"Give them not Hell, but


Hope and Courage."

Friday, September 28, 2012

Just Sex (Sunday, September 23, 2012)





For some time now, I have toyed with the idea of adding a visual component to our worship services. I’ve been trying to figure out how we could rig up, say, a Powerpoint, and project pictures, images, on a screen at the front of the sanctuary. Lots of churches do it, and, I don’t know, I thought that illustrating each week’s sermon might, somehow, make it more interesting.

But I don’t think that this Sunday would be the week that I would choose to introduce such a visual innovation. We don’t want the Vice Squad (do police departments still have “Vice Squads”?) battering down our doors, and we don’t want to end up on the front page of the Stoughton Journal that way.

 
So, there won’t be any pictures to illustrate today’s sermon. We’re just going to talk about sex. Which, in context of a church service, is probably innovative and unusual enough.

 
Because, let’s be frank, sex is not a topic we broach often within these four walls. We talk about lots of things: culture, the issues of the day, politics, sometimes we even talk about religion. But sex? Hardly. And there, we’re not unusual.

“When I listen to what religion in the West teaches about sexuality,” Matthew Fox has written, “I hear two things. The first… is silence… [The] second is moralizing… If I were to name in one word the message I have received from my religion regarding sexuality over the… years of my life, I would answer: regret.”

From whence comes this silence and regret—and even loathing-- with which, traditionally, mainstream religion has greeted matters of sexuality? Why is there, deep within many of us, this blocking mechanism which brings silence, nervous laughter, or even a feeling of shame, whenever the subject of human sexuality is mentioned?

The American journalist Frank Harris lays the blame for our wounded psyches on St. Paul. In the early years of its development, Harris wrote, “the Christian church was offered two things: the [elevated] spirit of Jesus and the idiotic morality of Paul, and they rejected the higher inspiration and took up the latter.” “Following Paul,” Harris concludes, “we have turned the goddess of love into a fiend, and have degraded the crowning impulse of our being into a capital sin.”

Of course, it’s always easy to blame St. Paul for all of the (real or imagined) sins of Christianity—he was there at the beginning, after all, so it all must have started with him. If there’s something you don’t like about the Christian tradition, blame St. Paul for it!

But even Paul wasn’t completely original; his ideas had to come from somewhere. In developing his own ethic and ideas, he internalized some of the prevailing ideas of his own time, of course Maybe we can go further back, and find even earlier sources we can “blame” for our shame and discomfort about sexuality.

Perhaps we can blame it on Moses and the development of Judaism, the religion of the Old Testament God Yahweh. Yahweh—the sworn enemy of all those gods and goddesses of the polytheistic pagans of the ancient Middle East; the sworn enemy of all those gods and goddesses whose religions so often centered on fertility rites and who (or so we are told by the followers of Yahweh, at least) often incorporated strange, lewd, immoral practices into their religious rituals. Perhaps for all these centuries since, subconsciously and not so subconsciously, we have carried on the Jewish tradition’s battle with paganism and sensuality and sexuality. If we want to let St. Paul off the hook, we can blame it on Moses instead.

Or we can blame it on the Greeks; blame it on Plato, or Aristotle. One of the most important ideas of classical Greek philosophy was its body/soul dualism: its elevation of the soul, and its denigration of all things having to do with our earthly (and earthy) bodies.

In the fourth century, St. Augustine imbibed deeply of this dry spiritual wine of Greek philosophy and started to preach a sexual morality which shunned the senses and the sexual, and saw sexuality in all of its forms (even within marriage) as intrinsically lustful, and thus sinful. All children were conceived in lust, Augustine taught, and thus all children, at birth, were tainted with sin. That’s how the Original Sin of Adam and Even got passed down from generation to generation—in our very conception, in our very birth.

That’s really healthy stuff, isn’t it? No wonder we’re so messed up when it comes to sexual matters! The Catholic Church (its supposedly celibate, all-male hierarchy at least) never really has shaken off this Augustinian nightmare when it comes to matters of sexuality. But our own Protestant forebears weren’t much better. They were hardly “advanced”  (or even healthy) when it came to matters of human sexuality, and instead have given us 400 years of pietism, Puritanism, and Victorianism, none of which exactly rewrote the book on human sexuality.

This has been followed in our own day by a narrowly individualistic and hedonistic “sexual revolution” which has rejected any restraint or underlying moral code whatsoever, which commercializes sex, debases the human body, exploits the weak, denigrates the “un-beautiful”, sexualizes children, and which deserves to judged and even condemned.  

No wonder that the church, usually, just cowers off in a corner somewhere, and shuts it mouth as far as sex is concerned, and turns back toward more “pleasant” and “edifying” subjects. Or, why it just wags its finger in judgment, and equates all human sexuality as “filth”.

Which really misses the point, as far as human sexuality is concerned.  So, maybe it’s time to end the silence, or as Salt N’ Peppa would say: “Let’s talk about sex.” Yes, even in church.

Our sexuality refers to our totality as individual persons, especially those aspects that relate particularly to our being male or female. Sexuality encompasses all the ways in which we express ourselves in our drive to know and to relate to other beings. Our sexuality encompasses all the ways in which we are turned on by other people—and in only a small percentage of cases is that “turn on” of a narrowly physical, much less genital, nature. If we view our sexuality as being not just of the body alone, but of our whole beings, of our whole lives, then I think it clarifies for us the relationship between sexuality and religion.

The first declaration of a just sexuality is that men and women are equal, and that male and female sexuality are equal gifts in the eyes of God. This may seem obvious to us; but if we look at the abuses women have suffered at the hands of religion in the West (and I think in the East as well), then it bears repeating. The early Church Fathers may have mused that women were not really created in the image and likeness of God as men were. But we must also remember that Jesus himself befriended women openly (something not done in his time), and seemed to have no problem welcoming women as his disciples. He may even have been married. Even St. Paul wrote in his letter to the Galatians: “In Christ there is neither male nor female,” and this seems to have been the bottom line for him on this issue.

So, the first declaration of faith in matters sexual is that are all equal—not all the same, not all alike, but equal.  

The second declaration of just sex is that there is great diversity inherent within human sexuality, and that, if we’re going to judge morality, then we need to use the same criteria for both homosexual and heterosexual relations. That criteria is what Matthew Fox calls “the test of justice”:

Just sexual relationships, whether gay or straight, should enable the individuals involved to realize the same degree of wholeness and empowerment in their lives.

Just sexual relationships are about exercising “power with” one another, and not “power over”.

Just sexual relationships are about treating the other person as a living being, and not as an object.

Diversity among sexual orientations is as much a blessing as the diversity in any other aspect of this amazing creation.

The third declaration that a just sexuality makes is that sex is good, that our sexuality is an important part of the original blessing of creation. Leave out all of the commentary and analysis, and the basic story of the first chapters of Genesis is this: “God created them male and female… they became one flesh… they were fruitful and multiplied… and it was good.” The Old Testament myth of the Garden of Eden reminds us that in the beginning we were created as sexual beings, and were invited to express our sexuality in a creative manner—and that this is the way the Creator intended it to be. It’s not a sin, then, to be glad that we’re sexual beings and that we yearn for ways to express ourselves sexuality.

Which is not to say that all the ways in which human beings express themselves sexually are always good.  Hardly. Abuses of human sexuality can readily become means of distrust and fear and brokenness. In a world which we share with other beings, who are living out their callings and finding ways of expressing who they are, a selfish and self-centered philosophy of  “If it feels good, do it” can never take the place of a healthy sexual ethic.

We are most true to our deepest humanity, I think, when we strike an inner balance between eros (on the one hand) and chastity (on the other). It is through the dialogue between eros and chastity that our sexual relationships can best meet the test of justice. If our sexuality is only about selfishness and exploitation and promiscuity—about getting what we want when want it-- then it is going to flunk the test of justice. But if we let chastity reign in our narrower and more selfish instincts, then justice can be done.

The fourth declaration of a just sexuality is that sexuality is related both to body and spirit. Listen to how sensuous, how en-bodied ancient scriptures can be. This is from the “Song of Songs” in the Hebrew Bible:

“Behold, you are beautiful, my love,
you are beautiful!
Your eyes are doves behind your veil.
Your hair is like a flock of goats,
moving down the slopes of Gilead.
Your teeth are like a flock of shorn ewes
that have come up from washing…

Now we, obviously, might want to update our metaphors a little. (Don’t try “Your hair is like a flock of goats” as a pickup line in a bar, for instance.) But think of how completely free of the loathing of the body which characterizes so much of Western religion these words are.  

A just view of sexuality glorifies the joy of communion on both the physical and the spiritual levels. It celebrates the fact that, in a truly loving and just relationship, the spiritual and physical cannot, in effect, be divided one from another. You often can’t tell where one ends and the other begins, and that’s really the point. Two lovers, in their very speaking—touching-- reaching out to each other—are engaging in the spiritual act of two becoming one. Feelings yield thoughts; touches yield words; and through physical communion and communication, two souls become one.

Fifth (and finally) a just sexuality reminds us that human sexuality can serve as a means of transcendence. Through our sexuality, we can transcend the limitations of this linear-rational, mundane existence, and come to know some sense of mystical union with the Absolute—some sense of the grace of God.

As the theologian Dorothy Soelle has written:

“Both religion and sexuality heal the split between ourselves and the universe. We discover that we are indeed ‘part of everything’ and one with the mystery of life. To talk about God in relation to our sexuality means to be aware of love moving in us, for ‘in God we live and move and have our being’.”

Through our intimate sexual relationships, we can experience a great breakthrough to the Spirit of Life that makes all things new. We can receive—and give-- a deep and profound gift of grace.

Matthew Fox has written that when two people discover each other in love, the wings of the seraphim and cherubim beat with joy. The sacred heart of Creation is echoed in the heartbeat of lovers.

When we find one another in the full expression of our love, the daily dances of our lives become sacred rituals; the days of our lives are made holy and whole.

When we reach out, in love, and in justice, to touch one another, we reach out beyond ourselves as well; we reach out and bless the Earth and all of its creatures. And we reclaim once again, perhaps just in the momentary beating of two hearts as one, a small piece of the Garden of Eden.

 

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Humility: The Quiet Virtue (Sunday, Septembe16, 2012)


            
 
 I was never a huge Monty Python fan, although I have found some of their antics amusing over the years. And while I wouldn’t call their 1979 film, Life of Brian, one of my favorite movies of all time, I did enjoy it. There are scenes from it which I remember, which have carved their places in my memory.

            One such scene is the film’s depiction of the “Sermon on the Mount”, more particularly, Jesus delivering the Beatitudes to the assembled crowd.

            Well, the characters in the film are in the cheap seats, way off on the fringe, and they’re not really paying attention, they’re squabbling among themselves, and this is in the days before public address systems and “Surround Sound” and what have you, so they’re having more than a little trouble hearing what Jesus is saying.

“Blessed are the peacemakers,” for instance, becomes “Blessed are the cheesemakers.” Not quite the same thing.

By the time they come to “Blessed are the meek,” Mrs. Big Nose, a couple of rows toward the front, has to explain what’s going on.

“Oh, it's the meek!” she says. “Blessed are the meek! Oh, that's nice, isn't it? I'm glad they're finally getting something, 'cause they have a hell of a time, the meek do.”

They sure do. Meekness (and humility) are hardly virtues that seem highly esteemed in our contemporary world. No, it seems as though today it is celebrity that we worship: celebrity, esteem, notoriety, being noticed, being affirmed, being recognized, getting to sit at the front table, sit in the front row of seats. The most banal mediocrities command our attention, while often (too often) the truly heroic and virtuous goes unrecognized and certainly unrewarded.

It reminds me of a cartoon I saw once in the New Yorker. A woman is speaking to her friend. She says: “I just spent an hour with my manicurist and pedicurist, after having done a ninety-minute workout with my personal trainer at the gym, a lunch with my low-carb support group, and now I need to go for my botox injections and my yoga class. I just don’t have any time for myself anymore!”

As the great social activist William Sloane Coffin once said, “There is no smaller package in the world than someone who is all wrapped up in himself.” Or, as my friend and colleague Deane Starr once put it, “When we worship at the altar of our own egos, we worship at a very small altar.”

Now, I have nothing against self-development or self-actualization, and the voyage of self-discovery is an important one for all of us to take. “Know thyself,” the ancients counseled, and they were right. There is much to be said in favor of paying attention to who we are, each of us, because if we remain mysteries to ourselves, then not much else in life is going to make much sense either. We should, each of us, like who we are. We should know ourselves—cherish ourselves even-- as a unique being in the cosmos, unlike any other, with particular gifts and talents and deep treasures within our soul. A certain amount of ego—a good dose of self-esteem, helps us to get through life in a confident and effective manner. Self-loathing-- constantly berating ourselves, and denigrating ourselves, and going through life apologizing for taking up space-- is certainly unhealthy; it is, really, an insult to our Creator; it’s a form of blasphemy, really.

But if we buy into our culture’s delusion that “It’s all about me”—that these lives of ours should be nothing more than one long campaign to “find ourselves” , then we are most likely to lose ourselves instead. A life which is turned in completely on itself-- which thinks “It’s all about me. It’s all about my wants, my needs”-- is, more often than not, a life which will eventually wither and die from its isolation from others—from being cut off from the genuine, mutual nurture and caring which only total sharing with others—total immersion in the rough and tumble struggle of life (in which we’re not supposed to get our way more than 50% of the time)-- can bring. A life lived in isolation, for itself alone, might seem “successful” on the outside—it might even accumulate plenty of wealth and fame and even power. But at its center there will be an empty core. That which is done for something greater than ourselves truly abides; it transcends the generations, from age to age. But that which is done only for our small and puny power, or for pleasure or wealth alone, either simply dies with us, or leads us down a path of disaster, dishonor, and despair.

As Mother Teresa was completing her first visit to America, she remarked that she had never before seen a society of such human isolation, on the verge of spiritual bankruptcy. “The reason you have no peace,” she said, “is that you have forgotten that you belong to each other.”

It is our humility which keeps us on the pathway of life, which reminds us that we belong to one another. As Rilke wrote:

Each thing—

each stone, blossom, child—

is held in place.

Only we, in arrogance,

push out beyond what we belong to

for some empty freedom.

 

If we surrendered

to earth’s intelligence

[and to the humility that keeps us connected]

we could rise up rooted, like trees.

Humility is a quiet virtue; it’s a forgotten virtue, really, in this narcissistic celebrity culture of ours. But real humility is not merely a game we play, a bit of play-acting in which we indulge in order to manipulate and impress other people, to show them how “humble” we are, to lower expectations, to falsely downplay our strengths in order to make them seem the greater. Humility is not just an option we turn on or off on a whim to get people to like us, or pity us, or go along with us. Humility is, rather, a critically important aspect of human living; it is standard operating equipment for anyone who genuinely seeks to be a spiritual and compassionate human being.

            And humility requires certain things of us.

Humility requires us to look beyond our own circumstances to the circumstances of others (and to draw that circle of concern just as widely as we can). Norman Cousins reminds us that each of us is but a single cell in the six billion cells of the great body of humankind. “[Our] needs are individual,” Cousins writes, “but they are not unique.” It is our sense of compassion—our deep sense of empathy and interdependence—which makes possible our deepest reverence for life.

Humility does not require that we wallow co-dependently in the pain of others; nor does it require that we take on inordinate guilt about our own good fortune. But a true sense of humility reminds us that, if we are to be true to our divine birthright, that our good fortune obligates us to the service of others, and that each of us has a role to play in helping to heal the pain of all the creatures of our Mother Earth.

Humility does not require that we deny our gifts and talents and abilities. But it does require that we acknowledge our limitations.

Canute the Dane was conqueror and king of England during the early years of the 11th century. Chroniclers tell us that, more than anything, he loathed the obsequiousness of his royal retinue. He grew so tired of all the excessive praise and flattery they heaped upon him, that one day Canute ordered that his throne be brought down to the seashore. He then gathered together all of his court, and had them stand all around him: mounted cavalry and knights in shining armor, and musicians and priests and bishops and lords and ladies of the Court, all gathered together, in all of their worldly splendor and extravagance. All this “great party” stood by the side of the “great king” as he sat atop his steed by the side of the sea.

He ordered them just to stand there. And as the tide began to come in, and the waves started to dash against the shore, Canute held up his scepter, and he commanded the incoming tide to cease.

Well, the sea didn’t listen. The incoming tides soon proved the futility of the all the king’s commanding, the absurdity of all the false glory that had been heaped upon him. The king got soaked. His retinue got soaked. So Canute hoped that an important lesson about humility managed to sink in as well.

Sometimes, when things are going well for us, we might even delude ourselves into thinking that we are in control of all those forces in which we live and move and have our being. But usually when we start thinking this way, the tides of life have this way of reminding us that we’re not in control of everything, and that the tides of life have this way of washing over us, and getting us all wet, too. “Man plans, and God laughs,” an old Jewish proverb tells us. Or, if you prefer, “We propose, and the universe hiccups.”

Humility also reminds us that while each of us might have our own truths, that none of us owns the truth. No religion, no government, no political party, no one country owns the truth. One thing that both totalitarian political systems and fundamentalist religions lack is humility. When the two become allied together, then the results can be deadly, as we have seen again in recent days.

            Humility also reminds us that we are connected to others (including many others we do not see and do not know) and that our actions often have much broader consequences than we know. We might want to say whatever we want to, whenever we want. We might claim that we have the “right” to do whatever we want; to make any video we feel like making. But we have to remember that yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theater is going to have consequences. And humility, in this modern world of instantaneous communication, means remembering that perhaps the entire world has become a crowded theater.

Humility reminds us continually not to rush to judgment, not to stand over others in judgment, but rather, seek ways to stand beside them in under-standing.

Humility is the source of true compassion. And it is from compassion that love and justice flow.

If we human beings are to learn to live once again in balance upon this beautiful planet which is our home, we need to recover, as a species, our deep sense of humility, our deep sense that we did not weave the web of life, but are merely strands in it. As Vaclav Havel once said:

“Man is not an omnipotent master of the universe, allowed to do with impunity whatever he thinks, or whatever suits him at the moment. The world we live in is made of an immensely complex and mysterious tissue about which we know very little and which we must treat with utmost humility.”

Humility is the sources of all true spirituality. It is our innate sense of humility—our deep inner sense that we inhabit a cosmos infinitely larger than we are—more expansive than our human reasoning can ever comprehend—which gives rise to our yearning to be fed and nurtured spiritually.

Being humble means knowing ourselves as children of one Great Mystery.

We are,each one of us, simply lovely human beings. I like all of you. I even like me. We’re amazing creatures, each one of us, really. Blessed with such awesome powers to think, to create, to build, to love.

But humility reminds us that the greatness of our souls only comes to full fruition in relationship to others. Souls—like wealth—are meant to be spent; they’re meant to be shared. We are meant to pour our beings out onto the face of the Earth—even to give them away, if need be.

Anthony DeMello tells the story of a man who was considered very holy by all those around him. He lived a life that was very strict and austere, to the point that, every day, he would let no food or drink pass his lips while the sun was still in the sky. In what seemed to be a sign of heavenly approval for his actions, a bright star shone on top of a nearby mountain, visible to everyone in broad daylight, though no one knew what had brought the star there.

One day this holy man decided to climb the mountain. A little village girl insisted on going with him. The day was warm and soon the two were thirsty. He urged the child to drink but she said she wouldn’t unless he drank some water, too. He didn’t know what to do. He didn’t want to break his fast until sunset; but he worried about the child, it was so hot, and didn’t want her to become sick from thirst. So, finally, he let go of his way of doing things, his manner of holiness, and he drank some water; the little girl did, too.

For a long time he dared not to look up to the sky, for he feared that his star had disappeared. But when he finally looked up, there wasn’t one star shining in the sky, but two-- two stars shining brightly above the mountain.

For the truly humble, for those not stuck on themselves, but from whom love radiates outward from their inner selves to all the world, the sky is filled with stars too numerous to count, and blessings too abundant to imagine.