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Re-Imagining Marriage, Gender & Confronting the Religious Violence of Defending Marriage

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Friday, March 27 2009 @ 07:02 PM by Michael Adee
More Light Presbyterians is wholeheartedly committed to spiritual, ordination and marriage equality.  While we are fully engaged in the national ratification campaign for the 218th General Assembly's Ordination Amendment 08-B which offers spiritual and ordination equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Presbyterians, achievements toward marriage equality are being made in civil society. 
 
In recent days, the New Hampshire House of Representatives voted to approve legislation that would allow same-sex couples to marry by a 186-179 vote and the Vermont State Senate voted 26-4 to approve pro-marriage equality legislation. 
 
The Presbyterian Church (USA)'s long-standing commitments to non-discrimination in civil society based upon sexual orientation in addition to our long history of social justice should indeed instruct and inspire support for marriage equality in civil society and cause us to re-think a characterization of marriage between "a man and woman" that does not match God's creation. 

In addition to sending Ordination Amendment 08-B for ratification, the 218th General Assembly commended the study of marriage.  Marriage, from both a church and state perspective, is a faith conversation that merits much more thoughtful and faithful attention than simply declaring that "marriage is between a man and a woman."  Defending that narrow understanding and proscription of marriage is an act of spiritual violence and civil injustice. 
 
To help all of us understand that "defending marriage" does not advance thoughtful or faithful conversations about love, sexual ethics and marriage and it actually results in spiritual or religious violence, I recommend Professor Jon Pahl's recent article from the website of the University of Chicago's Divinity School.  His article is pasted below.  Jon Pahl is Professor of the History of Christianity in North America at The Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia.
 
56 Presbyteries have voted for Amendment 08-B with many traditionally-supportive presbyteries yet to vote!   Have Faith.  Continue praying.  Keep working. 
 
with hope and grace,
Michael
 
PS -- Special thanks to Bruce Hahne, recent National MLP Board Member and Elder, First Presbyterian Church, Palo Alto, CA, a More Light Church for number-crunching and analysis of trends so far for Amendment 08-B -- go to http://yeson08b.blogspot.com/
 
Michael J. Adee, M.Div., Ph.D., Executive Director & Field Organizer
More Light Presbyterians, 369 Montezuma Avenue # 447, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 USA (505) 820-7082, michaeladee@aol.com, www.mlp.org
 
Answering God's Call to Serve!  YES on 08-B Campaign
For resources, stories, presbytery vote tally, and news from More Light Presbyterians
YES on 08-B Campaign go to http://www.mlp.org/answeringgodscall
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The University of Chicago Divinity School
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Sightings

March 12, 2009

The Religious Violence of "Defending Marriage"

— Jon Pahl

A recent article in The Atlantic and recently released Lutheran documents give good reasons to revisit the status of gays and lesbians across American society.  Unfortunately, few commentators to date have addressed the most troubling development of the past few years:  the growth of DOMA Laws, or "Defense of Marriage Acts."  These laws are forms of religious violence.
 
The Federal Defense of Marriage Act, passed in 1996, stipulates that for the purpose of federal laws and operations, "the word 'marriage' means only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife."  According to domawatch.org - a website sponsored by supporters of these laws - thirty-seven states now have some form of DOMA Laws on the books.  The rationales for such defensive laws are often couched in neutral, "secular", or "naturalist" language.  But the move to establish such laws came from religious groups, notably conservative Protestants, Catholics, and Mormons.  And the logic and appeal of these laws also originates in religion, and functions as a form of violence.  Six theses can clarify the contours of the religious violence embedded in these laws.
           
1)  DOMA Laws violate sacred texts.  Many of the arguments against gay and lesbian civil unions or marriage appeal to biblical texts from Genesis, Leviticus, Romans, or I Corinthians.  But such arguments impose upon the texts a twentieth century understanding of sexual identity alien to the Jewish or Hellenistic cultures in which these texts arose. 
           
2)  DOMA Laws elevate heterosexual marriage to idolatrous status.  In some communities of faith, defending "marriage" has become all but an item of confessional status (it is absent from any historic Christian Confessions).  This arrogates to a majority - heterosexuals - special privileges (economic, social, and spiritual) not available to sexual minorities. 
           
3)  DOMA Laws scapegoat gays and lesbians.  As Rene Girard argues, scapegoating is a chief manifestation of religious violence.  It is difficult to see what real threat is posed to heterosexual intimacy, much less to civil society, by the desire of homosexuals for similar rights.  It is easy to see how DOMA laws organize consent over and against a relatively voiceless and powerless group.
           
4)  DOMA Laws sacrifice homosexual rights, and damage civil society, in the interest of religious purity.  One measure of the justice in any society is how well it cares for vulnerable members.  Sexual difference marks individuals as both vulnerable and "dangerous."  And as Mary Douglass showed, any "danger" against which a law must defend is invariably constructed around some purity interest.  DOMA Laws require gays and lesbians to sacrifice rights others take for granted, and render them subject to legalized forms of exclusion and discrimination.  They damage the deep trust that is the most important social practice in civil society. 
           
5)  DOMA Laws confuse legislation with religion, and violate the First Amendment, as Ann Pellegrini and Janet Jakobsen have argued.  It is entirely permissible (although ethically subject to scrutiny) for private communities to shape the boundaries of association in whatever ways members agree upon.  It is a violation of the First Amendment's protection of free association to inhibit by law some forms of association that pose no harm to the common good, and a violation of the freedom from an established religion when religiously-inspired exclusions are written into law.
           
6)  DOMA Laws perpetuate an association of sex with power, and thereby do damage to any sacramental sensibility that might remain in association with even heterosexual marriage.  As Hendrik Hartog and other historians have shown, marriages have shifted in the modern era from patriarchal patterns of coverture to social contracts in which couples seek mutual fulfillment.  Such contracts might be compatible with a sacramental sensibility, since they entail pledges of sexual fidelity and commitments to share social resources and responsibilities, along with (one might argue) other gifts of God.  DOMA Laws associate sexual fidelity with legislated forms of coercive power, and inhibit the deep trust and mutuality intrinsic to modern (and sacramental) marriage.  They establish hierarchies of relationships, and associate heterosexual unions (and sexual practices) with dominance.
           
DOMA Laws have been passed with the support and lobbying of religious groups.  Such laws point, unfortunately, to a deep tendency of religions to consolidate power through exclusion, as Miroslav Volf has so cogently shown; these laws have no rationale for their existence apart from that exclusion.  People who wish to "defend" corrosive influences on marriage - and I count myself as one - might actually find allies among gays and lesbians who desire public recognition for their pledges of fidelity and their commitments to share resources and responsibilities with one another.  A true defense of marriage would not involve mean-spirited exclusions, but would embrace practical policies that strengthen deep trust and support families facing economic challenges.
 
References:
 
Paul Elie's article in The Atlantic,"God, Grace, and Sex," is online as "The Velvet Reformation" at http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200903/archbishop-canterbury/2.
 
The Social Statement "Human Sexuality: Gift and Trust" and the ECLA's recommendations on ministry practices are online at http://www.elca.org/What-We-Believe/Social-Issues/Social-Statements-in-Process/JTF-Human-Sexuality.aspx.
 
Jon Pahl is Professor of the History of Christianity in North America at The Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia.  He recently edited and published An American Teacher:  Coming of Age and Coming Out, the Memoirs of Loretta Coller (Infinity Publishing, 2009).  

Source of article:  http://divinity.uchicago.edu/martycenter/publications/sightings/archive_2009/0312.shtml





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