Publishing Ventures that Legitimate Homosexuality - What God Condemns
Recently Zondervan published Two
Views on Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church;2 this book bills these two views as
“affirming” and “non-affirming,” and two authors support each side. Both sides,
we are told, argue “from Scripture.” If the “affirming” side was once viewed as
a stance that could not be held by confessional evangelicals, this book
declares that not only the non-affirming stance but the affirming stance are
represented within the evangelical camp, so the effect of this book is to
present alternative evangelical positions, one that thinks the Bible prohibits
homosexual marriage, and the other that embraces it.
All who read these lines will of course be aware of the many books
that proffer three views or four views (or two, or five) on this or that subject:
the millennium, election, hell, baptism, and many more. Surely this new book on
homosexuality is no different.
To this a couple of things must be said.
(a) The format of such volumes, “x views on y,” is intrinsically
slippery. It can be very helpful to students to read, in one volume, diverse
stances on complex subjects, yet the format is in danger of suggesting that
each option is equally “biblical” because it is argued “from Scripture.” Of
course, Jehovah’s Witnesses argue “from Scripture,” but most of us would hasten
to add that their exegesis, nominally “from Scripture,” is woefully lacking.
The “x views on y” format tilts
evaluation away from such considerations, baptizing each option with at least
theoretical equivalent legitimacy. In short, the “x views on y” format, as useful as
it is for some purposes, is somewhat manipulative. As I have argued elsewhere,
not all disputed things are properly disputable.3
(b) Otherwise put, it is generally the case that books of the “x views on y” format operate within
some implicit confessional framework or other. That’s why no book of this sort
has (yet!) been published with a title such as “Three Views on Whether Jesus is
God.” We might bring together a liberal committed to philosophical naturalism,
a Jehovah’s Witness, and a confessional Christian. But it’s hard to imagine a
book like that getting published—or, more precisely, a book like that would be
tagged as a volume on comparative religion, not a volume offering options for
Christians.
Most books of the “x views on y” sort restrict the
subject, the y-component,
to topics that are currently allowed as evangelical options. To broaden this
list to include an option that no evangelical would have allowed ten
years ago—say, the denial of the deity of Jesus, or the legitimacy of
homosexual practice—is designed simultaneously to assert that Scripture is less
clear on the said topic than was once thought, and to re-define, once again,
the borders of evangelicalism. On both counts, the voice of Scripture as the norma normans (“the rule that rules”), though
theoretically still intact, has in fact been subtly reduced.
Inevitably, there have been some articulate voices that insist
that adopting an “affirming” stance on homosexual marriage does not jeopardize
one’s salvation and should not place such a person outside the evangelical camp.
For example, in his essay “An Evangelical Approach to Sexual Ethics,” Steven
Holmes concludes, “Sola Fide. I have to stand on that. Because the Blood flowed
where I walk and where we all walk. One perfect sacrifice complete, once for
all offered for all the world, offering renewal to all who will put their faith
in Him. And if that means me, in all my failures and confusions, then it also
means my friends who affirm same-sex marriage, in all their failures and
confusions.
If my faithful and affirming friends have no hope of salvation,
then nor do I.”4 But this is an abuse of the
evangelical insistence on sola
fide. I do not know any Christian who thinks that salvation is
appropriated by means of faith plus an affirmation of heterosexuality. Faith
alone is the means by which sola
gratia is
appropriated. Nevertheless, that grace is so powerful it transforms. Salvation
by grace alone through faith alone issues in a new direction under the lordship
of King Jesus. Those who are sold out to the “acts of the flesh ... will not
inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal 5:19–21). The apostle Paul makes a similar
assertion in 1 Corinthians 6:9–11:
Or do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers not men who have sex with men nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God. And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God (emphasis added).
In the context of Paul’s thought, he is not saying that without
sinless perfection there is no entrance into the kingdom, but he is saying that
such sins—whether greed or adultery or homosexual practice or whatever—no
longer characterize the washed, sanctified, and justified.
This art of imperious ignorance is not unknown or unpracticed today. For example, both in a recent book and in an article,12 David Gushee argues that homosexual marriage should be placed among the things over which we agree to disagree, what used to be called adiaphora, indifferent things. He predicts that “conservatives” and “progressives” are heading for an unfortunate divorce over this and a handful of other issues, precisely because they cannot agree to disagree. He may be right.
In all fairness, however, in addition to the question of whether one’s behavior in the domain of sexuality has eternal consequences, it must be said, gently but firmly, that the unified voice of both Scripture and tradition on homosexuality has not been on the side of the “progressives”: see especially the book by S. Donald Fortson III and Rollin G. Grams, Unchanging Witness: The Consistent Christian Teaching on Homosexuality in Scripture and Tradition.13 As Trevin Wax has pointed out, on this subject the “progressives” innovate on teaching and conduct and thus start the schism, and then accuse the “conservatives” of drawing lines and promoting schism instead of agreeing to disagree.14
A somewhat similar pattern can be found in the arguments of Jen
and Brandon Hatmaker. Most of their posts are winsome and compassionate, full
of admirable concern for the downtrodden and oppressed. Their recent move in
support of monogamous homosexual marriage has drawn a lot of attention: after
devoting time to studying the subject, they say, they have come to the
conclusion that the biblical texts do not clearly forbid homosexual conduct if
it is a monogamous commitment, but condemn only conduct that is promiscuous
(whether heterosexual or homosexual), rape, and other grievous offenses.15
In his explanation of their move,
Brandon testifies that after seeing so much pain in the homosexual community,
the Hatmakers set themselves “a season of study and prayer,” and arrived at
this conclusion: “Bottom line, we don’t believe a committed life-long
monogamous same-sex marriage violates anything seen in scripture about God’s
hopes for the marriage relationship.”16 Quite apart from the oddity of the
expression “God’s hopes for the marriage relationship,” Brandon’s essay
extravagantly praises ethicist David Gushee, and ends his essay by citing John
13:34–35 (Jesus’s “new command” to his disciples to “love one another”).
Among the excellent responses, three deserve mention here.17
(a) Speaking out of her own remarkable conversion, Rosaria
Butterfield counsels her readers to love their neighbors enough to speak the
truth.18 “Love” that does not care enough to
speak the truth and warn against judgment to come easily reduces to
sentimentality.
(b) With his inimitable style, Kevin DeYoung briefly but
decisively challenges what he calls “the Hatmaker hermeneutic.”19 To pick up on just one of his points:
I fail to see how the logic for monogamy
and against fornication
is obvious according to Hatmaker’s hermeneutic. I appreciate that they don’t
want to completely jettison orthodox Christian teaching when it comes to sex
and marriage. But the flimsiness of the hermeneutic cannot support the weight
of the tradition. Once you’ve concluded that the creation of Adam and Eve has
nothing to do with a procreative telos (Mal.
2:15), or the fittedness of male with female (Gen.
2:18), or the joining of two complementary sexes into one organic
union (Gen.
2:23–24), what’s left to insist that marriage must be limited to two
persons, or that the two persons must be faithful to each other? Sure, both
partners may agree that they want fidelity, but there is no
longer anything inherent to the ontology and the telos of marriage to insist
that sexual fidelity is a must. Likewise, why is it obvious that sex outside of
marriage is wrong?
Perhaps those verses were only dealing with oppressive
situations too. Most foundationally, once stripped of the biological
orientation toward children, by what internal logic can we say that consensual
sex between two adults is wrong? And on that score, by what measure can we
condemn a biological brother and sister getting married if they truly love each
other (and use contraceptives, just to take the possibility of genetic
abnormalities out of the equation)?
When marriage is redefined to include
persons of the same sex, we may think we are expanding the institution to make
it more inclusive, but in fact we are diminishing it to the point where it is
something other than marriage.
(c) And finally, I should mention another piece by Kevin DeYoung,
presented in his inimitable style as a “Breakout” session at T4G on 13 April
2016, titled, “Drawing Boundaries in an Inclusive Age: Are Some Doctrines More
Fundamental Than Others and How Do We Know What They Are?” I have not yet seen
that piece online, but one hopes its appearance will not be long delayed, and
he has given me permission to mention it here.
I have devoted rather extended discussion to this topic, because
nowhere does “the art of imperious ignorance” make a stronger appeal, in our
age, than to issues of sexuality. By the same token, there are few topics where
contemporary believers are more strongly tempted to slip away from
whole-hearted submission the Scripture’s authority in our own lives.
