G’day Christopher,
Thanks for your posts. I agree that the Anglican formula of Scripture, Tradition, Reason is useful. Where I would differ from you is how you define Tradition and Reason. Tradition is tradition of the church across the ages, not experience. Experience is another category altogether, so that we actually have four categories, not three: Scripture, Tradition (of the church), Reason (that is, using our brain), and Experience.
I have no problem with having Tradition, Reason, and Experience inform our understanding of Scripture - however, God is Lord of his Word, his written word as well as his incarnate Word. That means, while *our experience* may be useful to help evaluate our understanding of Scripture, God’s lordship of his word means that our experience must be subject to Scripture (and hence to God) rather than additional, or abstracted from Scripture. We must always hold our experience up to the measure of Scripture and ask, “Does it conform to Scripture, does our experience make sense in light of Scripture etc.” Likewise, we must do the same with Tradition and Reason. For, in the end, our reason is fallible, our experience is distorted by sin, and our tradition is never complete. And experience is terribly ambiguous - whose experience do we choose to believe? My experience is, homosexual relationships are more damaging than good for people - Christian or not. It just so happens that this accords with my theological point of view.
The second point - you say,
Some feel that the Bible simply refers to certain acts in a context in which those acts are both degrading and unnatural, and that these references are not talking about sexual orientation. In a way this view is based in the existence of new Knowledge (Reason) about human sexuality that was not available to the writers of the Bible.
But there are assumptions here about what the writers of the Bible understood and explained about sexuality and what our culture knows and understands about sexuality. First, there’s the assumption that the Bible writers had a far inferior understanding of a number of things, including the understanding of sexuality that what we *now* have due to psychology of sexuality etc. That is, they are primitive and unsophisticated, but we’re modern and sophisticated in our knowledge. This assumption does a great injustice to the ancient world. Second, that what the Bible writers knew about sexuality could, in no way, match up with what we understand about ‘orientation’ today.
In relation to your other post- sorry I haven’t made myself clearer. When you say ‘orientation’, it appears as if you are using it as somewhat equivalent to ‘nature’ - as in, ‘homosexuality is in that person’s *nature*/orientation’. Paul understands heterosexuality as the true *nature*/orientation - so homosexuality is against *nature*. It then appears as if you say that, because we now understand from science etc (which is questionable, by the way) that homosexuality is within a person’s *nature*/orientation, Paul’s words need to be updated.
My criticism (if I’ve understood you correctly) is this: Paul sees *nature* as defined by God, and in Rom 1 in a context where God is Creator. So nature and God’s revelation of what “natural” means (according to the OT) is definitive for Paul when it comes to sexuality. Sexuality, for Paul, must be in line with God’s creative intent.
Regarding the OT law, you are right that Paul seems to show some ambivalence towards the law - but then he has roaring endorsements of the law as well - the law is holy, righteous, and good, for example. And Paul’s *usage* of the law tells us a lot about what he thinks of it, and how he sees it operative in the Christian life. As a means of salvation it is out altogether. As a means of informing us about God, his standards and plans for the world, then it is highly relevant. Indeed, when the law is seen through Christ - as the ‘end/goal of the law’ - the law is able to be Christianly (if I can make up a word) applied to everyday life.
That’s enough for the moment.