Ethics &
Gay Christians
Ralph Blair
Dr. Blair is a psychotherapist in private practice in New York City. He
is the founder of The Homosexual Community Counseling Center and Evangelicals
Concerned, Inc.
Copyright © 1982 by Ralph Blair. All rights reserved.
Introduction.
I approach this topic with some sense of uneasiness, not only because of
the recurring poverty of ethics in my own life but also because I know that
due to some understandably bad experiences with oppression at the hands of
homophobic church people, discussion of ethics in the lives of lesbians and
gay men can be a thankless and even resented undertaking. It can be experienced
as threatening to all of us. Recently, a director of Dignity (the Roman Catholic
lesbian and gay male organization) wrote: "When I first joined Dignity
in 1975, 1 was told that if we pursued the discussion of 'morality and ethics'
we could possibly split the membership of Dignity right down the middle."
(Dignity Newsletter, Feb., 1982) Perhaps that "goes with the territory,"
so to speak. After all, when what is meant by "morality and ethics"
in this context usually means "sexual ethics" in general and, more
specifically matters of promiscuity, monogamy, S&M, "open relationships,"
and so on, discussion can get quite heated.
Of course, ethics covers much more than sexuality (or what passes for sexuality)
though it is understandable that sexuality gets the attention. But if we are
to address ethics in the lives of lesbians and gay men who are Christians,
much more live the ethics, we must look at more than sexuality. We won't grasp
the significance of even sexual ethics unless we see sexual ethics in the
broader context, both of theological basis and outworkings.
Christian Ethics..
What is the qualification we intend by speaking of ethics in the lives of
lesbians and gay men who are Christian? What difference does "Christian"
make? Is there a difference between ethics and Christian ethics? Are we, as
Christians, supposed to be different from other people?
After sampling 20,000 households in America, a recent finding of a market
research organization was this: "Christian buying habits and daily activities
are, for the most part, not that different from anyone else's." (Contemporary
Christian Music, Mar., 1982, pp. 23, 26) The Moral majority's protests notwithstanding,
it was discovered that, for example, "the majority of those who listen
to religious radio on a regular basis claimed as their favorite television
shows: 'Three's Company,' ... 'Dallas,' ... and 'Love Boat."' To me,
Christian gay publications sometimes sound very much like gay publications
that make no pretense to anything "Christian." I've noticed that
in such periodicals, for example, Paul's serious warnings of evil teachers
in Philippians 3:2 are ridiculed by "us bar-hoppers and bath-goers,"
there is titillation of the promise of shared bath facilities for an up-coming
convention, there is the reminder that "with the social season upon us,"
(Advent) Christian gays should know the symptoms of "new, unfriendly"
sexually-transmitted diseases, there is a review of a book by a gay Episcopal
priest recounting his world-wide one-night stands and a gay Christian periodical
can do no better than to reprint as review what amounts to the press release
of the secular publisher of the book itself. Even a secular gay periodical
(The Advocate, Sept. 17, 1981) says in its review of the book (Look Back in
Joy by Malcolm Boyd) that "The descriptions are usually very vivid, but
frankly, I'm not all that interested in what a famous gay man has done (and
with whom) in the course of his love life. What I am needing is insight into
the meaning of relationships, be they transient or long-term." Even Tennessee
Williams, who is certainly no stranger to either,transient or long-term homosexual
relationships, knows enough to say, as he did in an interview (ARTS, Part
11, June, 1982) that "any kind of promiscuity is a distortion of the
love impulse." I've seen attacks on and condemnation of Anita Bryant,
Jerry Falwell, and anti-abortionists, with double-standard criticism for right-wing
and left-wing Christians, and a self-deceiving self-serving bias that says
"to hell" with those who are different, especially "homophobes."
Perhaps we're no different from straight Christians who self-servingly and
just as self-righteously say "to hell" with anyone else, especially
"queers." Maybe we're as selfishly culture-controlled as are those
we would liberate. Maybe we're more gay and lesbian than we are Christian.
Dennis Winter, Vicar of St. Andrews, Paddock Wood, Kent, says that a mature
Christian's behavior is "frequently so different from that of his age
that he, or she, is an outcast from society. Like Jesus," such a person
"may even be thought of as immoral, ... clash[ing] with the established
ways" and Winter notes that "it is only the voice of history that
proclaims" such a person "a saint." (in Law, Morality, and
the Bible, edited by Bruce Kaye and Gordon Wenham, 1978, p. 193) We need not
go into detail here with an analogy of the Moral Majority vis a vis gay and
lesbian Christians. We all have experienced that and have talked it to death.
But we might add, that in the same sense, those of us who would be mature
Christian lesbians and mature Christian gay men frequently must behave so
differently from some ways of certain sectors of gay society that we can become
outcasts from that society as well. How much do we conform to the standards
of some parts of gay male and lesbian culture instead of testing ideas and
lifestyles in terms of our Christian identity and our liberation to serve
rather than to insist on our own rights? How easy it is to go along with the
self-deceiving self-serving bias of pride and self-absorption. How often do
we volunteer to carry the oppressor's burden that second mile as Jesus said
his followers should carry the burdens of the Roman soldiers? Can't we forget
ourselves for a while? Do we agree with Henri J. M. Nouwen, who, in his 1981
commencement address at Princeton Seminary, had this to say: "If we are
truly faithful to our vocation we will find ourselves not on the road to power,
but on the road to powerlessness; not on the road to success, but on the road
to servanthood; not on the broad road to praise and popularity, but on the
narrow road of confrontation and rejection." (Princeton Seminary Bulletin,
II, #3, 1982)
Jesus challenged all sorts of conventional expectations and rules of both
religious and secular society. Remember his approaches to the religious leaders,
to women, to children. Let's confess that we who are Christian lesbians and
Christian gay men sometimes do a more thorough job in challenging conventional
morality than in challenging conventional immorality. In this we are the flip
side of our New Right enemies who do a better job challenging conventional
immorality than in challenging conventional morality.
Judging as Condemnation or Discernment.
At about this point, it would be well to give some consideration to the
subject of judging.
In any discussion of Christian ethics, inevitably we must face the question
of judging as condemnation, which is itself condemned in the Bible, or discernment,
which is itself commanded in the Bible. When we take it upon ourselves self-righteously
to condemn others we are condemning ourselves, though we're so self-deceived
and defensive about it it may not be too obvious. We are commanded to so "judge
not." (Matt 7:1; Luke 6:37; cf. Matt 7:24; Luke 6:41f; Mark 4:24) But
sometimes we can be so out of touch with reality and fall into such a defensive
compensation for our own sins that we do condemn each other and thereby condemn
ourselves. We fail to see, with William Barclay, for example, that "if
we realized what some people have to go through, so far from condemning them,
we would be amazed that they have succeeded in being as good as they are."
(Matthew, I, p. 263) I think that this observation is especially appropriate
when we think of the obstacles gay men and lesbians have had to face alone,
without any real help from family, friends, church and society but with rather
the strong opposition from these very quarters.
Clearly, we are told not to judge others by condemning them on the other
hand, however, we are told to forgive others. (Matt 6:14f; 18:21-35; Mark
11:25; Luke 17:3f) In order to forgive we have to perceive that someone has
sinned against us and in order to so perceive we have to be able to discern
sin in another person. Since it takes one to know one, this can be pretty
simple. We have to be free from condemning and at the same time be free to
recognize or discern wrong-doing. We are told to rebuke our sisters and brothers
when they sin. We are told to help our sisters and brothers overcome sin in
their lives for their own well-being, but we are not to read them out of the
Kingdom (Matt 13:24-30; 36-43, 47-50. cf. 22:11-14) In Galatians 6 Paul said
that we should gently point out another's sin but that we should watch out
that we don't commit the same sin. It is our familiarity with sin in our own
lives that makes sin so very believable in others' lives. We are urged to
carry another's burdens but to beware lest we become proud and self-deceptive.
We're told, too, that each of us should carry our own burdens, but that
we should not be so preoccupied with self that we engage continuously in comparing
and contrasting ourselves with others, though each should test his or her
own actions. Paul repeats this elsewhere (Rom 14:5-12), saying that in some
matters "everyone should have reached conviction in his [or her] own
mind," that one who does or does not do something "has the Lord
in mind" in participating or abstaining and remembering that we are each
accountable to our own Master, Jesus Christ. In everything we do and are "we
belong to the Lord." Even our bodies are not our own. Paul asks his readers
to "Form your own judgment on what I say" about our spiritual privileges
(I Cor 10:15).
A "Gay and Lesbian Ethic?"
Are we Christians called to develop a "gay and lesbian ethic?"
No. We have biblical, theological, and practical reasons for resisting any
effort at concocting a special "gay" or "lesbian" ethic.
Psychosocial research shows that there is no intrinsic difference between
same-sex and other-sex orientations. Our homosexuality, as we know from experience,
is only one part of us. There are as many homosexualities and heterosexualities
as their are individuals living their own sexualities. As with any other aspect
of our lives, what we believe and value and see our way clear to pursue as
Christians or as non-Christians will determine what we do with our sexuality.
In view of the fact that for us Christians, there is no male ethic and female
ethic, no Jewish ethic and Greek ethic, no slave ethic and master ethic, there
is likewise no gay ethic and straight ethic. What holds for Christian men
holds for Christian women. What holds for straight Christian men and women
holds for gay Christian men and women. This unity, of course, doesn't necessitate
uniformity, as is obvious from the Jerusalem Council. But it should guard
us against the setting up of a whole new set of moral standards for homosexuals
as homosexuals or for lesbians as lesbians. Paul writes that "there is
no distinction," that "all alike have sinned," that "all
are justified by God's free grace alone, through his act of liberation in
the person of Christ Jesus." (Rom 3:22ff, NEB) As Christians, we are
all called to a common revolutionary lifestyle in Christ-like behavior. Are
we so busy sometimes trying to promote our gay social revolution or feminism's
agenda or our own weak but pridefully self-preoccupied egos in repetitious
impersonal genitalizing, for example, that we miss our basic task: the promoting
of a revolutionary outworking of our common calling in Christ. We are to get
lost for Christ's sake! It is in this that we may express Christ-like behavior.
The Ground and Goal of Christian Ethics.
What we do and don't do depends on who we are and who we aren't. More precisely,
how we behave and how we feel depends on what we believe. This is true biblically,
theologically, and psychologically, even if inward thought and outward behavior
don't mesh. Remember that stingy man in Proverbs who invites you to "Eat
and drink" but "is always thinking about the cost," whose "heart
is not with you." (23: 7 NIV) His calculating niggardliness is there
because he doesn't know what it is, himself, to receive. He doesn't believe
he has received or will continue to receive. Therefore, he thinks he cannot
afford to give freely. To the writer of I John (4:19) it is clear that we
can love others because God loved us first. We can give because we have received.
The fact that we are loved already "casts out fear" so that we are
free from excessively self-centered grasping and giving that is just as selfish.
We can get on with loving each other more wholeheartedly. Knowing God's unqualified
mercy, we can face even the most threatening "truths" about ourselves
and others since the One who is both the Truth and Love stands over against
any "truths" we may encounter. That's why, in Ephesians 5:4, thanksgiving
can replace the "coarse joking" and put-downs Paul eschews. It's
not a matter of three-letter words replacing four-letter words; it's a matter
of trust in God replacing pride and a ridiculous self-confidence. It is such
gratitude, as Luther knew, that forms the basis for our ethical obligation.
Old Testament commandments rest with the nature of reality as it really
is, i.e., "I am the God who rescued you out of Egypt. Therefore: these
are your obligations." The specific laws are inseparable from the Preamble
of this Treaty. The New Testament commandment to love rests with the New Testament
reality of God's eschatological act in the perfect life, the cross, and the
empty tomb of Jesus Christ. "Therefore," the writer of I Peter (1:13-16)
says, "prepare your minds for action; be self-controlled; set your hope
fully on the grace to be given you when Jesus Christ is revealed. As obedient
children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance.
But just as the One who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for
it is written: 'Be holy, because I am holy."'
Christian acts are rooted in the acts of God. Ethics for gay men and lesbians
who are Christians cannot be rooted in a secular sexual liberationism or an
agenda of politically correct or trendy selfishness. "Gay" or "lesbian"
Christian ethics, if Christian, are Christian ethics, period. They are nothing
more and nothing less. We are Christians who are gay people. Christian ethics
are not autonomous or abstract. As Emil Brunner put it, the divine imperative
follows from the divine indicative. Guilt and fear can therefore be overcome.
Love, even to the enemy, is therefore finally possible. But apart from the
Gospel, this is precisely what is not possible.
In an article in Psychology Today (Nov., 1981, pp. 68ff), Peter Marin writes
of what he calls "Moral Pain." Although he focuses on the "moral
pain" of Vietnam veterans, he speaks of it as afflicting "the rest
of us," too. He sees it as "a profound distress that may defy therapy,"
that opens up "areas of pain for which there is really nothing like a
'cure.'" He writes of the "inadequacy of psychological categories
and language in describing the nature and pain of human conscience" and
sees the inadequacy to lie in the psychotherapeutic tradition itself and its
"morally vacuous view of human nature." He confesses: "Many
of us suffer a vague, inchoate sense of betrayal, of having somehow taken
a wrong turning, of having somehow said yes or no at the wrong time and to
the wrong things, ... having two coats while others have none ... and yet
proceeding, nonetheless, with our lives as they are." Sadly, denial and
distraction are the only coping mechanisms some people have left.
It would be tragic if we who have been privileged to hear the Good News
and have been entrusted to go everywhere proclaiming repentance and forgiveness
of sins, offer nothing more potent than a "baptized" New Right platform
or a "baptized" gay liberationism to our gay brothers and lesbian
sisters and to a fearfully hostile church and confused society all suffering
such "moral pain." Men and women who are having enough trouble living
with themselves -- especially with their same-sex desires -- not to mention
living with others, need to hear and see answers more relevant and effective
than what are offered by either self-righteous enemies of sex or idolators
and trivializers of sex. So many people have never really heard the Good News
because of the Puritanical pretensions of theocracy which isolate abstract
rules from the Good News of God's acceptance of us in Christ. Others have
not heard the Good News because of an absolutizing of relativity even among
those of us who call ourselves followers of Jesus Christ.
Instead of the loopholes of a hard casuistic legalism or an amorphous situationism,
each tending to a deceptively absolutist amorality, Paul was somewhat specific
as to what love which "fulfills the law" required in rather concrete
situations. Even in that flagship of Christian liberty, his letter to the
Galatian Christians (5:19f), he wrote that the "works of the flesh"
are obvious: "sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and
witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions,
factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like." (NIV) These he
contrasted with "the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience,
kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control." (22f)
He urges: "Let us keep in step with the Spirit." (25, NIV) Paul
tells the Thessalonians to "live at peace among yourselves ... admonish
the careless, encourage the faint-hearted, support the weak, and be very patient
with them all. See to it that no one pays back wrong for wrong, but always
aim at doing the best you can for each other and for all." (5:14f, NEB)
According to that most contemporary epistle, the one to the Ephesians and
others (4:17ff), we are "no longer [to] live as the Gentiles do [who],
in the futility of their thinking ... have given themselves over to sensuality
so as to indulge in every kind of impurity, with a continual lust for more."
You see, when we give ourselves to what cannot satisfy we are continually
looking for what we have not received. The writer sums: "Be imitators
of God ... and live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself
up for us." (5:lf, NIV) "Submit to one another out of reverence
for Christ." (5:21, NIV) Clearly, these instructions are not as specific
as some would want but they are more specific than some others want.
Reciprocity in Ethics Based in the Imitation of God.
Do you notice that there seems to be a remarkable practical reciprocity
that is built into the biblical ethic that calls us to be imitators of God?
It's good for others for us to imitate God. And it's also good for us. We
may also say that it is good for God.
Look, for example, at the passive resistance Jesus taught when he said:
"If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also."
(Matt 5:39, RSV) Paul said that too, in his letter to the Roman Christians
(12:21): "Don't allow yourself to be overpowered by evil. Take the offensive
-- overpower evil with good!" (Phillips)
Luther suggested that God has placed next to everyone of us someone who
serves as what he called the "indicator of our wrath." He proposed
a sort of graduated sensitization system in our dealings with such a person.
Notice, as we look into this, what happens to us as we implement Luther's
plan. First, Luther suggested, think about that person. Second, think in friendly
terms. Third, desire that person's best welfare. That is not necessarily what
you think is that person's best welfare; it is not even necessarily what he
or she "wants" either. (Incidentally, one of the most effective
ways to do this is to pray for the person. That's what Jesus said we should
do, "pray for those who persecute" us (Matt 5:44). ) And then the
fourth step in Luther's plan is to approach that person in real love. Our
love for ourselves, Jesus said, gives us clues as to how to love others. Let's
try that with the "indicators of our own wrath" -- such as Jerry
Falwell, Jerry Kirk, Richard Lovelace, Richard Halverson. It can get challenging!
In Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis cuts through much unnecessary introspection
when he advises: "Do not waste time bothering whether you 'love' your
neighbor; act as if you did. As soon as we do this we find one of the great
secrets. When you are behaving as if you loved someone, you will presently
come to love him. If you injure someone you dislike, you will find yourself
disliking him more. If you do him a good turn, you will find yourself disliking
him less." Psychologically, of course, this reciprocity makes perfect
sense. We incorporate "them" with "us," and though we
may still disagree, we anticipate that end in which our differences are of
no final concern. Such an "indicator of our wrath" would thereby
need no longer be so defensive and consequently need no longer be so much
on the offensive. He could take his guard down somewhat and perhaps even become
something of a friend.
Certainly, though, if we are going to give care in doing at all, anything
aimed at the welfare of another human being, we might as well give care to
doing it as intelligently as possible, as wisely "as serpents" and
as harmlessly "as doves." Let's be on to our own rationalizations
and hidden agenda. Let's not be blind to the evil in the world. Let's not
be careless about consequences. Luther, you remember, cautioned that even
in our almsgiving we must examine whether the giving of these alms, at this
time, in this way, furthers the other person's real welfare or brings harm.
What is the most intelligent thing to do? What is effective? What are the
unintended effects, for example, of genital acts with strangers? Do these
acts show intelligent and loving concern for the welfare of strangers or can
we delude ourselves with all sorts of projections and fail to see our rationalizations
for grabbing what we think we want when we want it? You know, there is plenty
of medical, psychological, sociological and experiencial evidence to show
that anti-gay Fundamentalists are no less effective in blocking the meeting
of homosexuals' intimacy needs than are gay liberationists who preach the
"celebration" of indiscriminate genitalizing. What are the unintended
effects of impatience? Of gossip? Of "standing up for the truth?"
We must love responsibly, with all the resources of our heart, mind, soul,
-- with all of our strengths, and yes, even in all our weaknesses. We're no
better than Paul who confessed that "what I do is not the good I want
to do" and that "the evil I don't want to do, I keep on doing. ...
Who will rescue me? Thank God, Jesus Christ our Lord." (Rom 7:19, 24f)
Conclusion.
Ethics for Christians are what we can call "mimethics," an ethics
of imitation. The Greek word in Ephesians 5:1 is (mimetai), imitators. "Be
imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children and live a life of love
just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering
and sacrifice to God." (NIV) Here are both the ground and goal of ethics
for Christians, whether we are gay men, lesbians, or heterosexuals. God's
love is our ground and, as God's dearly loved children, we are to set our
goal as the living of a lifestyle of love, using every resource we have in
Christ, as we imitate Christ who gave us everything we need, while giving
back to God, as we ourselves must do.
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