Fellow-Confessors
As you know the homosex-&-the-Bible issue
continues to tear up mainline denominations. And I continue to try to help
pastors who are themselves torn up by it inwardly as well as in their
work.
Here's part of a recent email from a pastor pleading
with me for help on the issue:
I have come to the conclusion as to why the homosexuality
issue is such a "deal-breaker" for many. If something that is so apparently
clear in scripture is not to be believed, then what is? Are the skeptics to be
believed? Is there nothing we can know for sure? Everything relative? No
absolute truth? Is it just as valid to make it up as we go along? If this
foundational understanding of God's design for our lives and his standards of
behavior are no longer valid, then our significant world-view crumbles. It is
overwhelming to consider the world as a place where the God of scripture is
nothing like we understand him to be. Where then can any of us stand? "God" help
us if Christopher Hutchins is correct after all.
Dear....
....I pray you'll find helpful at least something in
my response to you.
1
For its whole history, Islam has viewed the Qur'an as
sacred in the sense of untouchable in the sense of uncriticizable. If a
believer disagrees with anything in it, that is taken to mean total rejection of
it and Islam: disagree with anything in it, & you've turned yourself into an
infidel. This form of anti-intellectualism is called the
all-or-nothing fallacy (or totalism, or the slippery slope, or the domino
effect, the either/or fallacy). Blasphemy! This anti-thought is
fear-driven: touch a wrong key, & the computer will
crash!
2
Fear, not faith. The apocalyptic genre of
literature used this fear to damn anybody who in any way changes the text -
e.g., Rev.22.18 (adds) & 19 (subtracts). This concluding formula is
the apocalyptist's way of (1) asserting that what he's written is indeed
"revelation" (Latin for "unveiling," for which the Greek is "apocalypse"), &
(2) protecting the purity of his text. Christians of extreme
fundamentalist persuasion apply this formulaic cursing not just to Rev. but to
the whole Bible - in ironic parallel to Islam's sacral protection of the
Qur'an.
3
I hope you sense that in the above, I'm addressing
your biblical sacrality, the untouchability of the Bible's ideas in
morality: either you agree with the Bible against homosexuality, or you throw
out the Bible with Christopher Hitchens. I'm putting it baldly &
boldly, but your second paragraph does put all the Bible's eggs into one basket
labeled "homosexuality": if the Bible is wrong on homosexuality, how can we
argue that it's right about anything? ln this thinking, you are
like a gambler who risks all on one throw of the dice. In this, your
thinking is the same as that of atheist homosexuals, who dispose of the whole of
Scripture (& of Christianity) on the basis of its anti-homosexual
texts. The irony is that those who say a biblical no to
homosexuality are canceling the Bible not only for most homosexuals but for most
American children, whose minds are public-school-captive to egality (the sacred
form of multicultural egalitarianism): faithfulness to biblical literalism
assures that America's children will not be faithful to the Bible.
This is the ground-issue of church infighting on
homosexuality.
4
The Bible uses its religion to promote & sanction
(support, motivate to) the ethics, morals, customs of its
provenance. This use of religion is universal: in human beings, the
religious & moral minds are - though distinguishable in thought -
inseparable in action. But the very inseparability of thought/action
involves mutual variability: a change in either changes the
other. When either morals or theology tightens/loosens, the other
tightens/loosens; or morals re-tighten if theology does not loosen (i.e., the
person "repents"); or theology re-tightens if morals retighten.
(Pathologically, one may compartmentalize thought/action, with one tight &
the other loose. This abnormal behavior is compensatory, a tight side
giving pseudo-stability to compensate for the destabilizing effects of the
loose side.)
5
The Bible teaches us how to sort all this
out. God says both don't eat pigs (Lev.) & eat pigs (Ac.10;
cp.M.7.19). (That's [dietary] customs with legal
support). God says both hate your enemies & (Jesus) "Love your
enemies." (That's ethics.) God says both no homosex &
faithful body-&-soul one-to-one commitments. (That's
morals.) Conclusion: In all these instances, believe the
second (i.e., later) thing God says. / A radical contrast
to the Qur'an: In disagreeing with itself, the Bible models our
disagreeing with it. Since it was written by reps of two
competing religions, how could it not disagree with itself? How
could Jesus not have said, "You have heard..., but I say to
you...."? The Bible-makers (who bound together the founding documents of
the two religions) understood revelation as a process, not (as in Islam)
an event (an angel's communication to one person over a brief period of
time - so the Qur'an-makers did not bind together OT / NT /
Qur'an).
6
Given the nature of Scripture as the literary result
of a self-critical revelational process, I've long taught the Three
Freedoms of biblical hermeneutics;
freedom IN the Bible,
knowing it
freedom WITH the Bible,
using it
freedom FROM the Bible, not
letting it use you (as the Qur'an uses Muslims). Galileo had the facts,
but his repressors had the Bible (& let it use them, against science). l You
have been letting the Bible use you against all homosex despite the fact
that this sexual preference is now know to be a natural comparative
underdevelopment - &, to the extent of natural, not a preference at all
but a "given" condition - "comparative" meaning minor (90% being hetero).
(I have a natural comparative defect: I tend to see & write numbers
backwards. It may be a combo of nature/nurture: early in K-12, I was
forced to write with my right hand, & wrote all numbers & words
backwards, right to left. Left-handedness is a "comparative" defect in
that the condition is minor [90% being right-handed].)
7
The (Presbyterian) editor of the Christian Century
said, ina recent editorial, that after 30 years of debating the ordination of
homosexuals, his denomination has decided to dump the issue downstairs - my
wording, but you get the idea: sub-national judicatories are to decide the issue
for themselves. Immediately, 100 churches left the denomination on the
ground that the Bible is clear on the issue, & the national church muddied
it, acting against the Bible. It reminds me of the slogan of American
history's "Christian" church movement slogan: "Where the Bible speaks, we
speak; where the Bible is silent, we are silent." (That slogan fought on
the wrong side in our Civil War.)
8
You well state the same perplexity: "If
something that is so apparently clear in scripture is not to be believed,
then what is?" Maybe a short list will help you see the illogic of your
statement: (1) The Bible clearly says God commanded genocide, but you don't
believe he did; (2) At the Last Supper, Jesus clearly commanded the custom of
foot-washing, but you don't believe the church was wrong to find it too
inconvenient; & the same for (3) "baptism" (which in the original can only
mean immersion, & which Jesus clearly commands at the end of Mt.). (4)
The Bible clearly says (Ps.6.5) that once you're dead, you won't be able to
remember God; but you don't believe it. (5) The Bible (Paul!) clearly says
women are not made in the image of God (1Cor.11.7), but you don't believe
it. (6) The Bible clearly says the sun was stopped so the day could be
lengthened so a battle could be won; but you don't believe it. (6) The
Bible clearly says the Son is subordinate to the Father, but you (& I)
believe in the Trinity of co-equal Persons....you get the idea. The
question then becomes, How is the Bible authoritative, seeing that in
some few instances it's clearly wrong & other few instances what it teaches
is not followed by the churches?:
8.1
On the Bible's authority, the two categories of
Bible-ignorant believe (1) the Bible is a hoax & (2) it's perfect
(authoritative in science, history, commanded behavior, & faith). That
leaves three categories of degrees of Bible-informed: the Bible is
authoritative in (3) history / commanded behavior / faith; in (4) commanded
behavior / faith; in (5) faith / commanded behavior in conformity to the
character & will of God. Mine is position No.5, which is primarily
about what the Bible is primarily about, viz. faith-trust in the biblical
God. I repeat: The Bible is authoritative in what the Bible is
primarily about. (For any book, could a reasonable case be
made for wider authority?)
8.2
Everything in the Bible is hung on the
clothesline of "faith," "the Faith." And everything on the clothesline
is important to understanding & living the Faith. Instead of a
clothesline, Jesus' metaphor is a hook on which the Bible (his "the law and the
prophets") all hangs (*krem-* [Lat., *pend-*]): Mt.22.40 (the hook [in the
previous three verses] being the commandment to love God / neighbor /
self).
8.3
I've no doubt that Jesus was that
radical. Everything in Scripture de-pends, hangs, on the
triple-love hook, which is the ethical criterion of authentic faith. Of
the four Evangelists (Gospel authors), Mt. is both the most Bible-quoting &
the only one recording the radical hook. (What, now, does love have to say
to an unfaithful hetero couple & a faithful homo couple?) / The
Luke parallel (10.25-28) emphasizes the ethical ("do"). / The Mark
parallel (15.28-34) puts the ethical above the liturgical ("whole burnt
offerings and sacrifices").
9
You put very well indeed the threat many Christians
feel when told that homosexuality is "natural" rather than a chosen sexual
preference. Every human being is born "naturally" imperfect, with a number
of defective genes; some are born "naturally" underdeveloped (e.g., Christopher
Hitchens in religious sensitivity) or blind or deaf or lame. To blame a
human being for a "natural" imperfection is ignorant if unknowing (as in Paul's
case on homosex in Ro.1) or, if knowing, cruel. (In Ro.1, Paul cites no
scriptural support for his condemnation of homosex; his sole support is the
Stoic sanction of nature (what's "un/natural" - & science has knocked out
that support).
10
Science can knock out nothing essential to
Christian faith, & scientism (philosophical positivism, dogmatic
materialism, historicism) knocks out everything essential to Christian faith
(revelation; creation; incarnation; Jesus' atoning death / resurrection /
ascension / sending of the Holy Spirit [Pentecost, Church], return [the
full-come Kingdom of God]; the Trinity [as at the end of Mt.]). /
Also true is the reverse: Religion can knock out nothing essential to
science.
11
On our computers recently, Loree & I read some
meditations of our Chinese daughter-in-law sent by her husband. We
cut/pasted her Chinese into "Google Translate" (translate.google.com) for almost
instant two-column (Chinese/English) pages. (She has been a Christian less
than four years.) I quote a little here to give you her sense of what is
authoritative about the Bible: "I have been redeemed, forgiven, [have]
receive[d] the riches of His grace." (God's) "Life is the source of all
life, and can give people eternal life." "This Book [the Bible] will
preserve the truth; find out why it will be our confidence and the source of
spiritual power surge." / The Chinese church (with no leadership
from the West) has taught her how to read the Bible.
12
Appropriate to new contexts of space (geography) &
time (periods), people have had to learn to re-read the Bible. The
last chapter of Luke speaks of "two of Jesus' followers" learning from him to
read the Bible in light of Messiah's suffering - "explaining from all the
Scriptures the things concerning himself" (24.27). The same author speaks
of an Ethiopian Jew who, while reading Isaiah 53.7-8 (in Greek), was asked by
Philip "'Do you understand what you are reading?'" (Ac.8.30) Answer: "'How
can I, unless someone instructs me?'" "So beginning with this same
Scripture, Philip told him the Good News about Jesus." In Luke-Acts, you
are to read the OT with updated (Christian) eyes. Without
this christological exegesis, the OT would not have made it into "the
[Christian] Bible". Jews, of course, consider this Christian reading of
their Hebrew Scriptures too radical a pesher (re-visioning, in light of
unexpected historical changes). Christians respond that "the Christ Event"
(the whole Jesus Story from incarnation to consummation) not only justifies the
pesher but requires it, & the pesher update saves the (Jewish)
Scriptures from rejection by Christians. / I am saying to you that
today, many Christians are rejecting the Bible because they've not been
instructed in its updates. Ironically, Christians who reject the updates
(as you do in the case of homosexuality) are making it easy for other Christians
to reject the Bible.
Grace and peace--
Willis
Elliott