| Getting Closer
Structure For Intimacy
This material is based upon Dr. Ralph Blair’s address at connECtion
1981,
the summer conference of Evangelicals Concerned, Inc.
© Copyright 1981 by Ralph Blair
According to social psychologist Daniel Yankelovich, "Surveys and my
own interviews show a widening acceptance of cultural pluralism. We are not
going back to ... the notion that [for example] homosexuality is intolerable
... The Moral Majoritarians are counter revolutionaries, trying—I think
futilely—to roll back what has already happened."1 Although Yankelovich
reports that "The public is still mired in unrealistic expectations and
still entranced by the seductions of duty-to-self," (which he sanely
dubs a "moral and social absurdity") he observes that "Peoples’s
life experiments ... now drive home the lesson that duty-to-self is not a
viable guide to conduct."2 He sadly notes, but wisely interprets: "The
most ardent seekers of self-fulfilment fallaciously view the self as an endless
series of gratifiable needs and desires."3 Then he asks a crucial question:
"Will we achieve a synthesis between traditional commitments and new
forms of fulfilment? Or will we indeed end up with the worst of two worlds—a
society fragmented and anomic, the family a shambles, the work ethic collapsed,
the economy uncompetitive, our morality flabby and self-centred, and our personal
freedom even more restricted than under the old order?"4
LIVING OUR FAITH AND LIVING OUR SEXUALITY
We can rephrase Yankelovich’s question in terms of evangelicals concerned
about living our faith and living our sexuality. Will we be able to see beyond
the current distractions to understand how homosexuality fits into the overall
pattern of Christian commitment or will we try only to see if our Christian
commitment fits into our overall pattern of homosexuality and end up stalled
in our inability to integrate our voluntary faith and our involuntary sexuality?
Will we allow hostile churches that refuse to accept our homosexuality, making
of it a mockery, to kick us out into what may seem to us at first to be the
welcoming arms of a secularist gay subculture that, in turn, refuses to accept
our faith and allegiance to Christ, making of it a mockery, and kicks us out—on
our own? We might then, as others have, reluctantly give up the faith that
we chose because we cannot escape the sexuality that we are. In that case
we might settle for a "liberation" that is worse than a trivialization
of what can be ours, and the costly struggle for gay rights would produce
nothing more important than the right to parade with our clothes off. But
perhaps, instead, we might be forced out of the oppressive systems of both
the non-comprehending churches and gay liberationism, into the truly welcoming
arms of Jesus Christ. He alone understands our real needs, temptations and
commitments. It is in Him alone, through His love for us as we are, and through
His love shed abroad in the hearts of a community of some of those around
us, that we can be free to become faithful stewards of the lives that God
has entrusted to us.
In responding to his own question about the synthesis of traditional commitments
and new forms of fulfilment, Yankelovich holds what he calls a "relatively
hopeful outlook that grows from a conviction that out of the present disorder
something vital and healthy is struggling to be born."5 As a Christian,
I believe that we have an even surer hope, for that God who did not spare
His own son, but gave him up for us all, will not fail graciously to give
us, along with Christ, all things we truly need.6
But how are these things to be given to us? Specifically, in real life,
how is our human sexuality to be reconciled with our faith? The reconciliation
that we have is not packaged as either the churches or gay liberationism has
offered it when we have looked to those sources, so often in vain. The answer
there has not been reconciliation but division. Our faith and our sexuality
-- what the Lord has joined together -- the world and churches must not undo.
Since sexuality is a part of our natural world, here and now, and not a
part of the world to come, it must be that if we are to have our God-given
sexual needs met -- however we may have distorted them -- it will be in this
life and, if in this life, in terms which are compatible with responsible
caretaking of this life in all its aspects. And it is this life, in its breadth,
that is the present arena of the reconciliation that is already ours in and
under our Lord Jesus Christ.
Last year I spoke of the need for and approach to the achievement of our
human need for intimacy and we took seriously both natural and special revelation
in this regard. This year, I want to share with you again, both biblical and
psychological considerations. This time we’re concerned about the working
out of our intimacy needs in same-sex covenantal relationship -- the structure
for the achievement of sexual-romantic intimacy. It is within such a structure
that we who are created in the image of God can most fully become not just
individuals in isolation, certainly not amputated individuals, but a people
in holistic communion -- body, soul, spirit.
In looking into this we will see what both Christian and non-Christian sources
have to teach us—but we will exercise caution with both. Non-Christians
can be confused by what Paul called "senseless minds" (Romans 1:21)
so we must be careful not to fall for that which passes for the merely current
science, "in" fashion, modernity, postmodernism, etc. One of the
symptoms of such non-Christian minds, according to Paul in Romans 1, is the
making of sex -- and specifically homosexual behaviour -- into an idol. Tricks,
Renaud Camus’ chronicle of his international genital escapades, is trumpeted
by Seymour Kleinberg of Christopher Street magazine as a "gracefully
written view of the nights in a life where the moment is absolute and the
body is everything."7 So we must be very careful, critical, to distinguish
between that in the secular sphere that is helpful and that which is idolatrous,
which substitutes in vain.
Still, no less an evangelical than Donald Bloesch has advised that "evangelical
theology ... will display a readiness to take into account scientific discoveries
and new scientific evidence, even if this calls into question certain reputed
historical facts or opinions of the world and man found in the Bible."8
But evangelicals can have a hard time doing this, as Bloesch himself unwittingly
exemplifies, for in his very next sentence, he attacks "the theory of
evolution" as not being "scientific" and lumps it with "social
Darwinism" to boot. No wonder even evangelicals such as Bloesch have
such difficulty understanding homosexuality. The religious establishment,
as over against the secular, whether conservative, liberal or whatever, can
have what Paul called "hardened minds." (2 Corinthians 3:14) And
Jesus, contrary to the arrogant assumptions of the stubborn "Moral Majority"
of his day, said to it: "tax collectors and harlots go into the Kingdom
of God before you." (Matthew 21:31) He said that at the Messianic banquet,
the maimed, the lame, the blind, in short the "last" would be first.
(Luke 14:16-21; Matthew 22:1-10) So we must be careful not to succumb to that
which passes for the merely current views of a so-called Moral Majority. We
who are to be servants of Christ must be careful not to become the slaves
of the fundamentalist establishment or the gay liberationist establishment
or whatever establishment. Rather, we are to "renew our minds" as
Paul urged (Romans 12:12), change our perspective to that which is in accord
with the servant mind of Christ, with every thought and consideration brought
under Christ’s Lordship (2 Corinthians 10:5) It is such a renewed mind
that will facilitate our implementation of the law of love, and especially
the loving of the not-so-lovable, sick, cranky, aging, hurt, tired, defeated,
senile partner!
But just as Lewes Smedes writes that, "In order to fit biblical morality
to modern marriage, we will have to do more than quote texts that refer to
marriage and sex" we must agree that in order to fit biblical morality
to modern homosexuality and gay relationship, we will have to do more than
quote texts that allegedly refer to homosexuality. As Smedes says, "We
need to see where real problems lie within modern marriage" and, we add,
within modern homosexuality and gay relationship, and again in Smedes’
words, "do our best to bring the whole moral perspective of the gospel
inside the sexual scene. We will have to ask how Christian love—the
self-giving love of Christ shed abroad within us—ties into the sexual
experience ... today."9
ANSWERS ANSWERS EVERYWHERE, AND NOT A ONE, YOU THINK
In facing the question of how we are to structure the meeting of our human
intimacy needs evidenced in our homosexual desires, we are confronted with
the increasingly vocal and vociferous, though not necessarily solicited, opinions
of fundamentalism on the right and gay liberationism on the left. The secular
right joins with the fundamentalists and the religious left joins with the
gay liberationists. Each -ism has its own pet phrases, scare strategies, put-downs,
and know-it-all solutions to what they call our "problem". To some,
our homosexuality is called our problem and to others our Christian faith
is called our problem.
Fundamentalism
The "solutions" of fundamentalism are reactions familiar to most
of us through the battle-cries and demagoguery of the Jerry Falwells and other
Moral Majoritarians, the double-talk of the specious "ex-gay" movement,
and the short-sighted ethnocentricities of mainline evangelicalism. In the
interest of time, let’s not get bogged down in yet another discouraging
recitation of these insensitive and ignorant fundamentalist "answers".
To say the least, they leave much to be desired—much that is the heart
of the gospel of Jesus Christ, and therefore, much that could be truly helpful.
Gay Liberationism
Let’s examine, in some detail, the "solutions" that are
being promoted from within the ranks of gay liberationism, specifically from
gay pop-culture, gay therapy, and gay religion. Can we find help here? Are
there answers here? I’m sorry to say: No, not very much help at all;
no realistic answers here. What seems to be offered here is the perpetual
indulgence of the junk sex junkies. While fundamentalism absolutizes gay sex
into a great big "Heavens, NO!", gay liberationism absolutizes gay
sex into a great big "Hell, YES!" Neither leaves us with a psychologically
viable or biblically faithful perspective on homosexual sex and relationship.
With the pretension of every moral arbiter sans starting point outside the
relativity of one’s own egocentrism, gay Advocate publisher David Goodstein
pushes: "Recreational sex [as] that done purely for fun with no interest
beyond a one or two night stand."10 The thousands of classified sex ads
in his pink section, as well as the editorial and commercial space of the
rest of the paper, promote and reflect such "recreational sex"—a
very common part of much if not most of what passes for the ideal lifestyle
of the mythical modern urban gay macho man. But there is a blatant contradiction
in Goodstein’s advocacy which he seems not to notice. He follows his
praise of "recreational sex ... done purely for fun [with strangers]"
with the admission that "men love recreational sex as a validation of
their skill, attractiveness and power." Goodstein is more on target than
he realizes or even intends. It is true that most if not all so-called recreational
sex with strangers is motivated by beliefs about one’s own inferiority
and consequent feelings of insecurity. In an effort to counter these beliefs
and feelings of one’s own ineptitude, sexual unattractiveness and weakness,
one does go out and "trick around", trying to find affirmation of
that longed-for sense of "skill, attractiveness and power." Goodstein
would have us believe that such "fun" and such anxiety and fear
can co-exist. Of course, they can’t. His soft-headed argument falls
flat not only theoretically but also experientially. Because the self-doubts
that prompt the search for affirmation exist in the brain cells of the self-doubter,
no amount of "affirmation" or "validation" of someone
else’s version of the self-doubter is going to reach the source of the
self-doubt. In fact, such "affirmation" will, at the very least,
only aggravate the self-doubts now reinforced by the attention such seeking
and tricking calls to them. Even Goodstein knows that all is not as ideal
as he would try to make this arrangement seem for he grants that "handling
more than one sexual relationship can be a bit tricky" and in a later
column concedes that "eventually" gay men "tire of these [promiscuous]
practices."11 He fails utterly to understand why this is so. He thinks
it’s because we have foolishly bought "the notion that only fidelity
is right." A year ago, he said much the same thing but more specifically
scapegoated the so-called "Judeo-Christian morality."12 He was prompted
to sound off by the assessment he heard of San Francisco’s Castro district,
made by the former wife of one of his colleagues. He describes her as "a
wonderfully supportive, loving woman who likes sex and has a great sense of
aliveness." But what she saw in the Castro was not people having "fun".
What she saw was this: "Everyone seemed so serious, so intent, so heavily
into sex. Nobody was laughing, and they all looked alike. It was like visiting
a communist country."13
Perhaps it was this final comparison that got to Goodstein, the epitome
of the self-affirming gay capitalist, but whatever it was, he reacted with
a rare frankness about the limits of genital sex with strangers. Goodstein
acknowledged that "Today we are accustomed to having sex on floors, through
holes and even in simulated bathtubs. The prevalence of more exotic forms
of sexual practices and the routine inclusion of pills, poppers and piss are
taken for granted. Only discomfort or disapproval are now considered out of
place." Goodstein said that "Getting lost in the search for the
cosmic orgasm is no better than being denied that orgasm altogether. The endless,
frantic search can only keep us dissatisfied and separate from others".
To Goodstein, the orgasm is nonetheless cosmic but he reasons that "when
orgasmic gratification becomes the sole source of satisfaction or the standard
against which all satisfaction is measured, we deprive ourselves of a great
many other forms of pleasure. We become driven by our genitals", he says,
"instead of being in charge of our lives". Unsophisticated hedonism
is not pleasurable enough for the gay est guru. Goodstein is trying to hold
on to the sensualistic pleasures of the old Cyrenaics while moving on to the
more refined and even noble pleasures of the Epicureans. But in his absolute
devotion to and attempted control of the avoidance of pain and the pursuit
of even the more sophisticated pleasures, Goodstein follows, and in turn is
followed by, a long line of those who would have their pleasures unmixed.
They thereby perpetually set themselves up for the painful disappointment
of unreasonable expectations.
And the east coast is no better off than the west coast; Christopher Street
is no better off than the Castro. Everywhere we look in the gay male ghetto
we can see what John Stranack’s Blueboy article, "Are We All Trash",
called "planned sexual obsolescence and conspicuous sexual consumption"14
As the T-shirts say: "So many men—so little time." Those of
you who recall our discussion of the nature of intimacy will be especially
attuned to the stupidity of the following blurb about a gay "back room"
bar in New York City. It is promoted as having "Rooms designed to provide
a high level of intimacy while providing complete anonymity".15 Gay writer
George Whitmore admits that "it’s almost redundant to modify the
word ‘sex’ with the word ‘anonymous’ nowadays".16
Edmund White reports in his States of Desire: Travels in Gay America, the
following sad deterioration: "I used to have a very bright gay barber
in the Village and I could always chart the latest development from his remarks.
Seven years ago he was telling me that masculinity was in, five years ago
that fidelity was out, four years ago that sexless intimacy and raunchy anonymity
constituted the new ideal, three years ago that the Village was ‘tired’.
He now lives in San Francisco".17 According to White, "Although
many gay people in New York may be happily living in other, less rigorous
decades, the gay male couple [today] is composed of two men who love each
other, share the same friends and interests and fuck each other almost inadvertently
once every six months during a particularly stoned impromptu three-way. The
rest of the time they get laid with strangers in a context that bears the
stylistic marks and some of the reality of S & M ... if not violence,
at least domination".18
Whitmore, writing of life on Fire Island, tries to assure us that "the
Island can be bliss for two people who have their relationship hanging loose
(a three-way with that Al Parker lookalike? Why not?) and their heads screwed
on tight".19 He testifies: "I never ever lost [a lover] there"
(pause) "we waited until we got back home". Exemplifying the sad
flux of the so-called "gay culture", White tells of the latest New
York gay "look" but is quick to warn his readers: "No doubt
this look will have faded by the time you read my description".20
According to the Spada Report, 74% of gay men with lovers state that they,
their lovers, or both of them do have sex outside their relationship21 and
according to the Mendola Report, 63% of gay men with lovers have "occasional
outside affairs" or outside sex "on a regular basis" along
with sex with their lovers, or they have no sex with their lovers and have
their sex only outside the relationship.22 According to the Bell and Weinberg
study from the Kinsey Institute, "Open-Coupleds were the modal type among
the males", that is, the most frequent style of the male-male couple
was "open", with sex outside the relationship. Bell and Weinberg
found such arrangement "relatively rare among females"23 and so
did Mendola and others. In contrast to gay men, Mendola found that 83% of
the lesbians she surveyed have sex exclusively with their partners.24
Now before we go further, I must caution you to be critical of any creeping
sense you may be having that we are falling into forbidden value judgments
when we view certain gay lifestyles as better or as worse than others. Contemporary
Christians have not entirely escaped the infection of the current anti-value
judgment morality. They shout: "Neo-judgmentalism!" as they sit
in judgment against any critical evaluation but their own, and they seem not
to know what they’re doing. Having been the victims of stupid and hypocritical
religionists for so long, however, it is quite understandable that they would
react with such suspicion, fear and anger. Their wounds have not yet healed.
But the self-contradictory value judgment that dogmatically holds that a "liberated"
gay man or woman must make no value judgment against any lifestyle, has penetrated
to the very core of gay liberationist rhetoric, if not to the surface of an
ageist, sexist, and narcissistic gay culture elite. Believing that an individual
has something Mary Mendola calls the "right to freedom of choice",
regarding what she prefers to call "sexual exclusivity", she fails
to catch her self-contradictory dogma when she asserts that she "does
not accept the expression sexual fidelity because the word fidelity is in
itself a value judgment".25 Evidently, she has no idea that her own assertion
"is in itself a value judgment". In judging the value of "fidelity",
which incidently of course she devalues, Mendola violates her own standard
in one whopper of a value judgment. Even Bell and Weinberg fall into this
sort of lapse into postmodernism when they report that, concerning what they
call the "close-coupleds", "We resisted the temptation to call
this group ‘happily married’, although some of its members described
themselves that way, because we did not want to imply that heterosexual relationships
and marriage in particular are standards by which to judge people’s
adjustment".26 But, of course, in saying this, they nevertheless cast
just as much a valued judgment, albeit one more to the liking of secularists,
even though their data did support the conclusion that the close-coupleds
were better adjusted.
With impunity it is taken for granted, if not to the cheers of the gay culture
elite, that again, James Spada boasts: "I’m a raving liberal. Anything
that anyone wants to do, as long as nobody is hurt by it ... is fine."27
Spada grants that "‘hurt’ is open to interpretation",
but on what basis, we ask, is ‘hurt’ to be interpreted? And for
that matter, on what basis do Spada and Goodstein and other gay Epicureans
make an exception? Why is ‘hurt’ excluded? They offer no more
argument or reason for their pleasure-principle than did Epicurus himself.
To them, it is their non-transcending "experience," interpreted
as though there is no God and She has not spoken, that would seek to be its
own "obvious" justification. But since they do not believe that
there is such a God, they cannot be expected to want to listen to Him.
And yet, even among the gay pop culture designers where little or no notice
is paid to God, there is a gnawing sense, given rare expression, that there
really is something in promiscuity that is basically debasing and defeating.
Writing in the Advocate, Arnie Kantrowitz, no stranger to back-room sex with
strangers, has this to say: "... in spite of the crowd, what we are really
doing is masturbating alone ... Those of us who emerge from a decade in the
back rooms will not have it easy looking for love in the sunlight. We have
circles under our eyes and hearts. We have seen a great deal of imagined perfection
and not enough of the drudgery of love ... after a decade of untrammelled
freedom, it will be hard for some of us to rely on each other for longer than
it takes to come".28 John Stranack puts it this way in a gay skin magazine:
"Let not the tombstone read, ‘Departed trick of Tom, Dick and Harry—gone
down for the last time.’".29
Well, if gay people, on our own and within the public sector of gay social
life and under the influence of gay pop culture, are not going to have a better
chance for good relationship than what we have seen reported and promoted
by the Goodsteins, Whites, Spadas and Mendolas, is there some better chance
with gay therapists? Shouldn’t we expect that their training and experience
with troubled clients would teach them something about the folly of childish
hedonistic pursuits? Shouldn’t we expect them to know better than to
push the same stuff as the pop culture pushes? Sadly, a visit to the back
room bars of Greenwich Village, the baths of Los Angeles, or the meat-rack
of Fire Island will reveal that many so-called gay therapists are at least
as confused and messed-up as those they would pretend to treat. Even in the
more sober activity of their writing of pop psych articles and books, one
looks in vain for something better. Even gay therapists are junk sex junkies.
In a gay sex manual mistakenly subtitled An Intimate Guide for Gay Men to
the Pleasures of a Gay Lifestyle, Edmund White and psychotherapist Charles
Silverstein write: "Many homosexuals seldom or never settle down with
lovers; an endless round of one-night stands or short affairs can provide
a gay man in a big city with constant novelty and excitement and introduce
him to a wide variety of erotic delights. And these delights", they assure
us, "can be deeply rewarding ... Gays today represent this tendency toward
hedonism in one of its most extreme forms ... Most gay men are free to pursue
pleasure rather than submit to duty".30 White and Silverstein seem not
to notice the implications of their own observation: "Unfortunately,
many homosexual men feel bad about their own promiscuity".31 They seem
not to know that a one-night-stand is used to separate two beds.
Writing about male couples, Silverstein attacks what he disparagingly calls
"matronly feminists" for what seem to me to be fair-minded criticism
of the "frequent, quick, and impersonal sex" of what Silverstein
brags is the "sexual ferocity of the male gay world".32 Mistakenly,
he calls such a critique "anti-sexual", failing in his reaction
formation to see that it is his own unrealistic position that is anti-sexual,
i.e., counter to sexual realities as they most fundamentally are. Whatever
physical pleasure Silverstein may be missing must be understood in terms of
his own failure to get the point of his "oppressors."
Another gay therapist, Don Clark, also wants us to know that "It is
a rare couple that makes it through a whole lifetime of satisfying monogamy."33
He, too, does not seem to catch on to what is happening. Like others, he is
aware of some problems with promiscuity but he says that "most of the
discomfort comes when one partner wants to be free to explore while feeling
that the other partner should stay safely at home." 34 No Golden Rule
here. Clark complains "that human history has dictated that human sexuality
be intertwined with other human needs such as power, love, trust and security".
He urges that we "come to view sex as simply sex" as though there
should be nothing to sexual behaviour, among the only creatures who think
about their sexuality, than nerve ending stimulation.35 If he believes so,
why doesn’t masturbation do? Of what use is the unseen body of a stranger
in a back room bar? "Sex as simply sex" simply put, simply does
not exist. It can’t exist as such. It is simplistic wishful thinking
on Clark’s part, but hardly thinking that squares with his own experience.
And no wonder. So long as human beings are thinking, feeling creatures who
not only behave but plan and interpret that behaviour of others, and remember
it, and communicate about it, and so long as human beings also personalise
the behaviour, the slogan "sex as simply sex" is an adolescent stupidity.
Doesn’t Clark realize that the so-called "double-standard"
over which he laments, is not a double standard at all but the same standard
applied, first to self and then to mate. That standard is the person’s
own sense of what is sexy and he sees it in others but not in himself. That
is why he "wants to be free to explore" (Clark’s words) and
to try to get affirmation while at the same time "feeling that the other
partner should stay safely at home" (Clark’s words) away from the
temptations that the first partner believes would be seen as sexier to his
sexier partner than he himself is seen. Evidently, Clark does not understand
this, but even his own relationship illustrates it. Clark boasts that he and
his lover have sex with others from an "approved list" between "periods
of monogamy" that Clark calls "security-building time -- a safety
zone".36 He admits that one partner vetoes a particular person for sex
with the other partner out of "insecurity". Of course. Why does
he think he calls the "periods of monogamy" "security-building
time" and "a safety zone" and why does he think there is a
need for such an "approved list"? He also grants that his "fear
of rejection" makes it "scary and sometimes humiliating to go around
asking other people if they are sexually available to me".37 This gay
therapist seems somewhat aware of all the parts but he doesn’t know
how to put them all together for himself let alone to facilitate a realistic
achievement in the couples he counsels.
And what of gay spiritual leadership in this area? If not much realistic
help can be counted on from gay pop culture or gay therapists, might not the
gay religionists help? Sadly, much from gay religion is no more helpful. Malcolm
Boyd, Al Carmines, Bill Silver and others "celebrate" promiscuity
as a "gift of God". A recent issue of a gay religious caucus publication
warns its readers "with the social season upon us" we should know
the symptoms of "new, unfriendly" venereal diseases and suggests
that readers "procure for yourself at least one good gay health guide"
such as that of Silverstein and White [In 1981 the devastation of AIDS was
still unrealised]. Gay religious caucuses programme time for the baths during
their annual convention and those members who try to uphold ideals of monogamy
as theological policy, if not practice, are dismissed as "up-tight"
and "unliberated" and dupes of their "straight oppressors".
With "help" like this in moving toward and into and within sexual
relationship, it is no wonder that so many gay people believe that gay relationships
don’t work. Neither the churches nor the gay pop culture, nor gay therapy,
nor gay religious caucuses have contributed much at all in the way of realistic
help in this area. Certainly much of the so-called help that has been offered
has been at least useless if not downright destructive. As Alexander Solzhenitsyn
said, speaking in a wider context in that now famous Harvard Commencement
Address of 1978: "The human soul longs for things higher, warmer and
purer than those offered by today’s mass living habits".
THOUGHTS TOWARD GAY PARTNERSHIP FOR CHRISTIANS
Gays are like straights
Yankelovich reports that when Americans in general are asked about their
desire for the ideal of two people sharing a life and home together, (both
in 1970 and again in 1980) a constant 96% reply that this is what they do
value.38 Letitia Anne Peplau and her associates in social psychology at UCLA
studied responses of 127 lesbians, 128 gay men, and 130 heterosexuals and
found that "the values and experiences of homosexual couples are similar
to those of heterosexuals in many ways" and that "most people strongly
desire a close and loving relationship with one special person".39 But,
of course, desire is one thing; knowing how to afford to implement it is quite
another. We should, however, be very clear about the fact that, as Jones and
Bates (and others) have documented, and as is known by anyone familiar with
couple relationships in general, "it is reasonable to describe the success
of gay relationships in ways that are similar to those used to describe straight
relationships".40 Neither the fundamentalist’s insistence that
gay relation-ships are a travesty and caricature of heterosexual relationships
nor the gay liberationist’s insistence that gay relationships are a
whole new genre which must avoid at all costs so-called heterosexual straight-jackets
can stand up under intelligent examination. So, we are all, heterosexuals
and homosexuals, looking for closeness, intimacy.
Gay couples are not like straight couples
Just because gay relationships are prompted by the same basic needs as are
heterosexual relationships and just because elementary psychodynamics as well
as irrationalities, many everyday problems of living, and so on, are the same,
we must not be blind to some situations which arise in same-sex relations
in rather homosexually-specific ways. Moreover, we must distinguish here between
three kinds of couples: the male-male, the female-female, and female-male.
What are a few of the special problems gay people do face in female-female
partnership and in male-male partnership as they try to build "a close
and loving relationship with one special person"?
Whatever problems individuals have in accepting their own homosexuality
and therefore in accepting the homosexuality of others, and whatever problems
relatives and friends or society and the institutional churches have with
this will inevitably impact the gay couple. No gay relationship can succeed
where either one or both of the partners have basic reservations about the
naturalness or goodness of homosexuality. Hiding one’s most important
personal relationship from family and friends, not to mention from self, can
impose severe restrictions and consequent stress on any relationship. While
it may make sense not to disclose the nature of a relationship to some other
people, a basic acceptance of one’s own sexual orientation is essential
to the construction of a workable relationship.
The home-wreckers are those in one’s own family, church, and society.
Under the banner of "family values" they go about their "duties"
of home-wrecking with a self-righteous zeal than can be devastating. Even
in the sophisticated New York City co-op market, for example, one agent was
quoted in The New York Times as saying that she "almost had given up
trying to find a building that would accept homosexuals buying in partnership".
41
When a gay person invites a partner to live together in an apartment he
or she already owns or rents, remaining in the apartment can become a luxury
totally dependent on the whim of the co-op board or landlord. In the courts,
homosexuals living together do not constitute "a family unit", even
in liberal New York City.42 [In 2001 this is no longer the case] Important
as social scientists now understand "marriage rituals" to be,43
what mainline Protestant church, let alone evangelical church, is ready to
perform a covenanting service for two gay Christians? [In 2001 this is no
longer the case in a few mainline churches.] These and many other society-fostered
and society-aggravated strains illustrate some of the continuing battles gay
relationships face in their struggle simply to survive. This shows how very
important it is for those who are quick to criticize the instability of gay
relationships to put as much energy into supporting gay rights. If they don’t,
they reveal their unrepentant homophobia for what it is.
Men and women are different from each other. This is true biologically as
well as it is true in terms of enculturation. I want you to understand clearly
that when I say this I am not speaking of what necessarily should be or necessarily
should not be, but of what is. Therefore, there are differences between couple
relationships composed of two women, two men, and one woman and one man.
In an interview in the August 1981 issue of Omni, physician, psychoanalyst
and sex therapist Helen S. Kaplan attributes the sex drive and sex behaviour
differences between men and women to the "differences between male and
female brains" for, as she says, "Sexual desire resides in the brain".
Kaplan says that "all the many differences between males and females
are brought about by testosterone" and that there are "testosterone
receptors" throughout the body, in for example, the muscles, bones skin,
brain, etc. She states that "all differences between male and female
sexuality are due to the strength of the male sex drive, which seems much
higher than the female’s. All other differences follow from that".
According to University of California sociobiologist Donald Symons, the
differences between men and women seem to be both hormonal and environmental
in origin and maintenance,44 and Kaplan and others agree with him about this.
Both naturally as well as in terms of societal influences, females tend toward
more nurturant ways than do males. Historically and cross-culturally, males
tend to be more physically aggressive sexually than females, more competitively
driven. As a result of socialization at least, men tend primarily to be sexually
stimulated by sight, while women are more generally stimulated by touch. The
outward-bound aggression and visual stimulation of men, together with men’s
tendency to "no cost" genitalizing with a variety of partners, produce
the well-known "roaming eye". A proliferation of visual pornography
for both heterosexual and homosexual men, the institution of rest room sex,
back room bars, baths and meat-racks for gay men, for example, illustrate
the differences between men and women when it comes to sex. There are no lesbian
back room bars and baths, no "call-girls" for lesbians, lesbians
do not have sex with strangers in public toilets or meat-racks and there is
no commercially-produced visual hard-core pornography for women. Attempts
to "cash in" on supposed opportunities among women have been failures,
for there is virtually no market for skin-deep sex for women, gay or straight.
With such in mind, Symons sees homosexuals as what he calls "the acid
test for hypotheses about male-female differences in sexuality, "noting
that "In homosexuality, we see male and female sexualities in their pure
uncompromised forms".45 Peplau and her associates agree, observing "that
gender—the fact of being a man or a woman—often exerts greater
influence on relationships than does sexual orientation. Women’s goals
in intimate relationships", they found, "are similar whether the
partner is male or female. The same is true of men".46 These are extremely
important observations for our present concerns.
Both pluses and minuses can be found in these observations; both that which
can make gay relationships easier and that which can make them more difficult.
Especially the gay male relationship and the heterosexual relationship, insofar
as it has a male in it, can have a harder time trying to be a good relationship
than can the lesbian relationship. Those relationships which have perhaps
the most going for them in terms of what it takes for stability, aside from
the effects of the prejudices of society, which are, themselves, different
in terms of gender, are lesbian relationships. This is the case since both
partners, as women, tend toward nurturant attitudes and behaviours and are
not prone to skin-deep sex outside the relationship.
In general terms, there is an empathy in homosexual couple relationships,
either female or male, that is often missing in heterosexual couples. As Masters
and Johnson documented, committed homosexuals (those who have lived together
at least one year) have a more relaxed understanding of their partners’
sexual needs than most heterosexuals, married or unmarried, presumably because
it is easier to understand one’s own sex than the other.47 This is true
of both male homosexuals and lesbians and had been observed long before Masters
and Johnson documented it. It can be a real encouragement to us. Heterosexuals
have to contend with a person in relationship who is biologically and socially
an "alien". There is a greater chance for miscommunication within
the heterosexual pair, then, than there is within the same-sex pair.
A real danger, though, so far as the achievement of a realistic structure
for intimacy is concerned, exists for the male-male couple. This is due to
the fact that both partners can be prone to outside genitalization and weak
nurturant behaviour patterns that do not so plague lesbian couples and that
are countered somewhat by the contributions of women in heterosexual partnerships.
Unfortunately, to some perceptible degree, where there is change in this regard,
it is that studies show women have steadily become more like men in sexual
attitudes and behaviours, but even these studies indicate that women have
yet to come anywhere near the superficial genitalizing to which men tend.48
Would that the trend, though, was that men were becoming more like women in
these matters.
We can appreciate the significance of male-female sex differences as we
have outlined them when we realize that studies of couples with high levels
of satisfaction suggest that they are good relationships because of the willingness
of the partners to be persistent in working with each other through rough
times and of the empathy the partners have in their communication.49 In good
King James English, that spells "longsuffering". Gay couples that
will be successful are those lesbian couples that persistently capitalize
on their natural nurturant attitudes and behaviours, and those male couples
that persistently watch out for the dangers of their proneness to skin-deep
sex and that strive toward the cultivation of nurturant attitudes and behaviours.
The empathy that is such a sine qua non of successful couple relationship
is something of which gay men and women can make very good use in their natural
bond between themselves and their same-sex partners.
One plus one still equals two
The idea that "the two shall become one" has been misunderstood
over the years. It’s true that two individuals do come together in oneness
of purpose for relationship but so often we fail to see that relationship
implies two, not one. There is no relationship when there is but one person.
Relationships exist between persons. Two people come together for one relationship,
one partnership, but they remain two people. They have their very own distinct
bodies, brains, histories, egos, perspectives, sets of expectations, personalities,
insecurities, irrationalities, talents, etc. These two different people constitute
the polarity that makes the relating for the one relationship not only possible
but desirable. Nevertheless, as C. S. Lewis wrote, the biblical "one-flesh"
idea states a fact not just a sentiment, and of course it does. He illustrated
with a violin and a bow: one instrument.50 In "one-flesh" we have
a new entity that simply does not exist apart from relationship.
Perceived difference between partners is what makes romantic relationship
attractive, whereas perceived similarity between people is what makes non-romantic
friendship attractive. While similarity of basic values is crucial for successful
romantic partnership, perceived personality and style differences are what
make up the involuntary attractiveness of the romantic partner. Here too,
there are pluses and minuses. That which automatically will make such relationship
easier and that which will make it more difficult is one and the same: differentness
from self. It is that differentness or novelty that one partner sees in the
other that makes it so exciting and interesting to be around the other, but
since it is different, it is capable of being troublesome, misunderstood,
and can take some getting used to—even on a repeated basis. But of course,
it remains different, no matter how familiar it gets.
Falling in love is not the same as loving-as-an-act-of-will
The experience of falling in love can be a wonderfully hectic one. Unfortunately
it can be confused with that which makes relationship successful. We must
understand clearly that falling in love is actually a very strong form of
liking, not loving. It is an involuntary attraction or taste for that which,
at whatever level of perception, spontaneously meets the test of our encoded
experiences and imprinting going back to our early mental processing. Falling
in love is an involuntary feeling and it is completely different from the
intentional loving-as-an-act-of-will that deliberately and rigorously seeks
another’s welfare as it also seeks its own. As Shakespeare put it in
Sonnet 116: "Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds".
This different love is an act of will, what C. S. Lewis called "a deep
unity, maintained by the will and deliberately strengthened by habit; reinforced
by" God’s grace. Lewis saw such wilful loving as that on which
"the engine of marriage is run: being in love was the explosion that
started it".51
Psychiatrist David D. Burns of the University of Pennsylvania says that
it is dysfunctional to "define love as the exciting romantic arousal
you feel when you first meet someone who is very special to you [and] you
believe that this romantic feeling is the key ingredient in a successful relationship".
He says: "When the warmth and intoxication begin to fade you are likely
to make the interpretation that the quality of the relationship has been diminished."52
Burns continues: "This attitude creates a vulnerability to disillusionment
after the early phase of a relationship because such feelings of excitement
tend to be transient and have a low correlation with long-term marital satisfaction
... While romance can draw people together initially, it does not ensure a
successful ongoing relationship any more than physical attractive-ness does.
If you believe that loving feelings are the most important ingredient in a
successful relationship you are bound to feel disappointed and threatened
when these feeling are diminished."
Psychologist Dorothy Tennov, author of Love and Limerence: The experience
of Being in Love, defines "limerence" in terms of the overwhelming
passion and even possession phenomena of romantic feelings. According to her,
"A relationship that includes no limerence may be a far more important
one in your life, when all is said and done, than any relationship in which
you experienced the strivings of limerent passion". "Limerance,",
she states "is not in any way preeminent among types of human attractions
or interactions," and, she adds, with a recognition of the disruptiveness
and consequent non-maintainability of the heights of limerence, "when
limerence is in full force, it eclipses other relationships."53 C. S.
Lewis asks: "Who could bear to live in that excitement for even 5 years?
What would become of your work, your appetite, your sleep, your friendships?"54
Yet we do see all around us that people are in love with being in love.
There is nothing unreasonable in enjoying the involuntary experience of falling
in love, infatuation, "walking on air" in the company of a new romantic
interest, and all that. It’s exciting. As Lewis wrote, "Being in
love is a good thing, but," he added, "it is not the best thing".55
Wisely, he noted that "You cannot make it the basis of a whole life.
It is a noble feeling, but it is still a feeling. Now no feeling", Lewis
wrote, "can be relied on to last in its full intensity, or even to last
at all. Knowledge can last, principles can last, habits can last; but feelings
come and go".56 That’s another reason why I’m putting so
much of an emphasis, as I do in my practice of psychotherapy, on identifying
the underlying thoughts and beliefs that cause the unwanted feelings and why
it is so important to challenge those beliefs in terms of basic, self-evident
principles of rationality.
Lewis clues us into a wonderful secret that so many prevent themselves from
experiencing because they get bogged down in thrill-seeking and never prepare
themselves for what Lewis calls "the best". Says Lewis: "It
is simply no good trying to keep any thrill: that is the very worst thing
you can do. Let the thrill go—let it die away—go on through that
period of death into the quieter interest and happiness that follows—and
you will find you are living in a world of new thrills all the time. But if
you decide to make thrills your regular diet and try to prolong them artificially,
they will all get weaker and weaker, and fewer and fewer, and you will be
a bored, disillusioned old man for the rest of your life".57 As he further
observed: "it is just the people who are ready to submit to the loss
of the thrill and settle down to the sober interest, who are then most likely
to meet new thrills in some quite different direction" and Lewis relates
this as "one little part of what Christ meant by saying that a thing
will not really live unless it first dies". 58
In my clinical experience, over time, I have seen such a letting go of the
irrationalities of what pass as the urban gay male mentality by even long-term
devotees to that system. What is aborning in their lives is truly the intimacy
for which they have been looking.
Unrealistic expectations
Gay and straight people have swallowed irrational ideas about relationship.
These irrational ideas produce unrealistic expectations. These unrealistic
expectations produce feelings of disappointment and, when exaggerated, depression.
In order to try to gain some sense of control over the disappointing situation,
the person often blames self for not measuring up to the romantic ideal and
scapegoats the partner, the relationship, gay relationships in general, society,
churches, God, and so on out of a defensive reaction. The relationship falls
apart, as only the latest failure in what is then taken to be the inevitability
of nothing very much better than short-term success in gay relationship.
You’ve heard people say that you don’t miss what you don’t
have. That is true, but not for the reason you may think. People miss only
that which they think is available and don’t have. Pop culture has taught
us to think that things exist that really don’t exist. More people than
homosexuals believe in fairy tales. But there are no unmixed bags in human
affairs. Reality is always a mixed bag; fantasy is always an unmixed bag.
We paint a picture of the "otherwise" situation but we are in complete
control of the fantasy picture so, of course, its just beautiful. The real
situation, in which others make their own contributions for good or ill, is
thus always a mixture of what we think we want or need and what we think we
don’t want and must not have. It seems so hard to learn the lesson C.
S. Lewis had in mind when he said that dream furniture is the only kind of
furniture we don’t stub our toes on. When it comes to thinking about
a lover, we tend to drift into some very unrealistic and undisciplined day
dreaming. "The girl of my dreams," "the boy of my dreams",
and the contradictory "real dream" are a few of our expressions.
As Lewes Smedes puts it: "Some people are sexually stupid enough to make
a touched-up picture of some exhibitionist their secret standard of a satisfying
sex partner".59 Some guys are still contrasting every potential mate
with pictures of a hot gay porno star who, unknown to them, has ballooned
off-screen into middle-aged spread. We look around us and see this "goodie"
in this one and another "goodie" in that one. We pick this one’s
body, that one’s brains, that one’s sociability, and this one’s
money and this one’s face, and that one’s identity as a Christian.
We pick and choose, left and right, failing to understand that such an approach
is ludicrous. We can have relationship with a person as is or we cannot have
a relationship at all. When we pick and choose parts of people we end up with
only a fantasy. And even if we finally "settle" for one person,
we are apt to make unfair comparisons between our partner, whom we know as
the mixed bag any real person will be, and that one’s body, that one’s
prosperity, that one’s industry, that one’s intelligence, that
one’s beautiful grey eyes. We must come to realize that far from a partner
being this trait plus this look plus this and plus that, a partner, for intimate
relationship, is more. A partner is more than the sum of his or her parts
and more than the sum of the parts from ten other prospects.
The incest taboo
Our society, churches, pornography, gay liberationism and practically every
other influence on our lives instills and perpetuates in us the ideal that
sex is bad, wrong, sinful, illegal, degrading, embarrassing, dirty, raunchy.
Masturbatory fantasies in secret, pornography on the sly and promiscuity in
public toilets and back room bars all contribute to the continuation of the
perception of genital sex as dirty and impersonal. Consequently, one way or
another, most relationships eventually have to contend with the insidious
effects of the incest taboo.
You may find that it is more and more difficult to integrate genital acts
and the closeness you feel for a partner you have come to know and accept
as a member of the family. You identify the partner with goodness and find
it increasingly impossible to identify this nice person, a family member,
with the dark sexual passion that you’ve reinforced by long association
of genital sex with fantasy and anonymity. As you look at yourself and naturally
fail to find any differentness that could constitute something you see as
sexually stimulating to you, you will conclude more certainly that you are
not sexy and that, by now, this is probably becoming more and more obvious
to your lover. You have increasing difficulty presenting yourself to your
partner in what you can consider a believably sexy persona. After all, you’ve
been seen with "your hair up in curlers" so to speak. Your partner,
in turn, also doubting his own sexiness in your sight, is likely to interpret
your coolness as a sure sign of your loss of sexual interest in him. Defensively
he pulls back from you and you, in turn, interpret this as his inevitable
loss of sexual interest in you, so you pull back even more. Sex between you
wanes and to counter your insecurity, both of you are tempted to "trick
out", thinking that this will prove that you are sexy. But this only
reinforces the idea you have that your partner is turning to others because
you yourself do not measure up sexually. The deadly cycle is repeated until
the relationship can stand such strain no longer and it ends in disappointment
and discouragement, hurt and anger, and cynicism about ever having a truly
good relationship.
"Open relationships"
Perhaps nothing has hindered relationship more, among modern couples, than
the very naïve notions incorporated under the banner of so-called "open
relationships." Certainly among gay men, the non-monogamous arrangement
has been a curse. It is not merely coincidental that the two most common assumptions
and descriptions of gay male couples today are, first, that gay relationships
are not monogamous and, second, that gay relationships don’t last.
Ten years ago, George and Nena O’Neill wrote their book, Open Marriage,
and popularized the belief that sexual fidelity was an out-worn demand, unnecessary
in the "sexual revolution" generation.60 But it is dangerous to
build new hypotheses on flimsy foundations, as the O’Neills soon learned.
They had been dead wrong. So in 1978, Nena O’Neill published the findings
of more recent research on 250 couples and concluded in The Marriage Promise,
that those marriages ending within two years tended to be the ones that deliberately
included the "open marriage" permission for extra-marital sex.61
Even Eugene Schoenfeld, Berkeley’s 1960's "Dr. HipPocrates,"
has changed his tune on the "open marriage" gospel of the now faded
flower-power days. In Jealousy: Taming the Green-Eyed Monster, he concludes
that "open marriage" has not really worked and that it has served
only to escalate jealousy and failure in relationship.62 The Sixth Anniversary
Poll of People magazine readers—hardly straight-laced fundamentalists—has
revealed that what People calls "a stunning 86% of readers" answered
with "an unadulterated yes" to the question: "Do you think
marital fidelity is important?" This view is shared equally by those
who are married, separated and divorced.63 Herbert Zerof states what any other
alert marriage counsellor knows: "Despite the increase in ‘swinging’
among couples, and more liberal attitudes toward sex outside a relationship,
most people are unable to tolerate an ‘anything goes’ attitude."64
He puts it in even stronger terms: "Despite protests to the contrary,
. . . [extra-marital affairs] are the most insidiously tormenting and destructive
arrangement any three people can devise— even more than a wrenching
divorce".65
All of this is confirmed in the Kinsey Institute’s Bell and Weinberg
study of gay male and lesbian couples. Naturally. Monogamy makes no less sense
in same-sex pairs. Bell and Weinberg found that what they called "Open-Coupleds",
when contrasted with the "Close-Coupleds", "felt more lonely"
in spite of (we should say, in keeping with) their going "out more often."66
On the other hand, the "Close-Coupleds had the smallest amount of sexual
problems, and were unlikely to regret being homosexual ... Although the Close-Coupleds
did not have the highest level of sexual activity, they reported more than
most respondents, and their sexual lives were evidently gratifying to them.
They were likely to have engaged in a wide variety of sexual techniques."
Let me say in passing that one definitely important and direct advantage
for the close-coupled is that, in terms of what a Christopher Street article
calls "the new Era of the Amoeba"— the intestinal parasite
epidemic among gay men —"‘wild abandon’ may become
exclusively descriptive of sex within" the monogamous pair. 67
Bell and Weinberger also report that the close-coupled "tended not
to report the kinds of problems that might arise from a lack of communication
between partners". The close-coupled were also "less tense ... and
more exuberant than the average respondent ... Both the men and the women
were more self-accepting and less depressed or lonely than any of the others,
and they were the happiest of all".68 In analysing these data, we should
keep in mind that, as psychoanalyst Herbert S. Strean points out in his book,
The Extramarital Affair, it is not so much that such relationship makes people
happy but that relatively happy people make such a relationship.
We can account for the widespread buying into the philosophy of "open
relationship" in many ways. We cannot overlook the fact that we are living
at a time when there is more general awareness of sexuality than ever before.
Such awareness however, often in the form of the proverbial "little bit
of knowledge", can be and has been more problematic than helpful. Perhaps
it is symptomatic of the natural growth into and through a time that may be
seen as adolescent.
It is explainable that what are perceived to be unrealistic, unreasonable,
and arbitrary demands for monogamy are transgressed with rationalization by
people who seem to neither understand their motivation nor the unintended
consequences of genitalizing promiscuously. If it is believed that lasting
monogamous gay relationships are impossible anyway, it is not strange that
they are not attempted with much effort. If churches tell you that even the
most faithful and constructive gay relations are "hell-bound" anyway,
where is the encouragement to "stick it out" and "see it through"?
What appear to be feelings of "boredom", for example, can be the
person’s defence against forbidden wishes and depression stemming from
unrealised fantasies of unreasonable romanticizing about what "love life"
"should" be. Through the influence of Hollywood, Television City,
Nashville, Disco, drug store novels, and the like, people have got hold of
an erroneous idea of what relationship is all about. We don’t have to
turn only to X-rated films to see that film makers are unable or unwilling
to integrate genital sex and long-term relationship with intimacy. Even in
PG and R films, when was the last time you saw a sex scene of a monogamous
couple married for several years? And of course, "good, moral family
films" with G-ratings can’t include sex in the "nice"
family! Bible-Belt record buyers swell the sales of "country" songs
that rationalize and even celebrate adultery. Millions of homophobic housewives
across America tune in each weekday afternoon to follow the messed-up lives
of their soap opera heroes and heroines. Anyone familiar with soap script
writing knows that if these messes are cleaned up, the viewers tune out.
If this is what the general pop scene is reflecting and promoting, no wonder
society’s "outcasts" may find it difficult to created more
realistic and responsible relationships. There are very few good heterosexual
relationship role models; there are virtually none when in comes to same-sex
relationships.
Variety and quality of interaction over time are two necessary contexts
for the enrichment of deepest intimacy between partners. Studies repeatedly
show that such variety and quality interaction in a strong commitment to ingenuity
and monogamy most effectively facilitate intimacy.
Monogamy is needed, but not as an end in itself. There are, for example,
plenty of people who do not have sex outside their relationship simply because
they believe that nobody would want to have sex with them. And maybe they’re
right! At least that is the way they look at it. Monogamy over time is needed
as a context in which something vital can begin to take root and be nurtured
and grow. Monogamy is a conclusion to the question of what kind of structure
best facilitates those major components to any successful close relationship.
Such definitive structure allows for, though doesn’t itself produce,
the strong communality, heavy emotional investment, frequent interaction,
personal disclosure and deep caring that characterise the interdependency
of intimate partnership.69
Ingenuity is needed, but not as an end in itself. There are plenty of people,
for example, who can come up with yet one more way to do sex or anything else.
Ingenuity over time is needed in order to improve the growing relation-ship
and to protect it from insecurities as well as outside forces that would tend
to do it in. Ingenuity gives good shape to flexibility as the growing relationship
must adapt to new circumstances, compromises, and changes both inside and
outside individuals and their partnership. The inevitable incompatibility
and conflict, if handled creatively, can become the means for further strengthening
of the relationship for greater heights together.
And commitment -- the will -- is needed because monogamy and ingenuity are
not always that easy, even though any other approach is, sooner or later,
harder and then impossible.
One still hears the rationalisation, "But no one person can meet all
my needs!" True. You must look elsewhere for your shoes, your professional
dental care, your gas and electricity, etc. And you must go elsewhere for
certain kinds of friendships and acquaintances. But don’t these sound
unresponsive to this often-voiced complaint? That’s because "no
one person can meet all my needs" or "I need my freedom" can
be just other words for "I want sex with hot men" which can be just
other words for "I’m not sexy". But the monotonous genitalizing
with one stranger after another hardly matches the needs of the very demanding
sexual gourmet. Actually, such a person spreads himself so thin that his real
needs for sexual satisfaction are never met. He goes out night after night
because he did not get his needs met during all those previous nights, even
though he had many sex partners and multiple ejaculations.
Until one understands the real motivation behind an appeal for so-called
sexual freedom or "open relationship", all the moralizing of self-righteous
fundamentalists and all the new wave rhetoric of self-righteous liberationists
will fall flat.
Carl Rogers concluded that the basic difficulty people have psychologically
is that they see themselves as "worthless and unlovable". That is
what I, too, have found in my own clinical practice. People see a gap between
who and what they think they should be. And they think that everyone else
sees them and this gap in the same way. They set themselves the impossible
task of countering their sense of failure by seeking affirmation from other
people. They never succeed because they are still stuck with their own version
of the gap. Nonetheless, they try endlessly to obliterate the gap. The harder
they try, the more they reinforce the sense of their problem and they get
no closer to a resolution, concluding that they are terminally unacceptable,
unlikeable, unlovable. Irrational attempts at independence thus end only in
reinforcing self-doubt. As we have said, the other person’s response,
no matter how "positive"—even if it is in the form of fame
and fortune—is not good enough to alter the long-term memory of one’s
own self-consciousness inside one’s own brain cells. Even Robert Redford
confesses: "All my life I’ve been dogged by guilt, because I feel
there’s this difference between the way I look—which I suppose
is good—and what I feel inside me. I get these black nightmares".70
A side-stepping of one’s own version of self, however, accomplished
in the knowledge that I am the only one who sees my me as well as my ideal
me and the gap between, can facilitate the relative security that yields a
healthy independence alongside interdependency. Actually, of course, a sense
of low self-worth is a result of inordinate self-centredness. A person becomes
preoccupied with his or her own importance and thereby makes too big a deal
out of the attention or lack of attention paid by others. It is then seen
as a personal calamity if someone else doesn’t say or do what we myopically
predict it would be so good for us to have him or her say or do.
What Smedes calls "the pivot on which our sexual lives turn" is
freedom, the freedom we have in Christ. It is not freedom that disregards
how the world is. He quotes Paul (2 Corinthians 3:17) as saying: "Where
the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom".71 This, explains Smedes,
means freedom from the compulsion to be dominated by sexuality. It means freedom
from both authentic guilt and neurotic guilt feeling. ("Many Christians"
Smedes says, "can accept forgiveness for almost anything but what they
do with and feel abut their genitals" 72). It means freedom from the
moral tyranny of even Christian institutions that impose their own rules on
our consciences as though their rules were God’s ("folkways that
posture as divine rules", says Smedes, "are anti-Christ".73)
In the phrasing of Herman Ridderbos, "Christian freedom ... means ...
spiritual independence from all these human bondages, even when this bondage
consists of too-narrow confessional or clerical commitments".74 Such
freedom means freedom from the illusion that there is ultimate joy in the
idol of sex. Smedes points out that the freedom we have in Christ is also
a freedom for the other person, including sexually, and freedom in permanent
relationship with the other. This freedom is then free to go beyond the welfare
of the mate to become welfare for yet others.
Such costly freedom for the other is poorly understood and even less practised
in both secular and Christian communities. Yankelovich’s observations,
however, have led him to say that "nothing has subverted self-fulfilment
more thoroughly than self-indulgence".75 Again it is heard: unless we
die, we cannot live. Robert Runcie, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made these
points with great eloquence when, amid the pomp and circumstance (and often
tasteless commercialism) of the "Wedding of the Century", he began
his address to Prince Charles and Diana, and to the millions watching around
the world, by saying: "Here is the stuff of which fairy tales are made:
the Prince and Princess on their wedding day. But fairy tales usually end
at this point with the simple phrase ‘and they lived happily ever after’.
This may be because fairy tales regard marriage as an anticlimax after the
romance of courtship. This is not the Christian view. Our faith sees the wedding
day not as the place of arrival but the place where the adventure really begins."
He then went on to explain that "any marriage which is turned in upon
itself, in which the bride and groom simply gaze obsessively at one another,
goes sour after a time. A marriage which really works", he said "is
one which works for others."76
OUR BIBLICAL ROLE MODEL FOR RELATIONSHIP
There is a divine two-fold role model for relationship as love-as-an-act-of-will,
that nobody can appreciate quite so much as a Christian can, for it’s
found in the Old and New Testaments. The covenant relationship between God
and the Israelites and between Christ and the Christians is what ought to
be and is and shall be the relationship between two of God’s people
in covenant union.
The role-model for such covenant union is that of God’s steadfast
and deliberate love, a completely voluntary loving of the world so much that
God gave, and gave, and gave.
Remember when God, as the husband of Israel, spoke to her through the prophet
Hosea, now almost 3,000 years ago: "I will allure her, and bring her
into the desert and speak tenderly to her". (2:14) God promised: "I
will betroth you to me forever; I will betroth you with righteousness and
justice, with love and compassion. I will betroth you in faithfulness, and
you will know the Lord".(2:19-20) Then, immediately turning to Hosea’s
relationship with his adulterous mate, God makes the parallel, instructing
Hosea to "Go, show your love to your wife again, though she is loved
by another and is an adulteress. Love her as the Lord loves the Israelites,
though they turn to other gods and love the sacred raisin-cakes". (3:1)
That is steadfast love; persistent love. That is our model. You know, those
little sacred raisin-cakes were foolishly believed to affirm one’s sexual
power, proficiency, and attractiveness. They were used as aphrodisiacs in
cultic worship of false gods. They were the poppers and pills, the paraphernalia
of the sex gods back in ancient Israel.
And then, later, with the prophet Ezekiel, whose mission it was to bring
consolation, to show that God was justified in sending Israel into captivity,
there is the same steadfast love. For, as is recorded in Ezekiel 16:15, Israel
had been promiscuous with "anyone who passed by" and even had made
"male idols and engaged in prostitution with them". (16:17) But
though God does not refrain from allowing her to reap what she sows, God is
still the faithful partner who promises again: "Yet I will remember my
covenant with you in the days of your youth, and I will establish with you
an everlasting covenant". (16:60)
In the New Testament, the marriage of God and God’s people is pictured
as that between Christ and His Bride, the Church. All of us, as the Bible
says, as Christians, are Christ’s Bride, whether we are women or men.
What a remarkable and beautiful picture of intimacy and tenderness. That old
ex-slave trader sea captain John Newton, author of the hymn, Amazing Grace,
was not skittish about calling Jesus Christ, "my Husband" in another
of his hymns, How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds, though editors of his hymns
have often deleted this reference as, no doubt, sounding too "homosexual".
And would you believe, some folk in the United Church of Christ nowadays are
so hypersensitive that under the guise of "inclusive language",
they have eliminated from a new hymnal called Everflowing Streams (Pilgrim
Press), Bride-of -Christ analogies! 77 They seem not to understand that theirs
is the sexist approach, not the true feminism of the Bible.
Paul instructs Christian couples to pattern after this model of Christ and
the Bride-of-Christ when he writes to the Ephesians (5:21): "Submit to
one another out of reverence for Christ" and love each other as Christ
loved His Bride and gave Himself up for her. (5:25) It is in God’s covenant
relationship with us that we can best see what is to be our covenant relationship
with our partner.
Translated into our daily living, that means that though, as Geoffrey Bromily
notes, "In the world of the fall . . . some part of life, if not all,
must be lived temporarily or permanently outside the regular patterns of God’s
created order" so we must not set ourselves up for unrealistic expectations
of perfectionism.78 It is not our wisdom or morality that holds us together
in this world: it is still and always will be God’s grace in Jesus Christ.
We live in a fallen world as sinners saved by grace. And our sexual life is
not lived anywhere else but right in the middle of this fallen world, the
only one we have.
But this in no way means that our covenantal homosexual unions are not truly
marriages in God’s eyes. Even before the fall, as Bromily points out,
marriage is marriage, "whether or not there is a related ceremonial or
institutional form".79 We don’t need the blessing of the First
Southern Baptist Church of Del City, Oklahoma or the civil recognition of
the government of Dade County, Florida. And we don’t have to procreate
children to have a covenantal union, as Bromily also notes, "marriage
has its own perfection without having to be related to family [i.e. children]".80
As a matter of fact, as the two same-bodied people, "bone of my bone,
flesh of my flesh" covenant with each other, they "will leave",
as the Bible says, "father and mother and be united" as "one
flesh". (Genesis 2:23-24) And more than a few gay men and lesbians have
been forced literally to leave parents, quite painfully, in order to "cleave"
to each other in their honest and mutual love and commitment.
Evangelicals do a lot of worrying over what is called the dating and marriage
of the "unequal yoke". To be sure, the plight of Christians and
non-believers who marry can be a very troublesome ordeal, whatever may be
the application of 2 Corinthians 6. It is a sound psychological principle
that couples do best if their most basic values are held in common, no matter
what those basic values may be. But these same evangelicals, usually unwittingly
but sometimes even deliberately, connive to push their homosexual offspring
into the "unequal yoke" of a homosexual-heterosexual marriage. The
consequences of these lying mismatches (Romans 12:9) are at least as difficult
as the better known "unequal yokes". Robert Schuller, "tele-evangelist"
of the Crystal Cathedral, has lent his weight to this sort of arrogant oppression
by demeaning gay relationships and urging all of his homosexual viewers to
become what he already is—heterosexual—so that they can enjoy
what he says he enjoys. He deliberately seeks to wreck the homes of those
already in gay relationships and he unwittingly lays the traps for the future
destruction of substitute "bisexual" homes.
Such stupid advice as Schuller’s contributes to making the divorce
rate of even evangelicals today about the same as that of secular statistics
of a decade ago.81 And what of the many more couples that are set up in this
way for eventual "emotional divorce" if not legal divorce?
According to Jim Conway, director of the D.Min. Programme at Talbot Theological
Seminary, there are those who "should never have gotten married"
and he recognises that, because "the Church is the one that married them"
it follows that much of "the blame for divorce falls smack dab on the
churches that allowed the marriages in the first place". He states that
"the church has a responsibility to see that people married in the church
are prepared for marriage".82 Although Conway was not speaking about
homosexual-heterosexual couplings, what he says makes perfect sense when it
comes to such couplings.
Bromily writes that "Marriage can work only as it conforms to the purpose
and work of him who created and established it".83 Marriage between one
homosexual and one heterosexual is fundamentally unworkable in terms of God’s
purposes for marriage as that purpose is expressed in the Bible: the deepest
possible companionship between two people created in God’s image. Just
as none of the animals in God’s creation was found by Adam to be involuntarily
attractive, those of another sex are not found to be involuntarily attractive
to people whose natural desires are for someone of the same sex. And just
as God saw that, for Adam, "no suitable helper was found" for partnership,
even among all of God’s creatures, God knows that even among all people
of the other sex, "no suitable helper" can be found for those who
can truly find such a helper only among people of the same sex. You don’t
think Adam was faking it, do you, when God presented him with a "suitable
helper" in Eve? Adam was simply being Adam. And, of course, in presenting
Adam with Eve, God was being God. "It would be odd indeed", reasons
Smedes, "if the Creator put attractive people in the world and forbade
us to notice them".84 And, being ourselves, we do notice those that God
has put here with us, don’t we?
That we must not have genital relations with everybody we find sexually
attractive does not negate the usefulness of sexual activity with an individual
who is our very own "suitable helper". C. S. Lewis comments on "the
sexual act, [which] when lawful—which" he says "means chiefly
when consistent with good faith and charity—can, like all other merely
natural acts (‘whether we eat or drink, etc.’ as the apostle says),
be done to the glory of God, and will then be holy".85 Lewis was here
faithfully echoing his Lord when Jesus spoke of such willed love fulfilling
the law (Matthew 22:34ff).
Slowly, evangelicals are waking up to the fact that the homosexual covenantal
union, under God, is the Christian solution to the unmet intimacy needs of
homosexual Christians. Smedes, ever so gingerly, strains himself to finally
allow the Christian homosexual "to develop permanent associations with
another person, association in which respect and regard for the other as a
person dominates their sexual relationship".86
If his permission seems less than an enthusiastic call to celebrate one’s
homosexuality, it is by intent, for Smedes goes on the say that "to develop
a morality for the homosexual life is not to accept homosexual practices as
morally commendable" but only that what he views as a "deplorable
situation", for which some permanent but shameful homosexual relationship
is to be concocted, is preferable to what he calls a "life of sexual
chaos". What more could one do to temper joy? And that is all the "help"
he offers, even though, for heterosexuals, he waxes on and on about the fun
of mutual masturbation87, "erotic excitement that pulsates with sensuality"88
and says that married sex has no restraint but "the feeling of the other
person".89
We should not complain too much though, since Smedes is one of the very
few evangelicals who allows even this begrudging recognition of our need.
But Smedes does not say how such a permanent relationship is going to come
about in a church and society that does its dead level best to keep homosexuals
from all relationship. This is particularly suspect in view of his extensive
and detailed discussion of the long-distance run for heterosexuals seeking
the same sort of permanent relationship within the dominant culture. But then,
we who appear to be no better than step-children, at best, in the eyes of
many of even the most compassionate of heterosexual Christians have come to
appreciate even the scraps that are dropped from their tables. I’ve
become quite adept at catching crumbs. [Happily, Smedes has long since come
around to a hearty support of gay relationships and has movingly keynoted
the summer conference of Evangelicals Concerned.]
So, in closing, remember that God’s commitment to us is the basis
for our commitment to each other. As we keep covenant with each other under
God’s own covenant with us, we have what we need: more than just our
strength alone. We who know what it is to be loved can love. We who know what
it is to be forgiven can forgive. We who are reconciled with God in Christ
can afford to be engaged in reconciliation with each other. We don’t
need to carry around the burden of grudges, fears, hurts, suspicions, resentments,
hostilities. We can truly afford to carry one another’s loads as well
as our own (Galatians 6:2 & 5) as Jesus, who moved among us as a servant
(Philippians 2:1-8) modelled the lifestyle that befits us.
In 1 Corinthians 13, Paul concretely prescribes nothing but love-as-an-act-of-will
for those who are the recipients of God’s love. And such love proscribes
nothing but that which is in opposition to it. Therefore, we can face relationship
with a dedication to patience, longsuffering, persistence, gentleness, kindness,
submission. We don’t have to have our own way (though we will try to),
we don’t have to be so touchy (though we will be), we don’t have
to be selfish (though we will be). We need not be phobic. We need keep no
score. Why? Because God keeps covenant.
We may not always feel up to all this; we may not always feel the love of
God. But just as we know that our security in human relationship cannot depend
on feelings but on willed commitment, we know that our security in relationship
with God does not depend on our staying "up" with what Ken Medema
calls those "sugar-coated ... I-am-His-and He-is- mine-and-doesn’t-it-make-me-feel-good
love songs" but upon God’s amazing grace.
Since we are loved with an everlasting love, surely we can afford to keep
the covenant these relatively few short years of a most interesting sojourn.
Like everything else which is not the involuntary result of fleeting emotion
but the creation of time and will, any marriage, happy or unhappy, is infinitely
more interesting and significant than any romance, however passionate"
W. H. Auden
© Copyright 1981 by Ralph Blair. All rights reserved
Dr Ralph Blair is a psychotherapist in private practice in New York City
USA. He founded the Homosexual Community Counselling Centre in New York City
in1972 and Evangelicals Concerned, Inc. in 1975. back to top
REFERENCES IN TEXT:
1 Cited in Psychology Today, April 1981, p.5
2 Ibid., p.91
3 Ibid., p.44
4 Idem.
5 Idem.
6 Romans 8:32
7 Publisher’s publicity
8 Donald Bloesch, Essentials of Evangelical Theology, Volume I, (New York:
Harper and Row, 1978) p.16
9 Lewis Smedes, Sex for Christians (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1976) p.229
10 David Goodstein, "Opening Space", The Advocate, April 30, 1981.
11 David Goodstein, "Opening Space", The Advocate, August 20,
1981
12 David Goodstein, "Opening Space", The Advocate, February 21,
1980
13 Idem.
14 John Stranack, "Are We All Trash", Blueboy, Volume 10, p.69
15 The New York Native, May 4-17, 1981, p.19
16 The Advocate, July 9, 1981, p.33
17 Edmund White, States of Desire: Travels in Gay America, (New York: Dutton,
1980) p.265
18 Ibid., p.267
19 The Advocate, op. cit.
20 White, op. cit., p.268
21 James Spada, The Spada Report, (New York: NAL, 1979)
22 Mary Mendola, The Mendola Report, (New York: Crown, 1980) p.68
23 Alan P. Bell and Martin Weinberg, Homosexualities, (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1978) p.222
24 Mendola, op. cit;, p.71
25 Ibid., p.67
26 Bell and Weinberg, op. cit., p.219
27 The Advocate, July 26, 1979, p.45
28 Arnie Kantrowitz, "Romance: Old and New", The Advocate, August
20, 1981, p.17
29 Stranack, op. cit.
30 Edmund White and Charles Silverstein, The Joy of Gay Sex, (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1978) p,13 and 15
31 Ibid., p.13
32 Charles Silverstein, Man to Man, (New York: Morrow, 1981) p.334
33 Don Clark, Living Gay, (Millbraw, Ca: Celestial Arts, 1979) p.82j
34 Idem.
35 Ibid., p.80
36 Idem.
37 Ibid., p.83f
38 Psychology Today, op. cit., p.85
39 Letitia Anne Peplau, "What Homosexuals Want in Relationship",
"Psychology Today, March 1981, p.28
40 R. W. Jones and J. E. Bates, "Satisfaction in Male Homosexual Couples",
Journal of Homosexuality, Spring 1978, pp.217-224
41 The New York Times, December 7, 1980, p.5
42 The New York Times, May 6, 1979
43 Cf. Journal of Marriage and the Family, Volume 43, Number 1 and Psychology
Today, June 1981
44 Donald Symons, The Evolution of Human Sexuality, (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1979)
45 Donald Symons, "Eros and Alley Oop", Psychology Today, February
1981, p.60
46 Peplau, op. cit., p.29
47 William Masters and Virginia Johnson, Homosexuality in Perspective, (Boston:
Little, Brown, 1979)
48 Behavior Today, July 9, 1979, p.5
49 Cf. e.g. David D. Burns, Interpretation of the BIAS Test, privately printed,
U. of Pa. Medical School
50 C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, (New York: Macmillan, 1943) pp.95f
51 Ibid., p.99
52 Burns, op.cit.
53 Cited in Behavior Today, February 25, p.8
54 Lewis, op. cit.
55 Idem.
56 Idem.
57 Ibid., p.100f.
58 Ibid., p.100
59 Smedes, op. cit., p.212
60 George and Nena O’Neill, Open Marriage, (New York: Evan, 1972)
61 Nena O’Neill, The Marriage Premise, (New York: Evans, 1977)
62 Eugene Schoenfeld, Jealousy: Taming the Green-eyed Monster, (New York:
Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1980)
63 People, March 24, 1980
64 Herbert Zerof, Finding Intimacy, (New York: Random House, 1978) p.40
65 Ibid., p.67
66 Bell and Weinberg, op. cit., p.223
67 Tim Dlugos, "Guess What’s Hit the Fan?" Christopher Street,
September 1980
68 Bell and Weinberg, op.cit., p.223
69 Cf. e.g. George Levinger and Harold L. Raush, eds., Close Relationships,
(Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1977)
70 People, March 24, 1980
71 Smedes, op. cit., p.82
72 Ibid., p.84
73 Ibid., p.85
74 Cited in Perspective, May-June, 1981, p. 13
75 Psychology Today, April 1981
76 Time, August 10, 1981, p.30
77 Christian Century, July 29 - August 5, 1981, p. 755
78 Geoffrey Bromily, God and Marriage, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980), p.40
79 Ibid., p.3
80 Ibid., p.4
81 Cited in The Life Community Newsletter, September 30, 1979
82 Cited in Cynthia Scott, "When Divorce Strikes", Moody Monthly
83 Bromily, op. cit., p.5
84 Smedes, op.cit., p.210
85 C.S. Lewis, Letters to Malcolm, (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World,
1963) p.15
86 Smedes, op. cit., p.73
87 Ibid., p.243
88 Ibid., p.228
89 Ibid., p. 236
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