Reclaiming Christian Orthodoxy
By Bishop Michael Ingham
October 2003
[Address by Bishop Michael Ingham
at the Gay and Lesbian Christian Movement Halfway to Lambeth Conference
held in October 2003 in Manchester, United Kingdom. Source: Anglican
Communion News Service.]
In the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew's Gospel
Jesus asks, "Is there any one among you who, if your child
asks for bread, will give them a stone? Or if the child asks for
a fish will give them a snake?" [Matthew 7: 9-10] Jesus was
speaking of the love of God for the needs of all the human family.
He was in particular challenging the notion that the love of God
is reserved for the pious and the pure, the ritually kosher and
the institutionally orthodox. Just as human parents will not refuse
their own children food, or love, he says, so the Lord God will
not refuse those who ask for bread in the name of His Son Jesus
Christ.
This, simply put, is the reason why the church
is re-thinking its traditional stance on homosexuality. We have
become aware in the last several years that gay and lesbian Christians
have been starved and denied the spiritual food of acceptance and
love they have a right to expect as baptised members of the Body
of Christ. We have become aware of the suffering, hardship and rejection
that is experienced by many gay and lesbian Christians throughout
the world. Some are denied admission to the Holy Communion. Most
are refused permission to serve in lay and ordained office. Many
are persecuted by civil and ecclesiastical laws. Some are forced
to become refugees. Some are tortured and murdered. [See, for example,
the experience of Ugandan Christians, forced to flee rape and imprisonment
as documented by Amnesty International. Look on www.changingattitude.org/news_i_c_uganda_vancouver_refugees.html]
This summer at least two dioceses in the Anglican
Communion - both beginning with the word "new" - decided
to do something about it. They, and we here today, believe that
God is calling the church to end discrimination and prejudice based
on sexual orientation. We believe that the continued exclusion of
people through the misuse of Scripture, and the repetition of inherited
and unexamined prejudices against minorities, is a sin against the
love of God.
Our actions in Canada and in the United States
have been guided by the Holy Spirit, which is the Spirit of freedom
and of truth. They were taken in response to changes in the sciences
and social sciences that affect our understanding of human sexuality.
They were taken not in rebellion against Scripture, but in faithfulness
to its constant and greater witness that God does not deny his own
children the bread of compassion and justice.
Still, our actions have been denounced in some
quarters as "unilateralist" and "unorthodox."
My own reading of the history of Anglicanism suggests that the first
criticism is rather weak. The Anglican tradition, as a distinctive
branch within the Christian family, came into existence through
the unilateral actions of the Church in England in the 16th century.
Some of the solutions being proposed today by
proponents of so-called "orthodoxy" - solutions which
would impose for the first time the necessity of a universal consensus
on the church - are the same arguments that were made by the opponents
of the very English Reformation they claim to represent. (As I asked
former Archbishop Carey informally one day, "If England had
not acted unilaterally at the Reformation would you be here to argue
for a new universalism today?" He declined to answer.)
Just as England in the 16th century proposed no
new doctrine for the church, but instead claimed the right to oversee
its own affairs with a degree of local autonomy, so other provinces
and dioceses in the Anglican Communion today are claiming that same
right to make pastoral provision for the people of God within their
boundaries. This is entirely within the tradition of Anglicanism.
The reaction this has provoked in many parts of
the world is of course to be expected, and it must also be respected.
Most of us do understand that a change in the understanding of human
sexuality and especially homosexuality is culturally and theologically
difficult for some. Just as we ourselves argue for a new respect
for gay and lesbian Christians, so we must ourselves show respect
for those of a traditional conscience in these questions. No one
here, I believe, is trying to kick anyone out of the church. That,
rather, seems to be the position of some of our "orthodox"
critics.
And for this reason we must challenge the claim
that Christian orthodoxy is the sole property of one segment of
the Christian church. We must examine the assumption that orthodoxy
is dogmatically uniform and unambiguous in these matters. We are
bold to say before God and the church that we too are members of
the orthodox Christian faith, and that our witness is to the Triune
God in whose image we too have been created.
The proponents of a narrow orthodoxy claim that
God condemns homosexuality, that the witness of Scripture is unambiguously
contrary to same-sex relationships, that the authority of Scripture
itself is at stake in this debate, and that the church cannot have
different moral standards in different parts of the world.
But we, from a broader orthodoxy, reply that God
condemns no one who has been made in God's image, that Jesus Christ
has taken upon himself the condemnation of us all, homosexual and
heterosexual alike, that homophobia [The Lambeth Conference of 1998
spoke of homophobia as "an irrational fear of homosexuals."
No one explained what a rational fear of homosexuals would be. I
use the term to denote prejudice against and denial of the dignity
of homosexual people] is one of the unexamined sins of the church
today, and that no doctrine of creation which ignores homosexual
persons is an adequate doctrine of creation. We reply that moral
standards do in fact vary in different parts of the Christian world,
and that this is a cause for deeper discussion rather than separation.
A couple of years ago we had a conference in New
Westminster that brought together all the people interested in social
justice in our diocese with all the people interested in evangelism.
I had come back from Lambeth in 1998 deeply impressed by the way
African bishops hold firmly together the twin imperatives of evangelising
and social transformation, and I knew that we in the western world
tend too often to separate them into different activities. Our conference
speaker was an American Baptist, and he began by saying this:
You Anglicans are a mystery to us Baptists. You
have bishops in your church who deny the resurrection of Jesus,
and you say "hey, we're a broad church. There's room for everybody
here." And you have theologians who question the Virgin Birth
and the gospel miracles, and you say "hey, we're a broad church.
Everybody can have their say." And then along come gay and
lesbian people asking for a blessing and you say "hey, we gotta
draw the line somewhere!" At least [he said] if you're going
to break up your church, do it over something important.
This raises the question of how we distinguish
primary and secondary issues in the church. To gay and lesbian Christians,
of course, the experience of exclusion is a primary issue. But theologically
we must treat the question more dispassionately. What are first
order issues in the church? And what are second order issues?
Anglicanism's best and most enduring effort to
answer these questions is the Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral of 1888.
It defines four things as first order issues for the Anglican church.
They are: the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, the ecumenical
creeds, the divinely ordained Sacraments, and the historic episcopate.
It's important to understand that these four pillars
were originally conceived within the Anglican Communion as a framework
to define membership. They arose in the late 19th century in response
to the growth of the church throughout the world and the requests
by autonomous churches in foreign parts for recognition as Anglican
churches. They remain the only defining criteria for membership
in the Communion. As the Primates said in Portugal in 2000, only
"formal repudiation of the Lambeth Quadrilateral" could
count as a cause for the departure of a province from the Communion.
[Statement of the Primates of the Anglican Communion, Oporto, Portugal,
March 28th, 2000] And no part of the church has yet done this.
No particular doctrine of human nature is contained
in the Quadrilateral, neither expressly or implied. No fixed and
immutable conception of human sexuality or Christian sexual ethics
are named here. This is not to say that Christian ethics and behaviour
are not central to Christian belief itself, for they clearly are,
but it is to say that first order issues for Anglicans are higher
order issues, and nothing in our tradition restricts ethical or
doctrinal development where the Gospel itself comes into contact
with new social conditions or changing human knowledge.
Theologically, to say that one believes in God,
in the divinity of Jesus Christ, and in his sacrifice on the Cross
for our salvation, is of a different order than saying one believes
in restricting sexual activity to heterosexual marriage or in the
blessing of same-sex unions. The existence of God is a foundational
belief. Christian social ethics is derivative. And while we must
not separate them - and we should never claim that moral law is
merely a human construct independent of the will of God - neither
should we confuse the eternal and timeless truths of the Christian
faith with the historic and temporal working out of those truths
in the changing conditions of human life. To do so is a fundamental
category mistake.
Yet those today claiming to be "orthodox"
wish to dissolve the distinction altogether. They hold that same-sex
relationships is a first order issue on the same level as the very
existence of God. Some bishops meeting in Kuala Lumpur announced
they would be in communion only with those who subscribe to their
understanding of human sexuality. Other bishops have thrown out
the historic episcopate altogether by asserting powers they do not
have, and are busy planting churches and licensing clergy in dioceses
where they have neither authority nor jurisdiction. In the name
of "orthodoxy" they create disorder and anarchy.
When asked how these actions are consistent with
the church's tradition and understanding of the episcopate, they
blame homosexual Christians and their supporters, arguing that the
rejection of homosexuality and the rigorous prosecution of a strict
heterosexuality for everyone without exception is the litmus test
for the entire edifice of Christian and biblical truth. They present
us with an "orthodoxy" that is not merely contingently
homophobic but necessarily homophobic, with a gospel that has become
law, and with a newly structured church that is more committed to
expulsion than inclusion.
One of the tragic developments in the church today
is the intellectual theft of the word "orthodoxy" by conservative
modernists. In fact, historic Christian orthodoxy has accommodated
a variety of spiritualities, theological schools, doctrinal convictions
and pastoral practices. Genuine orthodoxy includes people like Julian
of Norwich, who called God "mother;" Francis of Assisi,
who protested the church's submission to money; and Desmond Tutu,
who defied the fundamentalist-backed system of apartheid. Historic
orthodoxy has seen centuries when marriages were never performed
in the church and, if Boswell is right, periods when same-sex relationships
were celebrated. [John Boswell, "Same Sex Unions In Pre-Modern
Europe," New York, Villard Books, 1994]
We have seen the demise of cherished and fiercely
held doctrines like the divine right of kings and the institution
of slavery, the prohibition against usury and the strictures against
divorce. And we have maintained unchanged the church's universal
moral commitment to love and compassion for the despised and the
rejected, to justice for the suffering and the poor, to bread for
the hungry. We have continued to challenge the principalities and
powers of this world that corrupt and destroy the creatures of God,
for these imperatives are not subject to time and decay.
Orthodoxy is a broad river, not a narrow stream.
Yes, every river has its banks, but river banks also change over
time. Authentic Christian faith is anchored in the Holy Spirit who
leads us into all truth, and the living tradition of faith under
the guidance of the Spirit is always open to a new word from God.
There was a time, for example, when Christian
orthodoxy seemed necessarily anti-semitic, when Jews were openly
held in contempt by frequent New Testament passages that condemn
them. The 1662 Book of Common Prayer prayed for the conversion of
what it called "the faithless Jews, that our Lord and God would
take away the veil from their hearts...graciously hear our prayers
which we offer for the blindness of this people, that they, acknowledging
the light of thy truth, may be delivered from their darkness."
In a post-Holocaust world these sentiments are
now understood not only to have been a misreading of Scripture,
but to have led to a human catastrophe of obscene proportions. Yet
in this same world, homophobia has replaced anti-semitism as the
last acceptable prejudice in some parts of the church. Now, as then,
authorities remain silent or actively justify discrimination and
oppression in the name of their religious beliefs. Official statements
and declarations - even the ones making an attempt at balance and
fairness - go to great lengths to reassure traditionalists, while
offering at most a sentence or two of acknowledgment to homosexual
people.
Gregory Baum, a Roman catholic theologian, draws
a parallel between anti-homosexual prejudice and anti-semitism.
He cites the rejection of anti-semitism by the modern church as
an example of authentic Christian tradition that is capable of deep
renewal and change. He writes this:
When tens of thousands of homosexuals were put
into concentration camps in Nazi Germany, the world did not cry
out against this brutality. As the Christian church remained silent
in regard to the elimination of the Jews, so it uttered no word
to protect homosexuals from a similar fate. Why this indifference
to murder? What is it in our culture that makes us so hardhearted
in the face of the suffering of certain groups? In this case, it
is undoubtedly due to the church's teaching that homosexuality is
a perversion, a sin against nature, a manifestation of evil. Even
though Jesus summons us to be in solidarity with the despised, the
vulnerable and the "least of them," we are ashamed to
be seen in public as friends and supporters of gays and lesbians
and to defend their dignity and human rights. The murders of homosexuals
on our streets accuse us of a certain complicity, just as the violent
manifestations of anti-semitism do. An increasing number of Christians
see here a contradiction between doctrine and love. [See "Faithfulness
And Change: Moments Of Discontinuity In The Church's Teaching;"
in "The Challenge Of Tradition" John Simons, ed, Anglican
Book Centre, Toronto, 1997]
Baum says that when the church perceives a contradiction
between doctrine and love, a contradiction it cannot perceive until
certain conditions are present in history, then it is plunged into
a re-examination of truth. This process has five steps, he argues,
the first being the sense of contradiction that arises us when something
in the tradition strikes us as incompatible with what we know of
God's love and justice through Jesus Christ. The second step is
a search for the root of the contradiction in Scripture. The third
is a re-reading of Scripture and tradition to find hints for resolving
the contradiction. Fourth is turning to Christian experience - in
this case, the experience of gay and lesbian Christians in their
life in Christ - as verification of a new perspective. And fifth
is the development of a systematic theology capable of overcoming
the contradiction.
Over the years, the church has done this with
respect to usury, monarchy, slavery, capital punishment, the equality
of women, and the termination of marriage. In each case, the Holy
Spirit has guided the church through a period of difficult change
and brought us to a fresh appreciation of Christian responsibility
and freedom. In each case, orthodoxy has proven itself both flexible
and durable, both unchanging and yet ever self-renewing in its power
and faithfulness.
None of this involves rejection of the authority
of Scripture. On the contrary, the same Spirit that inspired the
writers of the Bible inspires the church in its reading of the Bible.
The Holy Spirit that breathes through the text, breathes through
the church. Charles Hefling writes:
To perceive the Spirit's work, the work of the
Spirit is needed, and while every biblical word may become a sacrament
of the Word, no biblical word always or automatically does convey
the Word to every reader or every worshipping community. Prayer
and study, the exercise of discernment and reason, play their part
as interpreters, in weighing the scripture, are themselves weighed.
The process is reciprocal, unavoidable, and unending. [See "The
Authority of the Bible in Today's Church," Seabury Western,
1993]
To place ourselves under the authority of Scripture,
therefore, is to enter a dialogical circle in which both church
and text encounter each other with new questions and new insights
in a continuous and never-ending circle of interrogation and revelation.
In this process we learn new things both about ourselves and about
the sacred text.
So, for example, we have learned from liberation
theologians and base communities of the poor that God speaks a particular
word of freedom and empowerment in Scripture to the marginalized
and oppressed peoples of the earth. And we have learned from women
that certain texts in Scripture have been used by men to control
and dominate, to justify male superiority and give it the appearance
of divine sanction. Phyllis Trible has called these "texts
of terror" in which humiliation, subjugation, rape and murder
seem to be justified by biblical authority. These texts of terror,
these oppressive texts, have been used against gay and lesbian people
too, and we must confidently say to the church and to the world
today that they are not the word of God.
In a statement of interpretive principles prepared
for the Diocese of New York last year a group of biblical scholars
said this:
Faithful interpretation requires the Church to
use the gifts of "memory, reason and skill" to find the
sense of the scriptural text and to locate it in its time and place.
The Church must then seek the text's present significance in light
of the whole economy of salvation. Chief among the guiding principles
by which the Church interprets the sacred texts is the congruence
of its interpretation with Christ's Summary of the Law and the New
Commandment, and the creeds. [See "Let The Reader Understand
. . . A Statement Of Interpretative Principles By Which We Understand
The Holy Scriptures," Diocese of New York, 2002]
The New Commandment they speak of is that text
in John's Gospel. "A new commandment I give you," says
Jesus, "that you love one another. Just as I have loved you,
so you also should love one another." [John 13:34] Love, according
to these scholars, is to be the guiding principle by which we interpret
Scripture. Not the sentimental love of modern society, but the costly
love of Jesus, the sacrificial love that is lifted up on the cross
for the life of the whole world.
The authority of Scripture lies in Christ himself.
This is the orthodox position. For he is the love of God made flesh.
"He is the reflection of God's glory and imprint of God's very
being". [Hebrews 1:3] Whatever reveals Christ in Scripture
is authoritative for the church. Whatever is not of Christ, not
consistent with the love of God shown in the crucified and risen
Lord, is not authoritative and cannot be made into doctrine necessary
for salvation.
The hatred, contempt and vilification of God's
gay and lesbian children that claims the name of orthodoxy today
is not condoned nor blessed by Jesus Christ. It has more to do with
those forces of religious fearfulness that crucified Jesus than
with the love for which he gave up his life. The problem faced by
gay and lesbian Christians, and those who stand with you, is not
that we are victims of tradition, but rather casualties of those
who have not grasped tradition deeply enough.
One of the elements of our tradition, of course,
is sexual abstinence. There has always been a recognition in Christianity
of those specially called to the single or celibate life. The voluntary
renunciation of sexual activity is a particular gift of self-offering
and service that some individuals are called to make, and it can
be a deep expression of love and faithfulness. There is also a place
for periods of voluntary sexual abstention in marriage itself. These
things are rightly honoured in Christian tradition.
Unfortunately, celibacy has not always been voluntary.
It has been imposed on people who have no calling to it, and required
of people who cannot bear it. Far from being a blessing, in these
situations it becomes a curse which denies normal, healthy human
intimacy to people who are in every other way faithful servants
of God. When people fail in it, as they often do, the response of
the Church has been to blame the individual, when it would have
been better to question the teaching. Imposed celibacy is a contradiction
in terms.
Anglicanism, to its credit has never imposed celibacy
on its clergy. Our clergy are free to marry and enjoy all the freedoms
and responsibilities of human intimacy. This is enshrined in the
39 Articles, no less! [Article XXXII] It's as if we have recognised
from the beginning that ordination does not require renunciation
of sexual life. Some individuals may have such a calling, it is
true, but they are few in number. Anglicans have instinctively recognised
that human beings are sexual beings and so we have accorded the
clergy the same marital privileges as the laity.
Except, that is, for gay and lesbian clergy. Here
we meet the cruel double standard. Homosexual people alone must
accept imposed celibacy. Homosexual Christians alone are denied
the full expression of intimacy with their partners because only
for them does the church now insist on the pro-creative theory of
sex. Only for them does the church still require renunciation of
the sexual life.
This double standard denies and diminishes the
humanity of gay and lesbian people. It is an aspect of homophobia.
The fact is, both homosexuals and heterosexuals alike are people
with the same legitimate yearnings, desires, hopes and dreams for
stable, faithful and lifelong intimacy; we are different only in
the object of our attraction; we share the same fundamental humanity,
the same sinfulness, the same image of God given to us all in creation;
we have the same Saviour and Lord who accepts us and loves us unconditionally.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu asks:
Why should we not want homosexual persons to
give expression to their sexuality in loving acts? Why don't we
use the same criteria to judge same-sex relationships that we
use to judge whether heterosexual relationships are wholesome
or not? I am left deeply disturbed by these inconsistencies, and
I know the Lord of the Church would not be where his Church is
in this matter. [See his Foreword in "We Were Baptized Too:
Claiming God's Grace For Lesbians And Gays," Marilyn Bennett
Alexander and James Preston, Westminster John Knox Press, 1996]
Where, then, is the courage of the church? Where
is our tradition of reasoned faithfulness, our ancient compassion
mandated by Christ himself and bequeathed to the church by the Spirit?
Will the church continue to call for costly sacrifice by its gay
and lesbian members through the renunciation of their full humanity,
but not take upon itself the costly sacrifice of witnessing to God's
love in homophobic societies or to other world religions? Why are
Christians willing to live or die for the uniqueness of Jesus Christ
but unwilling to proclaim the true depth of his uniquely unconditional
love to people of other faiths? Why are we accused of conformity
with secular trends in western society, while conformity with inherited
prejudice and the standards of other religions goes unchallenged?
It is time, as the Bishop of Oxford has so forcefully argued, to
turn the argument back on those who are raising the voices of panic.
In their book "We Were Baptized Too"
Marilyn Alexander and James Preston speak words of encouragement
to the church. Three words, first to gay and lesbian Christians,
second to the faithful hardworking clergy of the church, and third
to the ordinary members:
Gay and lesbian Christians, we can walk through
the storm. Though the walk may be long and rocky, and our burdens
heavy, we can walk together. We can be a sign to the Church that
has forgotten what it means to trust, what it means to love, and
what it means to do justice.
Pastor, you may think that the storms of homophobia
brewing out there in your congregation may be too threatening to
enter. You hear the thunder and you see the lightning, but can you
stand in the doorway and watch the opportunity to walk with the
liberating Christ pass you by? Yes, your walk will not be easy nor
your burden light, but you are not alone. Come out into the rain;
remember your trust in God; remember Christ's embodied stand for
justice.
Church member, have you been silent about your
loved one who has been turned away, rejected, despised in the name
of Christ? Forget your umbrella, it won't do you any good in this
storm, but come on out where you can see the rainbow in the distance.
The winds are blowing, the hail is beating, and it is a long way
to the car, but can you do any less than to go to the House of Unconditional
Love? Tell the stories, cast out the shame, love God's children,
and seek justice. [Ibid, p. 88-89]
We are asking for bread, not for a stone. We are
asking to be heard as a voice of hope and a voice of love. Let us
give thanks that the Lord Jesus Christ in his mercy has accepted
us, and pray that one day we may be accepted by the church that
bears his name.
|