By Mark Tooley on 7.23.07 @ 12:07AM
Would the founder of the Protestant Reformation have endorsed same-sex unions?
Would the founder of the Protestant Reformation have endorsed
same-sex unions?
Yes!
Or at least according to USA Today columnist Mary Zeiss
Stange, who is -- predictably -- a professor of women's studies and
religion at Skidmore College in New York.
According to Stange in her July 9 column, a modern Luther would recognize that the
"few biblical proscriptions against 'sodomy'...should not bar the
loving union of two gay or lesbian persons." A 21st century Luther
would also ordain homosexuals into the ministry "as in line with
his theology of the 'priesthood of all believers.'"
Stange was upset because a few days earlier the 4.9 million
member Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) had removed an
openly homosexual Atlanta pastor from its "approved" list of
ministers.
The Rev. Bradley Schmeling of St. John's ELCA congregation is
sexually involved with another man. His denomination, which is the
largest Lutheran body in America, requires its clergy to be
celibate if single and monogamous if married.
A church committee in February ruled that Schmeling was in
defiance of church law. But the liberal 350-member congregation has
kept Schmeling in the pulpit and is hoping that the ELCA's next
national convention in August will overturn the prohibition against
actively homosexual clergy.
At its last governing convention, the ELCA narrowly affirmed its
current orthodox teachings on Christian sexual ethics. But like
other declining, and liberal-led, mainline denominations, it has
rancorously debated homosexuality for many years without final
resolution. Among major communions, only the 1.1 million member
United Church of Christ has officially affirmed homosexual
practice. Meanwhile, the 2 million member Episcopal Church, which
elected its first openly homosexual bishop in 2003, is fracturing
over the issue.
USA Today's religion columnist is hoping for a new
"reformation" centered upon sexual inclusiveness. But Stange's
attempt to link her reformation with the Reformation takes
a circuitous route.
"Lutheran anti-gay activists routinely, and correctly, point out
that Luther had plenty of bad things to say about the scourge of
'Sodomites' in 16th century Germany," Stange reluctantly admitted.
She lamented that the German former monk, like St. Paul, was the
unfortunate "product of the social prejudices of his time and
culture." Medieval Christians, like first century Jews, were not
yet educated about "orientation" and "lifestyle," she
suggested.
But certainly Luther, as a theological revolutionary, would have
embraced homosexuality today, Stange insisted. After all, the
Reformer celebrated "physical" sex, honored marriage as a "blessed
estate," and sacramentalized "the natural inclination and
excitement" that brings two people together. A modern Luther would
surely realize that the "few" biblical condemnations of same-sex
relations are archaically "rooted in a worldview vastly different
from our own," Stange surmised.
The ELCA's next Churchwide Assembly convenes August 6-12, and
Stange hopes that Luther's spiritual descendents will launch their
sexual reformation there. As Episcopalians struggle with the global
Anglican Communion over their sexual debates, and the ELCA wrangles
over its sexual disagreements, "Protestants in both American
denominations would best begin by asking, 'What would Luther
do?'"
Stange's reasoning is common among mainline Protestant elites,
who long ago would have led all their denominations into a sexual
reformation, if unrestrained by traditionalist local church laity
who pay their salaries. For the elites, shaped by their own
experiences in the civil rights movement, anti-war protests, and
feminist causes, the Christian faith is primarily a battering ram
for egalitarian social reforms. For them, the divine kingdom is
just a few protest movements away from earthly consummation.
But Luther had far more in common with the Catholic Church than
with the Reformation's liberal descendants. He affirmed a
transcendent moral order, revealed obliquely through nature, and
more explicitly through Scripture, as transmitted by the Church. He
was not so much a revolutionary as an innovating reactionary,
striving to peel back what he believed to be problematic church
traditions in favor of Scripture's plain meaning.
The Protestant Reformer would recognize and undoubtedly approve
of Pope John Paul's II's "theology of the body." Unlike modern
secular culture's preoccupation with self-autonomy and "lifestyle,"
the late Pope taught a sacred unity between spirit and the physical
body. That unity included a unique complementariness between male
and female. Liberal Protestants reject that. Like Stange, they
believe that only a few troublesome Scripture verses, penned by
repressed Jewish men of the ancient world, stand between them and
revolutionary sexual freedom.
In contrast, orthodox Christian teaching paints a much broader
canvass that likens marriage to the fidelity between Jesus and The
Church, and between Jehovah and the Hebrews. This imagery, to which
Luther frequently referred in his fulsome celebration of matrimony
between man and woman, poses a far larger obstacle to sexual
revolutionaries.
So naturally, Stange and her cohorts instead prefer to cite the
"few" Scripture references to homosexuality, while ignoring the
much richer cosmology that obstructs their path. The passionate
German ex-monk who led the Reformation rejoiced in both the Bible
and in his marriage. Had he read Stange's USA Today
column, Luther would recognize little in her argument except the
rich evidence of fallen human nature.
topics:
Religion, Law, Unions