A
while back, I was invited by a church to talk about the biblical view of
homosexuality. I decided to take an evenhanded approach, trying to describe
fairly how people might arrive at different conclusions regarding this divisive
issue. I took this path in the hope of building some mutual understanding among
different factions and out of the conviction that individuals must reach their
own decisions about such matters.
After
my talk, I received messages from a number of attendees (and others who have an
interest in the topic) that touched on a shared theme. These people were
occasionally finding themselves in conversations with those who hold what I
will call “the absolutist position”: the Bible clearly and unequivocally
condemns homosexuality and we must take the same view of it. (I do not call
this the “literalist position” because, as we will see, what the Bible
literally says and means about this issue is one of the subjects of debate.)
The inquirers thought that things had to be more complicated than the
absolutist position acknowledged, and they sought help in understanding why
their intuition might be right.
This
post responds to those requests. To be clear: I am not here republishing the
presentation I made at the church, which gave a good deal of airtime to the
absolutist view. Rather, this post attempts to help people understand why they
may have sound reasons to conclude that things are, indeed, more complex than
the absolutist position admits.
There
are many such reasons. I will offer half a dozen.
The Bible is not the
only thing that informs our relationship with God
I
will assume that everyone asking me this question has a particular kind of
relationship with the Bible. They care deeply about it; they study it
thoughtfully; they turn to it for guidance; and they sincerely want to
understand it. This is, of course, precisely why these people bothered to come
to me with their inquiry. After all, if someone does not care what the Bible says, then the absolutist position is of no
consequence.
Still,
many people who acknowledge the importance of the Bible also believe that their
spiritual goal is not to achieve a relationship with a book but to achieve a relationship with God. In this sense, the Bible plays an intermediary role in our
faith, pointing toward something else but not being the end in itself. Indeed, it
can be argued that as soon as we make a fetish of any thing, substituting it for our worship of God, we fall into a
dangerous form of idolatry—the kind of object-worship that, ironically, the
Bible condemns with much greater clarity than it condemns homosexuality.
Furthermore,
the Bible has no claim to exclusivity as an intermediary source of inspiration
that may help us to have “a closer walk” with God. Other things matter, too. To
borrow a list from John Wesley, things like our religious traditions, our capacity
for rational thought, and our personal experience may play central roles here
as well.
To
take just the last of these, there is nothing inconsistent in finding
inspiration and guidance in both the Bible and
in our experience. To the contrary, the Bible repeatedly points us toward human
experience as a source of spiritual meaning and insight and as an indispensible
way to cultivate our relationship with God.
For
example, in the gospels Jesus instructs us over and over again about the central
importance of our service to and love for other human beings. He tells us that
when we feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, welcome strangers, clothe
the naked, care for the sick, and visit the imprisoned it is as if we do these
things for God himself. (Matthew 25:31-46) And Jesus left his disciples with
this “new commandment”: “that you love one another. Just as I have loved you,
you should also love one another.” (John 13:34) In these passages, and many
others, Jesus affirms what our very existence tells us: that our relationships
with other human beings draw us into a deeper relationship with God.
Relational
and personal experiences lead many people to conclude that the label “sinner”
should not be applied to someone because of their homosexuality. Some of these
people reach this decision based upon their own homosexual identity. Others do
so based on their experiences with the gays and lesbians in their lives: their
close friends, neighbors, co-workers, relatives, children, and grandchildren.
For
many of these people, this decision is driven by the realization that
homosexuality is not a choice but an innate characteristic—a conclusion that
is overwhelmingly supported by the current science around the question. Their
experience tells them that homosexuality therefore differs from the other
sexual conduct with which the absolutists sometimes like to compare it, like
adultery. This fact has tremendous moral significance: after all, regardless of
whether it may be just for us to pass judgment on someone based on what they choose to do, it is plainly unjust for us to do so based on who
they are.
Those
who take the absolutist position sometimes respond to these arguments by saying
things like “we are all sinners” or “we hate the sin but love the sinner,” and these
sorts of declarations have some appeal and may make sense in other contexts. It
is important to recognize, though, that such statements make no sense when applied to matters of
identity. It is not hard to see the conspicuous flaws in statements like “we
are all sinners, but you are a sinner
because you are black” or “we love you, but we hate your racial identity.”
This
helps explain why the religious condemnation of homosexuality comes at such a
high and tragic cost. Telling me to change an innate characteristic about
myself can lead to only two consequences: either I will mistakenly conclude
that I am being fairly judged, but
will be powerless to comply; or I will recognize that I am being unfairly judged, but will be powerless
to rebut the accusation.
The
latter reminds me of a personal experience. Years ago, a black lesbian woman I
know remarked to me: “If someone thinks I’m lazy because I’m black, then I can
show that I work hard. If someone thinks I’m moody because I’m a woman, then I
can show that I’m even-tempered. But if someone thinks I’m a sinner because I’m
a lesbian, what am I supposed to do to convince them otherwise?”
Placing
a human being in an acute and unsolvable dilemma like this has predictable
consequences, particularly for those in our church communities. It may prompt
anxiety, depression, and even self-destructive ideas and behaviors among our gay
and lesbian brothers and sisters. In the case of our gay and lesbian youth,
bullying and public shaming may exacerbate these problems.
Many
of us conclude that we cannot ignore what our experience teaches us about them—our
fellow children of the Living God. We believe that the God of Justice would not
expect us to judge someone unfairly based on who they are. And we think that
the God of Love and Mercy would not command us to magnify vastly the suffering
in the world, to no apparent end.
Neither
the Gospels Nor Jesus Address Homosexuality
People
who delve into the issue are often surprised at how few biblical passages
actually say anything at all about homosexuality. As I will discuss later, the
debate about this issue has centered on only a handful of passages in the Old
and New Testament. We might contrast this with the hundreds of references to
the poor and poverty or the more than fifteen hundred references to justice.
Those
who take the absolutist position sometimes argue that the Bible includes many
more indirect references to homosexuality through its various generic
condemnations of sexual immorality. But this argument suffers from an obvious
logical failing. After all, that argument assumes
that the Bible views homosexuality as a sin, which is precisely the issue
under consideration. You cannot prove something to be true based upon an
argument that assumes it is.
Furthermore,
none of the passages at issue comes
from the Gospels and none of them
involves any statement ever attributed to Jesus Christ. This has great
significance for many Christians, who view the Gospels as the most important
texts in the Bible and who think of the words of Jesus as the most important
statements in those texts. Given that Jesus never spoke of homosexuality, they
wonder how we can fairly conclude that he condemned it or even thought it an
issue of real significance to our faith.
The parts of the Bible that do appear to address it are, at
best, unclear
As
I mentioned, debates around this issue have focused on just handful of texts
from the Old and New Testament. Two of the most frequently cited come from the
Old Testament book of Leviticus. Let’s start with those.
Leviticus
The
passages at issue from Leviticus come from chapters 17 through 26 of that book,
commonly called the “Holiness Code.” To be clear, the Holiness Code reiterates
a number of principles that clearly have continuing relevance to us today and
that we find elsewhere in the Bible. For example, it tells us not to steal, or
lie, or commit an injustice, or do anything that endangers our neighbor’s life.
It commands us to love our neighbor as ourselves. (Leviticus 19)
But
the Holiness Code also includes large swaths of ritual and law that will strike
many contemporary readers as irrelevant and culturally bound. Indeed, on a
daily basis most us disregard many of its commands, such as: “Do not wear
clothing woven of two kinds of material” (19:19); “Do not eat any meat with the
blood still in it” (19:26); and “Do not clip off the edges of your beard”
(19:27). A while back, a man proudly circulated on the Internet a picture of
his tattoo of a verse from Leviticus that had been translated to condemn
homosexuality; he was apparently unaware that Leviticus also says “Do not put
tattoo marks on yourselves” (19:28).
Still
other passages will strike many contemporary readers as outdated to the point
of otherworldliness or even as horrifically inhumane. For example: “A man or
woman who is a medium must be put to death” (20:7); “If anyone curses his
mother or father, he must be put to death” (20:9); “If a man commits adultery
with a woman, they must both be put to death” (20:10); “If a man has sex with a
woman during her period, they must both be cut off from their people” (20:18);
and “If a priest’s daughter becomes a prostitute, she must be burned alive”
(21:9).
If
these verses do not hold much appeal for you, then you are in good company. The
Bible recounts a number of instances in which Jesus speaks against the enforcement
of the Holiness Code. For example, Leviticus says that a woman taken in
adultery should be put to death; but when confronted with such a situation, Jesus
declares: let he who is without sin among you cast the first stone. And
Leviticus declares that an injury should be repaid in kind: “If anyone injures
his neighbor, whatever he has done must be done to him: fracture for fracture,
eye for eye, tooth for tooth”; but Jesus calls upon us instead to “turn the
other cheek.”
Furthermore, the two passages at issue from the Holiness
Code are, at best, ambiguous in meaning. Granted, as they are often translated
they sound unequivocal in their condemnation. Consider the language from the
King James Version: “Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind. It is
an abomination” (18:22); “If a man also lie with mankind, as he lieth with a
woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to
death; their blood shall be upon them” (20:13). But experts in the Hebrew
language tell us it is more complicated that.
Contemporary scholars have indicated that the word
“abomination” is a mistranslation that does not capture the meaning of the
original text. They note that the Hebrew word at issue here (“toevah”) is used
in Leviticus to describe something that is prohibited as inconsistent with the
then-existing Jewish identity—like eating pork or engaging in sex during
menstruation. They point out that Leviticus uses this word primarily to mark
distinctions between the Jewish community and other communities and to identify
things that the Jews viewed as “unclean” but not as intrinsically immoral. They
note that Leviticus uses other language to describe things (like rape and
incest) that it views as inherently wrong.
Those
who take the absolutist position sometimes point to the punishment—death—as
evidence that Leviticus takes these violations very seriously and condemns them
in absolute terms. This argument, however, just leaves us with a different problem. After all, if that
argument is right, then we have to figure out what to do with all the other things that Leviticus seems to
take so seriously as to impose the death sentence, like cursing your father or
mother. Are we to take those condemnations literally as well?
In
sum, despite the assured and unqualified language of some translations, serious
questions exist about what these passages from Leviticus mean.
The Story of Sodom
Another
frequently cited Old Testament passage with respect to the issue of
homosexuality comes in the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. This story begins to
unfold in chapter 18 of Genesis. There, the Lord discloses to Abraham his
intention to destroy those cities, whose people have committed a grave (but
undisclosed) sin. In a remarkable scene, Abraham bargains with the Lord until
He finally agrees that He will not destroy those cities if He can find even ten
righteous people there.
The
story continues in Chapter 19 with two angels arriving in Sodom. There they
encounter Lot, who greets them and offers them the hospitality of his home. At
first they resist (which may be an important detail, for reasons I will
discuss), but finally they relent and he takes them in and feeds them.
All
of the men of Sodom then surround the house and demand that Lot bring out his
guests so that they might “know them.” Lot turns them away, making the
following offer, which surely strikes us as an astonishing one: “I have two
daughters who have not known a man; let me bring them out to you and do to them
as you please; only do nothing to these men, for they have come under the
shelter of my roof.” The mob rejects the offer and attempts to force their way
into the house, but the angels strike them blind. At the urging of the angels,
Lot and his family flee and the Lord rains sulfur and fire down on both cities.
It
is clear that the men of Sodom committed some sin that (combined with their
prior sinful conduct) drew the wrath of the Lord and resulted in the
destruction of the cities. What is less clear
is the precise nature of that sin. Absolutists
argue that the sin of these men is homosexual desire. Indeed, the tradition
around this interpretation gives us our words “sodomy” and “sodomite.”
Contemporary
Bible scholars tell us, however, that this is not the only possible meaning of
the story. They have identified a number of other interpretations that they
find at least equally plausible. I
will briefly touch on just three of them.
The
first is that the sin of the men of Sodom was that they wanted to engage in nonconsensual sex with Lot’s visitors.
That is, they wanted to rape them.
And, to make matters worse, they wanted to rape angels. Isn’t it possible, these scholars ask, that the Lord
punished Sodom for that?
The
second relates to the special significance afforded to the welcoming of
strangers in the ancient Near East, where travel to foreign lands was fraught
with peril. In that cultural context, Lot took on a special responsibility to
care for these men when he invited them in—perhaps a extraordinarily weighty responsibility
in light of the detail I mentioned before: he
talked them into it. The men of Sodom thus committed an outrageous offense
by terrorizing Lot’s guests and demanding that Lot offer them up for an act of
sexual violence.
This
second interpretation finds some support both within the story and outside of
it. It might explain, for example, why Lot makes the alarming offer of his
daughters and then adds: “but do nothing to these men, for they have come under the shelter of my roof.” These words signal
the profound moral responsibility that Lot felt for his guests.
As
discussed above, Jesus included the welcoming of strangers as among the other
great acts of charity like feeding the hungry and visiting the imprisoned. And Jesus
seems to have linked the story of Sodom and Gomorrah with a violation of the
moral imperative to care for strangers. He told his disciples: “Whoever shall
not receive you, nor hear your words, when you depart out of that house or
city, shake off the dust of your feet. Verily I say unto you, it shall be more
tolerable for the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of judgment than for
that city.” (Matthew 10:14-15).
We
would perhaps have fewer interpretive difficulties here if another passage in
the Old Testament told us precisely how to understand the story of Sodom and
Gomorrah, but none does. To the contrary, the references to this story in other
parts of the Hebrew Bible usually refer to their fatal sin as one of “pride” or
“idolatry.” Indeed, in the actions of the men of Sodom we see an unmistakable
placing of one’s own pleasures and
interests over those of anyone else—even at the cost of an act of violence
against angels of the Lord. This gives us yet a third way in which the behavior
of the men of Sodom may have offended the Lord.
Those
who take a close look at the story of Sodom and Gomorrah may conclude that it
leaves us with more questions than answers about the biblical view of
homosexuality.
The Levite and the Concubine
Another
text often cited in this debate appears in chapters 19 and 20 of the book of Judges
and involves the lesser known, and disturbingly grisly, story of the Levite of
Ephraim and his concubine. In that text, a Levite takes his concubine on a long
journey that ultimately leads them to a city where they do not know anyone. An
old man takes them into his home and cares for them. In a passage reminiscent
of the story of Sodom and Gomorrah, a crowd gathers and they call for the
Levite to be brought out.
In
words that echo those of Lot, the old man expresses special concern for the
male guest he has taken in: “No, my brothers, do not act so wickedly. Since
this man is my guest, do not do this vile thing.” But the Levite seizes his
concubine and puts her out to them, and they rape and abuse her all night long.
The Levite, discovering the dead body
of the concubine the next morning, cuts her into twelve pieces and sends them
throughout Israel in protest of her rape and murder.
You
can imagine why this story is not the subject of many sermons or Sunday school
lessons.
Those
who take the absolutist position sometimes point to this story as reiterating
the condemnation of homosexuality they find in the story of Sodom. But the
problems with this interpretation are obvious. After all, in this story—as in
that of Sodom—the mistreatment of strangers who have been welcomed into the
safety of someone’s home clearly plays a central role. And this story is
manifestly about rape and its consequences and not about homosexuality. Indeed, the offending rape is heterosexual in nature.
In
short, the story of the Levite and the concubine lends no apparent support to
the absolutist interpretation of the story of Sodom. If anything, it tends to
suggest that the “homosexual sin” interpretation of the story is mistaken.
The Letters of Paul
In
the debate over the biblical view of homosexuality, three of the letters of
Paul have received particular attention.
The
first text is I Corinthians 6:9, which lists some of the categories of those
who will not inherit the kingdom of God. The list includes a word that has
sometimes been translated as “sodomite.” Contemporary scholars have observed
that the original Greek word literally means something closer to “loose” or
“licentious,” and that early church tradition associated the word not with
homosexuality but with masturbation.
The
second text is I Timothy 1:10, which states that the law has been provided not for
the innocent but for sinners. The list in the following text then includes a
different and more rarely used word
than the one we find in Corinthians but that has also sometimes been translated
as “sodomite.” Contemporary scholars tell us, however, that in the time of Paul
the word would have specifically denoted a male prostitute.
The
final passage comes in the first chapter of Romans at verses 26-27. The actual
authorship of this passage may be open to dispute. But it has historically been
attributed to Paul and for our purposes I will assume that he wrote it.
In
this passage, Paul describes how some men gave their hearts up to pleasure
rather than to God, and that God accordingly gave them up to their degrading
passions. “The men, giving up natural intercourse with women,” he wrote, “were
consumed with passion for one another. Men committed shameless acts with men
and received in their own persons the due penalty for their error.”
Contemporary
scholars have disagreed about what this passage means. They have debated
whether it is about homosexuality per se
or something else, such as the idolatrous temple practices of the Romans or Gentile
infidelity more generally. And some have noted that Paul seems to be referring
here to homosexual conduct engaged in
by heterosexuals.
For
all these reasons, an absolutist who seeks a clear and unequivocal condemnation
of homosexuality in the letters of Paul will have trouble finding it.
Even if it were clear that the Bible condemned homosexuality
when written, we may assign the texts a different meaning today
Of
course, even if we believe that some or all of these texts characterized homosexuality
as a sin when written, this leaves open the question of whether those passages
carry the same meaning today. We may view the Bible not as a fixed text but as
an organic one, as one that does—indeed, must—change in meaning in order to
continue to have relevance to new generations. Far from offending the text,
this approach gives it continuing vitality, allowing us to put in perspective (for
example) the passages in Leviticus about menstruation or the passages in the
letters of Paul about slavery and the “obedience” that wives owe their
husbands.
Those
who take the absolutist position sometimes bristle at the idea that the Bible
is a living document, arguing that the meaning of the text cannot possibly
change because God does not change. There is some irony in this, because the
Old Testament—on which the absolutists base most of their arguments—describes a
number of instances in which God changes his mind. To compound the irony, one
of those instances is God’s judgment of Sodom, which Abraham persuades him to
amend pending further evidence.
The
debate over the fixed or organic nature of the Bible echoes a similar debate
about how to interpret the Constitution of the United States. The famously
conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia used to say—only half
jokingly—that while many people advocated for a living Constitution he
preferred a “dead” one. And, granted, treating any text—including the Bible and
the Constitution—as one of infinitely flexible meaning carries with it the risk
of robbing it of any meaning at all.
But
many of us do not warm to the idea that the living God has chosen to speak to
us through a collection of words that are dead on arrival.
We may not believe that viewing homosexuality as
a sin is central to our faith
Even
people who place that the Bible at the center of their faith, and who believe
that the small number of texts addressing homosexuality are important, that
those texts view homosexuality as a sin, and that the meaning of those texts
has not changed still reject the
absolutist position. They do so because they simply do not think this issue is central
to their faith.
These people conclude that the Bible repeatedly and
unambiguously calls our attention toward issues that provide work enough: the
poor; the hungry and thirsty; the imprisoned; forgiveness; grace; justice;
compassion. They will see those issues as having much more to do with their
identity as Christians and as the actions that will mark them as such. “They
will know we are Christians by our love,” the old hymn goes; not “They will
know we are Christians by how we interpret the story of the Levite and his
concubine.”
I
remember hearing a story about a minister who had become frustrated with his
congregation’s preoccupation with trying to figure out whether homosexuality is
a sin. Early one Sunday morning he’d had enough and so declared from his
pulpit: “Look, we all agree that the Bible tells us to serve the poor and the
sick and the homeless and the imprisoned and to do justice, so here’s my
suggestion. Let’s focus on that. And when there are no more poor and sick and
homeless and imprisoned people, and when justice has been perfected, then let’s
try to figure out what Leviticus says about homosexuals.”
We may
believe the church has a special duty
to the
marginalized and oppressed
Some believers reach a different kind of
decision. They conclude that the biblical view of homosexuality actually is central to their faith, but in a very
different way than that envisioned by the absolutist position.
These people note that one of the most
pervasive and powerful themes of the Bible—from Genesis and Exodus through the
Gospels—relates to the liberation of the oppressed. From the march through the
Red Sea to the scenes of Jesus embracing the culturally marginalized, they find
in the Bible a clear and unmistakable message of inclusion and freedom from
social and political tyranny. To use Dr. King’s wonderful phrase, they see this
as the “moral arc of the universe,” and they believe it their obligation as
people of faith to align with it.
In making this decision, many of these
people remain mindful of the church’s many failures in this respect, how it has
on too many historical occasions (mis)used the Bible to promote slavery, to
justify discrimination against Blacks and (ironically) Jews, and to perpetuate
the second-class status of women. They see the battle for the rights of gays and
lesbians as one of the great civil justice struggles of our time. And they feel
called—called by the same Bible cited in support of the absolutist position—to
be part of it.
Conclusion
I
am very fond of the work of the contemporary philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah.
In one of his books, Appiah writes that he dreads air travel because the person
sitting next to him inevitably turns and asks what he does for a living. When
Appiah responds “I’m a philosopher,” his seatmate almost always replies by
asking “And what is your philosophy?” Appiah smiles and says: “My philosophy is
that everything is more complicated than you think it is.”
Nothing
I have said here should be understood as arguing that there is only one way to
think intelligently about the Bible’s view of homosexuality. To the contrary, this
document is a reaction against precisely that kind of dogmatism. Everything is
more complicated than we think it is, and it is unremarkable that this includes
texts that are ancient in origin, of indeterminate authorship, written in
multiple languages other than our own, and subject to the vagaries of
translation. We do not diminish the Bible by acknowledging its rich complexity;
rather, we thereby afford it the respect and reverence it deserves.
We
honor the Bible through our careful study. Our rigorous analysis helps to scare
away misunderstandings and mistakes and mythologies and brings us closer to the
divine light of truth. In doing so, we follow the guidance offered by an obscure
itinerant preacher from the remote town of Nazareth.
He said it is the truth that sets us free.
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