God's Widening Welcome
A
Sermon About Welcoming Gender Different People in the Church
Preached at Hanover Street Presbyterian Church
On April 25, 2004
By the Rev. Thomas C. Davis, Ph.D.
[4-26-04]
Texts:
Romans 1:
18-32 (translation: The Jerusalem Bible)
The anger of God
is being revealed from heaven against all the impiety and depravity of
people who keep truth imprisoned in their wickedness. For what can be known
about God is perfectly plain to them since God has made it plain. Ever since
God created the world God's everlasting power and deity--however
invisible--have been there for the mind to see in the things God has made.
That is why such people are without excuse: they knew God and yet refused to
honor God or to thank God; instead, they made nonsense out of logic and
their empty minds were darkened. The more they called themselves
philosophers, the more stupid they grew, until they exchanged the glory of
the immortal God for a worthless imitation, for the image of mortal man, of
birds, of quadrupeds and reptiles. That is why God left them to their filthy
enjoyments and the practices with which they dishonor their own bodies,
since they have given up divine truth for a lie and have worshipped and
served creatures instead of the creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen! That
is why God has abandoned them to degrading passions: why their women have
turned from natural intercourse to unnatural practices and why their menfolk
have given up natural intercourse to be consumed with passion for each
other, men doing shameless things with men and getting an appropriate reward
for their perversion. In other words, since they refused to see it was
rational to acknowledge God, God has left them to their own irrational ideas
and to their monstrous behavior. And so they are steeped in all sorts of
depravity, rottenness, greed and malice, and addicted to envy, murder,
wrangling, treachery and spite. Libellers, slanderers, enemies of God, rude,
arrogant and boastful, enterprising in sin, rebellious to parents, without
brains, honor, love or pity. They know what God's verdict is: that those who
behave like this deserve to die--and yet they do it; and what is worse,
encourage others to do the same.
Matthew 5:
excerpts from 20ff:
[Jesus said]:
. . .if your
virtue goes no deeper than that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never
get into the kingdom of heaven. . . You have learnt how it was said to our
ancestors: . . .You must not commit adultery. But I say this to you: if a
man looks at a woman lustfully, he has already committed adultery with her
in his heart. . .It has also been said: Anyone who divorces his wife must
give her a writ of dismissal. But I say this to you: everyone who divorces
his wife, except for the case of fornication, makes her an adulteress; and
anyone who marries a divorced woman commits adultery. . .You have learnt how
it was said: Eye for eye and tooth for tooth. But I say this to you: offer
the wicked person no resistance. On the contrary, if anyone hits you on the
right cheek, offer him the other as well; if someone takes you to law and
would have your shirt, give him your coat as well. . . .You have learnt how
it was said: You must love your neighbor and hate your enemy. But I say this
to you: love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you; in this way
you will be sons and daughters of your Father in heaven. . .For if you love
those who love you, what right have you to claim any credit? Even the tax
collectors do as much, don't they? . . .You therefore must be perfect, just
as your heavenly Father is perfect.
…………………………………..
Let me tell you
about James and Joe.
James is a young
African American from Wilmington. He grew up in a tough neighborhood where
lots of kids join gangs and some sell drugs. But several years ago James
joined Urban Promise, a Christian group that uses Hanover's gym to get kids
off the street and into the care of leaders who can help them. James just
graduated from high school. He is articulate. He is poised. He is
self-confident. James is going into the military, and aiming for college
after that. We would be very pleased to have James as a member of our
church. But this would not always have been so, for it was only about a
generation ago that Hanover began to welcome African Americans in any
significant numbers. Quite a number of white members left when that welcome
was extended. Those who remained have come to believe that this is God's
work: showing a wider and wider welcome to all of God's children.
Now, about Joe:
Joe is a young
white man from Miami. He did
not grow up in a tough
neighborhood, but growing up was still tough on him, because he was not
boyish. Slender, gentle, soft-spoken, Joe got picked on at school and at
home. He left home as soon as he could; and without proper mentoring might
have ended up in trouble on the streets, or maybe even dead. But Joe found
Project Yes, an organization that works with schools and parents and
churches to welcome and nurture gender different kids like him. Joe is
articulate. He is poised. He is self-confident. And he is now not afraid to
identify himself as gay. Only about a decade ago Hanover declared that it
wanted to fully welcome people like Joe. Quite a number of long-time members
left when this welcome was extended. Those who remained are trying to
understand how God's welcome keeps getting wider and wider. That's what this
sermon is about, our Christian calling to fully welcome gender different
people into the body of Christ.
Let me explain
this term, "gender different". The oldest meaning of gender is not sexual.
If you look up the word in the dictionary, you will find that "gender" first
meant "born akin to," that is, born of a certain kind. For instance, in old
England, people would ask, "What gender of herb is that?" meaning not what
sex is that herb, but what natural kind of herb is that? Instead of speaking
of
sexual minorities, I think
it would be helpful to speak of
gender different people.
Allow the old meaning of "gender" to remind us that these people are of a
certain kind, naturally. They are born so. Of course, the modern meaning of
gender will inevitably color my usage of the word, and that's all right.
Gender different people are different primarily because something about
their sexuality is non-ordinary. However, it seems to me that their
differentness is far more complex than we will ever realize if we focus
solely on sex.
Another reason
for using the term "gender different people," is that GLBT (gay, lesbian,
bi-sexual and transgender) is not a broad enough term to encompass all the
different kinds of people who have a stake in the movement for just
inclusion and healthy self-image. For instance, it does not include
intersexuals--infants who are born with ambiguous genitalia, and thus cannot
be medically identified as either male or female. The accepted protocol for
helping such children to cope in a bi-gendered society used to be surgery
plus hormone treatments, in order to render the child either a boy or a
girl. These days, however, after some miserable failures of this protocol,
more and more parents of intersexual children are deciding that it's society
that must be changed, not their children. It's society's job to accept their
children as God made them, which is neither male nor female, but gender
different.
Furthermore, the
term, GLBT, does not include some pre-pubescent children whose bodies
clearly identify them as either boys or girls, but who nevertheless can't
seem to fit into society's gender expectations. Such children have little or
no sense yet of sexual self-identity, because they haven't gone through
puberty. They are sexually latent, as psychologists say. Thus, their
differentness has much more to do with gender than with sex. Such children,
often are picked on at home and in school because "they don't act right."
Because they are not yet adult, they don't have the self-awareness to
identify themselves as gay or lesbian or bisexual or transgender, --and
indeed, later they may self-identify as none of these. But one thing is
certain: When they are growing up they desperately need to be accepted and
loved; and because often they are not accepted and loved, many commit
suicide, in much higher numbers than gender ordinary children. Alice worked
several years in Miami with an organization called Project Yes, whose
central purpose was to reduce the suicide rate of gender different children,
by teaching parents, teachers, and religious leaders, to nurture such
children with compassion, instead of insisting that they squeeze themselves
into gender categories that don't fit.
Another gender
of persons not included in the GLBT rubric are bi-gendered persons. A
bi-gendered person is not the same as a bi-sexual person. A bi-sexual person
is one who experiences sexual attraction to both men and women. A
bi-gendered person is one who feels he/she is fully both male and female,
regardless of what anatomy he/she has. To further complicate matters,
according to clinical research, a bi-gendered person is different from an
androgynous person, who feels neither male nor female. And to complicate
matters even more, some children are born with male and female organs
externally and internally, while others have the external organs of one
gender and the internal organs of the other. They are called hermaphrodites.
I have not yet
mentioned transgender persons. A transgender person is one who feels that he
or she got the wrong body by birth. He feels like a woman trapped in a man's
body; or she feels like a man trapped in a woman's body. Sometimes through
sex change surgery transgender people seek the body that fits their mind and
spirit. Then they are called transsexuals; but perhaps only briefly, because
if the treatment works, they eventually get accepted into a bi-gendered
world as the gender they are convinced is authentically theirs; and then
they just blend in, because almost nobody gets up tight about gender
ordinary people, just gender different ones.
Perhaps by now
your head is swimming, as mine did when I got educated on such matters in
order to be a better counselor . One can be stunned to discover that
creation isn't as simple as you thought! If one is not tolerant of
ambiguity, the shock can lead to denial of obvious evidence: "All this
sexual-psychological-anatomical parsing is just too much," some will say.
"Let's just stick with what the Bible says: that God created us male and
female, period! Things are so much simpler that way. As for the people who
just can't seem to fit in, well, they're either badly confused, or else
willfully perverted, as Paul wrote. They'll just have to get with the
program, God's program. Then they'll be fine!"
Yes, there's the
nub, isn't it. The separation between Christians on these issues of gender
difference chiefly comes down to how complicated we think God's creation is.
The main conflict isn't so much about how to interpret the Bible; it's much
more about what is the nature of nature? Those who have little tolerance for
complication and ambiguity keep insisting that all these allegedly unusual
but nevertheless natural distinctions are not natural at all. They're
unnatural, abnormal, against God's intention, and therefore disgusting. But
those who, like Shakespeare, are willing to entertain that there are
stranger things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our present
philosophy, well, these folk tend to see things very differently.
How can we
resolve this very deep division of opinion about the nature of nature--by
pounding the table (or the Bible) and insisting we've got the right take?
We're pretty tough on the Taliban for managing conflict that way. No, since
the Enlightenment, much of the world has had another way: Don't settle
things by appeal to dogma. Question reigning assumptions. Observe and reason
from observations. Especially, reason together. Listen to divergent views.
It's
particularly important that we listen to the voices of gender different
people as we reason together. That's why sermon two of this series, to be
delivered by Elder Larry Peterson, will hearken to the voices of gay men and
lesbians outside our congregation, and why sermon three will listen to
voices inside our congregation: those of a gay man, a lesbian, and a
straight man whose feelings and convictions have changed over the years.
Because there is much anxiety, and sometimes even hostility toward gender
different people in our society, many citizens never get the chance to
listen to them speak about themselves, or dialogue with them. Often, the
anxieties of gender ordinary people or the fear of gender different people
in the closet prevent such discussions from taking place. This is tragic.
It's disastrous to navigate through life by ignorant stereotypes and appeals
to old dogma. All of us deserve better.
As the worship
committee and I were thinking about this series of sermons, I received a
request to address some Bible passages that are often used to clobber gender
different people; for instance, the one we heard this morning, from the
first chapter of Romans. The request went something like this: "Please teach
the congregation that such texts are not against homosexuality per se."
Well, one could take that sort of approach to defend gender different people
against abuse; but I'm not going to, because it supports the assumption that
Christians ought always to obey the moralizing voices that they hear in the
Bible. And this assumption must be challenged. Sometimes, even if we have
rightly understood a biblical moralizing voice, we ought not be bound by it.
For example, I don't agree with Paul's admonition in Romans 13 where he
declares that citizens should always obey their governors, because they are
God's agents for keeping evil-doers in check. They are never a threat to
good citizens, he says. Do you believe that rulers always act on behalf of
God and are never a threat to good citizens? This moral premise seems
preposterous, given what I read in the newspapers. I don't agree either with
the voice that we hear in Colossians 3:22 which says, "Slaves, give entire
obedience to your earthly masters." (Incidentally, neither did many of your
forebears in the early years of this congregation, who opposed the
institution of slavery). I do not agree with Paul where he says in 1
Corinthians 14: 34: "In all congregations of God's people, women should not
address the meeting. They have no license to speak, but should keep their
place as the law directs." (Surely many of you must also disagree with that
opinion, since there are many, many women Elders in this church). I don't
even agree with the voice of Jesus which we heard in this morning's Matthew
reading, the voice that says that the only just grounds for divorce is
marital infidelity. (And apparently, neither do many faithful Christians
these days who have divorced their spouses to protect themselves from
unrelenting physical or mental abuse.)
So, I won't go
to great pains to prove that Paul wasn't really against homosexuality per
se. It seems clear to me that Paul thought men making love with men was
perverted and disgusting, and women making love with women, likewise. I'm
not going to try to explain away his disgust. I'm just going to be honest
and say that I don't share it, given what I know about gender different
people from my own inquiry and experience. I'm convinced that God's
biological creation is much more complex than Paul realized. It doesn't
bother me that Paul and I disagree about quite a number of things. Though I
honor him as the founder of Christianity, I don't feel duty bound to follow
all of his moral opinions; and occasionally, not even those of the
red-letter voice of Jesus! God gave me a heart and a mind, and I believe
that God wants me to use both boldly, having courage to stand for what I
believe is right in my own place and time, as the Spirit leads me.
This posture may
seem brazen and heretical to some of my colleagues in presbytery. They may
say: "Tom, how dare you encourage your flock to disobey the Bible! What
authority does any Christian have to second guess scripture?" Well, here is
my answer: I claim the same authority which Jesus had, when he preached in
the Spirit and said, "You have heard it said, but I say unto you." When he
did that, he was picking bones with the Bible, you know. Every time he said,
"you have heard it said," he was referring to a passage from the Hebrew
scriptures. Jesus was not trying to destroy the authority of scripture when
he said, "but I say unto you. . ." He was trying to take people to a deeper
level, trying to persuade them to observe the spirit of the law instead of
the mere letter of it. In the case of "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth," he did something even bolder. He called them to
disobey a biblical law which
kept vengeance to a minimum by limiting recrimination. But he did that by
challenging people to take an even greater step of self-restraint, and not
recriminate at all! He said to them,
love your enemies! Don't
retaliate against them at all! His advice went against the old law, but
respected its intention. Every time Jesus said, "but I say unto you," his
advice had to do with compassion. Dig deeper, go further, follow the path of
compassion, Jesus taught. Be perfectly compassionate, as your heavenly
Father is.
Well, that's the
authority I claim when I urge you not to follow the opinions of our faithful
forebears just because they're in the Bible. Instead, follow the Spirit's
call to compassion. When the abolitionists called for the end of slavery
even though the Christian scriptures said slaves should obey their masters
in everything, they were following a call to compassion. When the women
suffragettes went to jail to gain women the right to vote, even though the
Christian scriptures told women to sit down and shut up, they were following
a call to compassion. And when I challenge you to learn everything you can
about gender different people, and then see whether you still feel the way
that Paul does about men making love with men, or women making love with
women, I feel I've good authority for doing that; for I believe our Lord
calls each and every one of us to be deeply, deeply compassionate, and as
bold in the Spirit as he was.