Does
the Bible Condemn Homosexuality? An Interview with Dr Reverend Cheri
DiNovo.
As the debate rages
over the legality and morality of same sex marriages, many Christians
rely on the Bible as their guide. Many believe that the Bible clearly
condemns homosexuality, and they provide specific passages to back up
their claim. We decided to give the other side of the debate a chance
to answer. So, we interviewed Dr Reverend Cheri DiNovo, a United Church
Minister who has performed a dozen same-sex marriages in Canada. She
has also written a Ph.D. thesis on the subject of how Christianity deals
with the outcasts of society.
In this interview,
we asked Dr Reverend DiNovo to explain her perspective on three often-quoted
biblical passages that seem to condemn homosexuality.
THE TURNING:
Well, lets go through the Bible and take a look at some of the
passages which people often quote when condemning homosexuality. Starting
in the beginning with Genesis 19, we have the story of Sodom and Gomorrah,
where Lot invites two men into his home, not knowing that they are really
angels. Soon, a crowd forms outside the house, demanding that the strangers
be sent out so they can be raped. Lot refuses, and offers his virgin
daughters instead. ( Click
here to read the passage). How
do you read this in terms of an attitude towards homosexuality?
DiNovo:
Well, first of all its important to remark that this passage is
not about homosexuality. In fact, it has nothing to do with homosexuality.
Its about welcoming, its about the theology of hospitality,
which is the great theology, biblically speaking, from the beginning
of Genesis to the end of Revelations. So, always and everywhere, the
bible tells us to be welcoming and hospitable to strangers, especially
strangers who are not like us. So here come some strangers into your
town, so what do you do with them. The great sin of Sodom, for which
it was punished, is the abuse of the strangers. It has nothing to do
with how they were abused. That is irrelevant to the story. Anything
could have happened. It is the fact that they were abused at all that
is the point of the story.
It is not a question
of sexual ethics, because it is absurd to say that its okay to
send your virgin daughters out to be gang-raped, but its not okay
to have strangers gang-raped. And that would be an absurd reading of
it, but that would be a literalist reading of it, if you want to take
it at face value, without any thought involved. I think theres
a great deal of prevarication when talking about this. People just throw
Sodom and Gomorrah out as if they know what its about. They either
dont know what its about or if theyve actually studied
the bible in obvious detail, theyd see that its not about
homosexuality. Its a smokescreen.
THE TURNING:
And yet, this story has cast an enormous shadow over Christianity. We
speak of sodomy because of this story. It suggests that
church leaders over the centuries have considered this story to be about
homosexuality.
DiNovo:
I know, and isnt that absurd. That truly is prevarication, it
clearly speaks to an agenda of the church, and that agenda is about
hegemony and control, and its always about control over those
places where people feel the most vulnerable, and thats in their
sexuality and in their ethical dealings with each other. Where the church
wields the hammer the most, thats where you should question it
the most. This is one of those texts that has simply been abused by
the church.
THE TURNING:
I guess it begs the question, had the angels appeared as women, what
would have happened in the house?
DiNovo:
Well, the same thing, it would have made no difference, except that
sodomy wouldnt be a part of our vocabulary. But another thing
to point out about the biblical period: there was no such thing as homosexuality
in the biblical era, neither in the Hebrew scripture era nor in the
New Testament era. Homosexuality did not exist as a term or as a person.
Homosexuality as a person was invented in the nineteenth century, as
a pathology.
At the time the
Bible was written, both the Hebrew scripture and the New Testament,
homosexual acts were just variations of sexual acts. We remember that
during the Greek era when the New Testament was written, homosexuality
between an older man and a younger man was seen as a very common form
of mentoring. It was average, it was not frowned upon. Where we see
Paul and others in the New Testament railing about what seems like homosexuality,
what theyre actually railing about is manipulation of youth. Its
really more pedophilia that theyre railing at in that context,
especially among the Greeks themselves and the whole Greek mythic structure.
Theyre railing against the Greek way of life. And part of that
way of life was this initiation procedure with young boys, and its
really pedophilia, and the kind of power imbalance which that implies
is really the problem.
So, homosexuality
is really a bad translation in this context. There were no homosexuals
at that time, there were only adults having sex in various ways, and
one of those was having sex with their own gender.
THE TURNING:
So, just to put that in context, would most of the men who were having
sex with boys also be married to women?
DiNovo:
Oh, absolutely. This was a patriarchy, so you want your name to be carried
on. You have to remember that marriage was not what it is now, either.
Marriage in biblical times was usually polygamy, and women had the status
of cattle, they were purchased with gold, and they were really there
to have children for the men. They were not seen as a man's prime object
of sexual attraction. Maybe there was a component of that, but that
was not really the key component. Marriage was to produce children.
And to produce the patriarch's children, with the patriarch's name.
So marriage didn't
have very much to do with sex, and the classic example of that is Solomon
and his thousand wives. That's in the same breath as the Ten Commandments'
injunction against committing adultery. Well, what does it mean not
to commit adultery in a community that would allow you to have one thousand
wives? How much energy does one guy have, you know? Clearly, there's
something else at work here than sexual prohibition. Again, we have
to see things in context, in terms of the differences between their
world and our modern world.
Leviticus
: "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman, it is an abomination."
19:22
THE TURNING:
Okay, well, let's continue our march through the Bible, and get to Leviticus,
where God says to Moses, among many other things, " You shall not lie
with a male as with a woman, it is an abomination."
DINOVO:
Okay, so, here you have the Jews differentiating themselves from the
other great cultures of their day. In Leviticus you will find another
six hundred strictures as well, including against eating shellfish,
as well as spitting on the floor, prohibitions about women having their
periods. There's all sorts of stuff there that we would now throw out,
with very little thought. We would say, this is a people with very little
in common with our people who have prohibitions for all sorts of strange
reasons, and this would be of interest to a cultural anthropologist
maybe, but it is certainly not anything we're going to live our lives
by.
This is Rabbinical
wisdom, this is not mine: the ban against homosexual sex acts is of
the same order as not eating shellfish. So, if the Religious Right condemned
the eating of shellfish in the same breath as homosexual acts, then
maybe they would have it in context.
What's really true
about Leviticus, and what kosher is about, is being mindful. Mindfulness
about what you do, how you do it and why you do it. Mindful about the
fact that God is aware of what you are doing, and God is present in
what you are doing, and so you do it in a spirit of holiness. That holiness
is imbued in every moment of your life. So, when youre washing
your dishes, what fork you use, what you eat with, all of this has to
do with God in some beautiful and brilliant way. So, it's not about
what fork you use, it's not about who you sleep with, it's about the
mindfulness in which you engage in sexual acts, it's not about eating
shellfish, it's about the mindfulness of the food that you put into
your mouth - where did it come from, what pain when into producing it.
So, that's what Leviticus is about, and this is what gets lost.
THE TURNING:
We've received a fair bit of mail at the magazine from people who read
the Bible quite literally
DINOVO:
I wish they did! I wish they read it more literally, I wish they actually
read it. My problem with literalists and fundamentalists is that they
don't actually read it, because if they did, it would be very difficult
to uphold these kinds of arguments, the hatred of homosexuals, for example.
It simply isn't there. What they have done very successfully is taken
one passage out of context, without studying it, and then used that
to beat up their neighbors. I really wish people would study the bible
more, it's not a question of studying it less, or being less literal.
I wish people would actually study the words there, i.e., being a bit
more literalist about it. That would lead to a whole different conclusion.
THE TURNING:
And if you go down that Leviticus list, it says you should never even
see your own sister naked. So, if this is what God said to Moses, and
hence to the rest of us, how does one pick and choose out of that list?
DINOVO:
The bible is designed to be read in community, and then to be debated
and discussed. It's not a fait accompli. This is why in the midrashic
traditions there are libraries full of texts asking 'what does it all
mean?' And we Christians have libraries full, called theology, asking
'what does it all mean?'. The reason for this is that we don't know,
we can never know for sure. So this is a book that is meant to be read
out loud in community, so we can all hear it, all think our different
thoughts, and then we all come together to discuss it. That is the purpose
of it, and that was the way it was meant to be used. It was originally
a partly oral tradition handed on down, and discussed, 'What does this
mean? What do you think this means, these words of our tribal elders?
What implications does this have for our lives?' It's not an immediate
prescription. This is a book that is designed to engender a lot of things,
prayer among them, worship, all sorts of things, but it was never meant
to be read as a prescription for people.
You know, you look
at the stories in the Bible, and you wonder how does this show me how
to live my life? I mean, the story of Jonah or Noah -- what we are we
supposed to do, when it rains go out and build an ark? It would be an
absurd way of reading it, we dont read any text that way. What
we do is that we read it and then we discuss what it really means, and
that's exactly the tradition from which it comes, and has been from
the beginning of it's writing.
Homosexuality
in the New Testament
THE TURNING:
Well, let's jump ahead then to the New Testament. In Corinthians there
is a section which reads:
' Do you not know
that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Do not be
deceived, neither fornicators nor idolaters or adulterers nor homosexuals
nor sodomites nor thieves nor covetous nor drunkards nor revilers nor
extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God." ( 9-10)
Homosexuals are
clearly mentioned, at least in this translation. What is this text trying
to say?
DINOVO:
What if all of our emails which we sent to our friends would
be saved for two thousand years, collated, put together as a series
of letters, written basically as holy scripture? There'd be some pretty
wacky stuff in them. And some of our emails were clearly meant for particular
people at a particular time, for a particular situation.
The letter to the
people at Corinth was exactly that - written at a particular time, to
a particular people, in a particular situation.
At Corinth they
were having basically orgiastic meetings, people kind of blending in
an interesting ( sexual) way, taking what was in the old pagan religions
and in the new Christian story. Among the Greeks, there were temple
prostitutes, and so here in Corinth you had this decidedly unJewish
living out of the story! There were wild parties, fornication and all
sorts of wild things happening. So Paul is kind of ranting at them here,
saying clean up your act, this is not what church should be about. Now,
again, we have to remember that Paul himself is a human, this is not
the word of God. This is the word of a first-century male, and he is
writing in a patriarchy, and he is writing to a culture that he finds
loathsome as a Jew. He grew up with Leviticus, where youre supposed
to be mindful of everything you did, with rigid rules about everything
they did. And although he railed against the Pharisees for doing that,
he was also offended by the Greeks who had thrown all of those rules
out - "Do what you want, lets party, let's blast!" So, here he
is trying to reign in what has become a little too Greek for him. He
also says that women shouldn't speak at church, and he seems to support
slavery in one passage. Again, do we need to accept that? Of course
not, it's ludicrous.
THE TURNING:
I wonder if we can end this by talking about where Christ himself would
stand on this. Christ to my knowledge doesn't say anything about homosexuality
or homosexual acts. However, he does say quite a lot about judgment
and whether human beings should be judging each other.
DINOVO:
Christ basically says, 'judge not' . That sums it all up, 'judge not'.
Love thy neighbor as yourself. Well, your neighbor in an adulterer,
your neighbor is a fornicator, your neighbor is a homosexual. This is
your neighbor. Who do you think your neighbor is? Sometimes your neighbor
is your enemy, this is the person you must love as yourself. Your neighbor
is not the person who looks just like you and thinks just like you.
So, in light of
that, what does it mean to love your neighbor? Does it mean to judge
them, to harass them? To force them to change to become more like you?
Absolutely not. Does it also mean to accept everything that your neighbor
is doing? Not that either, because clearly, at some point, one draws
the line. Jesus drew the line many times. He drew the line at stoning
the adulterous woman. He made declarations in terms of justice. Certainly
when you look at his ministry, it is based on justice and love.
So what is Christ
calling us to do in a situation? And that's the great question for a
Christian. And it is a question, it's not a pat answer, it's a real
question. Every situation is a little bit different, so we can't always
rush in with pat answers, the way the church is wont to do. There's
all sorts of reasons. The Church has been an agent of patriarchy and
that doesn't die overnight. One can quickly see, if youre a feminist
at all, why you wouldn't want adultery or sleeping with homosexuals.
In a patriarchy, whether in the 1st century or in Genesis,
you want the bloodline to be clear, and you want property to be passed
along. Follow the money. And that's where this comes from, it's an overlay
over what's holy in the Bible.
THE TURNING:
I saw a man on CNN the other night who is the father of a homosexual
son, and this issue had split his family in two. His son was no longer
welcome in the house, he said with apparent sincerity that he loves
his son, as all fathers do. However, he felt his son's homosexual lifestyle
was endangering the young man's soul. He couldnt stand by as a
father and look aside. What advice would you give that father in light
of your reading of the Bible?
DINOVO:
I always find it interesting that Christians can read the passages about
not judging and then immediately do exactly that. I would immediately
call the father's attention back to his own life, his own lifestyle,
who he really is, and what he really did. In the same way as Jesus said,
it's not even what you do, it's what you think. Okay, let's look at
your thoughts now, and see if there's any sin there. And if there is
any sin there, you had better pack up your stones and go home. To be
biblical about it, he is judging, whether he wants to admit to it or
not. And that is what all people do who hurt their own children. I mean,
how horrible is that, to turn away from your own child, how unbiblical
is that? So, is it loving, is it just? One would think as a community
that is sitting together, praying together, that one would say no, it
is neither loving nor just.
THE TURNING:
From a parental perspective, we try to instill rules that our kids can
live by, and many, many people look to the Bible as essentially a rule
book, what behaviours are allowed or not. But what you've just said
could be interpreted as ' you know what, anything goes, just love your
kids through it.'
DINOVO:
Well, the thrust of the bible is anti-morality. People are always aghast
at that, but that is exactly what it is. Certainly, the thrust of Jesus'
ministry is against the morality of his day. He breaks just about every
rule, including the commandments. He works on Sunday, and he calls for
us all to stand on the side of the marginalized. And to be welcoming
to everyone. Now, look at how the church is actually marginalizing people.
Look at gays and lesbians, they are so marginbalized, we've forced them
to start their own church. And women have been marginalized for millennia.
Then you've got to ask are we really being faithful, are we really being
biblical? That would be the way to approach it. And then, when you look
at your own children and your own life, you ask yourself: ' how am I
living my life now? Am I living it with a profound and deep ethicality
that is not just what ruling class morality says I should do? Am I standing
up for the downtrodden? Am I welcoming the marginalized, am I welcoming
everyone? Those to me are the overriding ethical demands placed upon
us by Christ, and upon our children.
That doesn't mean
that everything goes - absolutely not. It means you are always working
for justice. There is always a struggle to be involved in, and there
is always someone to be stood up for, and that shifts, of course, depending
on the context. But that's always where you should stand. In terms of
your own personal ethicality and morality, that comes to play very nicely
to, which is to say, 'who's hurt, who's bleeding in my life right now?'
There's the call of Christ to you, to stand with the wounded. That's
what's important. Sexual ethics, every kind of ethics comes from that
same place. And keep in mind: we will never, never be perfect. This
is the great 'joy' of original sin ( laughs), we are always going to
be separate from God and Christ. This is the great lie of Gnosticism,
the great lie of the prophets of perfection. We're never going to be
there, nobody is. How dare anyone set themselves up as holy over us,
to say that youre worse than I am. That's the most unchristian
attitude I can possibly imagine. If someone passes themselves off as
holy and enlightened, run the other way and hold onto your wallet! They're
charlatans for sure.
If you liked this
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Links and
Resources
Many of
these web sites contain articles explaining how the Bible does not condemn
homosexuality. Please contact us if you know of other useful resources.
Christiangays.com is a site
which affirms homosexuality as a valid alternative lifestyle supported
by enlightened ACCURATE interpretation of the Bible.
Equal Marriage For Same-Sex Couples :
www.samesexmarriage.ca
Gay
South Africa : The Bible & Homosexuality
Let The Truth Set
us Free: a web site which takes a detailed look at each of the six
portions of the Bible that deal with homosexuality. Finds that many
of the condemnations of homosexuality have misuderstood scripture due
to poor translations or quotes have been lifted out of context. Includes
a downloadable book. http://www.TruthSetsFree.net/bar2.html
