Human beings are given
responsibility for intracreational development, bringing the world
along to its fullest possible potential. The creation is a highly
dynamic reality in which the future is open to a number of
possibilities and creaturely activity is crucial for the becoming
of the creation. Creative capacities have been given to the created
ones for the task of continuing creation.[15]
Thus, humans are co-participants with God in the formation and
reformation of the social order in which we live. God, in
fact, has in steadfast love and faithfulness relinquished some
control over creation and designed humans to be co-creators,
through their relationships, of the social world in which they
live, for good and for bad. The autonomous individual human
who is independent of others and who chooses to be or not to be in
relationship does not exist. Rather, humans are created in the
image of a relational God and exist as agents, albeit sinful
agents, in relationship with each other, with creation, and
ultimately with God.[16]
[25] Given this relational nature of humans, how humans
structure our relations with each other and how we live out those
relations in our world matters. If humans hold some
responsibility for defining and constructing our social world, then
we must develop a social and ethical approach that views humans as
more than the sum of or fit of their body parts. As
Christians, we need a better criterion than "form" for defining and
structuring our social relationships, including one as foundational
as marriage. Instead, the vocational call itself is a vastly
better approach for defining and structuring our relations
according to God's call to serve life with and for the
neighbor.
[26] In the Lutheran doctrine of vocation, the central tenet of
the vocation call is that it is a call to serve the neighbor in the
relationships in which humans live. This is ultimately a
relational vision of vocation where humans serve as the channels of
God's creative love and as "Christs" through sharing life and love
in their diverse and unique relationships. Thus, instead of
being called out of "stations" or "places," rather we are called to
serve in, through, and out of our many and various relations.
In this way, vocation is a relational concept which suggests
an order that is constantly in the flux of life where humans, in
part, are participants in the construction of the social world in
which we live. Consequently, in our vocations, we as
Christians can know ourselves as relational beings and as thus
called by God to serve the neighbor in and through our
relations.
[27] Perhaps a richer definition of vocation, then, might be the
"call to serve life with and for the neighbor in the many and
varied relationships in which humans live." This is a call
with the neighbor in that neither the neighbor nor the
person called is consumed as a unique image of God. This is a
call for or on behalf of the neighbor in that the
person called does not abandon the neighbor to serve only the self.
This is a call to serve life by giving, sustaining,
and enhancingin all its unique and varied physical, emotional,
spiritual, intellectual, relational, and pro-creational abundance.
This is a call with and for the neighbor who is both
globally and intimately understood. This is a
relational call where the person, the neighbor, and their
relation with each other and the community beyond are each
preserved in their unique individuality, yet are also richly
interconnected with those around them. Through this call, the
Christian is formed both by her own neighbor-centered service and
by the vocational service offered to her in return by the neighbor.
The community too, whether as church or society, is formed
through this interaction and in turn forms its individual members
and its relations. When the call to service in love and life
remains at the center of this interactional formation process, both
humans and the social order become what God intends; when this call
is not at the center, then life as God has intended is rejected
(sin) and thus destroyed.
[28] How do we know this call? We know the call first in
our embodied createdness as God's image. At the heart of this
createdness is our relational nature and so, second, God also calls
us in and through the many and varied embodied relationships in
which we live. Instead of linking vocation to "stations" or
pre-existing locations in a divinely established social order,
God's call is linked to human relationality so that the vocational
call becomes about serving one another in life-giving relationship,
no matter what its form or the form of the participants.
These relationships and their forms are multiple, varied, and
unique to the persons in them, and are not measured according to a
bio-ontological form of the participants but according to how those
in the relation as well as the relation itself serves life.
[29] Ultimately, for the Christian this call comes in Jesus
Christ through the Holy Spirit, who through faith resurrects,
inspires and empowers humans and their relationships out of sin
toward right relationship. All relationships since the
beginning have been fractured by sin, which is essentially
rejection, i.e., the abandonment and/or consumption of another or
the self in an attempt to make the self the center of the universe
or deny the self's God-given place in the universe. This
rejection permeates our relationships with other humans, with
creation, with our own image of God, and ultimately with God.
Since all life depends on the relationship with God and since
humans are trapped in their own relational rejection, God must
rescue humans and their world. In Christ, God refuses to let the
relationship go, no matter how loudly humans reject God.
Instead, God dwells with, reconciles, renews, and empowers
new life-giving relationship first with God, and through this
relation, with other humans, with creation, and with one's self as
created in God's image.
[30] Jesus Christ, through the power of the Holy Spirit as the
breath of life, constantly restores and calls us to the life that
God continues to create. At the center of this restoration
process lies the call to serve life with and for the neighbor.
The sinner and reconciled saint meet in Christ and from this
meeting emerges the on-going call. For the sinner, the
command to love the neighbor protects and orders, often coercively,
her life in relation to others. In faith in her reconciled
relation with God, the saint knows herself to be called out of her
relationships in service to life as God continues to create,
sustain, and enhance it. This call to serve life with and for
the neighbor is the foundational Christian criterion for defining
and structuring all relationships of society, including marriage.
In the end, the call to serve the neighbor is what orders the
relational creation, not the form of a human or the humanly
constructed meanings given to that form.
[31] In light of this call, then, we can better understand the
created order God has designed. God has ordered all of life
into life-giving, life-sustaining, and life-enhancing relationship,
despite the human tendency to destroy their relationships and the
life they create. Here we discover Luther's order above the
orders, namely love. Three aspects of this relationally
ordered life are foundational to human existence. First, the
relationship with God through language and communication, which is
the foundational criterion of human worship and the proclamation of
the Word. This relation is the foundation of the churchly
estate and the human's relation with God. Second, the relationship
with God and neighbor through God's eternal, committed, faithful,
life-giving and life-reconciling relationship with all of creation,
which is the foundational criterion of the central human
relationships of marriage, parenthood, and friendship as well as
all human relations. Third, the relationship with neighbor
and self as God's image, which is the relationally negotiated
social structure including government, economy, culture, and norms
as the social context for shalom, justice, blessing and
righteousness inside of which all life-giving relationships must
take place.
[32] This social structure is designed by God to be constructed
through human interactive negotiation where humans play an on-going
co-creative role in forming these dynamic social relationships and
the social context in which they are found. In this regard, humans
participate in the creation of their relations, for good and for
bad, while God as creator and redeemer of all relationships
continually directs and empowers humanity toward the relational
forms that will support and enhance life. Far from being
universal or essential, these relations are always changing in
relation to the persons and the community of which they are a
part.
[33] Consequently, the human as a multiply-holistic embodied
relational image of God is the basis for understanding the call.
Rather than defining the call based on physical form, instead
we can hear the call as it emerges from humanity's own created
relational image of God and in turn becomes the guiding force for
how human relations and community ought to be structured.
Although sin has marred that image and humans consistently
reject their relationships by attempting to abandon and/or consume
God, neighbor, and self (as God's image), in the new life given in
Christ, humans can know and follow their call to serve life in all
their relationships, including marriage. The call to serve
life with and on behalf of the neighbor is finally the foundational
criterion of all relationships and their resulting social
structure.
The Relational Call to Serve Life
[34] What, then, does this call to serve life look like?
The call to service of life is grounded in (at least) three
interconnected relational principles: righteousness,
shalom, and justice. First, vocation is a call to
serve life through righteousness, or better "right relationship,"
with God and neighbor. Relationship is right when life is
nurtured, sustained, and enhanced in and through love and persons
are neither abandoned nor consumed. Essentially, it is life
without sin. This relation is balanced between regard for the
neighbor, the self as God's image, the community in which the
relation takes place, and God as the life-force behind and within
all relations. At the heart of all right relationship is
one's individual, relational, and social relationship with God.
A person is first righteous when she exists in a
life-nurturing, enhancing, and sustaining relationship with God.
Due to human sin, such right relationship with God can only be
given and received as grace from God, never earned or accomplished.
But once given in Christ and known through faith, the right
relation with God in turn becomes the source of all other
relationships and empowers right relation with the neighbor, whom
or whatever that neighbor might be. Therefore, the driving
purpose of the call to serve life is righteousness, right relation
with God which is transformed, through the power of the Holy
Spirit, into right relation with neighbor. Right
relation is finally what humans are called to seek.
[35] Second, vocation is a call to serve life through
shalom, often translated peace but in fact including such
characteristics as wholeness, well-being, joy, and harmony both
within the relation and its participants. Shalom
includes blessing which is God's sharing of God's personal
shalom with that which God has created through God's
ongoing creation of life into right relation. Shalom
isrelational life at its most vital, where all creatures live "in
harmony and security toward the joy and well-being of every other
creature."[17] At the heart of this
shalomic existence is trust (faith) and steadfast love,
both of which imply faithfulness and commitment to abundant life in
relationship, first with God and through this relation with others.
Thus the call necessarily involves a call to life in harmony
and holistic interaction. Although in sin this peace passes
all human understanding and we are able to image this
shalom only through a "glass darkly," we are ultimately
called to whole (holy) lives of harmony and peace that are filled
with trust and love. This call to shalom finally
anticipates who humans are called to be.
[36] Third, vocation is the call to serve life through justice
(mishpat). Justice is the actual living out of right
relation with our neighbors and is thus an ongoing search for a
living order in relationship that serves the individual, the
community and its many relations. Justice involves order
because it has a base rhythm and structure to it that excludes that
which is destructive to life in right relationship; it is living
because as a necessary part of ever-transforming life justice must
be constantly in motion whether at its macro or micro levels in
order to take into account the needs of all changing relations.
As order, justice includes the law and institutions which
protect and sustain the community, its relations and individual
participants; yet at the same time, as living order, it renews,
reforms, and retires these laws and institutions in fulfillment of
its duty to protect and support life-centered relations. This
call to do justice is finally about life with the neighbor and is
never about serving the order for the order's sake. If the
order no longer serves the neighbor, then the order must change
according to the call; the call must not change according to the
order. Justice then forms the context in which right relations
exist and all of creation lives fully in God's shalom. The
call to justice is finally what humans are called to do.
[37] These three principles (among others) are central criteria
for defining the relationships out of which we are called.
Essentially, we are called to be God's image, to put on
Christ and serve the life of the neighbor in love as embodied
Christs to God's relational world.[18] While
all humans are called as created images of God to strive for life
in life-centered relation, whether they know it or not, the
Christian knows through faith that this life is continually called
forth by God, indirectly through creation itself and directly in
Christ. This call to relational service of life is the
criterion for structuring our earthly relationships. Any form of
relation that supports, nurtures and enhances life in right
relation according to justice and shalom is a blessed part
of God's living order.
The Relational Call to Serve Life in
Marriage
[38] This call to serve life with and for the neighbor takes
place in a wide variety of relationships. These relationships in
which humans (and all of creation) live are the dynamic contexts
from which the call emerges. They are also the products of the
call. In this world, these relations are also thwarted, perverted,
and destroyed by human sin and its consequences. Yet God's
life-giving call remains in and through these relations, underlying
sin in our created image and standing against sin in Christ,
constantly being renewed and empowered by God through the Holy
Spirit. All relationships have within them this call toward life of
service with and for the neighbor. However, each relationship
embodies this call differently depending upon the participants
involved and the characteristics of the relation.
[39] The marriage relation is one such relation. But what is
marriage? Much debate in recent years has centered on the form of
the persons involved. However, as articulated above, form is an
unhelpful and often destructive basis upon which to ground a
definition of any relation, including marriage. Rather, the
definition of marriage ought to be grounded first in the call as it
is lived out in a specific type of relation with certain qualities
and characteristics.
[40] What are some of those contextual characteristics?
First, marriage is a unique type of interpersonal
relationship. No other relationship has quite the same
qualities, character, or function in community. It is a
relation that is governed in a unique way by time, space, depth and
breadth of relation as well as by the unique persons in the
marriage and the unique situational context in which the relation
is found. The marriage relation has the potential to span a
long period of time that may include much of the participants'
lives while at the same time delineating the everyday moments of
ordinary life at their most exciting or most plodding. The
marriage relation takes place in a particular space, though that
space may change with varying amounts of frequency and thus
requires a constant negotiation of the use and feel of that space.
The marriage relation involves the embodied wholeness of
human beings in a manner unlike any other relation. It can
anticipate deeper, stronger levels of intimacy, vulnerability, and
mutuality in all the aspects of what it means to be an embodied
human -- the physical, erotic, emotional, spiritual, intellectual,
and social natures and the relation between each. As such,
however, it also has the ability to hurt and destroy like no other
relation. The marriage relation requires the mutual consent
of its participants and expects a level of trust, commitment,
faithfulness, forgiveness, and love that most other relations do
not expect. The marriage relation, to a degree more
profound than any other relation, involves the deliberate "making
and sharing a life together" with another person, a life that
includes hills and valleys but most often the ordinary mundane-ness
of life across time and in shared space.
[41] Second, given its time, space, and relational depth and
intensity, the marriage relation plays a crucial role in
structuring society. Marriage is never merely about persons
making a private promise to each other; their relation and how they
live it contributes to (for good and for bad) and is supported by
(for good and for bad) the community in which the relation exists.
Persons in the marital relation serve the lives of each other
and are served by each other, but they as individuals and as a
relation also serve the community through the relation they form.
Marital relations that practice such qualities as trust,
faithfulness, hope, steadfast love, forgiveness, and commitment
over time and in the same space will share those qualities with the
community through the other relationships in which the marriage
partners take part. Marital relations that do not practice
these things end up destroying not only their own relation, but
will harm the community as well.
[42] A third characteristic of marriage involves the erotic.
Rather than being grounded simply in physiology, marriage
like all other relations is grounded in the call to serve life with
and for the neighbor. This does not exclude sex or the body
from the definition of marriage but rather contextualizes sexuality
and the body in a particular relation where persons are called to
be, do, and seek the fullness of life as embodied
creatures. The individual's incarnate body with its desires,
pleasures, needs, and fears plays a central role in the marriage
relation, for humans are indeed embodied creatures and live out all
relations as bodies. However, this embodiment also includes
the intellectual, emotional, and spiritual aspects - the body,
heart, mind and soul - as they are inter-related in the human
creature. The erotic, which is holistic embodied relational life
often at its most incarnate, has of course best been exemplified by
the sexual experience, although it can and does take other forms.
The erotic flows through the marital (and other) relation and
is experienced in a particular way in our sexual being and doing,
yet is never limited to the sex act. Thus, given the time,
space, and intimacy aspects of marriage, the erotic can play a
vital role in marriage as it reminds us that we are incarnate
creatures, related to one another often beyond words, and empowers
us in our relations.
[43] These characteristics of the marital relation -
interpersonal contextual relationality, socio-communal
relationality, and erotic relationality - show the relational
context within which the marital call is heard and followed.
As such, marriage has the potential to be a community of
learning, a blessing, and a parable for both its participants and
the community in which it exists. As a community of learning,
marriage provides a place in space and across time where persons
can learn and practice right relation, shalom, and justice at their
most intimate and embodied. This includes such practices as:
the practice over time and in a shared space of trust and
trustworthiness; faithfulness and commitment to a promise; love,
care, and compassion for another during the good, the bad, and the
mundane; compromise, negotiation, and harmony of life's dynamics;
intimacy, vulnerability, mutuality and respect of human dignity in
the physical and sexual as well as emotional, spiritual, and mental
aspects of one's partner; and finally, and perhaps most
importantly, forgiveness and metanoia (repentance) when
each person fails at these practices again and again (as they
inevitably will). In other words, marriage is a
relation where persons can (potentially) practice living out their
call to serve life with and for the neighbor at its most intimate
over time and in the same space. As persons in the marriage
relation continue to learn and practice this call, they will in
turn be better able to carry out their calls to serve others within
the community.
[44] Second, the marital relation is, or at least has the
potential to be, a blessing. In this relation, when it works, God
gives, protects, nurtures, and enhances life. Those in the
marriage relation can receive personal, economic, political, and
social support that includes care, love, and companionship as well
as intimacy and acceptance, whether it be physical/erotic,
emotional, intellectual and/or spiritual. Marriage becomes a
relation where persons can handle life's consequences together.
In essence, persons in the marriage relation have the
opportunity to make and share a life together with someone in the
same space and over a long period of time. Here a person
serves the neighbor and is served and enhanced by the neighbor in
the relative safety of a public commitment that is (or ought to be)
also supported, blessed, and integrated by the community.
[45] Finally, the marital relation can be a parable of God's
relation to humanity, for it is the primary human relation that can
portray, even in its distinctly embodied and sin-perverted form,
the intensity, universality, and steadfastness of God's love,
commitment, and enduring faithfulness to creation. While
other relations may portray some aspects of God's commitment and
faithfulness, marriage embodies the elements of time, space,
interaction, and depth of this relation in a way few others can. In
the marriage relation, the call to serve life as God gives it is
molded, intensified, and directed by the specific characteristics
of this relation to image God's consensual, committed, loving
service to life for us and in turn provides a unique channel for
God's loving and life-giving work in creation. As a parable
and channel for God's love, then, marriage is one human relation
that can (potentially) image God's relation with us deeply and
passionately, albeit skewed by sin.
[46] From these qualities and characteristics, I propose a
(working) theo-ethical definition of marriage for the Lutheran
church. This definition is based on God's call to serve life
with and for the neighbor. Marriage, I submit, is service
with and for the neighbor in a relationship between two persons
that is 1) a deliberate and ongoing public commitment of 2)
faithfulness, trust, and love 3) shared by mutual consent 4) in a
long-term working toward life-long relation in which the covenanted
partners 5) make and share a life together through its good times,
bad times, and especially its mundane ordinariness which is 6)
lived out in an agapic and erotic relationship formed around such
qualities of shalom and justice as forgiveness, trust,
vulnerability, intimacy, equity, negotiation, compassion and
interactive growth 7) for the purpose of sustaining and enhancing
the living relational wholeness of the persons in the marriage
relation, any family that is intertwined with that relation, and
the community, society, and world in which that relation
exists.
[47] This definition emerges out of creation, namely God's
creational and relational commitment and steadfast love out of
which all life is created, sustained, and enhanced. It does not,
however, emerge out of bodily forms or human understandings of
those forms. Instead, the foundational criterion defining
marriage and all other relations is the call to serve life with and
for the neighbor. If a relation serves life, no matter the
form of the participants involved, then it is part of God's good
will for a living creation and ought to be supported and celebrated
as such.
Conclusion
[48] During this time of discernment for the Lutheran church as
it attempts to define and understand the various social and sexual
relationships from which Christians follow their vocational call,
Lutherans need to consider alternatives to form-based definitions
of marriage and sexuality. Instead, a better criterion is the call
itself - the call to serve life with and for the neighbor - as the
fundamental criterion for defining marriage. Definitions and
understandings of marriage that use "appropriate to form" as the
primary criterion in defining marriage not only exclude certain
relationships from being a legitimate support to society for little
reason other than physical form and its humanly constructed
meanings, but they also construct a social order that is often
hierarchical, exclusionary, and oppressive to those who do not fit
certain forms.
[49] Understanding and structuring the social order and its many
relationships according to the call puts service with and for life
of others at the heart of what humans in our relationships and as
individuals within those relationships are to seek, be, and do in
God's creation and as God's image. In this way, life and our
service to it becomes the standard for defining and living out all
relationships. This call is not only the defining factor but
also the critical factor for evaluating and changing our existing
relations, whether sexual, economic, political, ecclesiastical or
interpersonal. In other words, it is time to move beyond
form-based definitions of marriage and understand, construct, and
limit this relation (and all other relations) according to God's
call to serve life.
[50] As Christians, we trust that God has called us to service
of life in and on behalf of the world. This service is
accomplished both with and for the neighbor, whoever that neighbor
is. The Christian calling is first and foremost to live and
serve in life-giving, life-supporting, life-enhancing relationships
with the neighbor. When this is done through the
life-breathing power of the Holy Spirit, then those who are called
and the relations out of which they are called are shaped to fit
into God's relational order through which God gives and nurtures
life. This is especially true for the unique relation of
marriage. The time, the space, and the intensity of the
marital relation itself require something more than form as the
ultimate criterion for defining and legitimating this relation.
The definition of marriage, then, is finally found in the
call to serve with and on behalf of the neighbor, both personal and
communal, in and through this unique relation. In this view,
marriage is understood as one relationship wherein the call to love
and serve the neighbor is lived out in a unique and special way, a
way defined and practiced according to God's call into to
life-sustaining service with and for the neighbor.
Endnotes
[1]
Cf. Robert Benne, Ordinary Saints (Minneapolis:
Fortress, 2003) 153-154. "Form" here seems to include human
physiology and the scientific meanings, attributes, and
expectations that have been attached to that physiology, all of
which is believed to have a "proper" form in the created order
designed by God.
[2]
In fact, the meanings of "male and female" have changed
throughout history and have not always had the opposite yet
complementary meanings attached to them today. Cf. Thomas Laqueur,
Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University, 1990) for an excellent
discussion of how various western cultures have understood the male
and female and their relation to each other. See also Anne
Fausto-Sterling, Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the
Construction of Sexuality (New York: Basic Books, 2000) for a
helpful critical analysis of how the male and female is
(mis)understood by the biological sciences today.
[3]
Luther, "Commentary on Psalm 111:6," LW 13: 369.
[4]
Luther, "Confession Concerning Christ's Supper," LW 30: 266. See
also "On Temporal Authority" in Martin Luther's Basic
Theological Writings, ed. Timothy Lull (Minneapolis: Fortress,
1989) 701-702.
[5]
Luther, "Preface to the Old Testament" in Lull, 123-124.
[6]
Luther's readers must be careful here not to equate "station"
with "vocation" in his theology. Vocation for Luther is God's call
to serve the neighbor in and through a pre-existing station in a
given social order. This is different than the later Calvinist
approach which equates vocation and station so that a person is
called into a particular station in life. For Luther, the call is
not to the station itself but out of the station as the place in
society from which each person serves the neighbor in love. This is
a subtle difference, but one that opens the door for a new vision
of vocation and marriage.
[7]
Luther, Letter of Luther to Three Nuns, 1524, WA BR II,
no 766, 326-328 as translated in Luther on Women: A
Sourcebook, ed. Susan C. Karant-Nunn and Merry E.
Wiesner-Hanks (Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2003) 141. "God
created her body to be with a man, bear children and raise them as
Scripture makes clear in Genesis 1. Her bodily members, ordained by
God for this, also demonstrate this."
[8]
Gustaf Wingren, Luther on Vocation,trans. Carl
Rasmussen (Evansville, IN: Balast Press, 1999) 147, 155.
[9]
Benne, Ordinary Saints, 63ff.
[10]
James Nestingen, "The Lutheran Reformation and Homosexual
Practice" in Faithful Conversation: Christian Perspectives on
Homosexuality ed. James M. Childs Jr. (Minneapolis: Fortress,
2003) 47.
[11]
Robert Gagnon is an exception who is explicit in basing his
understandings of male and female on their genitals and how they
fit together. Cf. Robert Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual
Practice (Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 2002) 41.
[12]
E.g., Wolfhart Pannenberg, "You Shall not Lie with a Male:
Standards for Churchly Decision-Making on Homosexuality" in
Lutheran Forum 30:1 (February 1996) 29. Pannenberg
declares in this succinct article that a church is no longer
evangelical, Lutheran, or presumably Christian if it does not
subscribe to the proper "traditional" understanding of physical
forms and the relations into which these forms are allowed to fit.
There is no more ultimate claim than this.
[13]
Cf. Thomas Laqueur, Making Sex, 19-21.
[14]
Cf. Peter Berger, The Sacred Canopy (New York: Anchor
Books, 1967) and Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann, The Social
Construction of Reality (New York: Anchor Books, 1966).
[15]
Terence Fretheim, God and World in the Old Testament: A
Relational Theology of Creation (Nashville, TN: Abingdon,
2006) 276-277.
[17]
Walter Brueggemann, as quoted in Bruce C. Birch, Let Justice
Roll Down (Louisville, KY: Westminster/John Knox, 1991)
83.
[18]
Luther, "Freedom of Christian" in Lull, 619-620.
© February 2007
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 7, Issue 2