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Homosexuality,
The Bible and The Church
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Introduction
This article was written by the Presbyterian
Church when they were asked by the Presbyteries
of New York City and of the Palisades to give
"definitive guidance" concerning the eligibility
for ordination to the professional ministry of
persons who openly acknowledge homosexual
orientation and practice.
I believe this
(currently) is the one of the best,
most, balanced biblical and
compassionate documents that I have read on
this subject. I want to adopt it
(at least temporarily) as our statement on the
subject of homosexuality, the Bible and the
Church!
--Pastor
Ken Strong, Father’s Arms Fellowship, Scott
City, Missouri.
One thing has become very clear in consideration
of this request. The church must respond to this
issue. Numbers of persons both within the church
and outside it experience homosexuality, either
as a transient part of their growth as persons
or as a continuing force in their own lives or
in the lives of family members and friends. New
data in psychology and the social sciences have
appeared that challenge the church's traditional
posture on this matter. The time has come for
the church to confront this issue, to reexamine
and refresh its theological understanding of
homosexuality in the light of God's revelation
to us in Jesus Christ, and to renew its
practical approach to mission and ministry among
homosexual persons.
The issue submitted to this General Assembly is
a call for guidance to individual Christian
persons, congregations, and presbyteries
concerning the status of self-affirming,
practicing homosexual persons within the church.
Specifically, the presbyteries seek guidance on
the matter of ordination to the ministry of Word
and Sacrament. Difficult questions are involved
in this request. Should the General Assembly
foster the creation of a new situation in the
church, in which practicing homosexual persons
would be free to affirm their lifestyle publicly
and to obtain the church's blessing upon this
through ordination? Or should the church
reaffirm its historic opposition to homosexual
behavior? These questions must be dealt with in
the context of the whole life and mission of the
church. To answer them, we must examine the
nature of homosexuality according to current
scientific understandings, interpreted within
the context of our theological understandings of
God's purpose for human life. To this purpose,
in all its rich variety, the Scripture attests.
Church membership, ordination, pluralism and
unity in the church, and the Christian response
in ministry and mission must then, in turn, be
examined.
Homosexuality Within a Theological
Context
New data and hypotheses in psychology,
sociology, endocrinology, and the other secular
disciplines cannot in themselves determine a
shift in the church's posture on this issue.
Very frequently these disciplines shed new light
upon our understanding of homosexuality and how
the church should respond to it. Frequently the
results of scientific inquiry are tentative and
inconclusive, neutral in their theological and
ethical implications, or even weighted with
unspoken values and assumptions that are
misleading against the background of biblical
faith.
Therefore, we must address the task of
theologically interpreting these extrabiblical
data, while at the same time renewing our
understanding of Scripture and tradition in the
light of those data in the sciences. Medical and
psychological theories concerning homosexuality
and its causes are complex and often
contradictory. Among the multitude of hypotheses
and conclusions currently being entertained, a
small but significant body of facts emerges that
enlarges our understanding of what homosexuality
is and how we should respond to it. It seems
clear that homosexuality is primarily a matter
of affectional attraction that cannot be defined
simply in terms of genital acts, although the
homosexual orientation may be so expressed. Most
human beings experience occasional homosexual
attraction, although not always consciously. It
is reasonably certain that somewhere between 5
and 10 percent of the human population is
exclusively or predominantly homosexual in
orientation.
Exclusively homosexual persons appear to be
remarkably resistant to reorientation through
most psychiatric methods. Most exclusively
homosexual persons believe that their condition
is irreversible. Some secular therapists working
with those motivated to change report some
success in reversal, and counselors employing
both the resources of Christian faith and
psychotherapeutic techniques report a higher
rate of success. It appears that two critical
variables are involved. First, do therapist and
client believe that change is possible? Second,
how convinced is the client that change is
desirable?
The causes of homosexuality now appear to be
remarkably numerous and diverse. There is no one
explanation for homosexual affectional
preference, and thus neither the persons
involved nor their parents can be singled out as
responsible for the homosexual orientation. Most
authorities now assume that both heterosexuality
and homosexuality result primarily from
psychological and social factors affecting human
beings during their growth toward maturity, with
some possible influence from biological factors.
Most homosexual persons do not consciously
choose their affectional preference, although
they do face the choice of whether to accept it
or to seek change, and of whether to express it
in genital acts or to remain celibate. However,
although homosexual affectional preference is
not always the result of conscious choice, it
may be interpreted as part of the involuntary
and often unconscious drive away from God's
purposes that characterizes fallen human nature,
falling short of God's intended patterns for
human sexuality.
Human sexuality has a dynamic quality. Within
the constraints of nature, nurture serves to
transform both sexual identity and intersexual
preference. Our sexuality is vulnerable to
shaping influences from many directions. As the
embryo develops, the single root organism
unfolds and differentiates, sometimes making a
boy, sometimes a girl, sometimes a sexually
ambiguous being. Following an initial gender
assignment, we believe and nurture ourselves and
one another into authentic or inauthentic sexual
beings. We find here a parallel to the Genesis
account of the creation of humankind, which
speaks of the precious and precarious balance of
male and female life together that perpetually
needs both our affirmation and God's upholding
grace. Genesis offers polemic against deviations
from the wise separation of humankind into man
and woman. It is this separation that makes
union possible. In creation, God separates woman
from man so that they are constituted with
yearning for each other. Becoming one flesh they
portray the glory of his image in the earth. To
say that God created humankind male and female,
called man and woman to join in partnership as
one flesh, and commanded them to multiply
(Genesis 1:27-28; 2:24) is to describe how God
intended loving companionship between a man and
a woman to be a fundamental pattern of human
relationship and the appropriate context for
male-female genital sexual expression. However,
to say that God created humankind male and
female, called man and woman to join in
partnership as one flesh, and commanded them to
multiply is not to state that God intended to
limit the possibility for meaningful life to
heterosexual marriage. Jesus' own celibate
lifestyle and his commitment to his own ministry
rather than to the biological family (Matthew
12:46-50; Mark 3:31-35; Luke 8:19-21)
demonstrates the blessing of God upon life lived
outside the covenant of marriage.
This biological and theological argument has
implications for homosexuality. It appears that
one explanation of the process in which persons
develop homosexual preferences and behavior is
that men and women fall away from their intended
being because of distorted or insufficient
belief in who they are. They are not adequately
upheld in being male and female, in being
heterosexual, by self-belief and the belief of a
supporting community. Therefore, it appears that
what is really important is nor what
homosexuality is but what we believe about it.
Our understanding of its nature and causes is
inconclusive, medically and psychologically. Our
beliefs about homosexuality thus become
paramount in importance. Do we value it,
disvalue it, or find it morally neutral? Do we
shape an environment that encourages movement
toward homosexuality or one that nurtures
heterosexual becoming?
We conclude that homosexuality is not God's wish
for humanity. This we affirm, despite the fact
that some of its forms may be deeply rooted in
an individual's personality structure. Some
persons are exclusively homosexual in
orientation. In many cases homosexuality is more
a sign of the brokenness of God's world than of
willful rebellion. In other cases homosexual
behavior is freely chosen or learned in
environments where normal development is
thwarted. Even where the homosexual orientation
has not been consciously sought or chosen, it is
neither a gift from God nor a state nor a
condition like race; it is a result of our
living in a fallen world.
How are we to find the light and freedom
promised to us by our Lord through the Holy
Spirit in such a world? Where do we find norms
for authentic life, which in truth transcend the
conditioning of history and culture, and the
power to live by them? We dare begin no other
place than with the living Word, Jesus Christ,
who in risen power transcends time and space and
the limitations of our values, norms, and
assumptions to confront, judge, and redeem us.
It is here that all theological confession and
affirmation must begin—in the light of God as
revealed to us in the incarnate and living Word,
Jesus Christ. It is his exposure of our sin, his
obedient sacrificial love, and his being raised
in power to continue his activity of redemption
of this world (I Cor. 15:20-28) that brings us
new light. This same God in Jesus Christ comes
to make us whole, to redeem creation, and to
restore it to the goodness proclaimed at
creation. Yet the prelude to this redemption is
divine judgment. To look at the Christ is to see
at once the brokenness of the world in which we
live and the brokenness of our own lives. This
comes as the supreme crisis in our life. Yet, in
the moment of this crisis, the Spirit of God
brings the confirmation of divine forgiveness,
moves us to respond in faith, repentance, and
obedience, and initiates the new life in Christ.
Jesus Christ calls us out of the alienation and
isolation of our fallen state into the freedom
of new life. This new life redeems us as sexual
beings but is impossible without repentance. To
claim that God's love for us removes divine
judgment of us is to eliminate the essence of
divine love and to exchange grace for romantic
sentimentality. There is a necessary judgment in
God's love—else it cannot redeem. It was this
Christ who said to the woman in adultery, "Go
and sin no more" (John 8:1-12), and to the rich
young ruler: "One thing you still lack. Sell all
that you have and distribute to the poor. ..and
come, follow me." (Luke 18:22 and parallels.)
Jesus Christ calls us out of the alienation,
brokenness, and isolation of our fallen state
into the freedom of new life in Christ. We deny
that this new life liberates us to license and
affirm that it frees and empowers us for lives
of obedience whereby all of life becomes subject
to his Lordship.
Scripture and Homosexuality
We have already indicated that we must examine
scientific data but must move beyond them in
order to understand what our sexuality means and
how it should be expressed. We anchor our
understanding of homosexuality in the revelation
in Scripture of God's intention for human
sexuality.
In order to comprehend the biblical view of
homosexuality, we cannot simply limit ourselves
to those texts that directly address this issue.
We must first understand something of what the
Scriptures teach about human sexuality in
general. As we examine the whole framework of
teaching bearing upon our sexuality from Genesis
onward, we find that homosexuality is a
contradiction of God's wise and beautiful
pattern for human sexual relationships revealed
in Scripture and affirmed in God's ongoing will
for our life in the Spirit of Christ. It is a
confusion of sexual roles that mirrors the
tragic inversion in which men and women worship
the creature instead of the Creator. God created
us male and female to display in clear diversity
and balance the range of qualities in God’s own
nature. The opening chapters of Genesis show
that sexual union as "one flesh" is established
within the context of companionship and the
formation of the family. Nature confirms
revelation in the functional compatibility of
male and female genitalia and the natural
process of procreation and family continuity.
Human sin has deeply affected the processes by
which sexual orientation is formed, with the
result that none of us, heterosexual or
homosexual, fulfill perfectly God's plan for our
sexuality. This makes it all the more imperative
for revelation to make clear for us how our
sexual relationships are to be conducted so as
to please God and challenge us to seek God's
will instead of following our own. Though none
of us will ever achieve perfect fulfillment of
God's will, all Christians are responsible to
view their sins as God views them and to strive
against them. To evade this responsibility is to
permit the church to model for the world forms
of sexual behavior that may seriously injure
individuals, families, and the whole fabric of
human society.
Homosexual persons who will strive toward God’s
revealed will in this area of their lives and
make use of all the resources of grace, can
receive God’s power to transform their desires
or arrest their active expression. Within the
context of general biblical teaching on human
sexuality, a number of passages dealing
specifically with homosexuality are significant
for our response to this issue. These are, of
course, complementary to the wider biblical
themes of creation, fall, and redemption. Three
Scriptures specifically address the issue of
homosexual behavior between consenting males:
Leviticus18:22, Leviticus 20:13, and Romans
1:26-27. Romans 1:26- 27 also addresses the
issue of homosexual behavior between consenting
females. These three passages stand in an
integral and complementary relationship.
Leviticus 20:13 regards homosexual behavior as
an "abomination." In the Reformed tradition, the
Leviticus passages are considered part of the
moral law and thus are different in kind from
Levitical proscriptions against certain foods,
for instance, which belong to the ritual law.
Jesus declared "all foods clean" (Mark 7:19)—
one declaration among many that the ritual law
of the Old Testament is transcended and
fulfilled in him. Moral law in the New Testament
is not the means of salvation, for that is
Christ alone. Rather, obedience to the moral law
is a fruit of grace and salvation. Genesis
19:1-29 and Judges 19:16-26 show that homosexual
rape is a violation of God's justice. II Peter
2:6-10 and Jude 7 suggest a wider context of
homosexual practice in Sodom, implying that such
rape was but one expression of prior homosexual
practice in the population.
Romans 1:26-27 speaks to the problem of
homosexual passion, describing it as
"dishonorable," as well as to homosexual
behavior, which is described as "unnatural." By
"unnatural" the Scripture does not mean contrary
to custom, nor contrary to the preference of a
particular person, but rather contrary to that
order of universal human sexual nature that God
intended in Genesis 1 and 2. We emphasize that
Paul here includes homosexual behavior in a
larger catalog of sins, which includes pride,
greed, jealousy, disobedience to parents, and
deceit. Homosexual behavior is no greater a sin
and no less a sin than these. Two other texts, 1
Corinthians 6:9-10 and I Timothy 1:9-10, show
further New Testament opposition to homosexual
behavior. I Corinthians probably distinguishes
between the more passive partners or catamites
(malakoi) and the more active partners
(arsenokoitai). Homosexual relationships in the
Hellenistic world were widespread. We may safely
assume that some were characterized by
tenderness, commitment and altruism. Yet the New
Testament declares that all homosexual practice
is incompatible with Christian faith and life.
No Scriptures speak of homosexuality as granted
by God. No Scriptures permit or condone any of
the forms of homosexuality. In Matthew 19:1-12,
Jesus reaffirms God's intention for sexual
intercourse, enduring marriage between husband
and wife, and affirms godly celibacy for those
not entering the marriage covenant.
The biblical revelation to Israel, reaffirmed in
the teaching of Jesus and Paul, portrayed in the
theology and human creation, specifically
reflected in the ethical teaching in both the
Old and New Testaments, and confirmed in nature,
clearly indicates that genital sexual expression
is meant to occur within the covenant of
heterosexual marriage. Behavior that is pleasing
to God cannot simply be defined as that which
pleases others or expresses our own strong needs
and identity; it must flow out of faithful and
loving obedience to God. Sin cannot simply be
defined as behavior that is selfish or lustful.
Many unselfish deeds ignore God's expressed
intentions for our lives. Homosexual Christians
who fail to recognize God's revealed intent for
sexual behavior and who move outside God's will
in this area of their lives may show many gifts
and graces. They may evidence more grace than
heterosexual believers who so readily stand in
judgment over them. This does not mean that God
approves their behavior in the area in which
they are failing to be obedient.
To conclude that the Spirit contradicts in our
experience what the Spirit clearly said in
Scripture is to set Spirit against Spirit and to
cut ourselves loose from any objective test to
confirm that we are following God and not the
spirits in our culture or our own fallible
reason. The church that destroys the balance
between Word and Spirit, so carefully
constructed by the Reformers to insure that we
follow none other than Jesus Christ who is the
Word, will soon lose its Christian substance and
become indistinguishable from the world. We have
been charged to seek "new light from God's
Word," not "new light" contrary to God's Word.
Church Membership
Persons who manifest homosexual behavior must be
treated with the profound respect and pastoral
tenderness due all people of God. There can be
no place within the Christian faith for the
response to homosexual persons of mingled
contempt, hatred, and fear that is called
homophobia. Homosexual persons are encompassed
by the searching love of Christ. The church must
turn from its fear and hatred to move toward the
homosexual community in love and to welcome
homosexual inquirers to its congregations. It
should free them to be candid about their
identity and convictions, and it should also
share honestly and humbly with them in seeking
the vision of God's intention for the sexual
dimensions of their lives. As persons repent and
believe, they become members of Christ's body.
The church is not a citadel of the morally
perfect; it is a hospital for sinners. It is the
fellowship where contrite, needy people rest
their hope for salvation on Christ and his
righteousness. Here in community they seek and
receive forgiveness and new life. The church
must become the nurturing community so that all
whose lives come short of the glory of God are converted, reoriented, and built up into
Christian maturity. It may be only in the
context of loving community, appreciation,
pastoral care, forgiveness, and nurture that
homosexual persons can come to a clear
understanding of God's pattern for their sexual
expression. There is room in the church for all
who give honest affirmation to the vows required
for membership in the church. Persons with
Homosexual attraction who sincerely affirm "
Jesus Christ is my lord and Savior" and "I
intend to be his disciple, to obey his word, and
to show his love" should not be excluded from
membership unless it is their express decision
to continue in homosexual sexual practices.
Ordination
To be an ordained officer is to be a human
instrument, touched by divine powers but still
an earthen vessel. As portrayed in Scripture,
the officers set before the church and community
an example of piety, love, service, and moral
integrity. Officers are not free from repeated
expressions of sin. Neither are members and
officers free to adopt a lifestyle of conscious,
continuing, and unresisted sin in any area of
their lives. For the church to ordain a
self-affirming, practicing homosexual person to
ministry would be to act in contradiction to its
charter and calling in Scripture, setting in
motion both within the church and society
serious contradictions to the will of Christ.
The repentant homosexual person who finds the
power of Christ redirecting his or her sexual
desires toward a married heterosexual
commitment, or finds God's power to control his
or her desires and to adopt a celibate
lifestyle, can certainly be ordained, all other
qualifications being met. Indeed, such
candidates must be welcomed and be free to share
their full identity. Their experience of hatred
and rejection may have given them a unique
capacity for love and sensitivity as wounded
healers among heterosexual Christians, and they
may be incomparably equipped to extend the
church's outreach to the homosexual community.
We believe that Jesus Christ intends the
ordination of officers to be a sign of hope to
the church and the world. Therefore our present
understanding of God's will precludes the
ordination of persons who do not repent of
homosexual practice.
My Conclusion:
Being in agreement with the above
statement it is my belief and desire that we
as a church are called to love and embrace the
homosexual person while presenting a message
that either healing and re-orientation into
the image of God’s original design is both
possible and should be sought after as
disciples of Jesus Christ.
--Pastor Ken
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