Homosexuality and Christianity

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Homosexuality_Spanish_Inquisition.jpg
Holy Roman Catholic Church officials presiding over the torture of a man accused of being a sodomite before his subsequent execution during the Spanish Inquisition. Circa 1700 AD. According to Herrera Puga the authorities:
"placed no limits on the means; in this way they used the rack, the lash, fire, etc. In some cases... they applied padlocked irons to the flesh which even led to the amputation of a hand..."

The millennial debate about the varieties of human sexual desire, records of which can be found starting with some of the earliest writings surviving from antiquity, has also been preserved in some of the texts later gathered and included in the Christian Bible.

Their possible interpretations are still being debated, and the question of whether homosexuality is moral or a sin has become a matter of intense theological debate among Christians. Many sects have experienced deep divisions over the topic, most notably the Anglican Communion upon the ordination of Gene Robinson as the first openly gay bishop in the world's third largest Christian denomination.

Conversely, resistance to religion-related condemnation of and "spiritual violence" (as it is termed by groups such as Soulforce) against non-straight people has grown from the few isolated voices of past centuries into a social movement defending the right of each person to express their sexuality in a manner that is natural to that person.

Although the historically prevalent view among Christians was to regard homosexual intercourse as sinful, it is likewise true that they did not have the concept of a natural homosexual orientation. The belief in most previous societies was that most people were attracted to both genders, a view that has been confirmed by modern science, indicated by studies implying a "sexual continuum" with the majority of homo sapiens being bisexual to varying degrees and minorities being exclusively homosexual and heterosexual.

Christians such as the Anglican Communion's leader, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, regard same-sex relationships as moral since the Bible does not mention a homosexual orientation, arguing that the denunciations, often under the presumption of it being unnatural are applicable to heterosexuals. Those who believe homosexuality is sinful believe the passages condemning same-sex intercourse are relevant to all, often equating all homosexuality as unnatural or intrinsically disordered, has argued by the Roman Catholic Church's leader, Pope Benedict XVI.

Contents

Overview

Christianity
Confucianism
Greco-Roman Religion
Shinto
Stoicism
Taoism

The majority of Christian denominations hold that homosexuality is and always has been a sin. Most Christians would emphasise that they only condemn homosexual intercourse. Such sex (as opposed to the persons themselves) was condemned in Christian writings such as the "Summa Theologica", and in the revelations of saints such as (for example) St. Hildegard von Bingen (Bingen, 278-279), whose book "Scivias" includes quotes which she said were from God, in which any sexual acts between two men or between two women are condemned. Hence the traditional views on the subject, which are still adhered to by most denominations.

Other Christians dissent from the traditional condemnation of homosexuality. Among Protestants, the more fundamentalist view is generally strongest in the United States and Africa, while American Catholics are typically more liberal than Catholics elsewhere.

Christian theologians who do not believe homosexuality to be a sin argue that the fundamentalists have misinterpreted the pertinent Bible passages or quoted them selectively. For example, they consider the original Hebrew in Leviticus to be ambiguous as to whether "male" means adult man or little boy. They also point out that Leviticus also condemns many other things that modern Christians do, including getting haircuts, eating shellfish, wearing fabrics made from two different fibers (e.g., wool/cotton blends), and planting two crops in a single field.

Some apologists make a distinction between "moral" codes and "purity" (or "ritual") codes in Leviticus and say that the purity codes no longer apply but that the moral codes (including the prohibition against homosexuality) remain binding. Jews hold the Bible actually makes no distinction between morality and purity, and that the rules were generated in such a way that following the purity laws would lead to ethical behavior. However, Christians do not believe that the purity code prohibitions apply to them because these codes have been superseded by the sacrifice of Jesus. On the other hand, Christians do believe that the moral codes still apply. Thus much of the debate centers on whether homosexuality falls within the category of a purity code or a moral code. Liberal Christians argue that since the prohibition against homosexuality appears in a list of purity codes, this prohibition is equally irrelevant to Christians. Traditional Christians, on the other hand, consider the Levitical condemnation of homosexuality to remain in force, because they believe it is reinforced elsewhere in the Bible, including the New Testament, as well as in the later revelations to the mystic-saints. Conservative Christians often argue that while the Law of Moses as a whole is not binding today, many of the commands, such as against murder, adultery, theft are also in the Law of Christ, which is binding today, as is the command against homosexuality.Answers in Genesis article (This is a non neutral source)

There is criticism of this stance within the ranks of Christians themselves. These critics point out the case of the Southern Baptist Convention for example, one of the most conservative denominations in the United States. The church came into existence in 1845 and was against abolition of slavery in the 19th century, citing biblical support for slave ownership. The church was against universal suffrage in the 20th century, citing biblical support for male ascendancy over women. In the 21st century, the church stands against gay rights. All of these positions are criticized as being based on a narrow interpretation of the Bible, obeying the letter while going against the spirit of the Christian teachings. However, conservatives argue that the above line of reasoning could be used to dismiss literally every prohibition and commandment found in the Bible, and therefore has no place in the present debate. Conservatives also argue that it's a selective interpretation of history, and point out that one of the strongest proponents of women's suffrage in the USA was the fundamentalist and Democrat William Jennings Bryan, while evangelicals such as William Wilberforce were the leaders of slavery abolition in the UK. Proponents of the view that homosexuality is not a sin would likewise argue that those views started as minority movements that grew into a majority and draw analogy between their support of gay-rights to previous leaders against slavery among others.

History of the debate

In previous centuries, especially during the Renaissance, there were a few published critics of the Christian teachings on homosexuality, despite the fact that criticism of the Church was considered heretical and sometimes punished by various penalties.

An early - and anonymously published - Italian text, L'Alcibiade fanciullo a scola, published in 1652, denounces the story of Sodom and Gomorrah as a fiction made up by the Hebrew elders. In France, a similar text, Histoire de Dom Bougre, Portier des Chartreux, written in 1741, mocks biblical injunctions and extols same-sex love, as does Voltaire's The Bible finally explained, in 1776. It was followed by the Marquis de Sade who in his Dialogue entre un prêtre et un moribond of 1782 denounces religious (and other morality codes) as "man-made." In England, the pseudo-Byronian poem Don Leon (written in the voice of Byron but of uncertain authorship, published in 1866) vehemently denounced the abusive treatment inflicted on homosexuals as based on a dubious tale,

I grant that casuists the Bible quote,
And tell us how God’s tardy vengeance smote
Lot’s native town with brimstone from the sky,
To punish this impure delinquency,
Unmindful that the drunkard’s kiss defiled
(Whilst yet the embers smoked), his virgin child.
But reason doubts the Jewish prophet’s tale.

Biblical passages referenced in the debate

(The NRSV translation is used throughout for academic consistency where possible)

Each passage is quoted in the form of:

Disputed passages

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Saints Sergius and Bacchus. Circa 700 AD. Officers of the Roman Army in Syria who were tortured to death for their refusal to worship Roman gods. Yale historian John Boswell argues, on the basis of his translation of a single 9th century (hence much later) manuscript which has Sergius seeing a vision of Bacchus, which Boswell translates as:
*"Why do you morn and grieve, beloved? I have been taken from you bodily, but in the bond of our love, I am with you still."
This is one translation, in which terms like "beloved" are being used in place of "friend". Boswell also asserts this icon depicts a religious same-sex marriage with Jesus as "best man" stating that the two were male lovers. Other scholars regard it as a typical dual portrait of two saints who were martyred together, asserting that there is no indication that it depicts a wedding, and that the image of Christ which appears above the two is something found in religious artwork throughout Christian history, such as in the icon of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste, or the icon showingthe Virgin Mary, angels, and members of the Church and numerous other paintings: These scholars argue that Christ's presence above the scene does not mean that Christ was serving as "best man" at a wedding unless one is arguing that the large crowds of people depicted in the above icons were also being married as a group.
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Jonathan and David
The Biblical account of David and Jonathan, in which David declares,
I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan: very pleasant hast thou been unto me: thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women. (2 Samuel 1:26; KJV)
It has been read by some as the story of two lovers. For example, the anonymous Life of King Edward II, ca. 1326 AD, has:
"Indeed I do remember to have heard that one man so loved another. Jonathan cherished David, Achilles loved Patroclus."
We are also told by the Monk of Malmesbury that King Edward II wept for his dead lover Piers Gaveston as:
"...David had mourned for Jonathan."
This interpretation is not accepted by scholars who assert that the language of the original (the Hebrew word " 'ahabah ") was a general word for love which does not specifically indicate romantic or sexual love, and there was no explicit mention of any sexual encounter between the two (their kiss could have been, as they often were, a greeting); this in contrast to the account of David's adultery with Bathsheba, which is explicitly mentioned. Most Christian scholars have therefore rejected a homosexual interpretation. Other scholars indicate that the Hebrew word in the passage, 'ahabah,' is typically translated as love in the context of a marriage or sexual desire, and sexuality is often indicated in indirect language.
It is requested that references or sources be provided for the information in this section.

"La Somme le Roy", 1290 AD; French illuminated ms (detail); British Museum

Homosexuality and choice in Christianity

It is requested that references or sources be provided for the information in this section.
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Jesus and a young Saint John “whom Jesus loved”. “Agapao” the Greek word for love is used in the four relevant passages. Within the Bible the verb is used for different types of love, however usually it signified a non-sexual feeling that all Christians share for each other - it famously appears in John 3:16: "For God so loved the world...", as well as to describe Christ's love for Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. A number of authors in different time periods – Jeremy Bentham, John Boswell, Denis Diderot, King James I, Christopher Marlowe among them – have claimed that Jesus and John were lovers. However critics cite Jewish views of the time denouncing homosexuality as well as the term’s common meaning in the Bible. Some believe that while Jesus opposed the practice He offered compassion for those who did have such tendencies, citing Jesus' views on sexual matters where he preached leniency, the examples being: he saved an adulteress from stoning as required under Mosaic Law while nevertheless telling her not to commit that sin again; He warned His listeners in the Sermon on the Mount not to call people by the inflammatory word "raca" (which, according to an Egyptian papyrus ca. 257 BC, may have referred to homosexual effeminate passive males); and Christ also preached love for all sinners, associating with prostitutes and hated tax-collectors in an attempt to turn them away from sin by reaching out to them. Since Christ, believed to be the Creator Incarnate in Christian doctrine, stands in relation to all people (including "the beloved apostle") as a father to a child, this frames the context for all such actions taken by Christ, and may also explain the above sculpture's portrayal of a child-like John and a paternal Jesus, although the opposing view holds that it represents a common Roman-era same-sex love pederastic relationship between an adult and a younger man. (Wood carving and gilt, Germany, ca. 1320)

Many Fundamentalists view homosexuality as a choice, making a distinction between homosexual intercourse and homosexual attractions. They believe that homosexual orientation is also a choice or unnatural and changeable. Most argue that everyone is of a heterosexual orientation by nature and that homosexuals do not exist. For some fundamentalists this point is crucial to their position, believing that if homosexual orientation is not a choice then it should be accepted according to Galatians 3:28. They argue that this verse refers to attributes that are not freely chosen. This idea has found its expression in the Christian ex-gay movement, which publicizes cases of people who have "walked away from homosexuality".

Other Fundamentalists, on the other hand, have revised their view in recognition of the fact that gay teenagers are three times as likely to commit suicide as other teenagers, and that many gay teenagers come from Christian homes (see Teach Ministries). Many further recognize that so-called "ex-gay" persons are frequently of bisexual orientation, and that because of their erotic attraction to both genders, they are sometimes able to live in a heterosexual relationship.

Some fundamentalists feel it is essential to distinguish between intercourse and attraction. If there is free will, an important idea in Christian Theology, people do have a choice about who they are attracted to. As for most traditional Christians it is homosexual intercourse rather than attraction that is sinful. Many argue that homosexual people can change or be "healed" of their homosexuality.

Of course one can argue that if the orientation is not a choice then it is part of God's design for humans and therefore the act of two men or women loving one another must also be part of that plan. It would be highly illogical to imagine God making homosexuals but then forbidding them from acting on their orientation. It would make no more sense for homosexual persons to choose to be heterosexual than it would be for heterosexual persons to choose to be homosexual. Both choices would be against their true nature, whether the orientation is "chosen" or a result of a combination of factors (discussed in more detail below). They argue that since the Bible condemns acting against one's own nature that it would be sinful for a homosexual person to have heterosexual intercourse and that the Bible is silent on homosexual orientation as well as homosexuals having homosexual intercourse. Opponents argue that since in the Christian viewpoint the way people are born is not necessarily a perfect state. People can be born, or grow up with, strong urges to steal or lie compulsively, and these traits are not to be encouraged.

The idea of homosexual orientation being a free choice is rejected by most psychologists, as well as most other scientists and most homosexual people. The best evidence suggests that homosexual attractions are present in some people in early childhood (see genetics and sexual orientation and causes of sexual orientation). They further argue that to deny people the right to express sexual love with another human being in the manner with which God endowed them is not an act of compassionate love and unnatural. Many theologically liberal Christians agree and believe that God wishes for each person who has a desire for a consensual romantic and sexual relationship to fulfill it. There are even conservative Christians who have come to a new understanding that homosexual relationships that are loving and empowering are within God's design (From Wounded Hearts).

Based on Sigmund Freud's work, some notable psychologists, for example Robin Skinner in "Families and How to Survive Them", agree that homosexual attractions are present in children, but argue that there is a developmental progression in children from homosexuality to heterosexuality, and that homosexuality in adults can be the result of developmental problems encountered in making this transition in childhood. Freud's "Letter to an American Mother" of 1935 contains this idea - he writes: "Homosexuality is assuredly no advantage, but it is nothing to be ashamed of, no vice, no degradation, it cannot be classified as an illness; we consider it to be a variation of the sexual function produced by a certain arrest of sexual development. " Freud went on to say that in some cases, this might be reversible "By asking me if I can help, you mean, I suppose, if I can abolish homosexuality and make normal heterosexuality take its place. The answer is, in a general way, we cannot promise to achieve it. In a certain number of cases we succeed in developing the blighted germs of heterosexual tendencies which are present in every homosexual, in the majority of cases it is no more possible. It is a question of the quality and the age of the individual. The result of treatment cannot be predicted." Mainstream modern psychologist have rejected this early view in light of new research.

Other traditionalists accept that homosexual orientation is not a choice, but argue that acting on that orientation is nevertheless sinful. In these cases, most Christians who condemn homosexual intercourse would not condemn homosexual orientation, but would advocate a life of celibacy for those who have that orientation. An anti-gay counterargument would be to point out that in Matthew 5:28, Jesus condemns not only the act of adultery but also adulterous sexual desire that is not acted upon. By extension, it could be argued that (for example) a man who looks lustfully at another man (i.e. has homosexual orientation) has already committed homosexual sin in his heart. The same restriction would also apply of course to a heterosexual man looking at a woman with lust in his heart.

Further debate

Issues of interpretation

Liberal Christians argue that Jesus explicitly condemned divorce—equating it with adultery in the Sermon on the Mount—but never forbade homosexuality; so they call it hypocritical for fundamentalist to criticize homosexuality more based on vague passages when it is clear that divorce is a sin. Also, rather than interpreting the term "adultery" in the Ten Commandments to mean any sex outside of marriage, they interpret it to mean sexual betrayal of a spouse, which would make the prohibition irrelevant to sex between unmarried persons, including unmarried homosexuals.

It is worth noting that the Leviticus passages only specifically mention male homosexual intercourse. Paul's letter to the Romans is the only place in the Bible where female homosexual intercourse is specifically mentioned. It should also be observed that in respect of sexual conduct, Leviticus passages tend to speak euphemistically, rather than offering explicit reference to physical postures and actions. For example, Lev 18:6-17 repeats with each verse the phrase uncover the nakedness of, rather than explain exactly what is meant.

Modern readers often understand Leviticus as prohibiting homosexuality as such. But homosexual orientation denoting same-sex love, homoerotic feelings and sexual intercourse at the same time, is not a concern of Leviticus at all. The biblical expression "lie with someone" may be a euphemism for the act of penetration. Therefore, non-penetrative sex was never considered to be unlawful by the Jewish law. "The Talmud understands the Torah’s interdiction in Leviticus 18 and 20 to be limited to male/male anal intercourse. Other male/male non-penetrative sexual practices, such as intercrural intercourse, are included in the category of masturbation—a category that is condemned instead as "destruction of seed." To phrase the matter in contemporary language, the issue at stake in Leviticus and its later Talmudic interpretation is proper gender-role differentiation, not orientation or object choice. The text does not address the issue of homosexuality as that issue typically is framed in our conversations today" (Daniel Boyarin “Are there any Jews in ‘The History of Sexuality’?”, Journal of the History of Sexuality, vol. 5 no. 3 (1995) 337-39).

Resistance to human rights and science

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A protester (at right) attends a pride parade in Ottawa, Ontario, with a sign with a quotation from 1 Corinthians 6. Several neo-pagan parade attendees express their amusement.
Individuals active in the human rights movement sometimes allege a pattern of religiously based (and Biblically rationalized) resistance to expansion of the sphere of human rights. The Unitarian Universalist Rev. Dr. Barry M. Andrews, in a recent essay supporting same-sex marriage, compares resistance to it to the resistance to abolition of slavery, women's suffrage, and the end of anti-miscegenation laws. As he says, ... we know that these civil rights were opposed at one time by a majority of Americans, including churches and the government. Nevertheless much support for the anti-slavery movement, the anti-apartheid movement and the American civil rights movement did come from Christian churches but they always started as minorities as well. Persons active in science also allege a pattern of religiously based resistance comparing previous actions, such as the persecution of Galileo Galilei and dogmatic opposition to evolution, to current research and majority view on sexual orientation not being a choice.
It is requested that references or sources be provided for the information in this section.

Controversy over biblical terminology

It is requested that references or sources be provided for the information in this section.

The term most often alleged to be associated with homosexuals in the Bible is “arsenokoitai” (greek: "αρσενοκοίτες", literally "male-bed" ). There is a strong argument over the ambiguity of its meaning. In textural analysis it is usual to find examples of the word in other extant texts of the same period and to confirm their definition by comparing its usage among such texts. It is possible that the first usage of the word comes from the apocryphal Sibylline Oracles (Oracula Sibyllina - 2 BCE) if, in fact, the text actually predates the letters of St. Paul; otherwise, St. Paul invented word as most scholars agree. The Oracula Sibyllina states that the "arsenokoitai" will come from the north and steal the children. Comparing it with St. Paul it is quite possible that the term was referring to kidnappers, child molesters or the ancient Greek religious pederast tale of Zeus abducting his boy lover, Ganymede. Had St. Paul wished to condemn homosexuality in general, it is possibly more likely that he would have used already existing terminology. To imagine that he had no such terminology in his vocabulary is unfounded since Greek literature of the period abounds in homoerotic expressions and diction.

However, as mentioned above in the section "Opposed to same-sex behavior", conservatives argue that Paul chose this word deliberately to be comparable to the Greek version of Leviticus 18.

St. John Chrysostom, in the 4th century, does tend to use the term arsenokoitai to mean "child molester" or "pederast," and St. John the faster, Patriarch of Constantinople (John IV, 582-595) makes the statement: "some men even commit the sin of arsenokoitai with their wives", which adds even more ambiguity to its supposed meaning. The translators of the King James Bible in 1600, had they believed this term to mean homosexual would have been inclined to translate the term as "Invert". They chose rather to translate it as "abusers of themselves with mankind", a frankly odd expression since "mankind" refers to women as well as men. All things considered, another possibility is that the term means "Rape". In some cultures, in order to obtain a mate, the man often kidnapped and raped his chosen bride. The elements that are present are both abduction and forced sexual encounter, so it may be rape that is most likely being condemned.

Furthermore, the Hebrew passage in Leviticus 18:22 would be literally translated "And with a man you should not lay down bedchambers of a woman; it is an abomination." Some controversy exists over the phrases "lay down" and "bedchambers", which can both be used sexually, but do not necessarily mean sexual things. In particular, the "lay down" terminology used in Leviticus 18:22 is not the same as the surrounding sexual condemnations in Leviticus 18:20 and Leviticus 18:23, leading some to think that "lay down" refers to the generic act of sleep rather than the specific act of sexual intercourse. Also, the term "Abomination" in this case is translated from the Hebrew word "Toevah" which is always used in scripture in context to imply polluting oneself with impurities, whether by worship of strange gods or consumption of unclean foods, not to refer to sexual sins. So, it is possible that what is being described in Leviticus is some form of ritualistic sexual encounter that took place in pagan temples (i.e. Orgies).

Positions of specific denominations

(These are covered in-depth at List of Christian denominational positions on homosexuality; what follows here summarizes that page)

Related topics

Bibliography

External links

  1. Homosexuality: Fact and Fiction
  2. That which is unnatural: Homosexuality in Society, the Church, and Scripture

See also: Homosexuality and Christianity, 1290, 1320, 1326, 1652, 1700, 1741