Drawing lines in the aisle
Sexuality isn’t a matter of plumbing. If it was plumbing, then
same-sex relationships would not be an issue for the church. In the
Genesis account of creation (Chapter 1), we are told that:
1) We are created in God’s image.
2) It took two different creatures to represent God ... one female
and one male. God’s image is reflected in our sexuality. It is only
in the union of these images that we can fully represent the complete
image of God. Women reflect perspectives and emotions that are found
in God, but not in men and vice versa.
3) God is spirit and has no sex, but the characteristics we call
masculine and feminine are found in him (Note: We use the masculine
pronouns and “Father” in following Jesus’ example, not because we
believe God is male). He is glorified in the presentation of him
through our images/sexuality to the world. The image is not merely
internal. Our sexual plumbing is an external picture of internal
reality, meaning your soul has the same sex as your body.
We get into dangerous waters when we try to separate the two
realities, the body and the spirit. Scripture does not support such a
distinction. We are complete beings, body and spirit integrated. In
separating the two, we give people the false impression that the
distinctions are unrelated. The integrity of our creation is
violated. It encourages people to live lives during the week (body)
completely devoid of who they are when they attend their religious
services (spirit). We begin to hear politicians say things like,
“That’s my private life, it has nothing to do with my ability to
lead.”
There is no integrity between soul and body. Again, our Scriptures
do not make those distinctions. The link between the spirit and the
body is not meant to be severed, theologically or physically. The
separation of them is what we call death. When the images are
combined, God gives us a tiny bit of creative power in the ability to
produce another life in his image.
In the end, a monogamous female/male relationship is not promoted
because some ancient prophet decided it was the relationship he most
felt comfortable with, but because the family unit, beginning with
the union of the male and female images of God, is meant to be an
earthly representation of God himself. Look at some of the most
demeaning issues in our society: rape, incest, molestation, divorce,
etc.
Men are raised hearing the lie that they are not man enough. Women
hear the lies that they are not feminine enough. All of these are
spiritual attacks on the image of God as it is represented in the
bodies of humanity. When the family is destroyed, then it has no
power to represent God on Earth.
Same-sex marriage to me is not an issue of rights, it is an issue
of vital theology.
RIC OLSEN
Senior Associate Pastor,
Harbor Trinity Church
Costa Mesa
From an Islamic perspective, homosexual behavior is condemned in
the strongest terms. Such behavior is considered unnatural, immoral
and uncivilized. Sex, within the limits of marriage -- between a man
and woman -- is considered as a blessing, reward and a contribution
to the betterment of society from God.
IMAM MOUSTAFA AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Each person is called to realize and express his or her Buddha
nature -- True Self -- whether gay or straight. There is nothing in
the Zen tradition to prohibit or disparage same sex orientation,
sexual activities, relationships or marriages.
In marriage, both partners commit to practice with the joys and
challenges of relationship as a means of growing in compassion and
wisdom, regardless of whether they are of the same or different sex.
As one highly regarded American Zen teacher Robert Aitken puts it,
“The practice of marriage is the lifetime cultivation of intimacy.”
I recall the excellent example provided by my own teacher, then in
her 70s, as she matter-of-factly officiated at a lesbian wedding
perhaps 12 years ago, following the same rites she used in
heterosexual weddings.
The precept of “not misusing sex” applies to all, freeing us from
attachment to self-centered encounters for personal power, and from
harming others. Each person’s practice of meditation guides her or
his behavior in relationships.
In sharp contrast, the Dalai Lama, leader of one lineage of
Tibetan Buddhism, states in his “Core Teachings of Tibetan Buddhism”
that “sexual misconduct” for a man includes a sexual act performed
with another man. He also states that both the mouth and anus are
“unsuitable” body parts for sexual activity, whether male or female.
I find it disappointing that his global promotion of peace and human
rights has not included equal rights and dignity for women and for
gay people.
THE REV. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
I believe that same-sex unions can achieve the same level of
fidelity and stability as heterosexual unions -- that is what I am
afraid of!
The institution of marriage in modern society has a dubious record
of constancy and the creating of healthy relationships. I see the
attitudes and behavior of men and women married to one another as the
greater danger to the institution of marriage. Homosexual unions do
not threaten the traditional model of marriage as much as adultery,
serial marriage, desertion, spousal abuse, emotional cruelty and
verbal violence.
My marriage would flourish and be secure no matter how many
same-sex “marriages” were recognized by the various states. Still,
Judaism does not allow that homosexual unions could possibly be
accorded the same level of legitimacy as marriage between a man and a
woman. For Judaism, there simply is no such category as marriage
between two men or two women. Further, there is no “right” to marry.
There is no right to marry more than one partner at a time or to
marry an immediate member of one’s own family.
As a Rabbi, I would not agree to officiate at a “marriage”
ceremony between homosexuals. This is because I would then legitimize
homosexual marriage as much an ideal as heterosexual marriage.
“Marriage” can only refer to the full commitment between a man and a
woman, for if marriage means everything, it will ultimately come to
mean nothing.
In the view of Jewish tradition, homosexual practices are
condemned as morally objectionable. Society must have some formal
expression of approval or disapproval in certain areas of fundamental
moral concern. There is not one classical Jewish source that
justifies same-sex “marriages,” for they are contrary to the letter
and spirit of Jewish belief. A homosexual “marriage” is immaterial
under Jewish law because it cannot, by definition, be classified as a
Jewish marriage.
This conclusion, that same-sex “marriage” is counterfeit, is based
on thousands of years of moral teaching and insight. Where there is a
basic confusion between tolerance of everything and moral judgment,
Judaism clearly stands with traditional morality.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
“The Celebration and Blessing of a Marriage” in the Book of Common
Prayer begins, “Dearly beloved: We have come together in the presence
of God to witness and bless the joining together of this man and this
woman in Holy Matrimony.”
Sacramentally, marriage is the union in heart, body and mind of a
man and a woman. Certainly, a woman and a man should come to their
religious institution for “the celebration and blessing” of their
marriage in the presence of God and their family and friends only
after they have made the commitment to live together in a covenantal,
lifelong relationship.
Clearly, persons of the same gender make covenantal commitments in
lifelong relationships as well. Religious institutions are struggling
with whether such relationships between persons for whom marriage has
not been an option can be celebrated and blessed and, if not, why,
and if so, how?
Civil institutions are struggling with the “whys” and “hows” of
offering legal rights/benefits of marriage (inheritance, insurance
and much more) to couples of the same gender. From a religious
perspective, the bottom line is that we are each-and-all beloved
children of God and heirs of God’s dominion in which (in words from
“The Celebration and Blessing of a Marriage”) estrangement is
overcome by unity, guilt is healed by forgiveness and despair is
conquered by joy.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
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