Christianity and Queerness


            People who know me know now tend to take me for a ‘Cultural Marxist’ or perhaps 'Regressive Leftist' (not quite accurate but I’ll leave that for some other time) firebrand who goes a bit too far in my denunciations of economic liberalism and is a bit too obsessed with ecological pessimism. People who knew me 25 years ago took me for an arch-reactionary ready and willing to wage cultural war all this crazy modern nonsense. Some might ask me how my mind changed though I’m not sure my mind has changed. I have always been these two things in some kind of combination. What happened is that one part of my brain has slowly asserted dominance over the other. Take the issue of same sex eros as a pertinent example. This is an issue I have said fairly little about because my contradictory attitudes towards it long puzzled me and it is only later in my life that I’ve come to a clearer understanding on the matter. Here, if you like, I will reflect on my puzzlement though it is my puzzle and nobody else’s and it may be of interest to hardly anyone. Still, should anyone ask here is what happened to me and here is my mature position on the question.   
Long ago I used to mouth Thomist/natural law/ orthodoxy on this question all the while reading the Phaedrus and Symposium with no sense of discomfort whatsoever. Nor did gay artists like Wilde, Auden, Ginsberg or Britten bother me in the least. This is a peculiar enough thing to comment on for I strongly suspect it reflects a historical compromise Christians have always made. When I was an undergrad I was around clergy a fair bit and if you know clergy you know gay people closeted or not so closeted. It was assumed in my environment that homosexuality was a vice and abomination to be denounced from the pulpit but also something to be winked at and indulged among people of taste and sophistication. The majesty and objectivity of the divine law was one thing and quirks of individual behavior another and the less one examined the gap between them the better life was. Such unstated adjustments have long allowed people to navigate the complexities and contradictions of human existence. It allowed St. Anselm, for instance, to counsel that sodomy in the court of William Rufus should be subject to ‘gentle’ correction only. In my milieu, at a historically Anglican college (though for the record I have never been a member of that noble institution), you knew full well that the arch-traditionalist ‘Father Jones’ had his private ‘thing’ that you didn’t really bother him about so long as he towed the line publicly about the Book of Common Prayer and other conservative causes. Plus, I have little doubt that others, in other communions, have noticed the exact same things I have. The traditional Christian response to ‘queerness’ has been, in many cases, dissonance: denouncing things in public that one tolerates in private and studiously ignores in one’s friends and colleagues.    
            Anyone can live happily with a contradiction if reality never forces one to confront it. This is called conflict avoidance and it is one strategy for getting through life. One can read conservative polemics against gay liberation and listen to Ziggy Stardust with separate parts of one’s brain. However, there is no stopping revolutions if their basis is impeccably moral and gay persons themselves have rejected dissimulation and irony in the name of honesty and one can’t argue with that choice because, to quote the scholastics, truth is one of the transcendentals along with beauty, unity and goodness. So, there is NO return to the culture of winking and nodding at Professor Smith’s or Father Jones’ odd proclivities while acknowledging him to be a jolly good chap in most other circumstances. Honesty is the best policy. This demand has been socially transformative in a way that forces one to take sides. I don’t like taking sides all that much. Sides make me queasy but if it has to be done there is only one principle, luminously clear to me at least, on which to do it. If one takes a side one takes the side of the poor in whatever form one finds them economic, social or cultural. I recall many years ago reading liberation theologian Jon Sobrino. I must say it sounded too newfangled to me but one thing was clear: so long as I left to enjoy Latin masses and Palestrina I would not shed a single tear if every general in Latin America were hung from a lamp post.[1] Politically I could not find a real disagreement with Fr. Sobrino at least as to core principles. I certainly tried to contrive one or two for form’s sake (because I was that weird and stubborn) but at the end of the day I could not. Politics begins with solidarity with others and Christian politics begins with solidarity with the excluded, ridiculed and oppressed full stop: which is as much as to say that agape is a stance, or way of being in the world that it self-authenticating once one has adopted it.[2] That means that there is only one Christian response to gay people and that is come on in from the cold. If, sometime, you want to discuss what Aquinas says in this passage or Paul in that we can do that or not it is up to you. We could discuss the tension between what these older authors say and modern realities OR NOT. Your acceptance is not conditional on the outcome of a debate or the massaging of a text by subtle hermeneutists. I understand what Dante said about sodomy in the Inferno and I understand why he said it. I also understand that hundreds of years later new possibilities are unfolding around us and a modern Dante might well have to revise his opinion: in fact, if Dante were to express his underlying intuition about sexuality in a new context he might well do it differently.[3]  Solidarity with the poor and excluded come first and scholarly theological discussions second (in retrospect it amazes me how long it took me to see something that simple but there it is).[4]
            The odd thing is that this has always been my position in life because I had a life brain and an ideas brain which existed in perfect distinction from each other. When I lived in Houston Texas I used to wander the gay districts of that fascinating city as much as any other not really caring either way. If I wanted a coffee or a meal, I had one there as I would any other place and had any of my conservative friends seen me do so they would certainly have commented adversely on it. While ideas Bernie raged on about the crisis of modernity life Bernie just ate sandwiches and chatted with whoever because other people’s business was other people’s business. The ideas brain can be superficial compared with the life brain and when the two war with each other, as at certain points they always do, it is through that warfare that one cobbles together a personality, hopefully balancing the two in some productive way. At any rate an anti-modernist philosophical and theological discourse went on in my discursive brain while a deeper, wiser, self quietly subverted much of what it was saying. I really don’t know why any of this happened and it is probably better left to a therapist if and when I can afford one. I can only assume it was some desperate effort at individuation through putting myself in conflict with the world which is an attitude I have examined elsewhere. This explains why I am only a qualified ‘Marxist’ by the way though that is another matter.    
            Above I mentioned Thomistic natural law and some of you might be wondering what I mean by that. Others who are vaguely aware of what I mean by that might be wondering why I would be bothering my head about something so stupid and wrong. On this point though I need to give Ideas Bernie a bit of a hearing. Though you may think only a fool would read an author as dated as Aquinas (and that is the implicit, un-thought assumption of most North American liberals and progressives about the sufficiently distant past or, to use Mel Brooks’ phrase, “when things were rotten”) he is actually a powerful and coherent thinker. I have ALWAYS been deeply impressed by the “Treatise on Law” in the Summa of Theology and I still am. My antiquarian tastes and attitudes were debilitating in many ways but they ABSOLUTELY saved me from the error of a-historical thinking and indeed ANTI-historical or apocalyptic thinking and perhaps that was their providential function.
At any rate let me explain it to you this way. St. Thomas’ statements on law can be given a minimally secular reading that appeals to the basic ethical perceptions of most rational people. Expressed in this way it may well possess significant advantages in both coherence and fruitfulness over contemporaries of a deontological and utilitarian type. It certainly is superior to the empty formalism of the ‘divine command ethics’ that so obsesses analytic philosophers of religion and their atheistic critics. At any rate ‘natural law theory’ has this built in flexibility because it assumes nothing beyond the intrinsic disposition of the practical intellect to view beings under the formality of the good. This is the entire sense of its being ‘natural’. For St. Thomas, the natural law is natural as pertaining to the ‘nature’ or intrinsic disposition of a rational being to order its actions in accordance with a hierarchy of ends, embracing the basic goods of subsistence, vegetative life, animality and rationality in an ascending order of universality. It is the very opposite of the ‘biologism’ decried by over hasty readers too eager to move on to another text. It is not the reduction of the person to a natural determinism for inorganic being and organic life are assumed as moments in the self-expression in creation of universal subsistent reason (i.e. God). As such they generate, each at their own proper level, an ethical dimension or ‘law’. Thus the being of substances generates the laws of conservation and preservation: the self-communication of living substances generates the obligations of loyalty and care that constitute (in humans and perhaps other social animals) the family: the universality of rational substances the social demands for justice and the intellectual virtue of truthfulness. In all this, the practical activity of the intellect retraces and reaffirms the logical procession of the created order from the unity of the divine nous as being life and knowledge though the persuasiveness of natural law precepts does not directly depend on explicit consciousness of this fact. This, by the way, is why we do not need to be theists to be ethical beings. The universal good is moving us to our ends on a preconscious, implicit level. The conscious reflection that goes into an ethical decision does not rest upon a prior reflection on the divine being though it may, at some point, blossom into such a consideration. This though would be a second order reflection.
In all this Aquinas is a good Aristotelian (as he always is even if he is correcting Aristotle). Our rational nature and its values are not imposed externally on a dead mechanistic realm of pure determinism (and surely to God we have had enough of that notion for a few centuries). The values of rationality subsume and reinscribe the values of material and living nature in a higher synthesis that preserves them exactly as the rational soul includes the ‘lower’ functions of growth and sensitivity. This is clear if we presume at a pre-reflective and, please note, pre-theological, level that is has some direct relation with ought (it is true that there are MANY scenarios in which we need to separate these two things though what I mean by this exception will be clear below). At any rate this is an identification we spontaneously make on a daily basis however hard it may be to self-consciously revert to a judgment so implicit and direct. For instance, getting up in the morning entails the judgment that we ought to be awake because activity has a higher degree of actuality (i.e. being) than passivity. What is more the most basic precepts of the natural law also cover the self-diffusion of human life into the otherness of a subsequent human generation. If it is good for the human to be it is good for the human to be over time. Thus, our inclination to self- love which we share with everything from amoebas to elephants, if it is ordinate and not unhealthy, blossoms naturally into benevolent care for the common human future. One way (and not the only way) in which this care expresses itself is in the propagation and education of offspring. On this point even The Jacobin agrees for socialism, it tells us, is all about the kids!
I suppose for these reasons Aristotelians have been highly solicitous (like overprotective parents) of the social institutions built up around the process of human generation. This now seems to me to require a course correction. This is because participation in the great cosmic liturgy seems subject to certain ‘deviations’ or, to use a term I’ve come to prefer, ‘queernesses’.[5] Any fair  assessment of the evidence must admit the distinct possibility that queernesses, oblique motions (as I put it in my last book) are baked into the human condition. Things move in a certain way and things move against that movement in a harmony that may be hard for reason to discern but which there is no point in trying to suppress or alter. I myself spent the first half of my life trying on certain forms of ‘queerness’ that had nothing to do with sexuality. One of those is, as I adverted to above, authorial creation: a form of non-participatory participation in the complexity of life. I now think outsider stances of various sorts are something to be protected and cherished. The reason is I would be a hypocrite if I didn’t. A skeptical, ironic ‘queer’ detachment seems essential to me and in fact to the human condition though not every human need directly embody that attribute. I don’t do so in a sexual sense though I do in others. Of course, at some point queerness in the sexual sense may become one more form of normality and if that happens then nothing I say here has much sense or point which I don’t mind in the least. That said I can imagine no society that does not have oblique elements short of a dehumanizing tyranny devoted to crushing human particularity in the name of an abstract ideal: a thing I think Marx never intended or wanted deep down though among his disciples it was a ‘temporary necessity’ that, like all temporary necessities, quickly became obligatory and permanent. At any rate I follow Blake in his concern for the minute particulars of human existence and on this point, as on many others, I find him a deeper and more radical thinker than Marx.                      
                                                                       





                                           





[1] One point on which I found Fr. Sobrino deficient was that he had neither a theology of beauty nor one of creation and this because of a too literal adherence to the perceived ‘modernism’ of the Marxist standpoint. He may well have addressed the questions of art and nature in some form since but it is ages since I have had anything to do with theology so I don’t know.
   
[2] Oddly it was not a book that brought this home to me in a direct and powerful way but the film The Mission: it occurred to me as I watched it that one’s superiors in the Jesuit order cannot order one to abandon the poor in the sense that this can never be their REAL order and if they think it is then they are wrong and true obedience to them is to disobey. Discursive reason can always try to cheat conscience and for a time can succeed but if one has superiors it is their higher mind one must accede to not their lower one. One part of speaking truth to power is to call power to witness against itself.  Of course, I do not mean to diminish the complexity of real word judgment. The poor may not be easy to identify in a given situation for instance plus the poor are often pitted against each other as in populism.    

[3] I am no longer a proponent of any traditionalism Catholic, Anglo-Catholic or Orthodox. There is a reason for this pertinent to what I said above about Dante. While still an Anglican John Henry Newman wrote his Essay on the Development of Doctrine. Reading this book caused a slow but steady alteration in my thinking (I tend not to do things quickly). Newman argued that the inherent dynamic power of the basic truths of Christianity expressed in time necessitated a historical development of the church’s teaching that could not in principle exclude alteration in its specific theological AND moral judgments. Moreover, he thought that such alterations could be principled when it could be shown that the same ideas expressed in different historical epochs could ground distinct explicit judgments. What is more, he saw that this could easily be shown from the actual history of Christianity: whatever the church self-consciously thought of itself as doing, it was always in fact doing what Newman said, constituting its doctrine and not simply restating the ‘primitive truth’ of scripture or tradition. Newman himself saw this discovery as principally destructive of Protestant Biblicism and historical Anglicanism. He surely did not anticipate the profound alteration he would bring about in his own Roman communion. Historicism of some kind or other is now basic to Catholic self-understanding so much so that in contemporary Catholicism doctrinal development itself is scarcely in question only its pace, form and direction. All this is as much as to say that theology is a gateway drug to historicism and those who distrust the latter should definitely give the former a miss.         

[4] Ideas Bernie will interject here and say “of course, but charity is a firm and persistent willing of one’s neighbor’s total and final good (which willing is also the perfect love of God) and this does not necessitate the indiscriminate affirmation of all one’s neighbor’s sentiments and desires”. True enough but as far as I can tell queerness is something far more complex than a simple desire, like for a cigarette, that can be satisfied or not. Nor is it simply a sub-personal disposition like alcoholism. It is, to use only one example, a crucial aesthetic stance and the authorial stance (say) always has ‘queerness’ or ‘being off to the side’ as an essential component. In other words, there are other frameworks for understanding homosexual behavior than the traditional natural law ones or the traditional scriptural ones and these must be weighed and balanced against each other. The old moralists were certainly wise but they did not possess every single lens for viewing every single object and nor do we. One thing they did not consider, and to be fair had no vocabulary to consider, was queerness not as a behavior or a choice but as a way of being in the world. At any rate if I have erred in any of this I have erred on the side of generosity and will, on the last day, happily submit to the peer review of heaven.  

[5] Hence my thing for Latin masses, which I thought, and still think, a splendid visible icon of the cosmic procession and reversion from the one and the moment of radical humanism (the incarnation) that embodies it. For this reason, modernist, truncated liturgies bore me to tears though I see and accept why they exist. I myself am ‘queer’ with respect to these I suppose. Unfortunately, frequenting such traditional liturgies puts one shoulder to shoulder with people who want the Bourbons restored to the French throne or regard the minimum wage as a contrivance of Satan that makes the Blessed Virgin cry. For obvious reasons I have no time for such people.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Suspicious: The Hermeneutic of Paranoia

Liar!

Hitchens has a Razor Apparently