The Bishop of Liverpool, James Jones
(£), and Baptist minister Steve
Chalke have both recently come out in support of the church affirming
monogamous gay (sexual) partnerships.
James Jones says that gay partnerships
are among a number of major moral issues where ‘the church allows a large space
for a variety of nuances, interpretations, applications and disagreements’.
Steve Chalke has written a special liturgy for gay
partnerships that he has published on his Oasis charity website along
with a full ‘evangelical exegesis’ of his pro-gay stance (More here
and here).
The House of Bishops’ pastoral statement on civil
partnerships of July 2005 specifically precludes the clergy of the Church of
England from conducting services of blessing for those who have entered into a
civil partnership.
It states: ‘Clergy of the Church of England should not
provide services of blessing for those who register a civil partnership.’
Steve Clifford,
general director of the Evangelical Alliance (EA), has
said that he believes the conclusions Chalke has come to on same-sex
relationships are wrong. He has also expressed ‘sadness and disappointment’ at
the way Chalke, an EA member, ‘has not only distanced himself from the vast
majority of the evangelical community here in the UK, but indeed from the
Church across the world and 2,000 years of biblical interpretation’.
And yet both Justin Welby, the new archbishop of Canterbury,
and Steve Clifford seem committed to an ongoing dialogue with those with whom
they disagree. Welby has
called for the church to disagree ‘gracefully’ over gay marriage and
Clifford has
stressed that ‘as we have this discussion let's remember that Jesus
requires us to disagree without being disagreeable’.
Am I alone in finding this all rather disturbing?
To Jones and Chalke, the issue of whether or not one should
bless gay partnerships is a secondary issue on which evangelicals can
legitimately take different positions – in other words both views (acceptance and rejection of
gay partnerships) fall within the boundaries of evangelicalism.
Neither is
offering his resignation. This is particularly interesting given that the
Courage Trust resigned
from EA in 2002 when it decided to take the same position
on gay partnerships that Chalke is now espousing and affirming.
But it seems to me also that, in spite of Clifford’s and
Welby’s clear personal stance on the
issue (both take the orthodox position that the only context for sex is within
monogamous, heterosexual marriage), in practice they appear to regard gay
partnerships as being in the category of what Paul called ‘disputable matters’, issues (of the Romans 14 and 1 Corinthians 8 & 10 variety) on which
evangelical Christians can legitimately disagree and yet remain 'in fellowship'.
I say ‘in practice’ because they appear to be taking the
view that those who hold to and teach Jones’ and Chalke’s view on gay
partnerships should be debated with ‘gracefully’ and ‘agreeably’ rather than being
disciplined.
This approach seems to be at odds with EA's own official position which reads as follows (emphasis mine):
'We believe both habitual homoerotic sexual activity without repentance and public promotion of such activity are inconsistent with faithful church membership. While processes of membership and discipline differ from one church to another, we believe that either of these behaviours warrants consideration for church discipline'
This approach seems to be at odds with EA's own official position which reads as follows (emphasis mine):
'We believe both habitual homoerotic sexual activity without repentance and public promotion of such activity are inconsistent with faithful church membership. While processes of membership and discipline differ from one church to another, we believe that either of these behaviours warrants consideration for church discipline'
EA appears not to be abiding by its own policy but a far more important question is, 'Does ongoing 'gracious debate' square with what the Bible teaches?' I’m not at all
sure that it does.
The ‘one man, one woman, for life’ (marriage) context for
sexual relations of Genesis 2:24 is a creation ordinance for all mankind. Furthermore the
complementarity and permanence of the marriage relationship mirrors the complementarity and
permanence of Christ’s relationship with his body (and bride) the church
(Ephesians 5:22-33).
Old Testament teaching on sexuality (detailed in Leviticus
18 & 20) makes it very clear that the only proper context for sexual
relations is within (heterosexual) marriage. These two chapters straddle
Leviticus 19 with its injunctions to ‘Be Holy because I the Lord am holy’
(19:2) and to ‘love your neighbour as yourself’ (19:18).
Jesus upholds the creation ordinance of marriage (Matthew
19:4-6) and indicates that sexual purity goes beyond mere actions to thoughts
and motivations (Matthew 5:27-32).
Paul points out the unique nature of sexual sin (porneia) in that it involves sin ‘against
one’s own body’ (1 Corinthians 6:18-20) and argues that sexual purity is part
of sanctification, living a holy life (1 Thessalonians 4:3-8).
Furthermore we receive the grave warning in Revelation (21:8
and 22:15) that the unrepentant sexually immoral are destined for the lake of
fire and will not partake of the tree of life.
The book of Hebrews (10:26) tells us that ‘If we
deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the
truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but only a fearful expectation
of judgment and of raging fire that will consume the enemies of God’.
The Bible is also very clear that homosexual practice in
particular, as well as being included within the boundaries of sexual
immorality (porneia), is also a
specific marker of a society that has turned its back on God – Genesis 19,
Judges 19 and Romans 1 are familiar examples.
Jesus himself calls the church of Thyatira to repentance
over ‘(tolerating) that woman Jezebel’ who ‘by her teaching’ ‘misleads my
servants into sexual immorality’ (Revelation 2:20-25).
Sex outside marriage is viewed very seriously indeed in
Scripture but false teaching which leads people into sexual sin is viewed even more
seriously (Luke 17:1-2) and warnings about the affirmation and endorsement of
sexual immorality (2 Peter 2 and Jude are poignant examples) are particularly
strong.
Those who lead ‘little ones’ astray (Matthew 18:6), like
those they mislead, are in great danger. This is why it is so important for us
to exercise godly discipline with them (Matthew 18:15-20; Luke 17:3-4; Galatians 6:1; James
5:19, 20) for their own sakes, as well as for those who they might mislead or
have already misled.
Those who raise these uncomfortable issues in the church are
often are told ‘not to judge’, but the Bible is very clear that in the case of
sexual immorality or false teaching it is actually our responsibility as
Christians to ‘judge’ and to exercise discipline (1 Corinthians 5:1-13).
When there was a serious issue that threatened the integrity
of the early church (with whole groups being led astray) the apostles called a
council. We read about it in Acts 15. The matter (in that case circumcision) was seen as serious and
meriting prompt action. It is interesting that one of the conclusions of that first council was that all Christians were to avoid sexual immorality (Acts 15:29). When the church has encountered other serious issues throughout the centuries councils have similarly been called to bring resolution.
I am no expert on church history and cannot ever recall a
church council specifically on sexual morality but I can also not recall a time in history
when senior church leaders sought to affirm or bless sexual behaviour that the
Bible clearly teaches is immoral.
Can we imagine the apostle Paul leaving a situation like
this to smoulder and fester? Would he not rather have urged his co-workers to
‘command certain men not to teach false doctrines’ (1 Timothy 1:3) and to ‘gently
instruct in the hope that God will grant repentance’ (2 Timothy 2:25). Would he have not insisted that false teachers ‘must be silenced’ (Titus 1:11)?
Do we really
think that Jesus himself, given his clear warnings about the dangers of false
teaching, would have allowed a situation like this to persist unchallenged? Should
we be acting any differently? Is it really enough to ‘disagree without being
disagreeable’ and to debate ‘gracefully’?
When false teaching is allowed to fester in the church, and
when godly discipline is not exercised with those who are propagating it, whole
households, churches and communities can be ruined (Titus 1:11).
I am becoming increasingly uneasy about how we evangelicals
have allowed this particular situation to drift. I believe that the time for
tolerance and discussion is over and that we need now to act.