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notedNot by the Catholic Church, or as far as I know by European Protestants except for the Nazi era in Germany.
notedNot by the Catholic Church, or as far as I know by European Protestants except for the Nazi era in Germany.
Hi Contarini, and thanks for your interesting response.What pagan culture? What free sexuality? I question how much you actually know about any ancient pagan culture if you think the phrase “free sexuality” describes any of them.
How do you know that the men of Sodom rejected the offer of Lot’s daughters because they were not sexually interested in women?
I daresay you are right that I am assuming. I haven’t made a study of it. However, there are about two thousand years of that interpretation. Here’s Clement of Alexandria: “The Sodomites …burned with insane love for boys”, about 195 AD. And here’s the Apostolic Constitutions circa 390 AD “The sin of Sodom is contrary to nature”.You are bringing this assumption to the text.
That’s a good point. I certainly take the exegetical tradition extremely seriously.Contarini
I daresay you are right that I am assuming. I haven’t made a study of it. However, there are about two thousand years of that interpretation. Here’s Clement of Alexandria: “The Sodomites …burned with insane love for boys”, about 195 AD. And here’s the Apostolic Constitutions circa 390 AD “The sin of Sodom is contrary to nature”.
How do you get round the fact that there are two thousand years of interpreting the sin of Sodom as homosexuality?
Would you mind please explaining your new interpretation? I would be interested in learning about it.
May God flood you with miracles, Annem
As always, Edwin, your post is informative and convincing. What little I know about the topic generally folds into what you’ve posted.The bottom line: whatever the Fathers said, it’s clear that this passage is talking about rape, and thus in a cultural context where people distinguish very sharply between rape and consensual sex, the story of Sodom is not a good place to start for a discussion of the morality of homosexuality.
Referring to women with their heads uncovered, he called it a custom:Isn’t this similar though for a solo scripture(SS)believer when reading and discerning say a verse like 1 Corinthians 11:6
"For if a woman is not veiled, let her also be shorn: but if it is a shame to a woman to be shorn or shaven, let her be veiled.”
I mean many/most say they don’t have to cover their heads and use the reasoning that Paul was only talking about a cultural custom of that time and now it’s acceptable for women to go uncovered, but a few say they need to cover because that’s what Paul commands in that verse. So in reality it’s not a huge stretch for some to believe that he was talking about homosexuality in an orgy type obscene way that was happening culturally at that time instead of in the “committed relationship” way that is promoted now as acceptable.
It’s the problem I see with SS. So many leaders of churches, all claiming they are lead by the spirit and I think truly believing they are, leaving us with the resulting chaos.
I’ve heard time and time again over the years the reasoning that one follower can be convicted of an issue, say wearing dresses only, or head coverings, but another may not. Without one true head of the Church we end up with whip lash, trying to figure out who or what is right.
Who said a man couldn’t be friends with another man? No one. That they could not be in a relationship of mutual care? No one. It is when a man takes another man into his bed as if that man were a woman capable of a complementary relationship that is forbidden.Homosexual lust is condemned. But what about non-lustful desire for the same-sex, like emotional bonding and feelings of romance? Is that contrary to nature and condemned?
No, they didn’t. It was expected in ancient Rome that everyone could be attracted to just about anyone. Maybe even the local goat. Of the ancients whose lives we know in great detail, such as the emperor’s, we know of only one case, in all those centuries, of any emperor who stuck to one sex. Cl-cl-Claudius. The one and only. And he was heterosexual.People did not think in terms of an “exclusively homosexual” orientation.
Of course the ancients had sorts of rules, although they broke them with impunity, and although the few rules in no way made the society less promiscuous. Men were hardly expected to be faithful to their wives. The plebs had all sorts of brothels and promiscuous sex available to them, not to mention Lupercalia frequently resulted in orgies.common homosexuality/pederasty in their own culture. (This was anything but “free sexuality”–it actually had a lot of rules associated with it.) As some conservative scholars have pointed out, there do appears to have been some “committed same-sex relationships” between adults in the ancient world, but by and large the assumption was that same-sex relations would involve a boy or a slave.
Hi. No, ancient pagan sexuality is not the same thing as sexuality today. Of course culture’s change. And things could hardly have gotten much worse than little boy brothels on every street corner, with the boys allowed to retire only when their first body hair sprouted.In my opinion, modern egalitarian sexuality is the result of Christianity. It isn’t the same thing as ancient pagan sexuality at all. And that presents difficulties in applying Scriptural and patristic condemnations.
I have no idea if it is only about rape. I will have to look into it.The bottom line: whatever the Fathers said, it’s clear that this passage is talking about rape, and thus in a cultural context where people distinguish very sharply between rape and consensual sex, the story of Sodom is not a good place to start for a discussion of the morality of homosexuality.
You do not need to start with Sodom. You can start with Our Lord’s answer to the question of divorce:That’s a good point. I certainly take the exegetical tradition extremely seriously.
At the same time, there are longstanding interpretations that need to be questioned or reframed in some way.
Furthermore, the medieval (and I think also patristic, though I’m less sure) understanding of “sodomy” covered any sexual act that was seen as “unnatural.” Anal or oral intercourse between a man and a woman was also seen as “sodomy.” People did not think in terms of an “exclusively homosexual” orientation. The patristic passages you cite do not constitute evidence that the men of Sodom were sexually uninterested in women, or even that the Fathers thought they were.
Clearly the early Christians (probably including Jude in Scripture, although some pro-gay exegetes argue that the phrase “heteras sarkas,” which ironically has the same Greek root as “heterosexual,” refers to lusting after angels, who have “another flesh” than humans–but I’m really not sure this makes much difference) understood the “sin of Sodom” in terms of the very common homosexuality/pederasty in their own culture. (This was anything but “free sexuality”–it actually had a lot of rules associated with it.) As some conservative scholars have pointed out, there do appears to have been some “committed same-sex relationships” between adults in the ancient world, but by and large the assumption was that same-sex relations would involve a boy or a slave. In other words, same-sex sexuality was still very much about dominance and control–as was all sexuality, pretty much.
In my opinion, modern egalitarian sexuality is the result of Christianity. It isn’t the same thing as ancient pagan sexuality at all. And that presents difficulties in applying Scriptural and patristic condemnations.
The bottom line: whatever the Fathers said, it’s clear that this passage is talking about rape, and thus in a cultural context where people distinguish very sharply between rape and consensual sex, the story of Sodom is not a good place to start for a discussion of the morality of homosexuality.
Edwin
Exactly.You do not need to start with Sodom. You can start with Our Lord’s answer to the question of divorce:
They used religion to support their legal claim to slavery. I have heard people support slavery still, but they hide their form by saying it would be held to the biblical standard. Your example is slightly different or enough different that I going to bring it up. Slavery inherently takes away the rights of people. While marriage equality gives rights to people. You are correct in saying that making something a legal definition does not make something a fact.OK. But just because there is a “legal definition” doesn’t make it a fact. The law used to define African Americans as chattel property… No law of man can reduce a human being made in the image of God to property… The same holds for marriage. The churches have a right to their own definitions of marriage, and if you support separation of church and state
They want homosexuality to be deemed the legal equivalent of heterosexuality. That is a lie so patently obvious that it is a wonderment that someone with the most rudimentary knowledge of mammalian biology cannot see the difference.…homosexuals today who wish to be in monogamous relationships and be afforded the same status legally as heterosexuals.
Some Americans used Scripture out of context to create a moral argument for slavery, but this only occurred after Christians began to organize to stop slavery through the Abolitionist movement. It was in response to Abolitionism that Southerners began to promote a moral argument for slavery based on misreading Scripture. Before Abolitionism started in earnest, even Southerners were willing to admit that slavery was an inhumane institution, they just weren’t willing to bring economic ruin on themselves to get rid of it. Prime examples are Thomas Jefferson and George Washington.They used religion to support their legal claim to slavery.
Well, those people are idiots. Worse they obviously haven’t read the Bible. The Apostle Paul is quite clear that those who enslave others have committed a sin. This, by the way, is in the same passage where he mentions homosexuality as sinful as well (1 Timothy 1:10). Why would any Christian support re-legalizing the slave trade (even if it followed a “biblical standard”) when slave trading is explicitly called a sin in the Bible?I have heard people support slavery still, but they hide their form by saying it would be held to the biblical standard.
Governments can give civil rights (as opposed to natural rights) to anyone they want. Of course, as Christians, we would pray that our government did not “create civil rights” that contradict the law of nature and nature’s God.Your example is slightly different or enough different that I going to bring it up. Slavery inherently takes away the rights of people. While marriage equality gives rights to people. You are correct in saying that making something a legal definition does not make something a fact.
Well, I’m glad you cleared that up.Castigating… seriously? You have a right to your own definition and a right not to preform the ceremony. You have my full support on these 2 things.
I don’t think it should be criminalized. Neither do I think that adultery should be criminalized. Nor do I think that lying should be criminalized. I believe these sins should not be publicly celebrated, but I don’t think we should go around criminalizing everything that people do wrong. That is not the type of society I want to live in.Do you believe that being gay or participating in homosexual acts should be outlawed? If not, why?
I believe people who struggle with homosexual attraction should be loved and helped–not punished. That does not mean I “suspend moral judgment.” I have made a moral judgment, which is that homosexual acts are sinful. That is a moral judgment. But that moral judgment does not require me to support the demonization of homosexuals. I choose to love people even if they live in ways I think are wrong.Also why do you suspend your moral judgement there and not for marriage.
I will refer to your knowledge of history since it is not a subject I care to much about. The part “only after” seems wrong.Some Americans used Scripture out of context to create a moral argument for slavery, but this only occurred after Christians began to organize to stop slavery through the Abolitionist movement.
Pretty sure this is actually incorrect. As far as I can remember the USA’s government is set up to protect minority faction from being denied right by the majority faction I could be summarizing James Madison incorrectly though or wrongly applying his idea.Under the Constitution, the United States is a democratic republic, which means that the majority decides what rights people have.
Okay immorral not not criminal.I don’t think it should be criminalized. Neither do I think that adultery should be criminalized. Nor do I think that lying should be criminalized. I believe these sins should not be publicly celebrated, but I don’t think we should go around criminalizing everything that people do wrong. That is not the type of society I want to live in.
I disagreeI wish the Supreme Court would have stayed out of the political debate and allowed the American people to have a democratic debate on the merits or lack thereof of same-sex marriage.
Are you aware that Thomas Jefferson included the following in his original draft of the Declaration of Independence? The Continental Congress decided not to add it since southerners had themselves a slave economy, but still–this comes from a slave-owning southerner himself and he thought it important enough to list in his grievances against the British king.I will refer to your knowledge of history since it is not a subject I care to much about. The part “only after” seems wrong.