Debate & discernment

Johnson, Luke Timothy

DEBATE & DISCERNMENT SCRIPTURE & THE SPIRIT Luke Timothy Johnson Homosexuality as an issue internal to the life of the church poses a fundamental challenge not only to moral discernment and...

...Another order of questions concerns the connection of homosexuality to porneia...
...Essentially, however, the call of faith is to the living God whose revelation continues, rather than to our previous understanding of the texts...
...Is homosexual covenantal love according to "the mind of Christ," an authentic realization of that Christian identity authored by the Holy Spirit, and therefore "authored" as well by the Scripture despite the "authorities" speaking against it...
...I would like to think that these three premises, though perhaps nontraditional in formulation, are in essence profoundly Catholic, fairly and accurately representing not only the implications of the New Testament's own origin and canonization, but also of much loyal and creative interpretation within the tradition...
...First, it cautions us against trying to suppress biblical texts which condemn homosexual behavior (Lev...
...1:26-27...
...Such witness is what the church now needs from homosexual Christians...
...Before moving to the specific case of homosexuality, it might be helpful to amplify slightly two aspects of these premises which without explication might appear careless if not cavalier...
...Are homosexuality and holiness of life compatible...
...18:22...
...23:21...
...Within the faith community, this means an openness to the ways in which God's revelation continues in human experience as well as a deep commitment to the conviction that such revelation, while often, at first, perceived as dissonant with the symbols of Scripture, will, by God's grace directing human fidelity, be seen as consonant with those symbols and God's own fidelity...
...Remember, please, the stakes: the Gentiles were "by nature" unclean, and were "by practice" polluted by idolatry...
...The grounds of the church's decision then was the work that God was doing among the Gentiles, bringing them to salvation through faith...
...Is not porneia essentially sexual activity that ruptures covenant, just as castitas is sexual virtue within or outside marriage because it is sexuality in service to covenant...
...But it is called to discern the work of God in human lives and adapt its self-understanding in response to the work of God...
...How does this approach provide a context for the hermeneutics of homosexuality...
...6:9) or to make them say something other than what they say...
...The first-century Mediterranean world was obsessed by the social implications of food and table-fellowship...
...I take it as a given, first, that any process of discernment within the church takes as its fundamental framework the Irenaean triad of ecclesial self-definition: the canon of Scripture, the rule of faith, and the teaching authority of bishops...
...The second aspect of the premises I want to amplify slightly is the requirement for responsible hermeneutics to take every voice of Scripture seriously...
...The burden of proof required to overturn scriptural precedents is heavy, but it is a burden that has been borne before...
...The authority of these texts, furthermore, is most properly distinguished in terms of their function...
...If sexual virtue and vice are defined covenantally rather than biologically, then it is possible to place homosexual and heterosexual activity in the same context...
...Rather, as an anthology of compositions it contains an irreducible and precious pluralism of "voices," shaped by literary genre, theme, and perspective...
...The decision, furthermore, was not easy to reach...
...I think it fair to conclude that early Christianity knew about homosexuality as it was practiced in Greco-Roman culture, shared Judaism's association of it with the "abominations" of idolatry, and regarded it as incompatible with life in the Kingdom of God...
...This is a harder question because it pertains not simply to moral attitudes or pastoral care, but to the social symbolization of the community...
...Responsible hermeneutics claims the "freedom of the children of God" authorized by the New Testament, and seeks to negotiate the various "voices/authorities" within the texts in an effort to conform to that "mind of Christ" (1 Cor...
...Does our experience now support or challenge the assumption that homosexuality is, simply and without exception, an "offense against nature...
...Another example is the spread of the gospel to the Gentiles...
...The question is not only how we feel or think or act concerning homosexuality, but also how those feelings, thoughts, and actions relate to the canonical texts which we take as normative for our lives together...
...It is sometimes—as in the case of taking oaths and vows—not even possible...
...I repeat: an appeal to some populist claim such as "everyone does it," or "surveys indicate" is theologically meaningless...
...We can further observe that the flat rejection of porneia (any form of sexual immorality) is more frequent and general than any of its specific manifestations...
...The first concerns the experience of God in human lives...
...But every ecclesial decision to live by one rather than another of these voices, to privilege one over another, to suppress one in order to live by another, must be willing to state the grounds of that decision, and demonstrate how the experience of God and the more fundamental principles of "the mind of Christ" and "freedom of the children of God" (principles also rooted in the authority of the text) legitimate the distance between ecclesial decision and a clear statement of Scripture...
...The church can discern this only on the basis of faithful witness...
...1 Cor...
...Is the moral quality of sexual behavior defined biologically in terms of the use of certain body parts, or is it defined in terms of personal commitment and attitudes...
...It is, of course, grossly distorting to even talk about "homosexuality" as though one clearly definable thing were meant...
...3:13...
...We must be willing to support our decision by an appeal, not simply to changing circumstances, but to a deeper wisdom given by the Spirit into the meaning of human covenant, and therefore a better understanding of the sayings of Jesus...
...Second, however, Scripture itself "authorizes" us to exercise the freedom of the children of God in our interpretation of such passages...
...Faith in the living God seeks understanding...
...He is the author ojThe Writings of the New Testament: An Interpretation, and Faith's Freedom: A Classic Spirituality for Contemporary Christians (both Fortress...
...Discernment of experience in this sense is for the detection of good news in surprising places, not for the disguising of old sins in novel faces...
...On the basis of this experience of God's work, the church made bold to reinterpret Torah, finding there unexpected legitimation for its fidelity to God's surprising ways (Acts 15:15-18...
...The church cannot, should not, define itself in response to political pressure or popularity polls...
...Inclusivity must follow from evidence of holiness...
...Leviticus and Paul considered homosexuality a vice because they assumed it was a deliberate choice that "suppressed the truth about God...
...are there narratives of homosexual holiness to which we must begin to listen...
...Wisd...
...14:26...
...How was that work of God made known to the church...
...To step outside this framework is to shift the debate to other grounds entirely...
...This is never easy...
...Luke Timothy Johnson is professor of New Testament at the Candler School of Theology, Emory University...
...My third premise is that Scripture does not characteristically speak with a single voice...
...see Gal...
...theological understanding does not define faith or the living God...
...2:16) that is the authentic form of Christian identity which those texts are, through the power of the Holy Spirit, capable of "authoring...
...The call to the discernment of human experience is not a call to carelessness, but its opposite...
...The harder question, of course, is whether the church can recognize the possibility of homosexual committed and covenantal love, in the way that it recognizes such sexual/personal love in the sacrament of marriage...
...But what is the essence of "sexual immorality...
...If this conclusion is correct, what is the hermeneutical implication...
...But the church must say "no" with equal emphasis to the heterosexual "Playboy/Cosmo lifestyle" version...
...Through the narratives of faith related by Paul and Barnabas and Peter, their personal testimony of how "signs and wonders" had been worked among the Gentiles (Acts 15:4, 6-11, 12-13...
...A considerable amount of what we call the New Testament derives from the attempt to resolve the cognitive dissonance between the ex11 perience of Jesus as the source of God's Holy Spirit, and the text of Torah that disqualifies him from that role, since, "cursed be every one that hangs upon a tree" (Deut...
...These auctoritates emphatically define homosexuality as a vice, and they cannot simply be dismissed...
...Such considerations, in turn, provide an opening for a conversation between our human experience (including our religious experience) and the texts of our tradition...
...Compared to the extensive and detailed condemnation of economic oppression at virtually every level of tradition, the off-handed rejection of homosexuality appears instinctive and relatively unreflective...
...But it is the task of responsible ecclesial hermeneutics...
...Certainly, the church must reject the porneia which glorifies sex for its own sake, indulges in promiscuity, destroys the bonds of commitment, and seduces the innocent...
...Yet it is important to assert that God does, on the record, act in surprising and unanticipated ways, and upsets human perceptions of God's scriptural precedents...
...But many of us who have gay and lesbian friends and relatives have arrived with them at the opposite conclusion: for many persons the acceptance of their homosexuality is an acceptance of creation as it applies to them...
...It is easy for us at this distance, and with little understanding of the importance of the body language of table fellowship, to take for granted such a breaking of precedent that allowed Gentiles to share fully in the life of the Messianic community without being circumcised or practicing observance of Torah...
...Almost as important is the way in which these texts "authorize" a certain freedom in interpretation, by presenting a model of how Torah was reinterpreted in the light of new experiences...
...Much suffering had to be endured before the implications of Peter's question, "If then God gave the same gift to them as he gave to us when we believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I that could withstand God" (Acts 11:17), could be fully answered: "We believe that we [Jews] shall be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, just as they [Gentiles] will" (Acts 15:11...
...Conservatism in commitment to canon, creed, and council is paradoxically the necessary condition for genuine freedom in scriptural interpretation...
...Second, I take it as basic that hermeneutics involves the complex task of negotiating normative texts and continuing human experiences...
...We are freed as well to assess the contexts of the condemnations: the rejection of homosexuality, as of other sexual sins, is connected to the incompatibility of porneia with life in the Kingdom...
...We are freed, finally, to consider the grounds on which the texts seem to include homosexuality within porneia, namely that it is "against nature," an abomination offensive to God's created order...
...Do we allow divorce (even if we don't openly call it that) when Jesus forbade it...
...Homosexuality in the church presents a hermeneutical problem...
...Paul's Letter to the Galatians suggests some of the conflict it generated...
...it is a call to the rigorous asceticism of attentiveness...
...DEBATE & DISCERNMENT SCRIPTURE & THE SPIRIT Luke Timothy Johnson Homosexuality as an issue internal to the life of the church poses a fundamental challenge not only to moral discernment and pastoral care (the two aspects touched on in the recent Catechism of the Catholic Church) but to the self-understanding of the church as at once inclusive ("catholic") and separate ("holy...
...A third sort of authority is important but not as fundamental...
...Good for us, also, therefore, to read Acts 10-15 to see just how agonizing and difficult a task it was for that first generation of Christians to allow their perception of God's activity to change their perceptions, and use that new experience as the basis for reinterpreting Scripture...
...The present essay has the modest goal of clearing some space for debate and discernment by setting out what seem to be appropriate boundary markers for what promises to be a long and difficult discussion...
...Insofar as a "gay life style" has these connotations, the church must emphatically and always say "no" to it...
...The Scripture contains a wide range of "authorities" in the sense of auctoritates, or "opinions," not on all the subjects we could desire, but on many of great significance...
...It is emphatically not a vice that is chosen...
...The issue here is analogous to the one facing earliest Christianity 12 after Gentiles started being converted...
...Even the irenic Luke devotes five full chapters of Acts (10-15) to the account of how the community caught up with God's intentions, stumbling every step of the way through confusion, doubt, challenge, disagreements, divisions, and debate...
...We are obsessed by the sexual dimensions of the body...
...I spoke of the auctoritates as diverse and sometimes contradictory...
...In both cases, also, the church can acknowledge that human sexual activity, while of real and great significance, is not wholly determinative of human existence or worth, and can perhaps begin to ask whether the church's concentration on sexual behavior corresponds proportionally to the modest emphasis placed by Scripture...
...The decision to let the Gentiles in "as is" and to establish a more inclusive form of table-fellowship, we should note, came into direct conflict with the accepted interpretation of Torah and what God wanted of humans...
...Is that a fair assessment of homosexuality as we have come to understand it...
...Their highest authority is found in their capacity to reliably "author" Christian identity...
...The most fundamental instance for the very existence of Christianity is the unexpected, crucified, and raised Messiah, Jesus...
...I proceed by staking out three basic premises concerning ecclesial hermeneutics, and then a number of theses pertinent to the issue of homosexuality...
...Granted that they had been given the Holy Spirit, could they be accepted into the people of God just as they were, or must they first "become Jewish" by being circumcised and obeying all the ritual demands of Torah...
...Nothing could be more offensive than to challenge tradition on the basis of casual or unexamined experience, as though God's revelation were obvious or easy, or reducible to popularity polls...
...We are freed, for example, to evaluate the relative paucity of such condemnations...
...What counts is whether God is up to something in human lives...
...The church, it is clear, cannot accept porneia...

Vol. 121 • January 1994 • No. 2


 
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