| On Evangelical Faith and
Homosexuality
Dr. Ralph Blair, Founder, Evangelicals Concerned, Inc.
A Lecture at Princeton Theological Seminary
March 21, 2003
hat’s so immediately evident is this: Of all Christians, Evangelicals
have perhaps the most difficulty integrating any expression of homosexuality
with Christian faith. But here’s what’s not so immediately evident:
Of all Christians, Evangelicals should have the least difficulty integrating
at least some expression of homosexuality with Christian faith.
Why do so many Evangelicals have such difficulty? Perhaps it’s because
they tend to take neither sin nor the evangel as seriously as they say they
do? They would not have such difficulty if they but took sin and the evangel
as seriously as they ought.
Evangelicals say that sin is so horrible that it cost Jesus his life on
the cross. And it is so horrible. And it did cost Jesus his life. Jesus went
to the cross to atone for the horror of this world’s sin – including
the sins of sexual assault, sexual greed and sexual pride. But do we really
think that Jesus went all the way to the cross to atone for a loving expression
of an unasked for psychosexuality? Did he come to die because a committed
same-sex couple sleeps and eats together and does the dishes together?
Evangelicals preach that the transaction at Calvary trumps everything. And
it does. It trumps all the sin in the world, whether expressed in horrors
of cruelty that are so readily seen to be sin or in horrors of religiosity
that are not so readily seen to be sin. And it trumps sin’s sequelae
– death, "the wages of sin," and hell itself. Jesus died so
sinners might be saved from sin, death and hell.
But in antigay rhetoric, Jesus seems to have died so an anatomical technicality
might be tweaked and trumped. It’s what a couple does with two penises
or two vaginas instead of what another couple does with one penis and one
vagina that constitutes the sin in the antigay argument. As an Evangelical
antagonist argues: "the complementarity of male and female sex organs
[is] the most unambiguous" indictment against homosexuality. [Robert
A. J. Gagnon] But surely sexual complementarity is a bit more complicated
than tinker toys! In both heterosexual and homosexual attraction, what draws
two people together is the fascinating otherness that each sees in the whole
persona of the other, not the shapes of genitalia. Besides, even in the physicality
of sexual relationship, much more than the mechanics of genitalia is involved.
Another antigay Evangelical argues that without such anatomical dissimilarity,
"same-sex intercourse loses the symbolic dimension of two-becoming-one
present in male-female sex." [Stanley J. Grenz] But he fails to appreciate
the complexity of the one-flesh phenomenon, a union that surely has more to
do with two persons than with two body parts. This "sin" of homosexuality,
then, comes down to a matter of anatomical correctness, for whether such same-sex
behavior expresses affection or assault makes no difference. In either case
the "sin" remains in the same-sex component – period. That’s
hardly an adequate view of even sexual sin.
Evangelicals are People of the Good News – the New Testament’s
euangelion. It’s the term from which "Evangelical" is derived.
According to an Evangelical biblical scholar, the terms " ‘evangelical’
and ‘evangelicalism’ are most useful when they are held to their
etymology in the evangel, ‘the gospel [God] promised beforehand through
the prophets in the Holy Scriptures regarding his Son.’ (Rom 1:2-3),
on the assumption that such an ‘evangel’ is held with firmness
and sincerity of heart. In this light, evangelicalism as a movement must be
seen to be determined by its center, not by its outermost boundary –
and even that center must, in the light of its own confession, constantly
be held up to the examination of Scripture." [D. A. Carson] An Evangelical
historian adds: "Once past a shared commitment to a supernatural gospel,
evangelicals are all over the place theologically." [Mark Noll] In fact,
in the words of the president of Southern Baptist Seminary and a church historian
at Westminster Seminary: "No single evangelical tradition exists."
[Albert Mohler, Jr. and D. G. Hart] If these observations are accurate in
general, how can it be argued that – when it comes to a caring and committed
expression of same-sex orientation – the Evangelical faith somehow inherently
demands a virulent condemnation?
Ignorance certainly plays a part in opposition to homosexuality. And though
honest ignorance can be remedied by better readings of the Bible, science
and human experience, willed ignorance is immune to all data. And self-righteousness
plays a part. But self-righteousness can be repented of and forgiven by God’s
grace.
Opposition to homosexuality by conservative or Right-wing church groups
can have as much to do with allegiance to Right-wing sociopolitical agendas
shared with Right-wing secularists as with anything particularly Christian.
It may be nothing much more than a succumbing to a suffocating Zeitgeist!
But unless sin is seen as something far more sinister than the juxtaposing
of epidermal nerve endings in a same-sex expression of deep affection between
two people committed to loving each other – homosexuality will remain
a stumbling block for these folk. And they will remain stumbling blocks for
homosexuals, whether those who need to hear and respond to the gospel of Christ
or those who, having heard and responded affirmatively, are now told that
that simple gospel is simply not enough in their case.
And unless God’s grace in Christ is seen as something far more powerfully
precious than a moralistic antidote to such juxtaposing of nerve endings –
homosexuality will remain a stumbling block for these folk. And they will
remain stumbling blocks for homosexuals, whether those who need to hear and
respond to the gospel of Christ or those who, having heard and having responded
affirmatively, are now told that that simple gospel is simply not enough in
their case.
Here’s something else that’s evident: Liberal and Left-wing
ecclesiastical camps seem to have no difficulty at all in integrating almost
any homosexuality with Christian faith. What’s perhaps not so evident
is this: The ease with which liberal and Left-wing church groups climb aboard
every GLBTQ band wagon may have as much to do with their allegiance to sociopolitical
agendas they share with liberal and Left-wing secularists as with anything
particularly Christian. It may be nothing much more than a succumbing to the
suffocating Zeitgeist!
People ask me about the personal struggle that they assume I had as a born-again
teenager trying to come to terms with my homosexuality half a century ago.
I’m always concerned that my response – that I really never did
struggle – can seem callous in view of the severe struggles that so
many go through these days. Why did I not have such distress as a 16-year-old
in the mid-50s – and at Bob Jones University, too? Why did I have so
little discomfort with homosexuality as a student officer in InterVarsity
at a state university and in my years at Dallas and Westminster Seminaries?
And how was it that, as an IV staff member at Yale in 1964, I spoke out so
affirmatively on homosexuality that I was not re-appointed for the following
year?
These days, young Evangelicals come out of the closet after decades of a
progressively more homosexually permissive society. And they’re filled
with fear, hurt, frustration and anger. They unleash their fury against their
upbringing in Evangelicalism. So many are so angry that they throw out the
baby with the bath water. They don’t want anything more to do with Evangelicals.
But their bitterness bespeaks an unrequited love. And sadly, they then fall
for all sorts of shallow and sham spirituality so long as it’s pro-GLBTQ.
What else is to be expected? With an adolescent’s increasingly strong
and involuntary same-sex desire, together with an increasing inability to
manage cognitive inconsistencies in which psychosexual experience is at odds
with a home church’s teaching that that same-sex desire is a "choice"
for "abomination," something’s got to give. And it won’t
be what’s involuntary. It’ll be what was chosen – the Evangelical
church that was once such a haven of good news but from which one is now estranged
because it preaches that one’s unasked for desire for intimacy is strictly
prohibited. And if that church can be so wrong in what it declares about one’s
experience of deep and abiding longings, how can a young person trust it to
be right in what cannot be known from mere experience – doctrines of
God and Christ and salvation and what-have-you? That’s some of what
young Evangelicals who happen to be same-sex oriented are faced with these
days.
What factors contribute to the difference between my own relative ease in
earlier days and the trauma of those coming out these days?
Most significantly, there was the clear presentation of the plain gospel
I heard as a child. The good news invitation was to come to Christ. How? In
the words of Anglican hymn writer Charlotte Elliott, sung at the close of
every Billy Graham meeting: "Just as I am, without one plea, But that
Thy blood was shed for me, and that Thou bidd’st me come to Thee, O
Lamb of God, I come, I come." John 3:16 – straight! That preaching
was not cluttered with all of the sociopolitical add-ons of an angry Religious
Right. Of course a moral standard was taught. But, at best, the dos and don’ts
were of doing or not doing acts of rigorous loving kindness, in gratitude
for the loving kindness of God. The moral standard did not trash a person’s
very being.
Back in the ‘50s there were no "role models" of GLBTQ Christians.
But no matter. I had plenty of role models for being a Christian – period!
And that’s what mattered. I was a Christian. I was a Christian who happened
to be attracted to a few people of the same sex. Okay? I took the simple but
profound gospel of Christ at face value and moved on from there to work out
the details. Whatever I encountered of petty legalism and a majoring in minor
matters, I took to be contrary to the gospel and the all-embracing love of
Christ, and the Get real! Christian lifestyle to which he calls us.
These days there’s also an aggrieved and exaggerated victim mentality
that’s popular. And it’s linked with a sense of exaggerated entitlement
in which so much is interpreted in terms of only one’s rights. Those
who come out these days are as easily the victims of this hypersensitivity
and hyper-vigilance of self-centered identity politics as they are victims
of the homophobia and heterosexism that surely is there as well.
Such a self-centered way of seeing is certain to spawn feelings of hurt,
fear, frustration and anger. Making matters worse, these feelings are experienced
in a community where feelings are privileged over cognitive analysis. Trying
to get on top of the feelings of hurt, fear, frustration and anger based in
interpretations of oppression, people go into a rage. And such venting of
hostility is promoted – even programmed – in the GLBTQ movement.
But this approach only reinforces the hurt, fear, frustration and anger and
leaves one trapped in a tantrum of impotence, demanding that others be blamed
and others fix things they don’t much want to fix.
Short of getting others to change their ways with us – always a tricky,
if not impossible, task – can we change our ways with us? Can we talk
better sense to ourselves instead of trying to talk better sense into them?
Can we at least begin to talk better sense to ourselves while trying to talk
better sense into them?
Surely there must be a better way of dealing with homosexuality than most
Evangelicals have found so far. And there is. It’s the old and true
gospel way to which the church has had to return from derelict and dangerous
detours time after time.
Paul emphasized the unadulterated gospel of God’s saving grace and
justification by faith in Christ Jesus alone, apart from all conventional
distinctions. Especially relevant to our interest is what he wrote in Romans
1 and 2, Romans 14, Galatians 3 – and in these precious words from Romans
8. We’ve printed these words at the top of our EC newsletter for almost
three decades now: "For I am persuaded, that neither death nor life,
nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things
to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate
us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." (Rom 8:38-39)
By the way, there’s no textual support for the rumor that Paul added:
"Oh, I forgot – nothing, that is, except any and all homosexuality!"
For me, the genuinely good news of Christ’s gospel has always trumped
the cheap, self-centered substitutes offered – whether in fundamentalist
or liberal circles or in the homosexuality obsessions of the Religious Right
and the GLBTQ Left. In the wise words of 19th century evangelist D. L. Moody:
"Look at what He is, and at what He has done; not at what you are, and
what you have done. That is the way to get peace and rest."
The Gallup Poll finds that 46 percent of Americans say they’re "evangelical"
or "born again." Thus millions of homosexuals and family members
must deal with homosexuality and Evangelical Christian faith. And though most
think they’re working with God-given truths, they have a woefully poor
understanding of not only homosexuality, but of the Evangelical faith. For,
as has been indicated, their assumption that an antigay position is part and
parcel of Evangelicalism as such is erroneous.
And so I would challenge my fellow Evangelicals to take a closer look at
what they think they know about homosexuality and what they think they know
about Christian faith. Let’s take the gospel seriously and not relegate
it to a mere mantra. Let’s take sin seriously and not trivialize it
as merely a matter of anatomical correctness. Let’s take Christian discipleship
biblically, with no propping up of a few poorly grasped Bible verses out of
all proportion to Jesus’ clear call for a grateful love for God and
a rigorously generous love for our neighbors. And let’s take ourselves
more honestly, that we might see others’ needs in our needs, others’
sins in our sins, and even others’ foibles in our own foibles, and find
the self-sacrificing solution to hostilities at the cross of Christ, the only
Savior and Lord there is.
Copyright © 2003, Dr. Ralph Blair. All rights reserved. rblair@ECinc.org
Suggestions for reading on contemporary Evangelicalism
Darrell L. Bock, Purpose-Directed Theology: Getting Our Priorities Right
in Evangelical Controversies (InterVarsity, 2002).
Gregory A. Boyd and Paul R. Eddy, Across the Spectrum: Understanding Issues
in Evangelical Theology (Baker, 2002).
Alister McGrath, Evangelicalism & the Future of Christianity (InterVarsity,
1995).
James M. Penning and Corwin E. Smidt, Evangelicalism: The Next Generation
(Baker, 2002).
John G. Stackhouse, Jr. (editor), What Does it Mean to be Saved? Broadening
Evangelical Horizons of Salvation (Baker, 2002).
John G. Stackhouse, Jr. (editor), Evangelical Futures: A Conversation on
Theological Method (Baker, 2000).
back to top
|