More pauline references to homosexuality?

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EQ 77.2 (2005), 129-134 More pauline references to homosexuality? Ed. L. Miller Or MiLler is Director of the Theology Forum, University of Colorado, Boulder. KEY WORDS: BibLe; New Testament; PauL; homosexuality. For some people these days a great deal depends on the Biblical references to homosexuality. My own view is that, quite apart from the Biblical references, a case can be made from the general Biblical vision of creation: the homosexual condition is an unfortunate and irrational intrusion into the divinely created order, and homogenital activity should be judged as morally wrong. On the other hand, neither do I deny that, in our contemporary situation, distinctions must be drawn and that our moral sensibilities must be continually refined. But that is not the point at the moment. The point here is purely linguistic. And the aim is to attend to a question that, as far as I can tell, has not been noted in the discussions of the relevant Pauline texts. The several relevant Biblical passages have received scrutiny from both sides of the issue (Gen. 19:1-11; Lev. 18:22,20:13; Rom. 1:26-27; 1 Cor. 6:9-10; 1 Tim. 1:9-11; Jude 7). But it is apparent that the 'revisionist' interpreters of these passages, who find there sometimes radically different meanings from the more or less traditional ones, are very mistaken. l Even so, I suggest that there may be yet more Biblical references to homosexual conduct than has been thought. In addition to the three explicit Pauline references included in those just mentioned, others, though more implicit, should be reckoned with in discussions of Paul's treatment of the subject. 2 The key to this claim lies in the context of Paul's reference to arsenokoitai and malakoi in 1 Corinthians 6:9-10: 3 Don't you know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Don't be deceived! Fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, arsenokoitai, mala- From the plethora of contributions, I mention only the two that appear to have made the biggest impact: John Boswell, Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980), and Robin Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality: Contextual Background for Contemporary Debate (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983). 2 I am granting here the Pauline authenticity of Galatians and Ephesians. My discussion does not depend on this, though it does assume at least a degree of continuity between these epistles and the demonstrably authentically Pauline epistles. The issue is not the specifically and authentically Pauline authorship of homosexuality references in the epistles, but the possible presence in the epistles of more of these references than has been thought whoever authored them. 3 Quoted Biblical texts are from the New Revised Standard Version, adjusted occasionally in light of my present discussion.

130 EO Ed. L. Miller koi, thieves, the greedy, drunkards, revilers, robbers none of these will inherit the kingdom of God. I take the terms arsenokoitai and malakoi to refer at a minimum to participants in male homosexual relations; beyond that, their precise meaning is not important for our present purpose. (For the record, I share my own view that arsenokoitai, literally, 'males who bed males,' refers to those who assume the active role in the homosexual relation, whereas malakoi, literally, 'soft' or 'effeminate,' refers to those who lend themselves to others for such relations.) In 1 Corinthians 5: 1, Paul begins a discussion of sexual matters with the general term porneia, 'sexual immorality' (which in 6:10 he apparently intends as 'fornication,' in contrast to moicheia, 'adultery'). He then applies this in vs. 1 to an instance of heterosexual immorality, namely, a man 'having his stepmother,' presumably widowed. It occurs again in the personal form, pornos, 'sexually immoral person(s),' in vss. 9,10, and 11. The last of these is important because here, in 5:11, it is included in a Pauline list of vices, similar to that in 6:9-11 but with a difference. In the list in 6:9-11 we have initial references to pornoi and moichoi followed by references to ma/akoi and arsenokoitai. All of this suggests that Paul uses porneialpornos (and now also moicheia) of heterosexual activity specifically. It is further suggested that in 6:9 arsenokoitai and malakoi, as references to homosexuals, stand in contrast or in addition to pornoi as a reference to heterosexuals. In all other Pauline instances of porneia, pornos, and the verb porneuo, the reference, whenever the application is discernible, is always to heterosexuals, as it is explicitly, for example, in 1 Cor. 7:2. Paul's terminology in similar lists 4 should be noted, specifically the word akatharsia, 'uncleanness,' in Galatians 5:19: Now the works of the flesh are obvious: porneia, akatharsia, licentiousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, factions, envy, drunkenness, carousings, and things like these. I am warning you as I warned you before: those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God. and Ephesians 5:3-5:... porneia and akatharsia of any kind, or greed, must not even be mentioned among you... Be sure of this, that no pornos or akathartos, or one who is greedy (that is, an idolator), has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God. and Colossians 3:5:... Put to death... whatever in you is earthly: porneia, akatharsia, passion, evil desire, and greed (which is idolatry). and also 2 Corinthians 12:21 (though not a list): 4 It is sometimes claimed that these lists involve references to sins randomly chosen, but I incline to the view that they (especially the lists in 1 Cor. 6:9-10 and 1 Tim. 1 :9-11) are intended to reflect, loosely, the Law. One should note the explicit reference to the Law in the 1 Timothy list.

More pauline references to homosexuality? EO 131 I may have to mourn over many who previously sinned and have not repented of the akatharsia, porneia, and licentiousness that they have practiced. Clearly, in these passages Paul employs back -to-back, as in a formula, the terms porneia and akatharsia. Inasmuch as he normally uses porneia in reference to heterosexual offenses, we may naturally wonder what is added by the use of term akatharsia. My suggestion is that in these passages akatharsia is employed as a condensed and perhaps euphemistic expression in place of the more extended and harsher reference to arsenokoitai and malakoi of 1 Corinthians 6:10. This view is strengthened considerably by the fact that akatharsia is the very word that Paul uses in Romans 1:24 where he characterizes homosexual activity: God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity lakatharsianl, to the degrading of their bodies among themselves....'5 Also relevant is Ephesians 5:11-12: Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead expose them. For it is shameful even to mention what such people do secretly. One might be inclined to see a reference here to homosexual activity, especially in view of the Romans passage. But even if not, it is at least evidence that Paul does on occasion resort to indirect expression to avoid direct expression of what is deemed too shameful to speak of. This provides an answer to the question why akatharsia is employed in addition to porneia when they both occur. But what about the four instances in Paul (Rom. 6:19, Eph 4.19, 1 Thess. 2:3 and 4:7) where akatharsia occurs apart from any reference to porneia, etc.? Ephesians 4:19 poses no problem for the suggestion that Paul on several occasions uses akatharsia euphemistically for homosexual behavior, and in fact provides, possibly, further support for it. In Ephesians 4: 19, akatharsia might easily refer to Gentile homosexuality in view of the striking parallelism of the whole passage, vss. 17-19, with Romansl:21-28 in which Gentile homosexuality figures so centrally. In fact, Ephesians 4:17-19 can be read as a sort of short version of Romans 1:21-28. On the other hand, there seems to be no way that akatharsia in Romans 6: 19 and 1 Thessalonians 2:3 and 4:7 can be construed as references to homosexuality, but, on my view, neither is it necessary that it should. The point is that akatharsia refers euphemistically to homosexual acts when it occurs in a list in which different sins of a sexual 5 While it is true that homosexual activity is not mentioned explicitly until vs. 26, it appears that this is what Paul refers to in vs. 24: The identical language of 'degrading' (to atimazesthm) is used both in reference to the misuse of the body in vs. 24 and then again in specific reference to homosexual activity in vss. 26-27. Likewise, the exact phrase, 'God gave them up' (paredoken autous ho theos) occurs in reference both to the people targeted in vs. 24 and those (homosexuals) targeted in vss. 26-27. Thus, that the homosexual activity mentioned in vss. 26-27 is to be construed as a specification of a generic immorality mentioned in vs. 24 strikes me as a bare possibility.

132 EO Ed. L. Miller nature are delineated, or when it is conjoined with porneia. There is no reason why it should not be employed occasionally with its ordinary and more general meaning. Even so, it may be relevant that in the four passages just considered, where the reference might be, or even certainly isn't, to homosexual conduct, all but one (1 Thess. 2:3) place a sexual construal on akatharsia. There seems, then, to be a Pauline linguistic Tendenz with respect to his employment of akatharsia, a word of otherwise broad inclusion. The only other occurrence of akatharsia in the New Testament is at Matthew 23:27 where it has clear reference to unclean objects. And, as for the adjective, akathartos, in Acts 10:14 and 11:8 it refers to foods, in Acts 10:28 it refers to persons, in Revelation 17:4 it is linked to porneia, and in 18:2 to animals, and Paul himself uses it in 1 Corinthians 7:14 of children, and in 2 Corinthians 16:17 of general ritual practices, and, we have already seen, in Ephesians 5:5 of immoral persons (possibly, or probably, sodomites). The Pauline usage of akatharsia, specifically, is thus quite pointed. How does this proposal fit with Paul's cultural-linguistic Sitz im Leben? It would be relevant if a survey of Greek literature turned up even one instance of akatharsia or the adjective akathartos in reference to homosexual activity, but such a precise parallel is not to be found (if it had been found it would have been noted long ago). There are, however, several passages from the century or so before Paul that suggest that akatharsia was used with a strong sense of 'bodily filth' connected especially with the privates, which would naturally lead to a use of the word in connection with homosexual activities. The historian Diodoros of Sicily (c. 40 BC), in History, V. 33, 5, describes the practice of using urine for bathing as akatharsia. The scholar Dionysios of Halikarnassos (c. 8 BC), in Roman Antiquities, XIXX, 5, 52, describes a drunkard apparently 'mooning' and defecating at the Roman ambassador as practicing akatharsia 'which is not fitting to name.' Philo of Alexandria (c. 30 AD), in Allegorical Interpretation of Genesis, Il, 29, uses akatharsia of indulgence of the senses by analogy with public defecation. Greek philosophers of Paul's era, Cornutus, Nature of the Gods, 46 (the pig is most unclean, akatharsia) and Epictetus, Discourses, Iv, 11, 16 (the body unbathed will smell and be unclean, akatharsia). Later Christian authors of the first century AD use akatharsia, like Paul, in a list, and with an explicit or apparent connection with sexual sins: Note Barnabas, 10, 8 (oral sex = uncleanness, akatharsia) and Second Letter of Clement, 6 (uncleanness, akatharsia, used in immediate conjunction with adultery). On the other hand, the Septuagint employment of akatharsial akathartos may hold some stronger implications. 6 In the older traditions, these terms have the material sense of uncleanness stemming from contact with cultically 6 On some of the following, see Friedrich Hauck and Rudolf Meyer, 'Katharos, etc.,' Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, ed. Gerhard Kittel, and Gerhard Friedrich, tr. Geoffrey W. Bromiley (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1965-73), Ill, 427-29.

More pauline references to homosexuality? EO 133 impure objects (Lev. 7:21), animals (Lev. 11:1ff.), places (Lev. 14:40), corpses (Num. 9:6), lepers (Lev. 13:11), idolatrous activities (Ez. 36:17-18), and such. Sexual processes, too, can be a source of uncleanness, as in menstruation (Lev. 20:21). In the Holiness Code of Leviticus (chs. 17-26), homogenital relations are condemned as an 'abomination' (18:22; 20:13), along with numerous other defilements of a sexual sort, such as bestiality (18:23), incest (18:6), and adultery (20:10).7 Thus, though akatharsialakathartos don't occur in direct connection with homogenital activity, such activity is included in the general category of uncleanness (= defilement, miaria B ) in this material sense. This material sense of akatharsia continued into later Judaism and into the New Testament (as in Matt. 23:27). And there evolved alongside it a wider, more spiritual and more moral meaning according to which it is not the object that is unclean but one's own state (as in Isa. 6:5, Prov. 6:32, and Matt. 15:11).9 That in the Pauline passages cited above (the Romans passage and the Pauline lists) Paul's interest is in uncleanness in this spiritual or moral sense is clear. 10 But that is beside the point. The point is that one might believe, as I do, that Paul's reference to arsenokoitai in 1 Corinthians 6:9 self-consciously echoes Leviticus 18:22 11 where, throughout that context, the idea of uncleanness (= defilement) plays such a prominent role. If so, it would be utterly unsurprising that in the somewhat parallel lists in Galatians 5:19, Ephesians 5:3,5, and Colossians 3:5, and also 2 Corinthians 12:21, akatharsia occurs as a substitute for arsenokoitai. And, again, this equation would appear to be reinforced by the clear use of akatharsia = homosexual activity in Romans 1:24.12 I have not argued in a dogmatic manner that akatharsia in Galatians 5 :19, Ephesians 5:3, 5 (adjective), Colossians3:5, and 2 Corinthians 12:21 is a reference to homo genital activity. On the other hand, such a thesis is compatible with all 7 That all of these, and others, are 'abominations' is evident from, for example, Lev. 18:26 and 29. 8 The verb miaino, 'to defile, ' occurs throughout the context, and in the immediate context of the reference to homosexual activity, e.g. Lev. 18:23, and in 18:24 in a way that includes homosexual activity. 9 Akatharsia does not occur here, but the verb koinoo, 'to pollute or make unclean, ' does, and it is apparent from the context (Matt. 15:1ff.) that the traditional distinction between clean and unclean is in view. 10 On these and related points, see the brief discussion by Mark Reasoner, 'Purity and Impurity,' Dictionary of Paul and His Letters, Gerald W. Hawthome, et al. (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsityPress, 1993),775-76. 11 It has been argued, in fact, that Paul himself coined the word arsenokoites from the Septuagint version of Lev. 18:22 (see James B. De Young, 'The Source and NT Meaning of Arsenokoitai with Implications for Christian Ethics and Ministry,' The Masters Seminary Journal, 3 (1992). In any case, the philological connection seems undeniable. 12 Actually, one might argue that since it is not only male-male activity that is in view in Rom. 1:24-27 but also lesbianism, the Pauline references to akatharsia in the Pauline lists is, at least indirectly, a reference to both sorts of homosexual activity.

134 EQ Ed. L. Miller the evidence, and there does appear to be good grounds for it. It may well be, then, that there are more Pauline references to homosexuality than the three that are inevitably and exclusively cited. This possibility, and even likelihood, should be a datum in continuing discussions involving of the Pauline references to homosexual activity. Prophecy, Miracles, Angels and Heavenly Light? The Eschatology, Pneumatology and Missiology of Adommm's Life of Columba Paternoster Theological Monographs JamesBruce This book surveys approaches to the marvellous in hagiography, providing the first critique of Plummer's hypothesis of Irish saga origin. It then analyses the uniquely systematized phenomena in the Ufe of Columba from Adommin's seventh-century theological perspective, identifying the coming of the eschatological Kingdom as the key to understanding. James Bruce is on the ministry team at St Mary's Bransgore, UK. ISBN: 1-84227-227-6/ 229x152mm / 400pp / 29.99 Our Sovereign Refuge: The Pastoral Theology of Theodore Beza Paternoster Theological Monographs Shawn D. Wright This study of Beza's pastoral theology, based on a thorough examination of his writings, uncovers a new portrait of the third generation reformer. The picture that emerges is not of a cold, removed, overly-intellectual academic, but a committed Christian troubled by the vicissitudes of life. He believed that only the biblical truth of the supreme sovereignty of God could support believers on their earthly pilgrimage to heaven. Shawn D. Wright is Assistant Professor of Church History at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky, USA. ISBN: 1-84227-252-7/ 229x152mm /420pp / 29.99 Paternoster, PO Box 300, Carlisle, Cumbria CA3 OQS, UK