interning with Friends missionaries in Rwanda.  I used to believe that romance was a part of human nature.  As long as men and women existed in the same place, people would get to know each other and fall in love.  However, as I talked with a few young people in Rwanda, I remember being struck with some realities.  First, it was common for young men to reach a point in their lives where they would simply decide that they should be married, find a good candidate, get their parents to arrange things, and settle the deal all in the span of a month or two.  Second, divorce is much less common there.  Third, "love" between partners was hard for them to define (I imagine it often would be for us too).  Some people who I talked to had a sense that it was a friendship, but more often people made a direct correlation between the word “love” and sex.  All in all, Rwandans seem to see marriage as more of a social and economic partnership, than a spiritual and emotional union.  In a society where gender and age prescribe economic role, adult singles pose a significant (for poor families a single adult can be a dangerous) drain on the family economy.  So the western concept of what it means to “fall in love” is not a given in every culture.  It is certainly not in Rwandan culture.

My initial reaction to this realization was one of distaste.  I am embarrassed to admit my misconception that this was simply a way in which African culture was less developed than our North American culture.  I thought that as African Christians read their Bibles more, and allowed the gospel to transform them, their perspective on marriage would become more like ours.  Africans would begin to tell me about the passion of romance.  They would be able to, as we do, write intense emotional poems honoring physical beauty.  They would sing nostalgic songs about tiny romantic gestures.  They would talk about their "soul mates."  I no longer believe that.  

There actually are ways in which I do believe that the gospel will transform marriages in Africa.  For example, there are high levels of domestic violence and inequality in African relationships that are unbiblical and inappropriate for people who are submitted to Jesus.  As the gospel impacts people's lives, we should expect these things to change.  But I no longer expect their relationships to look more American.
Here in America, our view of romance is equally far from a Scriptural view.  It stems more from our pagan past than the Bible.  It seems like for a few weeks or so every year people are vaguely aware that our celebrations of Christmas and Easter have elements of ancient pagan festivals mixed into them.  However, we forget during the rest of the year that our western Christianity carries a great deal of baggage that comes more from our pagan forefathers than anything found in Scripture.  The most prevalent themes that got mixed into our gospel are the related themes of redemptive romance and redemptive violence.[2]  Paul Hiebert sums it up well by writing that “In the Indo-European worldview, the battle is the center of the story.  When it is over, the story is done.  The final words are ‘and they won (or were married) and lived happily ever after.’  But there is no story worth telling about the ‘happily ever after.’”[3] Besides the fact that European cultures almost always assigned gods to the internal/relational phenomena of romance and violence (which is rare for internal phenomena, since most gods are meant to describe external natural phenomena like wind, or the sun), the forces that move the story in many pagan myths recognize violence and romance between the gods as significant powers.  As Christianity began to overcome western culture, we began to adapt the gospel to fit the forms of our pagan worship that we were most hesitant to give up.  In some ways this is obvious.  Medieval Christians were taught to stop praying to the pagan gods like Cupid and Venus, and pray to St. Valentine instead.  But the most subtle ways are masked in the fact that we still tend to see romance and violence as the great powers that can be used to create change in the world.  This led to the myths of redemptive violence and romance.  

It is pretty easy to see that these myths are the two most powerful driving values behind most of our pop-culture media: TV, movies, literature, music, video games, etc.  For example, the website Box Office Mojo records the movies that have the top grossing opening weekends.  Every one of the top ten movies on the list champions one or both of the myths.  In addition to all the super hero/action movies, and movies like those in the Twilight series (whose value systems are obvious), there are more surprising movies like Shrek 2.  On the surface, this movie has little to do with the myths of redemptive romance and violence.  I am sure that the filmmakers saw themselves as promoting values like racial and cultural tolerance.  However, when you look at the forces that cause change in the story, the forces that are shown to have real power, it is romance (Fiona’s father learns to accept Shrek because he sees how “in love” his daughter is), and violence (when Shrek is falsely accused and arrested, his friends break him out of jail by creating a gingerbread monster that can temporarily overpower the guards, though not without loss and sacrifice).  In fact, the only movies that I noticed in the top 50 opening weekends of all time that challenge either of these myths, even briefly, are the Hunger Games (which briefly challenges redemptive violence while completely accepting redemptive romance), and the Passion of the Christ (which records an act that completely challenges every other power structure the world has ever known).  

While I have a lot to say about the destructive effect of the myth of redemptive violence in our culture, it is the myth of redemptive romance that has been on my mind recently.  Though they are certainly related, I will save the discussion of redemptive violence for another post.  What I am calling redemptive romance is the essential belief that a romantic relationship could give life meaning. It is the idea that our broken lives, out of synch with each other, with ourselves, and with creation, would be made happy, meaningful, and productive through a romantic (and usually, but not always, sexual) relationship.  Redemptive romance is one of the key objects of worship of our popular culture.  We worship it in song and story.  We appeal to it, and recommend others appeal to it as a solution to their problems.  For all intents and purposes, it is still a god that we worship today.

If it were only the popular culture that endorsed this value system, I don’t think we would have a problem.  In fact, we Christians would have a really powerful contrasting testimony in the post-Christian West.  Instead, we western Christians seem to function from within the same paradigm.  The only difference is that, for us, we cap the redemptive romance experience with marriage.  I don’t know how many times growing up, and even within the last year, I heard that “God had someone out there for me” (a promise not found in any Bible I’ve ever read).  But this idea comes out in more subtle ways as well.  It is frequently present in our youth programs, and especially when we teach sexual morality.  For example, the idea that God wants us to “save sex for marriage,” has an underlying implication that God wants us all to get married and eventually have all of our saved-up sex.  This is part of why so many Christian kids believe they are entitled to, that God owes them, a healthy marriage and a great sex life, and are devastated when it doesn’t come easy.  Perhaps more significant, it is implied in our programing.  Most larger churches have several discipleship groups geared towards couples or families of various ages.  But if someone is out of college and still single, they just get lumped in the “singles” group where the church often sees their singleness more like a problem to be solved than a valuable asset to the church.  And yet throughout church history singleness has proven to be incredibly valuable.  This may be part of the reason that for over a thousand years (and continuing to this day in some denominations) church leaders whether priests, monks, or nuns, were required to forgo family for the sake of the mobility and freedom that a strong commitment to ministry requires.  It has certainly proved effective.  It is impossible to overstate the impact of the monastic orders on global Christianity (ok, fine, maybe it’s just very hard.  I mean, it’s not as big as, like, the impact that Jesus had or anything).

Of course, there are some real problems that singles face which the church has a responsibility to address.  Humans need to exist in community.  They need older people to help mentor them, and younger people to mentor.  They need people who are like them to support them and different than them to challenge them.  It is through others that any person’s place in the community is defined.  The church has a responsibility to find ways to include them.  I love the movie Children of Men.  It paints a hypothetical picture of the world including the idea that without having a direct impact on children, adults lose hope for the future.  We have a human need to know that we are a part of a story that is bigger than ourselves: one that existed before us, one to which we will contribute, and one that will continue on after us.  We need to know our lives matter.  Single people are naturally the most disconnected from community.  Monastic orders used to provide an ongoing story for single people within the church.  The order existed before them, they created change both to and through it, and it continued on after them.  In our modern context, the Church could address the problem that singles face by existing as a community that functioned more like a family (In Matthew 12:29, Jesus endorses this view of the church by saying that his disciples were his “mother and brothers”).  But most churches do not really function like families.  What makes most singles groups so particularly dangerous is that they do almost nothing to address these problems.  In fact, they pull singles away from the rest of the community and put them in a group with very little stability or ongoing story.  Furthermore, as people marginal to the ongoing story of the congregation, with no story of their own, singles end up being disconnected from the very organization that some remain single to help equip. The Western church doesn’t know how to incorporate celibate singles who are not called to get married, settle down, and focus on the family.[4]

The North American Church has even taken this myth of redemptive romance and begun to read it into the Bible.  This is easy to do since the Bible really does have a lot to say about love, and also a great deal to say about marriage, family, and community.  I have been to probably a dozen Christian weddings where at some point someone will read a portion of 1 Corinthians 13.  I have never heard anyone point out that, while “keeping no record of wrongs” is undoubtedly a good practice for married couples, Paul was not talking about married couples when he wrote the passage.  Instead, the famous love chapter is really giving us a “more excellent way” for church communities to function in order that they accomplish their purpose.  Paul begins by sharing that churches should be structured so that the each individual’s spiritual gifts are valued and used to make them more effective (1 Corinthians 12).  But the more excellent way, an even more effective way, is for the church community to be established in love.  Love, from a Biblical perspective, can be summed up as desiring, and (as the closeness of the relationship allows) acting for the good of another person.  When God loves us, God desires and acts to bring what is good for us.  When we love Jesus, when we are his friends, we do as he commands (John 15:14).  His main command was that we love each other, and try to do what is best for each other, and the rest of creation.  This harmonizes with our general purpose as the Church in the world: to work with Jesus in doing the things that he is doing.  And the work he is doing is reconciling or redeeming people into relationship with God.  Consequently, we Christians have also “been given the ministry of reconciliation.” (2 Corinthians 5:19)  When the Bible speaks of love, the vast majority of the time, this is what it means.  It is indeed a beautiful redemptive love, but it is entirely non-sexual and unromantic in the Western sense. 

Interestingly, greater participation in God’s work also seems to be the basis for marriage.  Most of us have heard the story of Adam and Eve, the story where God orchestrates the first marriage.  It is a story where Eve, who was taken from Adam as a rib is given back to Adam as a friend and coworker.  And “for this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united with his wife,” and in some mystical sense beyond the merely sexual, “they will become one flesh.” (Genesis 2:24; Ephesians 5:31-2)  This is where we contrast what the Bible says about romance to the popular view, because the Bible does seem to say that romance exists and is a good thing.  It even has a fairly romantic view of marriage.  The difference is that romance is never the reason for marriage (and it is even less a reason for living or a life goal to be attained for its own merits).  Earlier in the story God gives his reasoning for the marriage.  He says that it is not good for Adam to be alone, and he will create a helper.  We often overlook that word, but the fact that a spouse is seen as a “helper” means that the individual (and later on in the Bible we will see that the community) has a task to accomplish.  The word “help” has no meaning without a goal or task.  The fact that in Adam and Eve’s specific case they will accomplish this task better as married people than as single people is given as the reason for the marriage.  In fact, this seems to be the main reason that God wants people to get married or approves of the marriage throughout the Bible (other examples are Abraham and Sarah, Ruth and Boaz, or Priscilla and Aquila).  I believe that it is the reason that the Church should want people to get married today.  If two people find that they can work with Jesus to bring God’s reconciliation to the world better as a family within the church community, instead of individuals within the church community, they should get married.  In cases where they cannot work with Jesus better as a couple, Jesus and Paul both show marriage to be a weakness (Matthew 19:12 and 1 Corinthians 7:7-9). Both marriage and singleness find their true meaning in people who are wholeheartedly devoted to advancing the Kingdom of God in the world.

We in the western church absolutely must learn to speak out against this myth of redemptive romance.  We must stand against the gods of popular American culture.  Our choice to engage romantically does not redeem our lives.  Our only redeemer is Jesus.  Our only God is the Trinity.  We must learn to use every asset available to us as people who seek to work with Jesus to expand the Kingdom of God.

As I continue to discuss the themes mentioned above, and continue to learn about effective ways that churches can use the asset of singles in their midst, I would be very happy to have the thoughts and insights of others.  Is anyone doing this well?  Does anyone have resources they would recommend on singleness, or on marriage for the sake of partnership in advancing the Kingdom of God?  Let the conversation begin!


[1] Many people I talk to about this assume that the modern accessibility of pornography has made celibacy easier, and is a contributing factor to the reality that 30 year-old bachelors are not as unusual as they used to be.  There certainly seems to be some truth to this.  Pornography seems to be widely used pretty much anywhere that an internet connection can reach these days.  I get why people find it so alluring, and I have, um, “experienced” my fair share of it, mostly in my high school years.  I am in no position to look down on anyone for their love of porn.  However, for the past several years I have taken steps to ensure that pornography consumption does not interfere with my commitment to the Kingdom of God and to celibacy.  My laptop has a program that sends regular updates to a couple of friends so that if I visit websites I shouldn’t, I have to have an awkward conversation afterwards.  All other internet capable devices I own have the internet features disabled.  So no, at least in my case, porn does not make celibacy easier.
[2] I’ll try to write more about how I became convinced of the pagan origins of the myths of redemptive violence and romance in future blog posts.  However, even if the myth of redemptive romance did not have pagan origins, it is both clearly unbiblical and clearly a driving force in our popular American culture.
[3]Paul Hiebert, Anthropological Reflections on Missiological Issues.  (Grand Rapids: Baker Books.  1994) 207.
[4] This is true for all adult singles.  I recognize that most Christian singles today have not made an active decision to be celibate.  However, in most cases they have actively chosen to pursue ministry or life goals other than marriage.  Though they have not actively chosen singleness, their Kingdom values have indirectly led them there, and they have willingly accepted singleness as a consequence.  In my experience, adults who make marriage a goal will find a way to get married, even when they clearly should not. 

Pagan Origins of Redemptive Romance

I am not a scholar in any field, and I am certainly not a cultural anthropologist, but I have read a few essays by people who are, and I have come to believe that our emphasis on redemptive violence and redemptive romance comes from our pagan past.  There is some evidence (particularly linguistic) of very early people groups that eventually split and moved to parts of India, Europe and the Middle East.  These Indo-Europeans were our very early western ancestors.  Some scholars try to reverse engineer Indo-European culture by comparing what we know of the ancient cultures that resulted from it.  It is interesting that almost every ancient culture throughout the area believed in certain gods: a sky god, a sun god, a god of the dawn, a god of the earth, etc.  However, in addition to the gods that describe these natural phenomena two or three gods are in almost every pantheon that describe activities that originate within humans: a god of war, or a god of “striking,” or of violence (Thor, Shiva, Mars, Ares); and a goddess of love, and sometimes also a god of love (Ishtar, Rati, Kama, Freyja, Cupid, Venus, Aphrodite, Eros).[1]  The third god that many cultures include is more abstract and has fewer similarities from one culture to the next.  It is the god of intelligence, wisdom, or trickery (Enki and Athena are examples, but so is Loki).  However, as I commented before, what is more interesting is that the events that the mythology recognizes as having real power are almost always one of these three.  

Take the story of Psyche and Cupid, for example.[2]  Here's my whirlwind summary: Psyche is beautiful and Venus is jealous so she tells Cupid to put a curse upon Psyche.  Cupid does it (the first actual change in circumstances is created by violence), though it goes wrong and he ends up not cursing her the way he had planned, but he makes it impossible for her to fall in love with any mortal man, and he accidently falls in love with her himself.  Over time, Psyche figures out that she is supposed to marry a god or monster thing and she hooks up with Cupid, knowing that she can never look at him and lives with him in a magical palace (the second actual change in circumstances is created by romance).  Psyche is happy in the magical palace, but her sisters confuse her and convince her that since she has never seen her husband, he is a monster and she should kill him.  She starts to go through with her plan, but changes her mind and Cupid kicks her out of the magical palace (The third major change in circumstances is the result of a sort of violence - though neither party actually acts in physical violence towards the other.  This is kind of the exception to the rule here).  Psyche wanders the world doing tasks for various gods at first and ultimately for Venus who is still mad at Psyche.  Because Cupid is in love with Psyche he helps her find the loophole in each of the tricky tasks that Venus tries to set up for her.  Cupid finally pleads that Jupiter make Psyche a goddess because Cupid is unbearably in love with her and Jupiter consents (romance creates the fourth actual change in circumstances) and that's that.  Interestingly, since they can now be together forever, the story ends.  Nothing is noteworthy about their bliss.  It is also noteworthy that in the earliest versions of this story it is clear that Psyche is representative of the human soul, and Cupid is representative of romantic love.[3]  The overt message of the myth is that the human soul finds its ultimate fulfillment in the bliss of romantic love. 

The Biblical view is completely different.  If we read the story of Joshua from a western perspective, it seems like Joshua violently raises the city of Jericho (and there is clearly some violence in the story).  However, if we try to read it from a Hebrew perspective, it is Joshua’s obedience that creates a real change in the circumstances of the characters.  Hosea is a story that we often interpret as encouraging redemptive romance.  And while there is romance, it is God’s mercy and Hosea’s obedience that actually create the greatest change in the story.  It is not coincidence that Jesus tells us to obey all that he has commanded (Matthew 28:20), and that we’re his friends if we do so (John 15:14).  The Bible has already established obedience and submission as the actions that create the most real change in our lives and in the world.  We are even told that Jesus’ death on the cross is an act of obedience (Philippians 2:8).  The idea that a romantic relationship would be the fulfillment of the soul, the psyche, is completely absent from the Bible.  Instead, our love (love is willing and acting for someone else) relationship with God is the place where our souls are fulfilled.  We can create positive change outwardly and inwardly through obeying God who tells us in the Bible and through the Holy Spirit how to love him (Power through submission!) This power has and will continue to change the world!


[1] Most of my research on this topic came from various pages of J.P Mallory and D.Q. Adams, Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture (Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1997).  But, I admit, I also did some reading on Wikipedia.  What can I say, I already admitted that I’m not a scholar in any field, right?  I would be really fascinated to hear what someone who actually is a cultural anthropologist or a specialist in Proto Indo-European Culture might say about my theory.
[2] This story is not a pure Proto Indo-European myth, but it is a significant myth in more than one Indo-European culture.  Since there is Greek art depicting the myth that dates back to the 4th century B.C.E. (according to Wikipedia, again, not a scholar), it was probably first told, in some form, around the same time that significant portions of the Old Testament were being written.
[3] The Greek word "Psyche" actually means “soul,” and "Eros" (the Greek equivalent to Cupid) actually means romantic desire.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Strategic Plans For Western Churches Overemphasize "Young Families"


As an abstract concept “The Kingdom of God” is sometimes hard to grasp.  The Bible teaches us that our main purpose as human beings is to exist within the Kingdom of God.  Our main purpose as people who follow Jesus is to work with Jesus to expand the Kingdom of God.  The Kingdom of God, or the Reign of God, can be described as places and times where God’s will for creation is carried out perfectly: where everything is doing exactly what God created it to be doing with respect to everything else in creation, and with respect to God.  The church in the West has certainly understood that healthy families and healthy marriages are included within the Kingdom of God.  But they are not the main part of the Kingdom, or our purpose as followers of Jesus.  Our emphasis on healthy families has become completely dissociated from the importance of living at peace with “the environment,” with the plants and animals around us, with our neighbors, with those who are unlike us both near and far.  We have neglected to stand up for the rights of the oppressed.  We have sanctioned the status quo. We have neglected to tell others in a loving way of the hope of Jesus: that our sins can be forgiven and life can have a purpose greater than ourselves.  We have neglected to sacrifice, even to suffer, to do these things.  The worst part is that this unbalanced view of the Kingdom of God completely ingrained in our communal church culture.  We, the Western Church as a group, have neglected a great portion of the gospel.  We have let one part of the Kingdom of God supplant the rest.

In my work with churches in the Southwestern United States, I have had the honor of hearing bits and pieces of several strategic plans that individual churches employ for growth.  Interestingly enough the vast majority of them intentionally target a group they call “young families.”  In their programming, in their teaching, in their organization and outreach, they are trying to attract and keep “young families.”  On the one hand, this makes sense, because if a church is to keep a tithing base that is going to be stable long term, it had better have some young adults with kids who are anchored in their community.  Any church that ignores its young families is going to run itself into the ground (whereas, you can ignore single people and retirees and the finances can be fine).  Furthermore, young parents are often in a time of personal transition, when they’re open to the gospel of secure families and redemptive romance (though not particularly more open to a Biblical gospel of radical, sacrificial living for the sake of the Kingdom of God), making them easier to bring into the church.  On the other hand, if a church is trying to represent the community around it, this emphasis on the ever more rare “young families” is generally misplaced.  It is especially misplaced when it is emphasized to the neglect of older families, retirees, and single people.  Of these, single people are the most neglected.  Yet, if there is one group that has shown its value to the church in bringing the Kingdom of God to the community, it is not young families but single people.  I would be interested in seeing more churches say that they are targeting single people.  I would be interested in churches saying that they are intentionally targeting older families or retirees.  Most of all, I would love to see a church who openly targets the broken people around them with a message of hope found in Jesus regardless of age or marital status.  Until we give up on our subconscious worship of the myth of redemptive romance, this is impossible.

The Evangelical Hang-up on Scripture


I thought I would take a short break from writing against the myth of redemptive romance to explain to any non-Evangelical or new Evangelical readers the general gist this whole Evangelical thing.  It wasn’t until a few years ago that I realized that the movement is not actually defined by an emphasis on the evangel (or the gospel, Jesus’s message of the availability of the Kingdom of God now).  The thing that sets most Evangelicals apart from our non-Evangelical Christian brothers and sisters is our view of Scripture.  I think Evangelicals can pretty much be defined as the group of people who try to submit their lives completely to Scripture.[1]  Of course, in order to do this, most Evangelicals have to take seriously the idea that God inspired both the authors of the Bible in some way and also inspired the process over the first couple centuries CE that led to the accepted cannon.  We argue and disagree amongst each other whether the Bible is Inerrant, or Infallible, or if it is authoritative in some other way.[2]  However, we all agree that the Bible represents some kind of revelation from God, and as a revelation from God, it should rule us.  To put it another way, we submit our lives to our best understanding of what God is trying to say through its judgments, proclamations, revelations, and stories instead of insisting the Bible submit to our judgments of it. 

Of course, this can be a little tricky.  Anyone who has actually read the Bible can testify to the fact that it contains some self-contradictory and confusing material.[3]  Sometimes this conflict is intentional, meant to point to a deeper truth beyond the contradiction.  Other times instructions are given to people in a specific situation (like the women of the Corinthian and Ephesian churches) that are different from the instructions given to people not in that situation.  But it is not always that easy to interpret.  A lot of the confusion has to do more with the fact that the Bible was written from within multiple ancient cultural contexts that we no longer completely understand (though people who have studied them understand them much better than others).  Consequently, we have to interpret the words of Scripture to get at the original meaning they conveyed to their first audience.  From that meaning, we try to figure out what they should convey to us.  These practices are called exegesis and hermeneutics by people who care to name them.  For Evangelicals it is most significant that we submit to the broad themes of the Bible, but that doesn’t mean that we can choose to ignore even “the least stroke of the pen.” (Matthew 5:18)  For every passage in Scripture, Evangelicals feel the need to do good exegesis and good hermeneutics and submit themselves to what they find.  

To outsiders, this sometimes seems arbitrary.  When did we decide to ignore the commands about women who are on their periods (Leviticus 15), but to keep the commands against having sex before marriage (Ephesians 5:3)?  The truth is that Scripture, most famously in Acts 15 and the writings of Paul, actively encourages us not to submit ourselves to the culturally irrelevant guidelines in the Bible.  According the most common interpretation, we are actually submitting to Acts 10 (Peter’s vision of animals on a sheet) by violating Leviticus 11:7 when we eat bacon.  The story of Acts 10 nullifies, the previous command.  We can still learn a lot about God and about being people who follow God by studying the commands in Leviticus, but we are no longer required to follow most of them.[4]  

Here’s where things get tricky.  Not all Evangelicals agree on a single interpretation of Scripture.  In general, this is where we get the differences that separate one Evangelical denomination from another.  For example, we Friends have traditionally believed that Jesus’s commands to “turn the other cheek” (Matt. 5:39), to “put away your sword…” (Matt. 26:52-3), and his general example of choosing to die on a cross rather than fight violently against his accusers, or to allow others to fight for him, make it impossible for someone to be following Jesus while serving as a soldier in the armed forces of any government.  Most of our Evangelical brothers and sisters say that the wars of the Old Testament show these examples are not meant to be applied to violence on an international scale.  They also point to verses that say we should submit to governing authorities (1 Peter 2:13, Titus 3:1, Romans 13:1) and we should seek the good of the people amongst whom we live (Jeremiah 29:7).   We Friends tend to respond that the wars in the Old Testament were a strange case where God was doing something exceptional in history, and while we submit to governments in most things, we “must obey God rather than men” when there is a conflict (Acts 5:29).  Regardless of who is right (it’s us, btw) the point is that the disagreement is over the interpretation of these verses: what do they mean, how do they fit together, and how do we submit to what we find in our modern culture.  Both sides of the issue agree on the terms of the discussion.  There is no time, ever, where Evangelicals simply choose to ignore something they believe the Bible to be commanding.  If they do, they cease being Evangelicals.  

Lately I’ve been hearing a lot of non-Evangelicals who are frustrated with us when it comes to our perspectives on issues ranging from gender and sexuality to drinking alcohol.[5]  They say, “everyone picks and chooses from the Bible, why can’t you guys just pick the happy stuff that says God loves you and ignore the stuff that oppresses people.”  This betrays two significant points of ignorance.  First, there are no legitimate interpretations of Scripture that clearly oppress people.  The problem is not with complementarians for example, though some people consider their prescribed gender roles oppressive, because their interpretation of scripture also includes the idea that men should sacrifice everything in their lives to support, care for and love their wives. [6]   In their interpretation, gender roles should actually play out like a competition between husbands and wives where each tries to better love and serve the other.  The fact that some people manipulate and oppress others in the name of complementarianism is not actually evidence of the oppression of their interpretation as much as it is evidence that they have not submitted themselves fully to their own interpretation of scripture.  The second point of ignorance is betrayed by the dismissive words “just pick.”  Because the moment we decide to submit our lives only to the parts of Scripture we like, or the parts of Scripture that society finds easy to accommodate, we have lost our identity as Evangelicals.  In that moment we have lost our unique role in the Church Universal and in the world, and we have lost any benefit we gained in our own spiritual development through submitting ourselves to Scripture in the first place.  

A lot of silly litmus tests have been popular in Evangelicalism over the last few years.  Thirty years ago, people thought that everyone needed to agree on the pre-tribulation rapture, and then people needed to agree on young earth creationism, and then people needed to agree on a definition of marriage.  I’m going to propose a new litmus test that I think gets right to the heart of the issue.  Anyone who implies that we should pick and choose the parts of scripture to which we must submit should not be an Evangelical.



[1] Actually submission is a core element of every legitimate branch of Christianity (and every other significant religion that comes to mind).  The Orthodox and Catholics submit themselves to the authority of the Church leadership and to the traditions of the church.  Mainline churches submit themselves to the direction of the Holy Spirit as interpreted by the community.  Though I am proud to call them my brothers and sisters, I also believe that it is important for our own Spiritual development to submit ourselves completely to Scripture.  This is what makes me an Evangelical.
[2] Inerrancy is the belief that there are no errors in the Bible.  Most people intend this declaration to include scientific and historical errors. Infallibility is the belief that the Bible cannot fail.  While not concerned with scientific and historical errors, people who hold this view believe that the purpose of Scripture cannot fail to produce positive transformation.  While on the surface, this seems to be a big disagreement, I don’t think it is very significant.  Take Acts 19:12-13 for example, we can argue all day whether or not Paul’s used hankies actually healed people and get nowhere.  It can never be proven or disproven, and would mean very little if it was.  On the other hand, if we submit ourselves to the little story we can gain a great deal.  We have to accept it as, if not historically accurate, at least reliable and inspired.  Once we do, we can be awed by the power that God can exhibit through an individual.  We can be humbled by the fact that no one has ever been healed through our hankies.  We can be inspired to strive for a greater communion with God, which the story tells us is possible.  Evangelicals take for granted that the story is reliable in order to allow the other elements of the story to work in them. 
[3] Check out Proverbs 26:4-5, “Do not answer a fool according to his folly…Answer a fool according to his folly.” (NIV)
[4] In fact, as a general rule (though there are some significant exceptions), most Christians today tend to assume that any Old Testament command, which is not reiterated in the New Testament, can be ignored.
[5] Interestingly, there is a very broad spectrum of interpretation on the Biblical passages that deal with gender, sexuality and drinking that are all within legitimate Evangelicalism.  People who are frustrated with us might influence us pretty easily by simply exposing us to historical and cultural information, or a different way of reading the verses that would help us interpret them differently.  
[6] Just for the record, I am convinced that an egalitarian view more accurately represents the Biblical standard for gender roles.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

The Whole Conversation Surrounding Homosexuality in Our Churches is Informed by the Myth of Redemptive Romance



The first thing that needs to be said to any LGBTQ individual in our churches is “Jesus loves you and we love you.  We want you to be an active part of this church community.  We believe that you need a relationship with Jesus, and that Jesus is reaching out to you.  God is not going to send you (or anyone) to hell just because of your (or their) sexuality.  And I’m sorry for over a thousand years of oppression and abuse in the church.”  We need to keep saying that even though it sounds trite.  If those words are not deeply heard, 24-7, in and out of the presence of our homosexual brothers and sisters, even when we’re joking, then we have failed before we have begun.  I know because there are friendships I have lost over this before I began the conversation.  And it was my fault.[1]  Even if we disagree on everything else, those words should still be true (based on any legitimate interpretation of scripture that I know of).  They should come out at the beginning of the conversation and it must be the foundation for any further discussion.  

It may be inevitable that the issue of homosexuality be used as a battleground on which we argue other issues including Scriptural authority and the role of sexuality in defining our identity.  While we must uphold Scriptural authority and uncover the destructive myth of redemptive romance, we must not allow those discussions to get in the way of caring about the individuals in our communities whose lives are most closely affected by these discussions.

What is the rest of the discussion?  As many people have pointed out (most recently Steve Chalke[2]) the main Christian response to homosexuality in our churches has historically been to recommend celibacy.  This is not the only response that Evangelicals promote.  But with “reparative” therapies taking some (perhaps much deserved) flak lately, recommending celibacy has resurfaced as one of the main suggestions for the spiritual formation of homosexuals in our communities.  We have a long tradition of recommending celibacy to homosexuals (going back, at least, to Clement of Alexandria[3]) but lately people have begun to feel uncomfortable with recommending celibacy. As though it is a cruel or unusual request to make. Though I am probably somewhere pretty close to a zero on the Kinsey scale, as someone who is actually celibate I feel that I might have a unique perspective to contribute to this discussion.  

In my last post I defined the heart of our Evangelical movement as total submission to our best interpretation of Scripture.  What makes an Evangelical view of homosexuality particularly tricky is that there are really only three New Testament verses that seem to relate directly to the issue.  However, all three seem to advise against homosexual actions (though they do not condemn homosexual attraction).[4]  Some people (like Chalke) maintain that the Bible could not be referring to committed monogamous homosexual relationships since the writers of the Bible could not have been aware of the existence of such relationships.  I disagree with that belief on a fundamental level since it is based on the ridiculous implication that committed, monogamous, homosexual relationships are a twentieth century innovation.  There are many stories in Greek and Roman literature of non-abusive, long-term homosexual relationships, particularly among soldiers; Achilles and Patroclus in The Iliad are a great example.[5]  I find it hard to believe that a well-educated, well-traveled, first century Roman citizen like Paul would not have heard of The Iliad.  Others contend that Paul was referring to homosexual rape that was apparently practiced as a way to dehumanize prisoners in the ancient world.  While such a practice seems worthy of condemnation, I think that Paul would have clarified his language (given that homosexuality was fairly common) if that was his intent.  Unless of course analysis of other ancient texts proved that the Greek word arsenokoitēs (the word that refers to homosexuality in the New Testament) was actually a shorthand commonly used in the ancient world refer to people performing this specific type of rape.  As far as I know, this evidence does not exist.  Nonetheless, while these arguments do not convince me, I do not maintain that people are stupid or ignorant if they are convinced by these arguments, or some variation thereof.  In fact many people who are smarter than I am, and whose walk with Jesus (I believe) is genuine, do believe some variation of them.  After all, we are really arguing over the interpretation of only a few words in three passages in the New Testament. 

The thing that I find most disturbing is that when I present the idea that the Bible is probably calling people with homosexual desires not to act on those desires, and to commit to a life of celibacy, it is generally looked upon as unfeeling or cruel.  This discomfort really has nothing to do with caring for homosexuals.  It is based completely on a belief in the myth of redemptive romance (to get a better understanding of what I mean by the term “redemptive romance,” read my first post).  For those who have not read my previous posts (or who have forgotten) what I call the myth of redemptive romance is the belief that a romantic relationship could give life fulfillment.  It is the idea that our broken lives (which are out of sync with each other, with ourselves, and with creation) would be made happy, meaningful, and productive through a romantic (and usually, but not always, sexual) relationship.  Of course, if the ultimate fulfillment of human life is found in a romantic relationship, then celibacy really is cruel.  If it is true, we must absolutely strive to find interpretations of Scripture that would allow for homosexuals to also experience romance.  Celibacy may be an acceptable decision for some rare, bizarre and misguided individuals who are uniquely gifted by God to live in perpetual frustration as a way to escape the world and follow God.  Since homosexual attraction is not a choice, God would have to be cruel to require such extreme asceticism of everyone who experienced it.[6]  However, if we reject the myth of redemptive romance, and accept the reality that the life of a celibate person can be very full, it puts this recommendation in perspective.  I believe that the main impetus behind most (not all) people who support gay marriage in the church has very little to do with compassion and love for homosexuals and much more to do with a false belief in redemptive romance.  We Christians must resoundingly reject this line of thinking.  Our claim is that the ultimate fulfillment of human life is not found in any romantic relationship, but in a reconciled relationship with God.  We work with Jesus to try and reconcile or restore creation to the way it was meant to be.  We are happiest and our lives are fullest when we are engaged in experiencing and expanding the Kingdom of God.  Human romance, homosexual or heterosexual, is not a central part of this experience.

Consequently, redemptive romance really is a false hope in our society, and yet it is one of the most widely accepted myths.  Once we have rejected any false worship of romance, we can see celibacy not as cruel asceticism, but as a healthy life choice that, though difficult, is no more difficult than monogamy.  Furthermore, it has proven to be a healthy response to homosexual attraction for nearly two thousand years.  One famous example of this is the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins.  As a young man, Hopkins engaged sexually with other young men.  However, when he approached the church with a desire to follow God, the church welcomed him and encouraged him to devote his life to serving others as a (celibate) member of the Jesuit order.  That is what he did.  Then, while living and working among the poor in England and Ireland, he used his desire to glorify God (and I imagine, his unique perspective as a homosexual) as inspiration for his poetry.  He wrote poems that later became some of the most influential for poets of the twentieth century, especially T.S. Elliot.  He lived as a celibate single person in a larger, ongoing Jesuit story.  And from that vantage point, he changed the world. 

However, this is only the first question in a larger conversation.  It is where I stand on this controversial issue, and though it is not exact, I believe that it is pretty close to the position that the Evangelical Friends have taken as a movement.  This leads to the obvious question of what we should do with people who disagree with us on this interpretation.  There is a temptation right now for us to use this as something of a litmus test for inclusion in the community (if you agree, then you are includable).  On the one hand, even someone who might engage in a wildly promiscuous lifestyle is welcome to attend our churches.  But what if someone wants to become a member, or a volunteer, or a teacher, or a recorded minister?  The room for inclusion gets narrow pretty quickly.  I’m not saying that we should not exclude people from certain levels of ministry in the movement.  If they disagree with us on core issues, we should encourage them towards other movements that might fit their beliefs more closely.  A big part of what defines us is our emphasis on the authority of Scripture, and to a lesser extent, how we interpret certain passages and themes in Scripture.  However, it does seem to me like this emphasis on a proper interpretation of these three verses has been blown out of proportion. 

Take, for example, a much more central theme in Scripture: Jesus tells us that we should love our enemies (Matt 5:44, Luke 6:27 and 35).  He encourages us to find creative non-violent solutions to problems, even violent problems (Matthew 5).  After he told his disciples they should have swords and be prepared (Luke 22:36), he told his disciples not to use them against people (Luke 22:51) and that people who live by the sword, die by the sword (Matthew 26:52).  He demonstrated a victory through dying (1 Corinthians 15:54 and 5), and even while he was dying, he asked God to forgive his enemies (Luke 23:34).  He encouraged his followers to also be ready to take up their cross and follow in his footsteps (Matthew 10:38).  This seems to have caught on.  In one place Paul assures us that our fight is not against flesh and blood (Ephesians 6:12), another time he tells us to bless those who persecute us (Romans 12:14).  This is a huge theme in Scripture with many more than three verses that we have to interpret.  The Friends tradition (and the tradition of the early church) included that we encourage people not to serve in the military of any government.  I think that the Bible is pretty clear in affirming us on this issue.  While I am about 70% sure that I’m interpreting the three verses that relate to homosexuality correctly, I’m about 90% sure that I’m interpreting the many verses that relate to military service correctly.

And yet, we have many people in our churches who are or have been soldiers, and who actively support the US military.  There is generally no restriction on them when they want to volunteer or teach.  In fact, we have even allowed a few people to be recorded ministers in our movement when they interpret these passages differently.  In general, people have interpreted these verses so that they do not apply when a person is a part of organized violence between governments, just as others say the admonitions against homosexual activity do not apply in the context of committed, monogamous unions.

As I wrote in the last post, the most significant time when we may really need to recommend that a volunteer or staff leader join a different movement is when they simply dismiss the authority of Scripture on the subject.  This includes people who choose to ignore the verses on homosexuality instead of engage and submit to them as well as the people who simply believe that Jesus did not really intend for us to love our enemies and turn the other cheek when our families or our country is being threatened.  On the other hand, if people desire to submit completely to Scripture but have a different interpretation of those verses, I would rather have them with us.[7]

We should be actively working against the effects of the myth of redemptive romance in our churches.  I believe that should recommend celibacy for homosexuals in our communities.  We should treat homosexuals (and heterosexuals for that matter) who want to follow the risen Jesus and who have a high view of the authority of Scripture, but disagree with us on interpretation, the same way we treat soldiers at our churches.  We should continue to engage homosexuals and soldiers in dialogue as they continue to grow in submission to God, continuing to challenge their interpretation, and continuing to allow their interpretation to challenge ours.


[1] Ok, just one friendship that I know of.  But it was a pretty good friend, and I miss him.  And it really was my fault.
[2] http://www.oasisuk.org/inclusionresources/Articles/MOIabridged
[3] James B. DeYoung, Homosexuality: Contemporary Claims Examined in Light of the Bible and Other Ancient Literature and Law (Grand Rapids: Kregel Academic, 2000) 333.
[4] The three passages are Romans 1:26-7, 1 Corinthians 6:9, and 1 Timothy 1:10.  I am not a Greek Scholar, but I have read that fact that the word arsenokoitēs (which is the word that refers to homosexuality) ends in koitēs implies physical action in the Greek.  So whatever it is that these passages are against, it cannot be saying that homosexual attraction is wrong.  Paul does claim in Romans that the attraction is unnatural, or a result of sin upon the created order.  However, if you read the passage carefully, it is the action of men having sex with men that he is actually against.  Even in the Romans 1 passage, which is the hardest on homosexuality, the attraction they feel seems to be a consequence of sin in the natural order not a sinful action on their part (in fact, the only action noted in the only verse that relates directly to men being attracted to men is that they choose not to have sex with women, something Paul applauds in different circumstances).
[5] While some scholars maintain that this is intended to be the Platonic ideal for male friendships, most scholars agree that Achilles and Patroclus represent an ancient example of a consensual gay couple.  Even if this specific example does not apply, the prevalence of gay relationships in the Greek and Roman world is well documented.  Check out Wayne R. Dynes and Stephen Donaldson, Homosexuality in the Ancient World (New York: Taylor and Francis, 1992). 
[6] For the record, I think it’s pretty clear that no one chooses their sexual orientation.  I have never heard any evidence to the contrary.  I’m not sure if this is relevant to the discussion at all, but I imagine it would be really hurtful if someone accused me of choosing my sexual orientation (especially if my orientation were not the norm). 
[7] Ok, I admit, there are some interpretations that are pretty destructive and we might do well to show a little healthy fear.  A few days ago I overheard a woman in a wealthy community talking about how it says in Corinthians that if people don’t work they shouldn’t eat, and all of our homeless ministries are just enabling stupid and evil people.  I came close to stopping her and saying, “First, that’s in 2 Theselonians not in the Corinthian books.  And second, it is written in reference to people who are mooching off the community as they wait for the second coming of Christ.  It cannot be applied to homeless ministry.  On the other hand, have you ever read about the cows of Bashan?”  What I actually did say (in the words of Mike Birbiglia) was nothing (which was probably a mistake).  Still, that woman should not be allowed to lead in any church anywhere.