What is Your Theology of Sexuality? 5
Questions
Posted on December 3, 2013
by David Fitch — 7 Comments ↓
Most of us do not think theologically about
sexual questions. I’m constantly forced to because I teach sexual ethics in a seminary. Most of
us do not sort out the implications of our sexual discernments for the way they
make space for God to work in and through our lives and other people’s
lives. We do not sort out the assumptions by which we engage our own
sexual formation. What do we do with desire? What does it mean that I am
attracted sexually to this or that person, this or that object? What if I’m
married and attracted to someone else? etc. etc. etc. In society at large,
there is an unconscious belief in the merits of self expressionism as the basis
of moral action. Pursue sexual self expression as an authentic part of your
self as long as you don’t hurt anyone else. It is left at that. In the midst of
this, the sexual guidance and formation that our churches have given us has
been brutal. The resulting confusion has been ubiquitous. And so, I offer some
questions I ask in the midst of the many discussions that are provoked by
sexual crisies in a person’s life or the life of the church. These questions,
admittedly are at the level of a theologian/philosopher of culture. They are
the questions that ferret out issues in the midst of church discernments. But
they might be helpful in person to person conversations if they could be translated
(maybe you can help me with this?). Yet I find these questions really important
as the church seeks to navigate sexual formation from within its communal
processes in the current culture. When someone presents to me “I believe such
and such” about a sexual issue he or she is confronted with, these are the
questions I find myself asking (often internally). I find these questions in
particular often missing in the ensuing discussions. So here are 5 sets of
questions that make explicit one’s theology of sexuality.
·
Sanctification: What doctrine of sanctification is implied
by your position? How do you believe God in Christ transforms/heals human
beings and human life? What then does this mean for all people with sexual issues
of any kind in their lives? What hope do you offer (from within your own
discernment) for people with issues that need healing, renewal, change,
transformation?
·
Chastity: All sexuality, heterosexual, gay, lesbian,
other assumes a form of chastity, the ordering our sexual desires towards a
given end. For instance, gay marriage infers that a gay
man shall guide and chasten his desires toward one male in one monogamous
marriage. In your own discernment, how are the ends towards which we chasten
our sexual drives determined in your views of sexuality?
·
Subjectivity: Subjectivity after the post modern matrix, within post
structuralism, after Foucault, Derrida, Zizek, Butkler, sees the human subject
as the product
of cultural formation, “the Big Other.” Part of this (if not the main part) is
that desire is not simply given but shaped by these forces. How does this
change the way we view sexuality and the formation of desire? Do you take this
into account? Why or why not?
·
Antagonism
as Source of Sexual Life:
In what ways is our sexual expression/identity formed in antagonism versus
healing? What ways have we pointed out faults in others to better secure and
avoid examining our own sexual identity and lives.
·
The
Limits on Self Expression:
If self expression is the source of one’s sexual ethic, i.e. what you feel,
desire should be fulfilled because it is given by God, what if any limits do
you put on that expression and why? What is the source of that limiting ethic?
For those theologically minded people, what do
you think of these questions for church conversations? Are there others that
are more important? Do you find any of these questions helpful?
offensive? Herein reveals much about our theology of sexuality. Why are they
helpful? offensive? How would you rephrase them? I’m not looking to define the
answers here for Christian orthodoxy. Instead I’m looking for the right
questions that need to be asked and the ones, given our current culture, that
often get missed. In this regard, do these questions help and why or why not?
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