Grace & Peace!
Just reading through some recent posts in this thread as I’ve been away for a bit, and found this flabbergasting:
You delude yourself into believing that you have no agenda and you do not believe in this gay culuture.
Coptic, I honestly have no idea how you can be misreading me as severely as you are, unless you’ve already made up your mind that you know precisely the sort of things I think and believe, regardless of anything I may say to the contrary. I suspect you’re falling victim to some sort of bias or other. Of course, having said that, I have a feeling that you’ll read that and think, “He’s calling me a homophobe! How typical of someone who’s totally steeped in the homosexualist agenda!” Sigh.
Assuming we continue a discussion either in this thread or any other in the future, how about we do this: how about, when I tell you what I believe, that you accept that I believe it in good faith? And how about, when you tell me something you believe, that I accept that you believe it in good faith? How about that? That way, you’ll avoid making the mistake of telling me what I do or don’t believe and I, too, will be preserved from making the same error.
You introduce what you say is a complex issue. No it is not. You want me and anyone else to believe this. You then say the issue of culture. You don’t define it and continue to write. You say culture creates people. Where did you get that idea? You follow that with a random thought that I cannot make any sense out of “conditions desire”…So what does desire have to do with anything except your desire to promote what you believe. You feel. …] You then introduce without explanation and put in paranthesis “gay culture” not once but twice. Doing this is reinforcement in my mind that you really believe that this is a real thing.
Your analysis is absurd, Coptic–I would accuse you of eisegesis (reading into what I wrote
something you wanted or expected to read) if I didn’t suspect that maybe something else, perhaps something completely unrelated to our discussion was causing your befuddlement (for instance, maybe you’re not a native English speaker). So. Let me break that paragraph down for you:“Coptic, you bring up something which is, to me, an interesting, important, and complex issue–and that’s the issue of culture and how culture creates people and conditions desire.”
Here, I am saying that as a result of your post to which I was responding, I was led to think about the various human cultures to which we belong and the influence that such cultures have over our development as people and, in a related way, how they exercise influence over what we desire as well as how we articulate what we desire to ourselves and to others. I state that I find such considerations to be interesting, important and complex.
I assume that you will understand how I am understanding the word “culture” by the context in which I use the word. Clearly, I’m not talking about civilization or high culture such as the fine arts. But if what I was talking about was unclear, I figured that most would not find it difficult to intuit (given what I write subsequently), that what I mean by the word “culture” is something along the lines of an “office culture” or “school culture,” the observable patterns of thought or behavior of people in a particular group and how those patterns create expectations of thought or behavior, establish norms, build community, etc.
Regarding my statement that culture creates people, simple reflection would lead one to consider how the various cultures in which one participates influence and form one as an individual in community with other individuals–they have a real effect on who we are. We are social animals. Moreover, since I believe that who we are as individuals is not sui generis but constructed by our interactions with those around us, saying that culture creates people is another way of saying that who we are is formed in community with others. Further, it is not such a big step from saying that we are who we are because of the groups of which we are members and participants to saying that we desire according to the desire of the other (I refer you to Girard’s mimetic theory for more information). It’s not a random thought at all, particularly not when you consider that, for the most part, the Judeo-Christian tradition sees the will (the thing in us which desires and pursues what is desired) as the locus of what makes us who we are as individual people."I feel that so often when people express misgivings about same sex attracted people or same sex attraction generally, what they’re really expressing misgivings about is "gay culture."And there’s a lot about “gay culture” over which one can be justifiably uncomfortable. "
Here, I state a suspicion (a feeling is what I call it, following a colloquial use of the word “feeling”) that when people express misgivings about same sex attraction that what they’re really objecting to is “gay culture.” I make this statement based on observations of what people say when they make their objections to same sex attraction (i.e., when such objections take the form of a list of pathologies). I put “gay culture” in quotes (not parentheses), because I’m designating it as something that is self-consciously artificial according to the common use of what is called “scare quotes.” Scare quotes are often used by people when they wish to draw attention to the semiotic or linguistic slipperiness of a particular concept or thing within a particular context. I introduce the concept of “gay culture” at this point because it is the particular culture that I will be considering in the remainder of the post. I introduce the concept once, and I mention it a second time in a sentence which is meant to lead into/introduce the next paragraph of the post.
The second time I mention “gay culture,” it is to say that the misgivings (which I identify in the sentence as giving rise to a sense of discomfort) are not unjustified, with the understanding that they are not unjustified given the nature of “gay culture,” which nature will be briefly touched upon in what follows in the post.
While it is true that I see “gay culture” as a self-conscious and largely artificial construct, it does not follow from such a perspective that I would believe that “gay culture” has no real impact on people’s behavior or expectations either for those who participate in “gay culture” or those who buy into if (only to oppose it). General “corporate culture” such as one experiences to one degree or another in a white-color office setting is a similar case: an artificial construct which has real consequences on human thought and behavior.
If you do not believe in it and if you do not support it why wuld you tell me that discomfort is justifiable? If it isn’t real.
Clearly because it has real consequences in the world in terms of human behavior, desire, and expectations that people both inside and outside the culture have for the behavior and desire of those on the inside.
So if gay culture is artificial, false and that some refuse to buy into then why would it make me justifiably uncomfortable? You are very confused.
It is false in the sense that is not a naturally authentic expression of same sex attraction qua same sex attraction.
Regarding you’re statement that I’m confused, I would venture to guess that you believe that because you’ve completely misunderstood what I’ve said and your misunderstanding is confusing and absurd.
You then end with “not as a function of a particular culture”? If “gay culture” is a false construct and not related to any culture as we know it then how can you conclude that it is not a function of any particular culture? What are the particular cultures?
My statement was a version of this: the more we see individuals as functions or representatives of a particular culture to which they are perceived or believed to belong (in the case of my post, “gay culture”) the less likely we will be to see them as human beings in their own right. An analogous example: a man with a particular southern US regional dialect will, to many people in New York City, be thought of as a redneck and as little more than an embodiment of “redneck culture” until either a) the man with the dialect definitively demonstrates that they have nothing to do with “redneck culture” or b) the New Yorker perceiving the man with the dialect transcends or overlooks the presuppositions which form upon hearing the southern dialect, regardless of the actual relationship the man with the southern dialect may have to “redneck culture.” Another example: athletic men are often perceived as participating in “jock culture” of one sort or another simply because they’re athletic.
You make no sense in your justifying weaving of thought of your beliefs.
Coptic, what makes no sense is that sentence. What makes less sense is how you could so completely misunderstand what I was saying…unless you were the victim of some misunderstanding or delusion.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
All is Grace and Mercy! Deo Gratias!