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Help for moving ahead

Food for reflection and discernment on moving to a more welcoming church
page 3

We promised to provide the contents of the Summer 2008 issue of Network News in html format, along with the regular PDF version which is already posted here.

Click here for a list of all the contents of this issue, with links to each of the articles.

And if you have comments or suggestions for more material that we might provide here, please send a note!

Biblicism:
Protestantism’s Distinctive Form of Idolatry

Paul E. Capetz
[Posted here on 10-3-08]

Paul E. Capetz

Those of us who work with a progressive or liberal under- standing of Protestantism and the Reformed tradition are always being criticized by fundamentalists and conservative evangelicals for our alleged lack of fidelity to what the Bible teaches. In the pressing issue of homosexuality that divides our denomination as well as the other mainline denominations into two warring camps, the constant refrain on the lips of those opposing any revision of inherited sexual ethics is that homosexual practice violates "the clear teaching of scripture."

Since I am not only a liberal Protestant theologian in the Reformed tradition, but also a gay man who has experienced at first hand the effects of this ecclesial battle in his personal and professional life, I have given a great deal of thought to the question of a proper and an improper use of the Bible in theology and ethics. After observing the Presbyterians engaged in battle for thirty years (from the 1978 General Assembly in San Diego that issued the first "authoritative interpretation" pertinent to the question of the ordination of gay persons, to the 2008 General Assembly in San Jose that swept away all such previous authoritative interpretations), I have concluded that our church is plagued by a form of idolatry that is distinctive to Protestantism, namely, "Biblicism."

Biblicism approaches the Bible as an unquestionable authority, presumably on account of its divine inspiration or authorship. I say this is idolatry because it treats the Bible as though it weren’t really a human document at all but a compendium of the divine opinions. Hence, to disagree with the biblical writers in any way is to oppose the very Word of God. But I call this form of idolatry distinctively Protestant since it differs from the forms of idolatry that characterize the other major forms of Christianity. Whereas Eastern Orthodoxy claims to have an unbroken tradition going back to the apostles that can never be revised, Roman Catholicism identifies the true church with an institution headed by the Roman pontiff who claims the authority to speak infallibly as Christ’s vicar on earth. It may be easier for Protestants to see the idolatry in these other forms of Christianity while failing to recognize idolatry in our own midst.

Let me illustrate this from my experience at the special meeting of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area convened on January 26, 2008 to vote upon my request to be restored to ordained status while declaring a scruple against a vow of celibacy. One of the things that struck me was that there were no actual ethical arguments put forward by conservatives as to why we should rationally consider homosexuality to be immoral. No one argued a traditional Roman Catholic argument about the natural law or appealed to modern psychology and science to suggest that these sources lead one to treat homosexuality as some sort of pathology.

All we were given was a simple appeal to the Bible, which is to say nothing but an appeal to authority. That’s what Biblicism is, a sheer appeal to biblical authority that is designed to shut down the possibility of rational theological and ethical debate. Now, if our denomination were a fundamentalist denomination that took this line with respect to every issue facing it, such Biblicism would at least be consistent with standard practice. But this is not how we have historically used the Bible. (Jack Rogers’ historical studies of the use of both the Bible and the Confessions are superb in this respect and deserve more attention than they have yet received.)

What most astonished me was to see how many ordained women voted against my restoration on the grounds of biblical authority alone. Do these women not remember the argument of those who opposed the ordination of women? It was exactly the same as that put forward against accepting the moral legitimacy of homosexuality: "But the Bible says…." When I raised this inconsistency with one woman, who is a recent graduate of Princeton Seminary and now a minister in this presbytery, she denied that the statements found in the Pauline epistles had any bearing on the question of women’s ordination and even hazarded the statement: "If I thought Paul would be opposed to me being a minister, I would give up my ordination." Aside from the fact that this is such an obviously self-serving reading of the passages in scripture dealing with women, I was dumbfounded that she would grant to the apostle Paul – a finite, historically conditioned, and even sinful human being like the rest of us – the ultimate authority to determine whether it was good and right for the church to ordain women. Her statement is an utter denial of the fact that in deciding for the ordination of women, the church set aside those passages used by opponents of women’s ordination as no longer having binding authority on us anymore. Paul’s opinions are not the views of God!

A hypothetical example crossed my mind. Let’s imagine that a pastor, opposed to homosexuality on biblical grounds, has a woman in his congregation whose husband beats her up every night. This woman confides to her pastor that she is seeking a divorce in order to escape the abuse. Now what is this biblically-based pastor going to say to his parishioner? "No, you can’t divorce your abusive husband because the only exception admitted by Jesus to his absolute prohibition of divorce is the sexual infidelity of your spouse." I seriously doubt that any conservative or evangelical pastor in our denomination would take that stand today, and yet it is "the clear teaching of scripture" (Matt. 19:9).

When I was accused of not taking scripture seriously, I read a statement made by an Episcopal bishop who defended his advocacy of slavery with these words: "If it were a matter to be determined by personal sympathies, tastes, or feelings, I should be as ready as any man to condemn the institution of slavery, for all my prejudices of education, habit, and social position stand entirely opposed to it. But as a Christian … I am compelled to submit my weak and erring intellect to the authority of the Almighty." If ever there were an argument against Biblicism, this is it. God gave this bishop a mind and a conscience to determine what is right and wrong, good and evil. He knew that slavery was wrong but, instead of following his conscience, he abandoned it for the sake of an uncritical, indeed idolatrous use of the Bible. After reading this passage, I wondered aloud how God will judge this man on the Last Day.

Biblicism is the distinctive form of idolatry in Protestantism because, while it purports to be a continuation of the Reformers’ sola scriptura (scripture alone), it actually fails to attend to the nuances of the Reformers’ own use of the Bible in the sixteenth century. The Reformers frequently called the Bible "the Word of God," not because they had abandoned their intellects or reasoning capacities when approaching it, but rather because the Bible is the original, and hence classic, witness to the gospel – and the gospel alone is the Word of God in the strict and proper sense. For them, it was not the Bible per se that is the Word of God but the gospel to which the Bible bears testimony and that bestows on scripture its normative status. Furthermore, careful study of the Reformers more than amply illustrates that their commitment to biblical authority was no anti-intellectual Biblicism but, instead, represented a serious commitment to a theological wrestling with the message of the gospel to be found therein, precisely so that they might reshape (i.e. reform) both the practice and the doctrine of their contemporary churches.

Ironically, the rhetoric of the conservative opponents of homosexuality in these past thirty years has only served to obscure and falsify the true heritage of the very Reformed tradition they so badly want to claim for themselves. For if Luther and Calvin appealed to the Bible to criticize the forms of idolatry they claimed to find in medieval Catholicism, they certainly had no intention of setting up a new form of idolatry in its place based on the Bible. It is sad when a church loses touch with the proper use and purpose of the Bible in its own tradition. It is now up to those of us who are progressives or liberals to see if we can help the church recover its authentic heritage, including how the Bible is supposed to be used in contemporary theology and ethics. God alone is to be worshipped, not the Bible.

 

The author:

The Rev. Dr. Paul E. Capetz is Professor of Historical Theology at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities.

A reader comments:

The Paul Capetz article is in the true spirit of Semper Reformanda.  May it be heard loud and clear.

-- Bill Yolton

Bill Yolton is a long-time leader in the Presbyterian Peace Fellowship, and also (we're glad to say) a long-time member of the Witherspoon Society.

If you would like to add comments
or thoughts of your own,
please send a note
to be shared here!

What Does the Bible Tell Us?

by the Rev. Tricia Dykers Koenig, for the Covenant Network.

Tricia Dykers Koenig wrote this brief essay over a decade ago for More Light Presbyterians, who still have it available on their web site.

More and more biblical scholars and other Christians are convinced that the Holy Spirit, speaking through the Scriptures, is calling the church to full inclusion of gay and lesbian persons. A few of the reasons:

Reading in literary and historical context: The texts often used to condemn homosexual practice were not dealing with the issues we address today - the morality of responsible sexual expression between persons who are gay or lesbian in their sexual orientation. The Bible condones sexual practices that the church today rejects, such as polygamy, concubinage, and levirate marriage (Deuteronomy 25:5); it condemns some practices the church now allows, such as intercourse during menstruation and remarriage following divorce. To be faithful today, we must try to understand the principles underlying specific biblical provisions, and seek to apply those principles to our circumstances.

The over-arching themes of Scripture: A major theme of the Old Testament is exodus - liberation from bondage and oppression. The prophets continually called for justice. The story of the early church is a history of breaking down barriers that divide people from each other and give some people status over others. Paul insisted that faith in Jesus Christ, not adherence to a set of legal requirements, constitutes membership in the Christian community.

The witness of Jesus Christ: Jesus consistently welcomed, indeed sought out, persons who were labeled outcast by his society. Criticized himself as a lawbreaker, he challenged self-righteousness, judgmentalism, and legalism, making it clear that the purpose of the Law is the protection of human welfare; human beings are not made to keep the Law regardless of its detrimental effects on the well-being of people (Mark 2:23-3:6). Jesus summarized the Law as loving God with one’s whole being, and loving one’s neighbor as oneself.

The rule of love: Even though it is not intended as such by Christians of goodwill, the presumption that homosexual behavior is always wrong does great damage to many, including some who have never engaged in it: young people unable to will or pray away the attraction they’ve been taught is evil (even if they don’t act on their feelings, they may still grow up with self-loathing); parents despairing about where they "went wrong," when the explanation for anyone’s sexual orientation is still a mystery; relationships torn apart by rejection; families which are not whole due to the dishonesty of remaining hidden in the closet. The taboo against homosexuality can lead to loneliness, both overt and subtle discrimination, and even verbal and physical violence.

"Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law." Romans 13:10

The New Testament abolition of categories of "clean" and "unclean": In the Torah’s Holiness Code, homosexual practice is a matter of uncleanness, along with eating blood and other dietary restrictions, contact with bodily discharges, wearing certain fabrics, and other prohibitions. Jesus challenged his culture and religion’s focus on ritual cleanness by associating with women, lepers, "outcasts and sinners" (see also Mark 7). Jesus laid the foundation for the distinction between moral law - that which pertains to the rule of love - and purity law - which is culturally conditioned. The Book of Acts relates the early church’s struggle to appropriate this principle. A good example is in Acts 10-11: Peter learns through a vision and an encounter with a Gentile, Cornelius, that "what God has called clean, you must not call profane." Witnessing the gift of the Holy Spirit to those his tradition has considered unclean, Peter concludes: "If then God gave them the same gift that God gave us when we believed in the Lord Jesus Christ, who was I that I could hinder God?"

An understanding of celibacy as a spiritual gift: The biblical witness reflects a variety of acceptable patterns of relationship outside of "marriage between one man and one woman," including polygamy and concubinage. In the New Testament, Paul asserts that celibacy is preferred to marriage, but acknowledges it as a particular kind of gift from God, not given to all (I Corinthians 7:7-9). Churches which require life-long celibacy consider it a special vocation, and endeavor to provide support for those who freely choose such a course. The Reformed tradition, following Luther and Calvin, affirms the goodness of human sexual intimacy and repudiates the requirement of celibate clergy. Requiring celibacy of gays and lesbians does not deprive them of sexual expression alone, but of the opportunity for relationships which are emotionally and spiritually intimate as well.

Valuing relationship and community: The creation stories in Genesis 1 and 2 are descriptions of the predominant pattern of male-female relationships, and affirmations of it; it is an unnecessary leap to insist that an affirmation of one pattern is a prohibition of all others. A person can be fully male or female, and made in God’s image, without relating sexually to someone of the other sex. The values being honored in Genesis 1-2 are relationship and community, not a specific form of relationship. Condemning persons to loneliness because they cannot fit into the predominant pattern is a violation of the spirit of the Scripture. It is ironic that Jesus’ quotation of Genesis in Matthew 19 is often used to justify a continued prohibition of homosexual relationships, when Jesus used Genesis to prohibit divorce - a heterosexual practice for which the church has changed its policies and biblical interpretations.

The use of experience: The church has changed its understanding of God’s will many times over the centuries, as knowledge and experience and the working of the Holy Spirit have provided new perspectives. In so doing, the church has been following in the tradition of Scripture itself, which reflects the changing understandings of God’s people as they experienced God in their lives in a variety of circumstances. Because of his experience of the Risen Christ, Saul fundamentally changed his understanding of what it meant to be related to God. The Jerusalem Council listened to the experience of Peter and of Barnabas and Paul in deciding on new standards of Christian faithfulness (Acts 15). When the church listens to the witness of its gay and lesbian members, and observes the evidence of the Holy Spirit in their lives, it is continuing the process that is demonstrated in Scripture itself.

Salvation by grace: All persons stand before God equally in need of forgiveness and reconciliation. We are loved and accepted by God not on our own merits, but because of God’s free decision in Christ.

"For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord." Romans 8:38-39
 

For further reading: Presbyterian Understanding and Use of Holy Scripture: Position Statement adopted by the 123rd General Assembly (1983) of the Presbyterian Church in the United States. DMS order #OGA-92-003. This statement is now available online.  It is 43 pages, easily printable in PDF format.

 

The author:

The Rev. Tricia Dykers Koenig is National Organizer for the Covenant Network.

Seeking to be Faithful Together:

Guidelines for Presbyterians During Times of Disagreement

[posted here 10-9-08]

As Presbyterians, we are called to work for the "peace, unity and purity of the Church" (Book of Order) as we seek to be faithful to God’s work in the world. However, disagreements and conflicts are inevitable in the life of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) as we try to be faithful.

They exist within committees, congregations, presbyteries, synods, at General Assemblies and in the national life of the denomination.

Conflicts are inevitable in all of life and certainly in the church. The history of the church is filled with conflicts and disagreements. Several of Paul’s letters address the conflicts which were common in the early church. There have been and are going to be disagreements as Christians attempt to discern God’s work in the world and as we interpret scripture.

Conflicts can be harmful and even destructive. They can cause individuals a great deal of pain and the community of faith immeasurable damage. Congregations have been divided; denominations have experienced schisms.

At the same time, conflicts can be an opportunity for new insights, learning, and individual and corporate growth.  Disagreements can illuminate a topic in helpful ways and can present solutions to problems which previously had not been seen. The successful resolution of conflict can also bind people together in a powerful way.

The Bible contains many stories of conflict and disagreement and much advice about how they can be addressed. As those stories indicate, God is already present wherever there is brokenness, granting wholeness and peace. God promises to be with us in times of disagreement and calls us to reconciliation, trust, love and forgiveness.

We realize that our perspectives are limited, so to help us affirm each other, enhance our community, stay open to the viewpoints of others and be sensitive to cultural diversity, we commit ourselves to the Guidelines in a spirit of prayer, trust, and love, seeking the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

Adopted by the 204th General Assembly (1992) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

 

 

In a spirit of trust and love, we promise we will…

Give them a hearing … listen before we answer

John 7:51 and Proverbs 18:13

1 Treat each other respectfully so as to build trust, believing that we all desire to be faithful to Jesus the Christ;

• we will keep our conversations and communications open for candid and forthright exchange,

• we will not ask questions or make statements in a way which will intimidate or judge others.

2 Learn about various positions on the topic of disagreement.

3 State what we think we heard and ask for clarification before responding, in an effort to be sure we understand each other.

Speak the truth in love

Ephesians 4:15

4 Share our concerns directly with individuals or groups with whom we have disagreements in a spirit of love and respect in keeping with Jesus’ teachings.

5 Focus on ideas and suggestions instead of questioning people’s motives, intelligence or integrity;

• we will not engage in name-calling or labelling of others prior to, during, or following the discussion.

6 Share our personal experiences about the subject of disagreement so that others may more fully understand our concerns.

Maintain the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace

Ephesians 4:3

7 Indicate where we agree with those of other viewpoints as well as where we disagree.

8 Seek to stay in community with each other though the discussion may be vigorous and full of tension;

• we will be ready to forgive and be forgiven.

9 Follow these additional guidelines when we meet in decision-making bodies:

• urge persons of various points of view to speak and promise to listen to these positions seriously;

• seek conclusions informed by our points of agreement;

• be sensitive to the feelings and concerns of those who do not agree with the majority and respect their rights of conscience;

• abide by the decision of the majority, and if we disagree with it and wish to change it, work for that change in ways which are consistent with these Guidelines.

10 Include our disagreement in our prayers, not praying for the triumph of our viewpoints, but seeking God’s grace to listen attentively, to speak clearly, and to remain open to the vision God holds for us all.

Adopted by the 204th General Assembly (1992) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) for use by sessions and congregations

For a more complete version of these guidelines in easy-to-print PDF format, click here.

A shorter version is available in print versions from Presbyterian Distribution Service:

bulletIn English, the PDS # is 7027006033.
bulletThe Spanish version is PDS #24358-07-011.
Assembly moves forward on Heidelberg

by John E. Harris
[posted here 10-9-08]

In the Spring 2008 issue of Network News, I reviewed overtures to the General Assembly that requested a more historically faithful, honest, and accurate translation of the Heidelberg Catechism than the one currently in the Book of Confessions. The good news is that the Assembly voted 436-280-11 to initiate the process to revise the Heidelberg Catechism. The bad news is that in my article I failed accurately to attribute ideas and analysis related to problems with the current translation of the Catechism. Christopher Elwood, Professor of Historical Theology at Louisville Seminary, originally provided those ideas in memoranda he wrote in 1997 and 1998. I included some of his analysis more or less verbatim and without attribution, an oversight for which I am sorry. His original important, insightful and informative 1997 and 1998 memoranda may be accessed on this website.

As reported by Bed Daniel in the June 24 edition of the General Assembly News, "After nearly seven hours of conversation, occasional confusion and spirited debate, a sharply divided Committee on Theological Issues and Institutions approved Overture 13-06 from Newark Presbytery, voting by a margin of 33 to 26 (with two abstentions) to ask the 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) to make five changes to the 1962 translation of the Heidelberg Catechism which since 1967 has been used in The Book of Confessions of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)." In spite the committee’s 54% to 46% approval of the Newark overture and a minority report, nearly 60% of GA commissioners approved the committee’s report.

As the June 27 edition of the General Assembly News noted: "The most emotionally charged overture from the Theological Issues and Institutions Committee came from the Presbytery of Newark asking the 218th General Assembly ‘to correct translation problems in five responses of the Heidelberg Catechism as found in The Book of Confessions and to add the original Scripture texts of the German Heidelberg Catechism.’ After hearing much information and debate, and defeating a minority report, the Assembly approved the overture to initiate the process to revise the Heidelberg Catechism by a vote of 436-280-11."

A Special committee will now be appointed by GA Moderator Bruce Reyes-Chow to study the recommended changes and bring back a proposal to the next General Assembly. If the 219th Assembly approves the proposal it will be sent to the presbyteries for an up or down vote. If two-thirds of the presbyteries vote to restore the Catechism, the proposed restoration will be brought to the 220th GA, a majority of which must approve the restoration in order for the amendment to take effect.

As might be expected, conservatives have reacted negatively to attempts to correct translation problems with the Heidelberg Catechism. For example, Dr. Robert Gagnon, a faculty member at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary and a member of the Board of the Presbyterian Coalition, has argued that the real reason behind attempts to correct the translation problems is, in Gagnon’s words, "a homosexualist agenda" rather than "translation purity." In his argument he notes that "four Presbyterian theology professors have negatively critiqued proposals for correcting translation problems." He fails to acknowledge, however, that thirty-two other faculty members of Presbyterian seminaries who teach theology and church history expressed their support for the overtures, asking the General Assembly to provide for a better translation of the Heidelberg Catechism. While our Book of Confessions ought not to be revised based on opinion alone, thirty-two informed opinions would seem to outweigh four, any day of the week.

 

 

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