1] After spending the better part of two days reading and
re-reading the new Draft Social Statement on Human Sexuality, I
would like to first thank the Task Force for ELCA Studies on
Sexuality for their careful and thoughtful consideration of the
topic. Chapters 1 and 2 are rich theological texts that
provide an excellent primer in Lutheran theology and ethics. Study
groups that read this document will be reminded of the basics of
our faith in an innovative and concise way.
[2] Furthermore, the Task Force has taken the draft in a few
directions that I find fruitful and innovative. By highlighting the
social character of sexuality, the Task Force has succeeded in
bringing together the social and justice issues related to
sexuality while keeping a close eye to individual sexuality. When
they focus in Part IV on trust, they truly identify the ethical and
social dynamic that is or should be at the center of sexuality and
relationality. Finally, by moving to social trust and the common
good in Part V, they provide the rationale for church social
statements, for only through common moral deliberation as a church
in the world can we begin to address systemic harms (1284; all
citations use line numbers indicated in the draft) like "the public
commodification of the body as an economic asset" (1301).
[3] That being said, I am most surprised by what is omitted in
the new Draft Social Statement on Human Sexuality, so it is my
intention here to lift up those aspects of sexuality and the
Christian life that I believe need greater attention in the
document. They are:
1) Singleness, the monastic life, and celibacy
2) Church as Bride of Christ and the poetry of Song of Songs
3) Human fruitfulness and creativity
Singleness, the Monastic Life, and Celibacy
[4] The Draft Social Statement on Human Sexuality (hereafter
referred to as "the draft") does recognize singleness as a
Christian calling. "Christians operate within callings of
responsibility such as work, parenting, singleness, or marriage.
Such callings have structures-or configurations of
responsibilities-that guide us in service to the neighbor"
(283-285). The draft also recognizes that many households are
headed by single persons (689). But singleness is hardly distinct
in the document, and is most often situated in lists of relational
vocations (see, for example, lines 283, 826, 1395, and 1411) And
unfortunately, it categorizes singleness as a "choice" that the
church respects rather than a high calling that the church
celebrates. In so doing, the draft fails to make use of the rich
biblical tradition that recognizes singleness as a high Christian
calling and vocation (1168-1169).
[5] Singleness itself is a "configuration of responsibility,"
and this is an incredibly important way for the draft to describe a
way of being relational and sexual as it relates to ethics and
vocation. I highly recommend a recent book on the topic, Dennis
Franck's Reaching Single Adults: An Essential Guide for Ministry.
Franck notes that 44 percent of adults in the United States are
unmarried. Many churches tend to focus their ministries on marriage
and families, and as a result, fail to minister to singles, and
also fail to benefit from the resources and gifts singles have to
offer the church. Single or unmarried adults do have a specific
calling in service to their neighbor. Sometimes this calling is
related to their continuing efforts to find companionship and enter
into marriage or family life. But at least some of those who are
single have a calling from God to the single life, and this is an
important insight overlooked by the draft (not to mention an
insight overlooked in the broader culture, which tends to think all
single people are just waiting for a relationship and are unhappy
until they find one).
[6] It would be difficult to offer a comprehensive view of
singleness in the Scriptures in this response essay, but I will at
least point the way. Jeremiah was called to be single. Hosea was
divorced. Ezekiel was a widower. In the period in which the New
Testament was written, a large religious order, the Essenes, were
committed to celibacy. Jesus himself never married, nor did many of
his followers, Paul famously among them. Paul has a good deal to
say about the single life, especially in 1 Corinthians 7, where he
says, among other things, "I wish that all were as I myself am. But
each has a particular gift from God" (1 Cor. 7:7).
[7] Singles have many spiritual gifts. They may have time to
give to the church or community that married people and parents
lack because of their vocation as spouse and parent. They can
maintain and nurture deep friendships. They are free to mentor
youth in the community, and provide spiritual care to older adults.
Some, as Paul writes, are given the gift of truly being "anxious on
the things of the Lord" rather than anxious about the things of the
world. Many of these singles, recognizing this vocation, enter into
monastic life, and care for their neighbor through prayer and
service in the monastic setting. Some "new monastics" do so in
similar and intriguing ways.[1]
[8] Since monasticism and celibacy play such an important role
in the transformations of the Reformation period, it would seem
appropriate for a Lutheran social statement on human sexuality to
reflect on these things. What do Lutherans say about the monastic
life today? Do Lutherans know there are other Lutherans committed
to the monastic life here in the U.S (http://www.staugustineshouse.org/)?
Shouldn't this draft address these issues in a substantive way?
[9] The Task Force encourages the church to "prepar[e]
additional social statements or messages to allow for more in-depth
consideration of the many matters related to human sexuality that
are of concern and import to the mission and ministry of this
church" (1426-1430). So the ELCA could commission a social
statement on singleness, celibacy, and the monastic life. However,
I argue that singleness in its many forms as a calling is such an
integral aspect of the biblical witness, and so prevalent in our
culture today,[2] that we should not fail to
discuss it and reflect on it in this social statement in a deep and
substantive ways.
Church as the Bride of Christ -and- Song of Songs
[10] It is surprising to learn that the Song of Songs makes only
one appearance in this social statement, in support of the argument
that the biblical narrative rejoices in the "splendor of sexual
attraction" (525). This takes the Song of Songs at its literal
level. I do not want to fault the Task Force for reading the
Scriptures only at the literal level of interpretation. Certainly,
that is our primary mode today, the literal and historic.
Nevertheless, it would be helpful and fruitful if the draft would
include reflections on sexuality in Scripture at the level of
allegory, typology, and anagogy. The church has traditionally (even
if not so much recently) read Scripture at these levels, and it has
especially been the splendor of sexual attraction itself that has
helped us deepen our faith in Christ as the bridegroom, the bride
of the church, not to mention the "marriage feast of the Lamb"
(Revelation 19:9) as the anagogical image often used to describe
the eschatological end of all things when God will be all in all.[3]
[11] there are at least two ways of reading Scripture that could
contribute significantly to the draft. First, the Task Force could
include more reflection on the "overt sense" of Song of Songs and
other texts of Scripture that contribute to our understanding of
human sexuality. There is also a whole other level of
"theological allegory" that could add an additional and important
theological contribution to our understanding of faith and
sexuality, and this is precisely the allegory of sexuality itself
as an understanding of faith and life in God. Maybe the most
obvious example of this in Scripture itself is Paul's allegorical
interpretation of Sarah and Hagar in Galatians 4, where the
different kinds of marriage, and their offspring, are offered as an
allegory for the two covenants.
[12] By not incorporating the Song of Songs as a significant
resource in the draft, the task force therefore fails to reflect on
an aspect of sexuality so ubiquitous in our culture-music, poetry,
and song. Although the draft mentions that the sexual is in music
(842), it mostly refers to this music in the negative, for its
strongly sexual content (771). The draft does not itself
engage any art or music in its positive manifestations. The Song of
Songs is omitted also. Since many exegetes have considered the Song
of Songs to be a wedding song (an epithalamium), it would make
sense for the draft to include some reflection on "sexuality and
song"; and since the Song of Songs has often been interpreted in
its theological sense as about "Israel and the Lord," and through a
Christian reading, Christ and the church, and the love between the
two, the task force might take my recommendation as encouragement
to explore what "trust at the heart of faith active in love" means
when we read Song of Songs and the lyrics of songs carefully, or
even when we sing them as worship.[4]
Human Fruitfulness and Creativity
[13] One of the most powerful statements in the whole draft
appears in the section on theological and ethical foundations. It
reads, "A Lutheran sexual ethic… is more about directing us
to find a responsible place for sexuality in the service of God's
ongoing activity in the world than about containing the ambiguous
power of sex" (310-316). This is a sub-theme throughout the draft,
the "productive" nature of human sexuality. Later, the drafters
write, "Sexuality especially involves the power or capacity to form
deep and lasting bonds, the power to give and receive pleasure, and
the power to conceive and bear children" (468-469). The entire
creative nature of human sexuality is thus grounded in God's
ongoing activity, and framed as freedom in Christ to love and serve
our neighbor.
[14] In other words, sexuality is other serving and
other-directed rather than self-serving and self-directed; and it
is, in one way or another, productive and creative. The draft says
that the "conception of children is a cause for gladness" (1022).
But this is a slightly different way of describing the purpose of
sexuality than the biblical "be fruitful and multiply." It may be
that the drafters have some ambivalence about sexuality and
fruitfulness. We live in a culture today that celebrates the joy of
sexuality as much or more than we commend sexuality as something
whose biological function, at least often and throughout much of
time, has been procreation. This is a complex topic, and as I write
on this I feel like I might fail to reflect on it appropriately.
Nevertheless, sexuality as something that is creative and
especially procreative needs tending in a Lutheran social statement
on sexuality. Singleness has its own gifts and ways it serves
the neighbor; one way sexuality in marriage serves the neighbor is
that it makes new neighbors!
[15] Of course, not all those who have sexual relations are able
to have children. This is a profound pastoral concern, one the
church rightly addresses with sensitivity, with care for those who
grieve at infertility. Many of our biblical narratives witness to
the struggle families go through when they are unable to have
children. Therefore, I very much appreciate the draft's way of
framing marriage and its creativity in a broader sense. They write,
"The purpose of marriage [is] to create long-term, durable
communion for the good of others" (1019, emphasis added). Marriage,
or other durable relationships where sexuality is expressed, are
creative and fruitful inasmuch as they create communion for the
good of others. One sees witness of this, for example, in the
marriage of Priscilla and Aquila in scripture, a marriage that
truly serves neighbors and the church. Most of us have experienced
relationships like this, couples or families or groups of friends
who express deep love and care for each other, and whose common
life together results in productive actions for the good of others
and their community.
[16] On this point, my recommendation is for the drafters of the
social statement to not shy away from the Christian commitment to
procreation, but to frame it at length grounded in our
participation in God's on-going activity and procreation.[5]
[17] Although I regret that this essay has focused on what has
been left out of the draft, I hope it is clear that my thoughts on
these matters have been shaped by the draft itself and in this way
the study has already achieved in at least some way the laudable
goal of ELCA social statements to "aid in communal and individual
moral deliberation and moral formation." My own individual moral
deliberation has been enriched by the document, and the JLE as a
resource for the church is in turn beginning the important communal
work of deliberation.
[18] That being said, I need to comment on an egregious omission
of the draft. In the Questions and Answers Fact Sheet for the draft
that accompanied my copy, I read, "Any implementing resolutions for
this social statement will be provided by the task force when the
proposed social statement becomes available in February 2009" (page
4). This is somewhat like submitting a resolutions document to a
synod assembly that contains only "whereas" statements and no "be
it resolved" statements. As a pastor in this church, I would
appreciate the opportunity to participate in the conversation not
only on the draft of the social statement, but also on the draft of
the implementing resolutions.
[19] Here are a few statements from the draft that I hope give
guidance for the implementing resolutions:
"Other pastors and congregations will call our
same-gender-oriented brothers and sisters in Christ to establish
relationships that are chaste, mutual, monogamous, and life-long"
(1145). Clergy and congregations will need to know that we have the
freedom within our denomination and confessional tradition to
provide such counsel, and in the best situation, we will also have
liturgical and pastoral resources available to help counsel and
ensure that people in same-gender relationships live in
relationships that are "positive and life-giving" (712). Our church
could also do much to "advocate for their legal protection"
(1135).
[20] What if we had an implementing resolution that operated
under the assumption that the following were true: "Scripture
places family as secondary to the community of God's people
(Matthew 10:37; 12:49)"? Is there an idolatry of the family at work
in our culture that needs addressing? Have we established
ecclesiological patterns and rules of common life together that
place "the community of God's people" above all other loyalties,
including the family?
[21] Thank you to the Journal of Lutheran Ethics for the
opportunity and invitation to compose these reflections. It is my
prayer that they will be of service in the formation of a social
statement on human sexuality that is truly "a contribution to the
ongoing work of moral discernment within the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America" (1416-1417). Our common mission statement, so
beautifully expressed in the draft, is that "because of God's
embrace of all the creation in Christ, we are a people set free for
lives of responsibility aimed at seeking the good of the neighbor"
(1432-1433).
[2]
See Robert Wuthnow's recent work on young adults for rich
insights into how young adults (many of whom are single) have
unique religious and life concerns that the church can address, as
well as many gifts to share with the church; After the Baby
Boomers: How Twenty- and Thirty-Somethings are Shaping the Future
of American Religion, Princeton University Press, 2007
[3]
See David Fredrickson, "God, Christ, and All Things in 1
Corinthians 15:28" , Word and World, Number 3, Summer 1998, for a
profound meditation on eschatology and God's personal
relationality. The key phrase in Greek in ta pavnta ejn pasin, a
phrase that Fredrickson argues is not about "absorption or
domination" but rather "of love and devotion. The phrase intends to
speak of personal relation" (257-258).
[4]
For one example of reading the Song of Songs in this manner, see
Robert W. Jenson, Song of Songs, Westminster John Knox, 2005.
[5]See, for example, Luther's explanation
of the first article of the creed in the Small Catechism.
© April 2008
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 8, Issue 4