A God Who Loves Queers
March 21, 2013 § 3 Comments
Valerie quoted to me recently Kate Bornstein’s direction to find the God who likes you, the God who acknowledges and affirms your being. I found this God initially, oddly enough through the Christian church, and primarily through studying the Bible. Lately, I’ve been at risk of letting go of what I know. I’m going to bypass the question of if God is real, since people name God as a motivator for all kinds of things, and thus God is real, whatever kind of real that means. And also since more than one God has been real for me, in my life. I’ve heard other queer people struggle with this, to keep hold and keep learning this God, as God. Not everyone can put it into words, and not everyone has to. But for myself in this moment, and for other people, I am going to try.
Who is the God who affirms queers? Who loves the people society hates? What have I seen about him? What do I know about her?
This God is not a God who is invested in control. This God does not need to shape creation to please himself, break it open, contort your truth, your individuality, consume you and leave you obedient.
Instead, this God is a God who is invested in freedom, committed to free will despite the cost, who is invested in consent. That God created from a place of taking joy in creativity, who wanted the joy of watching what was initiated take on a life of its own, go places and learn a self separate and divine.
This God is not going to hurt you. Even if, sad to say, you hurt someone else. Instead of control, instead of intervening in our free will by stopping us or punishing us until we are controlled by fear and made “good” she gave us the resilience of the human spirit, the presence of conscience, empathy, the will to change, the brilliance and potential of humanity to unbury the wisdom the Creative Spirit put into their own bodies and the living world and find it still there after suffering so much violence, and see new ways of being, nonviolent and creative and loving ones.
This God is not in the angry voice, the machine gun, armies made uniform and obedient and ready to be deployed, the nuclear bomb, the voice of shame, the electric rake of fear going up our spine and threatening what will happen if you do not obey. This God is not in the machine, the suppression of the self, the murder of the soul.
This God is in your own body, in the opening of your chest when witnessing something beautiful, in the energy of new truth running up your spine, in the pleasurable ache of desire in your belly, in the exhaustion of content. This God is in the resistance of the spirit against its own oppression, the courage of the commonplace person to refuse to harm another despite the threat of punishment, this God is in the vision of the radical, the humility and strength of the civilly disobedient, in each connection between human beings, in each moment of truly seeing the world, in the humanity and vulnerability of knowing ones own or another’s suffering without blindness or a need to move away. This God is in the natural world, in the reverence for one’s own true loves, the expansion and liberation of the soul.
When I say this God is real, it is because I know her. I know that other God, too, the one who hates us queers. And I say, from the spirit, don’t follow that one. That one is real. But that ain’t God.
On Christianity and Homosexuality
March 21, 2012 § 4 Comments
I recently heard a new catchy argument about homosexuality floating around the Christian community: “There are arguments on both sides, but only one side has Scripture to back it.”
I think I have proven that wrong in other posts, and so have many other people. I have pointed to the ways the Bible was used to condone slavery and mask an evil practice, and to fight against it. And many other Scriptures can be added to the argument. Take the only dialogue between Jesus and Satan in the Bible, which undoubtedly shows that Scripture can be used wrongly. And the fact that most of Jesus’s arguments with religious leaders of his time Jesus was regarding the letter of the Law. While they applied dead letter, Jesus had the right application of the Spirit of Love as his argument, which seems a much better backing to me.
To me, it feels like this argument embodies much that is wrong with contemporary Christianity. It comes from the totally wrong spirit. It does not even feel loving. It is meant to shame and silence people who would call the Christian community out for emulating the homophobia and bullying of mainstream culture under the guise of spiritual and loving behavior.
And it shows a fear and laziness in how some of us bear challenges to our beliefs about sexual ethics. If we were truly guided by a living Spirit, we would be ready to embrace new information, to make arguments in peace, and grow into new truths.
We need to collectively face the reality that our history as a culture includes rampant violence regarding sex. And that Christians have offered no alternative with strength of Spirit or beauty of vision enough to move the hearts of people and motivate them to change the way the teachings of Jesus did.
Perhaps some might envision the Kingdom on Earth as a place of nuclear families with heterosexual couples who married as virgins and never masturbated. But there is nothing radical about that vision, and it will not motivate the world to change. It will instead create a norm that we will attempt to impose upon one another with blatant or subtle violence, and draw us away from reality and the living context in which the Spirit can move and create beauty and instead into a detached and dead religious practice that creates confusion and suffering leaves us vulnerable to the manipulation of false spiritual leaders seeking power.
I think the Spirit is moving us to a grander vision, one beyond fear, where we can see how sad and weak violence is and how alive and creative and filled with joy we can be through and on the other side of the process of healing. I think we are called to rethink what we’ve learned regarding sex, and I am glad those questions are being asked relentlessly. And I don’t think throwing up blind arguments that misapply dead letter to a living world with a living Spirit can stop it.
No Such Thing as a Gay Hating Christian, More Like
April 21, 2011 § Leave a Comment
I just came across a rant online entitled, “there is no such thing as a gay Christian.” I’ve heard this plenty of times, and this time, I got to thinking on how I might respond if I spoke from my deepest, truest self. It goes something like this…
I agree that you have the letter of the law right. You can quote Biblical text to back your opinion. But I would have the letter of the law right if I said slaves should submit to their oppressors or that you should stone your parents to death for cooking on a Sunday. Whenever you quote the Bible, you are appealing to some other authority outside of the simple letter of the Biblical text. Whether or not you like to be confronted by this point is beside the point.
What we always have to appeal to in order to know how to live our lives as Christians is the spirit of the law, not the letter. This is what Jesus did, and this is what we have to do, either mindfully or by simply following the mandates set out for us by authority figures.
I say your argument has got the spirit of the law all wrong. So perhaps, in essence, we’re following a different spirit under the same name. If you are drawn to Christianity for a sense of moral superiority or shelter from the judgment and torture of an angry, violent God, then your spirituality is completely different from mine. What draws me to Christianity and the God Jesus represents is the ethic of love – radically simple and full of hope and life and vision for a world where connection and compassion and joy are found in abundance. I believe that is the spirit of the law, the spirit of teachings of Jesus, the spirit of God is the spirit of love. Not a spirit of threat and harm and restriction and fear.
If Jesus was showing us a better way, doesn’t it seem suspect that the same marginalized hated group in our culture is translated into the taboo sinner and moral scapegoat in our dominant religious culture? That doesn’t seem like a better way to me. Broader culture would suppress and kill and otherwise terrorize people out of same sex relationships; Christian culture would convert and consign to hell and terrorize people out of same sex relationships. I don’t even see that as a different way, much less better.
I would agree with the definitive statement that there is no such thing as a Christian hate crime or a Christian war. To be “Christian” derives from following in the teachings and example of Christ, and Jesus definitely didn’t do either of those things, but opposed them with his words and exemplified a better way, one of nonviolent resistance fueled by a divine love.
But to say there is no such thing as someone who loves and follows the Way of Jesus and has relationships and sex with people of the same sex… No one has yet articulated for me how same sex relationships contrast with the love ethic taught by Jesus. Arguments to that nature are shallow and cyclical and generally infused with an atmosphere of belligerence, threat, fear, and hate.
Anything that makes me feel like closing off a part of my soul or cowering or shutting out someone or something, I name to be the influence of a spirit of anti-love, or Satan if you will (though conjuring an image of horns and hooves seem like a distraction to me). Anything that makes me feel like my heart has enlarged to incorporate something or someone that was previously outside its bounds, that my soul has woken up and been united into one, clear, bright flame, I take to be the influence of the spirit of love, or the Holy Spirit of God.
That is how I discern what is the true spirit of the law, of the teachings of Jesus reflected in the Biblical scriptures. God is Love. And love is simple. As simple for me as that.
On Jennifer Knapp and Loving Sexual Ethics
May 1, 2010 § 1 Comment
The release of Jennifer Knapp’s new album and the recent news that she decided to be open prior to its release that she has a female partner and is still a Christian has completely consumed my inner (and much of my outer) world lately.
I love this woman. Her art has changed my life, no sentimentality included. Many, many people feel this way.
I am deeply upset by the news. Let me explain. Her same-sex romance and continuing ownership of the Christian faith does not constitute a moral conflict for me. This would not have been the case some years ago. I am upset, because it causes me great pain to relate to the spiritual turmoil she clearly went through in reconciling her faith with same-sex love and attraction. I went through a process of grieving when I read the reasons for her long break from making music. All I kept thinking was, “That’s it!? That’s why?” A great artist was broken to the point of being unable to create for eight years. To me, that is nothing short of severe injustice and of tragedy. The “Christian music industry” (VOMIT) was largely to blame. But that is not what I want to focus on just now. That was only part of what happened. She felt herself torn between her partner and her faith – between two parts of herself. That is some of the worst pain and the worst cognitive dissonance to reconcile and recovery from.
I decided to post this in an attempt to succinctly convey the total shift I experienced in moral comprehension surrounding same-sex attraction, sex, and love. If you love Jennifer Knapp or are otherwise at all conflicted about how the combination of homosexuality and Christianity interact, I think you will want to read this post.
On we go.
When you ask any Christian why they believe homosexuality is wrong, they will invariably answer, “The Bible says.”
This response is not ubiquitous or necessary in discussion of any other supposed sin. Everything else has moral ramifications that can be elaborated upon and even separated from church-speak all together. I can explain to a friend of any and all or no religious backgrounds why it is a sin/immoral choice/bad idea to: kill, rape, exploit, drink too much, eat too much, use too many resources, ignore others, and so on and so on. I do not need to appeal to anything outside of my own intuitive moral sense, the Spirit of Love in me, and trust that it will resonate with the same in their moral conscience and leave them with a personal moral decision.
But with homosexuality you get the same old, “God wills it. Look, the Bible says…” argument every time. This was the case for me initially. I could not come up with anything besides, “The Bible says…” and this seemed anomalous to me. So I kept coming back to those passages regarding homosexuality over and over again, trying to gain some moral grasp of what they were saying and why.
Amidst the complex and shockingly specific Law of the Old Testament, in the list of people who get stoned to death, with abrupt vehemence, homosexuality (specifically male, but we all agree that the culture did not fully perceive women as moral agents and they should be included) is listed. No Christian can quote the Law without appealing to some authority beyond the text as to which parts of the Law are still relevant to us under the New Covenant, with the Holy Spirit replacing the Temple and so on, and in what way. For example, I do not leave the corner of my fields for widows and orphans, but I give a portion of all of my resources to the under-resourced. I wear multi-colored clothes made of blended fabrics, but I try to wear excessively expensive clothes that flaunt wealth. I hold my father’s hand when his skin is discolored and cracked instead of sending him to a tent and bricking him in the head if he treads back without being “purified.” All Christians understand that Jesus eradicated the Law, stating that the Jewish clergy belied God in the way they kept the letter of the Law and not the spirit of the Law.
Then there is that bit in the story of Sodom and Gommorah – the men turning to lust after one another. A close reading of this eradicates its relevance pretty fast. This was not a culture where men were so “evil” they wanted to kiss other men and marry them and adopt babies, oh my!, but a vicious, overt rape culture. When the angels show up, the townsmen literally pound on the door and demand that they be handed over. Not for consensual sex of any kind – the town was primed for gang rape, slavering over fresh victims. That is so far gone, it isn’t difficult to read the story and think, “I don’t know if I could have thought of anything but fiery destruction to solve the problem either…” I would say this is tantamount to the moral confusion of trying to deal with legitimately evil people, which is a separate, long, and terribly difficult discussion in and of itself. Frankly, I don’t fully understand the story’s ramifications, but what I take away from it is that even Abraham, who was super righteous by all accounts, was LESS merciful than God, even though he perceived the opposite during his moral negotiations with God on the subject.
So, we’re on to the more actually challenging question of mentions of homosexuality in the New Testament.
Jesus said not a word about it. This is a very significant indicator of a very relevant fact – the sin that should be taboo in the Christian church is not homosexuality, or any sexual sin.
What is it? Hypocrisy. Willfull distortion of the truth, projecting an image of righteousness and piety, for the sake of gaining leverage and power that you use to exploit people and get away with abuse. There were PLENTY of people having same-sex romps all around Jesus as he lived and taught and healed. It was Rome. But the people he railed at, shamed, and blamed for the impending demise of the Jewish people’s world as they knew it were the hypocritical religious leaders who had learned to implore the authority of God without exhibiting the love of God. Jesus talks to these people in a manner radically different from his norm. It’s a huge part of what gets him killed.
Then we are left with Paul, and a less quoted bit of Revelations (written by John). Paul’s words are the crux of anti-gay sentiment in the Christian church. This is where my very real moral dilemma got stuck for a long time. I could not figure out what to do with Paul. I kept thinking, if I can just understand why this is listed as a sin, then I will be at peace with it.
I noted first off that homosexuality is NEVER singled out as a particularly “bad” sin. It is mentioned only in lists of the kinds of people who won’t enter the Kingdom, and if you notice the context, these lists are sent by Paul to communities in the midst of radically altering their moral views to the very new and largely undefined Christianity and scared that they aren’t good enough, that they aren’t doing something. It can’t be as easy as loving, can it? And what does that mean? He was trying to answer so many questions, because people were so willingly to follow the Way of Jesus, but struggling to comprehend what it was. Married couples were confused as to whether they should become celibate to “be saved,” and Paul tried to direct the to understand that having sex or mutually choosing to abstain were both ok. The lists are there to comfort them, not terrorize them! He is trying to say, you are not missing some magical thing that is required to get you into heaven. He named the people who were to be left of the Kingdom, naming liars, cheaters, murderers, etc, etc. Basically, those people who make a lifestyle of exploitation – they relate to others as predators, by going for whatever they can get from them. They choose dominance over love. They seek to destroy life rather than nurture it.
So why are homosexuals in this list? The answer I found from Biblical scholars is one I had a hard time with for a while, but now think is true. In short, the word homosexuality did not exist in Roman culture the way it does in ours. There was no such thing as same-sex marriage; there was not even separate caste marriage. Early Christians habitually broke marriage laws by marrying people of differing cultural and social standings. It was assumed at the time that men (those who were dominant) had the right to the bodies of women AND children, both male and female who were perceived as lesser and therefore property (inherently and rightfully submissive), and that they would have sex with them, that is get pleasure from bodily exploiting them. A man was not considered homosexual if he had sex with males – there was instead a lot of highly disturbing politics regarding tops and bottoms that I won’t go into now.
What did exist, rampantly, was temple prostitution. Boys and girls were sold or given to temples (and remember this was the most multi-cultural society before ours, there were a freaking ton of religions) and visitors would have sex with them without a fleeting moral qualm. This still exists today, if you ask me, in many guises. I would say Las Vegas is one of them – we go there to worship money. Paul wanted early Christians to know that they were to have absolutely no part in this. The people Paul was talking about when we say “homosexuals” would be more aptly described as “sex traffickers.” That is so in line with Jesus’s teachings, there is no contention. Anyone who is predatory with their sexuality, who does not honor the human rights of those they have sex with, IS A SINNER, until they repent and stop.
But how many Christians are mobilized to stop sex trafficking, sexual abuse, or rape apology in the current world? You hear statistics like in THIS country, someone is sexually assaulted every two minutes, and by the age of eighteen one in three women and one in six men have been sexually assaulted…. And you turn around and see Christians fighting “sexual immorality” by telling kids they must abstain even from being turned on by each other until marriage and that if gays are allowed to marry the world will end.
But I don’t know anything about Greek or Biblical scholarship on my own. I had to allow that perhaps Paul did mean just all same-sex desire and sex. And this is where it really got tricky.
Then I noticed something. The Christian church relates to Paul’s letters in much the same way that we do the Old Testament. There are passages we literally ignore and passages we tout. Women don’t cover their heads all the time, and men grow long hair without being metaphysically shamed and lessened. Women speak in church, and no one is suddenly stripped of their moral insight.
The best parallel I can find to the way the Christian church relates to homosexuality is slavery. Paul ALLOWED for slavery, as did the Old Testament. He sent a slave back to his owner. He said, “Slaves, obey your masters.”
Abolition was an issue that drew sides both within and without the Christian church. There were those who argued that the Bible allowed it and told slaves to be subservient. People believed being black was having “the mark of Caine” and being destined for suffering, which they gladly exploited for their own gain. And there were those who argued that all human beings were equal in God’s eyes, and that no one who served the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of Love could or would rob another person of their right to freedom and body sovereignty.
No one could erase those lines from the Bible. Paul did say, “Slaves obey your masters,” although maybe he meant bondservants and maybe slavery was different in that culture, but who knows. We learned to believe that the Way of Jesus leaves no room to own slaves. We gloss over those verses. We know they are wrong.
I believe that Paul also allowed for sexism. And that the Way of Jesus does not.
The anti-gay factions of the Christian church claim to uphold the sanctity of the Bible. They quote it as if they are not appealing to any other authority besides the letter, but, undeniably, they are. The letter of the law is nothing without the Spirit – this is one of the greatest tenants of Jesus’s teachings. And the letter does not animate itself regardless – there is always some “interpretation” being made. The Bible says, “Fear God,” “Love is God,” and “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear.” We’re all making decisions in how we understand it. How could we not?
What they are actually upholding and arguing is the sanctity of gender – specifically binary gender in which males and females are delegated into very specific, appropriate, and “God-given” roles.
I find no reason to believe, either in the Bible, in my own moral conscience, or in Jesus’s teachings as I have been able to discern them, that any trait found righteous in a man should be sin in a woman or vice versa. Men are called to be tender, to be non-violent, to uphold the rights of the weak, to divest of the “privilege” of exploitation. Women are called to be defiant and adhere only to the authority of God and the inclinations of their own moral conscience, to resist tyranny and defend themselves and others from oppression, to be their own moral thinkers and judges.
There is lots more to be said of the gender politics of Jesus. The fact that the tomb was discovered by two women, a direct parody of Jewish law where the testimony of two men was enough to confirm or condemn and women’s testimony counted for nothing, the inclusion of women in Jesus’s set of intimates, his insight into how people won’t marry in Heaven but be like the angels (which signifies to me that we are to be without gender/sex), and then the female leaders Paul himself commends in other letters than the “wives be submissive” and “women be silent” ones and his statement that “in Christ there is neither male nor female.” In summary – Jesus demands the divine, human rights of women be upheld the same as men’s, and children are naturally thrown in. Love, not ownership and not oppression, are the Way of Jesus. You cannot reconcile the two.
If we as a culture take ownership of people by defining their gender and their appropriate roles, their appropriate behaviors and temperaments, and their appropriate lovers we strip them of moral autonomy and body sovereignty, and we replace a love ethic with legalism. I believe, in short, that Paul was transitioning from Jewish law to the Way of Jesus, and that the place where he was most caught up in the old was in regards to patriarchy (the inherent right of the strong to rule over the weak and to take possession of their bodies, in a myriad of ways, through psychological terrorism or force) and so you get justification of slavery, sexism, and homophobia. If this is not Paul’s error, then it is ours in how we have understood him and just as relevant.
How can a loving action be made sin by the mere coincidence of gender? Gender has to be sacred – more sacred than love. I don’t mean love as affection or simple bodily desire or even extreme feeling or obsession. I mean love as the will to extend one’s self for the purpose of one’s own or another’s spiritual growth. Sexual desire calls us to closer communion with others (even when we’re teenagers and in our time of deepest introversion and resistance to intimacy), and we either learn to allow it to guide us wisely, crush it out of ourselves to our own loss, or turn what was meant to be sacred into a means of exploitation, of ourselves and/or others.
I think Christianity does demand a love-centered sexual ethic. And I do believe that our society does not have one. Rape apology, child abuse, and sexual trauma in the form of body-negativity, sex-negativity, gender-normative social conditioning, and homophobia abound.
Let me ask you this – doesn’t anybody think it’s odd that non-Christians are just as disgusted and abhorred by homosexuality as Christians? Doesn’t the coating of a severe preexisting prejudice in religious language seem slightly convenient to anyone?
We are using the name of Jesus to excuse our sexism, rape apology, homophobia, and the dominance of a huge number of people’s sexualities through physical or psychological violence, especially through shaming.
And that to me smacks of the taboo sin. Hypocrisy.