It’s unfortunate when we become
so focused on the symptoms of a problem that we ignore its underlying causes. Some Christian rhetoric on same-sex marriage
has done precisely that and has failed as a result to transcend the dynamics of
conventional partisan politics. Instead of illuminating the unique glory of
the life-giving union of husband and wife as an icon of the Holy Trinity and of
the salvation of the world, the
defenders of traditional marriage often merely skim the surface of public morality. The fundamental problem isn’t that increasing
numbers of Americans approve of same-sex marriage; it’s that many Christians
and others have forgotten the holiness and unique vocation of the man-woman
relationship. Once we lose that key
link, the possibility of thinking coherently—and faithfully-- about human
sexuality is gone.
In order to
speak with integrity on marriage and family issues, we need first to take a
sober look at the failure of the churches to equip our members to embody
chastity and sexual purity, and thus to be a witness of holiness in stark
contrast to the moral corruption so pervasive in our culture and world. Especially
since the dawn of the sexual revolution, Christians have too often turned a
blind eye to promiscuity, pre-marital sex, serial divorce and remarriage, and a
hedonistic culture that excuses all things in the name of an individual’s pleasure
and self-defined happiness. No wonder
so many Americans seem to dismiss opposition to same-sex marriage as
self-righteous hypocrisy and arbitrary discrimination. Those who tolerate—and at times even seem to
condone—sex and cohabitation for unmarried men and women have little standing
to criticize the prospect of legal sanction for gay unions. If there is no visible difference between how
Christians and others handle these crucial life-shaping matters, why should
anyone take seriously what we have to say?
If we do not call heterosexuals to holiness, why all the bother about
the much smaller population of homosexuals?
Likewise,
we misdirect our energies when we speak of civil marriage in contemporary
America as though it were identical to Christian marriage. Something accomplished before a justice of
the peace and recorded at the court house impacts taxes, inheritance, and other
legal matters, but cannot turn water into wine as a sign of the Kingdom of
God. Holy matrimony does not simply
grant civil sanction to the broken union of Adam and Eve, but heals and blesses
their common life as a sign of the relationship between Christ and the
Church. It is a calling, not a right,
for anyone. Man and woman wear the crowns of the Kingdom as their love for one
another finds its true fulfillment in the Lord.
God created us male and female in the divine image and likeness, giving opposite-sex
couples the unique ability to bring forth new life from their own bodies out of
love for one another. Through this
blessed union, parents and children become an image of the Holy Trinity,
sharing a union of love that binds them together and enables them to learn to
love Christ in one another. By the
restoration of the primal unity of male and female in God, Christian marriage becomes
a sign of the salvation not merely of two individuals, but of all humanity and
of the creation itself. Perhaps that is
why our Savior so often used the image of a wedding feast for the Kingdom of
God.
Eastern
Orthodox Christianity believes that man and woman are not interchangeable bundles
of individual rights; instead, the two sexes play complementary roles in our common
salvation. Jesus Christ and the
Theotokos, the apostles and the myrrh bearing women, St. Macrina with her
brothers Sts. Basil and Gregory, and so many other examples from Scripture,
hymnody, icons, and the saints demonstrate the abiding mystery of the male-female
distinction and relationship in our pursuit of theosis. The same God who
creates us as male and female saves us in relationship to one another. Instead of abandoning biological distinctions
as though our bodies were irrelevant and the two sexes identical, we look to the
Lord, His Mother, and ongoing generations of holy men and women to teach us how
to live faithfully in relation to one another as male and female. We deal here with a great mystery, as the
Logos who spoke the world into existence also made us man and woman in the
divine image. The male Son rose from the
dead and ascended into heaven; and the female Mother who bore Him followed into
the Kingdom at her Dormition. Even in
the world to come, the distinction of man and woman will remain.
No, God does not
call everyone to marriage, not even all heterosexuals. Yes, He invites everyone to holiness; preserving
sexual intimacy for the blessed state of marriage between a man and a woman is
part of that calling, as the Church has taught consistently for two thousand
years. Nonetheless, holy people have—and continue
to—struggle with temptations of all kinds.
Through fasting and other forms of self-denial, nourishment by the Holy
Mysteries of the Church, participation in healthy friendships and communities,
and sincere confession and repentance when we stumble, all of us-- regardless
of sexual inclinations—find strength and healing to press forward to the high
calling that is ours in Christ Jesus. The
nature of one’s particular temptations is irrelevant; the point is to turn away
from them and live faithfully.
Christian
witness on these matters faces serious cultural challenges today. One hears that the growing support for
same-sex marriage reflects positive portraits of homosexuals on both the small
and the large screen, as well as the experience of knowing friends and family
members who are gay. Straight people are
apparently marrying at declining rates, while many gay couples enthusiastically
seek legal recognition of their unions.
Some people seem to be more impressed by the commitment of same-sex
partners to one another than by that of the married couples they know. Appeals to the equal rights of individuals
to the benefits of marriage, however defined, clinch the argument for many.
Until very recently, of course, no culture or
world religion recognized same-sex relationships as holy, or even legal,
matrimony. From the perspective of Orthodox Christianity the revisionist claims
distort the truth about what it means to be man and a woman in God’s image and
likeness. They endorse sexual expression
apart from the loving, covenanted unity of male-female difference that alone is
blessed to bring forth new life. They
respond to the desires of individuals in terms of the categories of the corrupt
world, not of the struggle of disciplining oneself in order to respond more
fully to the divine eros. Though
Christian and civil marriage are not identical, Orthodoxy will not embrace society’s
official redefinition of the fundamental nature of marriage contrary to what
God has established from the origins of the human race. The Church cannot bless same-sex unions as
marriages, for that is not what they are. Sacraments restore persons and their
relationships according to God’s original intention for us to be like Him; and
He created us male and female in His image toward the end of our salvation.
Contrary to
popular assumptions, this stance on marriage does not entail that we should
condemn, judge, or shun people who are in intimate relationships with members
of the same sex. Orthodox priests concern
themselves only with the sexual and other sins named in confession or with the
very rare scandalous situation that has to be addressed in the parish. And confession is not about condemnation,
but forgiveness, healing, and growth, regardless of the sin confessed. Like the rest of us, those who struggle with
same-sex attraction need guidance and support throughout their lives as they
progress in holiness. Yes, all really are
called to enter into the holiness of God, to become saints. A Church that
honors King David, Photini, Moses the Black, and Mary of Egypt can ask no
less. Like the Samaritan woman, all who suffer
disordered sexual passions are more likely to respond to genuine expressions of
compassion and respect that point them toward the living water that satisfies
at a level deeper than physical desire.
Yes, the Church must speak the truth about sexuality, but also about
pride, self-righteous judgment, hatred, and gossip. And given the Lord’s definition of adultery
in the Sermon on the Mount, none of us is in the position to look down upon others
for sexual sin. After all, who doesn’t
have disordered desires? And the vast
majority of sexual sin is surely between people of opposite sex. We must be very careful with our words.
In our current
cultural context, the witness of true Christian marriage simply must become visible,
vibrant, and robust, if it is to be taken seriously by mainstream culture. All the more is our need to be vigilant in
our parishes and families, in our friendships and neighborhoods and schools, in
our choices of entertainment and attire, to form ourselves in chastity both in
our bodily actions and the thoughts of our hearts. Of course, we never do that alone, but in
communion with the Church and with the support of fellow strugglers who want to
participate more fully in the divine nature.
The early
Christians impressed even the pagan Romans with their care for the dying and
their rescue of exposed infants. It’s
time for the current generation of Christians to impress our society with the
chaste love of man and woman as a sign of God’s covenantal fidelity in Jesus
Christ. There is no better response to
the challenges posed by the ongoing sexual revolution than the living icon of
Christian marriage—of Adam and Eve healed and blessed as they wear the crowns
of the Kingdom and bring new persons into the world out of their love for one
another. That’s how God intends life to
go on in His good creation. It’s
precisely the differences between male and female that make the union of
marriage life-giving, complementary, and a path to salvation. True marriage manifests the healing of our
humanity in the image of God as man and woman. Our challenge is not only to say words about
marriage, but to live them out in ways that draw others to Christ and His
Church. That’s the most fundamental
political action of the Christian community:
to embody a life that conquers death, that heals our broken, corrupt
humanity—body and soul, male and female. If we do that, we will address not just the
symptoms of the moral decay of our society, but also its underlying causes.
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