Wednesday, December 17, 2014

"We can live without sex, but we can't live without intimacy": Homosexuals, Celibacy, and the Theology of the Body

The headline jumped out from the December 13 edition of The Washington Post: “Gay Christians Choosing Celibacy Emerge From the Shadows.” As the call for “homosexual marriage” increases at an alarming rate, it is encouraging to know there are homosexual persons embracing and promoting their call to virginity--while expressing spiritual insights into that sacred vocation for all.

The article featured Eve Tushnet, a 36-year old writer and speaker who converted to Catholicism in 1998, when “she thought she might be the world’s first celibate Catholic lesbian.” She writes for spiritualfriendship.org, a blog for celibate homosexual Christians that draws thousands of visitors each month.

Tushnet says that celibacy “allows you to give yourself more freely to God.” The focus of celibacy, she says, should be not on the absence of sex but rather on deepening friendships and other relationships. She urges people not to focus so much on the sex they can’t have, but on other avenues where they can experience true intimacy.

Tushnet uses the image of a kaleidoscope: “The jewels inside are desires. If you turn it one way, it’s lesbianism. If you rearrange them, it can be community service or devotion to Mary.”

Tushnet’s words shed much needed light on a world obsessed with the physical pleasures of sex, while failing to understand the interpersonal and sacrificial communion that constitutes genuine intimacy--that sex and intimacy aren’t necessarily one and the same

This truth was presented in the article most presciently by Julie Rodgers, a lesbian hired this fall to serve homosexual persons in the chaplain’s office of Wheaton College, a prominent evangelical school in Illinois. While holding that God does not bless same-sex relationships, Rodgers sees injustices done to homosexual persons by churches, and tries to heal them.

“Evangelicals are really trying to figure out what to do,” Rodgers told The Washington Post. “There is a real panic about how to move forward. How do we think and talk about sexuality? We haven’t had a robust understanding around celibacy in the past. We are trying to find a congruence between faith and spirituality that does not try to align with traditional marriage but does recognize that we can live without sex, but we can’t live without intimacy.”

We can live without sex, but we can’t live without intimacy. If we were to write a list of five truths the world desperately needs to hear, this would certainly be one of them.

Yet this is really nothing new. Catholics have a ready answer for Rodgers’ observation “We haven’t had a robust understanding around celibacy in the past,” and her question “How do we think and talk about sexuality?”

The answer? St. John Paul II and his Theology of the Body.

John Paul II did not address homosexuality specifically in the Theology of the Body, but he gave ample attention to celibacy, which he called “an exclusive donation of self to God.” The following quotes shed much light on the celibate vocation to which many heterosexuals and all homosexuals are called. Each quote is from a series of talks in the spring of 1982:

“The observation, “When they rise from the dead they neither marry nor are given in marriage” (Mk 12:25) indicates that there is a condition of life without marriage. In that condition, man, male and female, finds at the same time the fullness of personal donation and of the intersubjective communion of persons, thanks to the glorification of his entire psychosomatic being in the eternal union with God.”(March 10)

Paraphrasing Jesus in Matthew 19:11-12, Pope John Paul II said:

“I shall speak to you of continence. Undoubtedly, you will associate this with the state of physical deficiency, whether congenital or brought about by human cause. But I wish to tell you that continence can also be voluntary and chosen by man for the kingdom of heaven.” (March 17)

Explaining what it means to be celibate for the kingdom of heaven, Pope John Paul II said:

“Continence for the kingdom of heaven is certainly linked to the revelation of the fact that in the kingdom of heaven people ‘will no longer marry’ (Mt 22:30)…. Because God will be ‘everything to everyone’ (1 Cor 15:28).

“Such a human being, man and woman, indicates the eschatological virginity of the risen man. In him there will be revealed, I would say, the absolute and eternal nuptial meaning of the glorified body in union with God himself through the ‘face to face’ vision of him….

“Earthly continence for the kingdom of heaven is undoubtedly a sign that indicates this truth and this reality. It is a sign that the body, whose end is not the grave, is directed to glorification. Already by this very fact, continence for the kingdom of heaven is a witness among men that anticipates the future resurrection….

“So, then, continence for the kingdom of heaven bears, above all, the imprint of the likeness to Christ. In the work of redemption, he himself made this choice for the kingdom of heaven.” (March 24)

Speaking further of this likeness to Christ, Pope John Paul II said:

“Whoever consciously chooses such continence, chooses, in a certain sense, a special participation in the mystery of the redemption (of the body). He wishes in a particular way to complete it, so to say, in his own flesh (cf. Col 1:24), finding thereby also the imprint of a likeness to Christ.” (March 31)