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Biblical Perspectives |
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What DOES the Bible
Say? - An Overview. |
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The following article is from Chapter 3 of Pastor,
I Am Gay by Rev. Howard H. Bess, pastor of the Church of the Covenant (W&A), Palmer, Alaska
© Copyright 1995 Howard H. Bess.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Used by Permission |
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Biblical authority |
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All Christians grant some level of authority to the Old and New Testament writings. When Christians deal with ethics
and morality, they either start with the Scriptures or at least listen attentively to their commentary and counsel. |
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Developing a "hermeneutic" |
The
study of the Bible is more than merely reading the material. Serious
study of the Bible involves the adoption of a hermeneutic. Hermeneutics
is the science of literary interpretation. A student's hermeneutic sets
the rules and guidelines to be used in the study. Conclusions can be no
better than the hermeneutic rules that are adopted.
One basic rule of most hermeneutic systems is "Never ask the Bible to
answer a question that it does not address." Such a rule should be a
truism, yet it is violated over and over again. For example, the Bible
cannot be asked to answer scientific questions of the 20th Century. The
Bible material was written in pre-scientific eras. It is understandably
silent on 20th Century understanding of chemistry, physics, biology,
astronomy, or geology. My adopted hermeneutic does not allow me to ask
the Bible 20th Century scientific questions. |
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Does the Bible in fact say anything that is applicable to the present discussion? |
As
we approach the Bible on the subject of homosexuality, we must ask the
root question: " Does the Bible in fact say anything that is applicable
to the present discussion?"
Some facts are accepted by everyone. At the head of the list, Jesus said
nothing on the subject. There is not a single word in the Gospels, even
by inference, about any type of same-sex sexual activity. Jesus did not
hesitate to comment on the evils of his day. He said nothing about
homosexuality. Arguments from silence are always weak at best.
Nevertheless, Jesus's silence on this particular subject is worthy of
note.
Additionally, everyone agrees that there is no word in the original
language of either the Old or New Testament that can be properly
translated homosexual or homosexuality. There is no reference in the
Bible to homosexual orientation. Apparently there is no known reference
in any other extant writings of the eras of the Biblical writings. One
can only conclude that male homosexual orientation was not a concern to
Jesus, to the writers of the Bible materials, or to the societies in
which they lived.
Whenever same-sex references are made in the Bible, it is always a
reference to some particular sexual act.
I do not consider myself a Biblical scholar. I do consider myself an
informed student of the Bible. My congregations have been dependent upon
me to be a capable and conscientious student of the Scriptures, so that
I might in turn give informed interpretations of the Scriptures to them.
When the first member of my congregation said to me, "Pastor, I am gay,"
I became a committed student of the subject. Specifically I became
committed to finding out what the Bible says about homosexuality. |
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Ten passages are commonly
held to have
some relevance to the subject: |
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Hospitality |
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Genesis 19 records the story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. There is no reference to homosexual activity
in the passage. Two messengers from God, referred to as angels, visited Lot. Men of Sodom and Gomorrah did not
want the messengers from God in their cities. They demanded Lot turn his guests over to them for sexual abuse.
Lot offered his daughters instead. If the passage is any commentary about sex, it is about abuse and rape, not
homosexuality. Another rule of hermeneutics is that Scripture should be allowed to comment on Scripture. Allowing
Scripture to comment on Scripture, the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah were inhospitable attitude (Luke 10:10-13) and
failure to care for the poor (Ezekiel 16:49-50) |
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Temple
Prostitution |
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Four Old Testament passages (Deuteronomy 23:17, I Kings 14:24, I Kings 22:46, and II Kings 23:7) forbid both male
and female prostitution in pagan temples. The people of God were warned against selling themselves sexually for
pagan religious ceremonies. A male temple prostitute performed sexual acts with another male, a clear homosexual
act. I would not allow modern heterosexual prostitution to be used as a negative commentary on the morality of
sexual relations between a loving husband and wife. Neither do I see any relevance of ancient male temple prostitution
to the discussion of homosexuality and the practice of Christian faith in the late 20th Century. |
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The
Holiness Code |
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Two more of the pertinent passages are from the Old Testament: Leviticus 18:19-23 and Leviticus 20:10-16 are a
part of the Holiness Codes. The theme of the codes is summed up with "You shall be holy, for I, the Lord your
God, am holy." To be holy or pure before God was something more than merely being moral. Every area of a person's
life was involved. Some instructions in the Holiness Codes became central to Christian understanding. When Jesus
commanded his followers to love their neighbors, he was quoting from the Holiness Codes. On the other hand, the
Holiness Codes carry instructions that all Christians ignore. According to the codes, a worker must be paid his
wage on the day of his labor. A field is never to be harvested to the edge. Two types of yarn are never to be woven
into the same cloth. Raw meat is not to be eaten. Tattoos are forbidden. Bigamy is clearly acceptable.
Imbedded in the Holiness Codes along with an almost endless number of instructions and commands is found a prohibition
of a specific homosexual act. "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman." The book of Leviticus
itself gives us little help in understanding the intent of the command. Leviticus tells us nothing specific about
the forbidden homosexual act. It gives us no context for the command. Christian hermeneutics give priority to the
teachings of Jesus of Nazareth over the Old Testament. Jesus set new standards for what it means to be holy. He
embraced some Old Testament standards. He rejected and openly violated some other Old Testament standards: his
breaking of Sabbath rules kept him in constant tension with religious leaders. He ignored some Old Testament standards.
He raised justice, mercy, kindness, and love to new heights.
In the light of Jesus's life and teachings, the two Holiness Codes passages fade into obscurity and irrelevance.
The Old Testament informs and instructs, but it is the New Testament and the teachings of Jesus that the Christian
churches have embraced as normative and as having final authority.
It is well for hermeneutics to raise a general caution. Can any ancient prohibition set in a little known and little
understood context be properly superimposed over a modern setting? In particular can the Holiness Codes statement
have any relevance to the relationship between two men or two women in the 20th Century in a committed relationship
that is characterized as genuinely affectionate and respectful? I think not. |
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New
Testament Passages |
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This leads us to consider three passages in the New Testament. All three references about sexual deviance are found
in the writings of Paul. They are Romans 1:26-2:1, I Corinthians 6:9-11, and I Timothy 1:10. These passages have
always been difficult to translate and even more difficult to interpret because there are no clear English equivalents
into which the key Greek words can be translated. The most exhaustive study of the issues involved was published
by author Robin Scroggs in his book The New Testament and Homosexuality published in 1983.
In his study, Scroggs takes us into the Jewish and Greek worlds of Paul's day. He researched the sexual practices
and the issues of morality of that day as reflected in literature extant from that day. He found no indication
of interest in same-sex sexual relationships between consenting adults. What he did find was the widespread practice
of pederasty. In its usual form pederasty was a form of prostitution in which young boys were used sexually by
heterosexual males. Devout Jews and Christians were understandable critical of this practice found widely among
the Greeks. It is in this context that the words and expressions used by Paul are found in other literature o the
same period.
It is Scroggs' argument that the three references from Paul which we have cited are not commentaries about homosexuality
in general, but understandable references to the widely known practice of pederasty among the Greeks. Scroggs confronts
us with another rule of hermeneutics. He maintains that for moral and ethical passages of the Bible to be applied
to today's world, there must be some reasonable similarity between the contexts then and now. In this case the
contexts are so dissimilar that the three passages become irrelevant. To make his point even clearer, Scroggs coccludes
that Paul can be shown to be against only that which he was clearly against. |
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What Does the Bible say about homosexuality?
"Not Much!" |
One further observation is worthy of consideration. Nowhere in the New Testament is there a discussion of homosexuality
or of any homosexual practice. The three New Testament references are part of lists made in the larger contexts
of other discussions. Even if the importance of these three passages could be maximized and be shown to be directly
relevant to today's discussion, the very incidental nature of the references would relegate them to secondary importance.
When a parishioner asks me what the Bible says about homosexuality, my most honest answer must be "Not much!"
I have expressed my best studied opinion. But I am no more than an informed student. I am not a New Testament scholar.
I can ask no one to agree with me because of my standing as a scholar. I would ask that every pastor and church
leader, who is serious about the issue of homosexuality and the church's ministry, take the time to sort out the
facts, the fiction, the myths, the mysteries, and find a model of understanding. It is out of that model of understanding
that the strangers in our midst can become our friends, our brothers and sisters in Christ. |
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© Copyright 1995 Howard H. Bess
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Used by permission |
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