I Think I Believe I am Jesus' little brain cell

7Sep/1079

An open letter to Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir

There's a bit of a scandal brewing in my home of the Faroe Islands. Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, prime minister of Iceland, is on an official visit. Sigurðardóttir is a lesbian and is bringing her wife Jónína Leónsdóttir, as she naturally would. The prime minister of the Faroe Islands, Kaj Leo Johannesen, invited all the party leaders (there are seven) to an official banquet with the Icelandic prime ministerial couple. Here the trouble starts. Jenis av Rana, leader of Miðflokkurin, what can well be called a theocon party, declined the invitation, saying that since homosexuality wasn't what the Bible prescribes as normal, he "wouldn't dream of attending such a banquet." This was first on the news yesterday afternoon, but has already been covered by the Icelandic press. Maybe, but hopefully not (since it's so embarrassing), it will spread to other international news outlets. (Journalists, if you do cover the story, give me a call for some balanced commentary - or quote this blog post.)

Dear Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir,

First of all, prime minister, it's an honour to receive you to our country. Our history together go back centuries and will do so for centuries more. We are the same people. As a regular Faroe Islander, to the extent that my gesture means anything, I welcome you. I trust your visit will be a pleasant one.

Second, I want to tell you that I was truly saddened and embarrassed by what Jenis av Rana, leader of Miðflokkurin, did yesterday by declining to take part in an official banquet with you, merely because of your sexuality. Not only is this saddening and embarrassing because Jenis is a Faroese politician and he, even though I did not vote for him, in some way represents me, but also because, like Jenis, I'm a Christian.

It's saddening for me to see my faith, which I understand to be based on and lived out in love, be used as an excuse for homophobic intolerance. Christianity is the refuge of "the least of these", those who are hated, marginalised and persecuted. It's not an elaborate justification of self-righteousness and bigotry that some try to make it. Neither is it a cheap way to acquire political power in order to spread that same self-righteousness and bigotry.

It's interesting and ironic to note that in the famous Biblical story about Sodom and Gomorra, which is so often used against gay people, it was not homosexuality that awakened God's judgement, but, according to Ezekiel 16:49-50, lack of hospitality. All throughout his earthly ministry, Jesus extended his hospitality and ate with those who were deemed unworthy, often because of their perceived sexual sins, by the religious leaders of the time. That the irony of this situation is lost on Jenis av Rana is baffling.

I know that I speak for the majority of Faroese Christians when I say that you are more than welcome to visit our country and if the occasion arose, you and your wife both would be more than welcome to eat at our tables.

Please disregard Jenis av Rana for the extremist that he is. He does not represent more than a tiny minority among us. Please do not judge Faroese Christians based on his actions. I can assure you that they are as offensive to us as they undoubtedly are to you.

I hope your visit to our country will continue to be, despite this incident, pleasant.

Sincerely,

Arni Zachariassen

12May/102

One man went to Washington

"Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: 'God, I thank you that I am not like other men—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.'

But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, 'God, have mercy on me, a sinner.'

I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted." (Luke 18:10-14)

25Apr/108

“I’ll pray for you”

I posted a link about Jennifer Knapp on my Facebook the other day. As you probably know, she just announced to the world that she is a lesbian. I have nothing against homosexuality. I think the same rules apply for homosexuality as do heterosexuality. So I'm for Christian marriage both for straights and gays as the appropriate context in which romantic love flourishes. The posting of the link inevitably turned into something of a discussion about just that.

The discussion wasn't too constructive. Just reiterating standard argument for and against. All been done before. But at one point a friend of mine took out a rhetorical ploy Christians use that I really find offensive. When it proved difficult to make rational, theological arguments my friend said, "I'll pray for you."

No, I don't mind being prayed for, obviously. I need all the prayer I can get. But that's not the issue. What my friend did with the prayer was to (attempt to) establish superiority over me. When arguments failed, my friend tried to put me in my place by assuming a position over me. By praying for me or offering to do so, my friend effectively said that I had a problem and that it could only be solved by the prayers of my friend, implying that my friend's connection to God or position before him is better than mine, implying that my opinions are not as spiritual and as valid as my friend's.

As I said, I don't mind people praying for me. But I do mind people using prayer as a way off assuming a position of superiority over me. Or over anyone.

Prayer is not a rhetorical tool.

My friend also claimed that the Bible was crystal clear regarding homosexuality, which is also a rather pernicious rhetorical tool Christians sometimes use. More on that later!

22Oct/090

Andrew Marin on the 5 big questions regarding homosexuality

7Oct/090

Christian evolutionists and gay marriage

Andrew Sullivan linked to this video today. While it makes all sorts of religious and ethical warning bells go off, my initial thought was this:

What's the relationship between acceptance of a non-literal understanding of Genesis, that is evolution, and the support for gay marriage?

I speak, of course, without any statistical knowledge, but my hunch is that there is relatively greater support for gay marriage1 among Christian evolutionists than among creationists.

I suspect that Christian evolutionists are generally both more open to new ideas and insights in general, and scientific ones in particular than creationists. Being a creationist requires a concerted effort to ignore, at best, and demonise, at worst, data that conflicts with one's own position. More importantly, I think, evolutionists, especially them that have grown up creationist and later changed their minds, are more open to theological change than creationists. A creationist becoming an evolutionist does not only change his mind on scientific matters, but has to re-negotiate theological positions, often foundational ones. Not that homosexuality is foundational. It's important, yes. Very much so. But in the grand theological scheme of things, it's not. What is foundational is how one approaches the Bible.

Christian evolutionists appreciate how the Bible was written by and to people in specific historical contexts and in order to discern the Spirit's voice in the text, one must be aware of how the text is shaped by its original context. Genesis is properly understood in light of ancient near Eastern creation myths, especially those of Babylon. It's a polemical, though quietly so, subversion of the polytheistic idolatry surrounding the Jewish people at the time. It's a theological text, dealing with God and his relation to creation. It shouldn't be necessary to say this, but I will: It's a pre-scientific text. To the creationist, though, Genesis and the entire Bible are God's timeless word and the believer's task is to follow and apply it to the letter. Reality is of course more nuanced, but I sometimes I suspect that it's only because creationists (fundamentalists, actually) aren't thoughtful enough to be consistent.

So the evolutionist doesn't view Genesis 2 as an eternal commandment regarding marriage, but one rooted in its particular historical context, though he will take away important lessons from it. The door has been opened, to a certain degree at least, for the acceptance of gay marriage.

There's an important, fundamental world hermeneutic at play here. The creationist's resistance to science is often part of a larger way of seeing the world, in which "the world" is evil, godless and opposed to God. There are human ideas, man's own attempt to make sense of the world, without reliance on God. This basically includes all ideas - morals, science, philosophy and theology - that don't conform to creationism, in particular, and fundamentalist dogma, in general. Over and against this stands God's revelation - perfect, uncontaminated eternal truths, revealed in the Bible.

This means that the creationist is inclined to see acceptance of homosexuality as a legitimate, God-blessed expression of love, as part of "the world" and its proud rebellion against God. A bit like evolution itself. This is a sort of built in defence mechanism which makes it extremely difficult to get the creationist even to consider accepting homosexuality.

The evolutionist, on the other hand, doesn't essentialize "the world" as evil, godless and opposed to God. He sees it as a potential source of truth, along side of God's revelation. Fittingly, it is partly because of Genesis' teaching that humans are created in the image of God that the evolutionist doesn't reject the world as a legitimate source of knowledge. The evolutionist rejects the stark opposition the creationist puts between God and man, and comes to the world with an open mind.

This means that the evolutionist is likely to factor in various scientific, philosophical and ethical insights about homosexuality, in addition to (and I think this might be the most important factor) the experience of the gay person, in his reasoning regarding whether or not to accept homosexuality.

In summary, a Christian evolutionist is probably more likely to accept gay marriage than a creationist is. While I'm not suggesting a direct causal link - we all come to our conclusions in our own unique ways - I do think there is a sort of correlate. The underlying presuppositions regarding how both religion and the world work, about which Christian evolutionists and creationists disagree, predispose them respectively to either accept evolution and gay marriage, or reject both.

  1. I single out gay marriage, because the video does so and since this discussion revolves around Genesis, which mentions marriage. But it would of course be just as appropriate to speak of gay rights more generally.
12Aug/095

Your gay neighbour is a better Christian than you

gays-in-church

Given Christianity's history of exclusion and often outright homophobia, and the current bloodletting over their role, why do homosexuals bother staying, not to mention believing?

They do both in numbers that might surprise you: A new survey of 9,000 gay, lesbian, and bisexual Americans from George Barna, a well-known evangelical pollster, showed that 70 percent of gay adults describe themselves as Christian and 60 percent say their faith is "very important" in their lives. Granted, those figures are lower than the population as a whole, which register 85 and 70 percent on those rankings, respectively. But Barna, himself a Bible-believing, born-again Christian, points out that the numbers demonstrate that "popular stereotypes about the spiritual life of gays and lesbians are simply wrong."

"People who portray gay adults as godless, hedonistic, Christian bashers are not working with the facts," Barna said. "A substantial majority of gays cite their faith as a central facet of their life, consider themselves to be Christian, and claim to have some type of meaningful personal commitment to Jesus Christ active in their life today."

Moreover, while Barna's data indicate that homosexual believers tend to avoid active participation in an institutional church, both anecdotal evidence and some research shows that gays and lesbians who are involved in their churches and denominations are often more committed to the church and more involved in ministry than their straight brethren.

Politics Daily, "Why Gay Guys Are Churchier Than Their Straight Brethren"

11Aug/090

Hatred = Love?

gaybadge

I love homosexuals and welcome them into the church and have no problem with them in our society. However, marriage and sexuality is solely between a man and a woman and I stand by that.

This is a strange notion of love. I love you, but I reject the relationships that you desire. If you are heterosexual think for a second what this means. Would you in your right mind step into any organization that did not recognize the relationship you have with the person who is closest to your self as any human has ever been? Would you respect an organization that rejects the one to whom you have bonded yourself as "one flesh"? If the organization rejects your relationship, they are also rejecting you and your partner. So how then is this rejection…"love"? This is not an addiction, it is a relationship. The difference there is so obvious it's frankly stupid to debate.

"if you object to homosexuality, at least be honest" from my new favourite blog, Notes From Off Center

8Jul/090

Onward Christian soldiers!

“We are to live with anticipation and expectation of His imminent return,” he told me. Look at the signs, said Young: nuclear Iran, economic collapse, President Obama’s decision to “unleash science” upon helpless embryos. He seemed to feel that the military was now the only safe place to be. “In the military, homosexuality is illegal. I don’t want to get into all the particulars of ‘Don’t ask,’ but you can’t act on homosexual feelings. And adultery is illegal. Really, arguably, the military is the last American institution that tries to uphold Christian values. It’s the easiest place in America to be a Christian.”

From Jeff Sharlet's excellent and deeply scary Jesus Killed Mohammed: The crusade for a Christian military.