Joseph Walter Miller

Homosexuality


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the swinging pendulum of cultural practice and tolerance of homosexuality. He covered the chronological era from the beginning of the Western Christianity to the 14th century. Although attitudes swung by extremes over the centuries, in many historical eras, including early Christendom, the practice of homosexuality was not a religious, moral issue but a cultural issue. There was no recognition of gay orientation, and people of diverse backgrounds practiced both gay and straight sex. Many early rulers such as Emperor Hadrian had homosexual relationships. Boswell’s analyses9 of the scriptures and early church were an opening salvo against the contemporary, non-analytical acceptance of the status quo condemnation of the LGBT community. His scholarship is impeccable though, being the first to tackle this issue head on, his work has endured much criticism. Boswell died of AIDS at the age of 47, and I suspect that he was gay. Perhaps his personal experience informed his analysis.

      Mark Allan Powell is the Robert and Phyllis Leatherman Professor of New Testament at Trinity Lutheran Seminary. He is editor of the HarperCollins Bible Dictionary and author of more than 100 articles and 25 books on the Bible and religion, including a widely used textbook, Introducing the New Testament. He is probably the most prolific scholar within my selection of sources. Powell has written a chapter in a quasi-official book written by a series of distinguished authors in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA), Faithful Conversations, edited by James M. Childs.

      K. Renato Lings has recently published Love Lost in Translation, a 641 page tome made up of the most detailed literary and linguistic analysis of the clobber scriptures. Lings (according to book cover) and website holds degrees in Spanish, Translation Studies, and Theology. In addition to studying Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Nahuatl (Aztec), he has written and taught extensively on biblical interpretation, translation, and issues relating to gender and sexuality. Missing from his introduction is his motivation for writing on this subject. His writing appears to betray only an academic interest in accurate translation and sexuality as expressed in the Bible. Although the book itself is very detailed in translation of Hebrew and Greek, it is a very readable and interesting book.

      Who is doing the teaching today? Arguing that homosexuality is a sin

      Why me?

      Since so much has been written on homosexuality, why write another tome? Many others have written in support of the LGBT community; some are briefly introduced above. As noted, those who have had a significant relationship(s) with gay friends and/or family tend to be supportive of the LGBT community. When they exegete the scripture that has been used to oppress gays, they interpret them differently from the current negative connotations that are often introduced by words such as, “Well, the Bible says….”

      So why am I writing about this subject, and in defense of the LGBT community and homosexual practice? Unlike Hamilton, Helminiak, or Rogers, I have not had an extensive ministry with the gay community. I do not have intimate relationships with any gay people who have come out of the closet. I have not witnessed committed Christian gay couples and their faithful service to the Lord. I was an engineer for about 30 years and lived in a refined bubble devoid of poverty, cultural issues like abortion or homosexuality, economic deprivation, pay-day loan sharks, lack of basic medical care, unjust immigration systems, and the like. Depending on the particular year, I mingled among PhD scientists and engineers, other university academics, or well-paid workers in a production facility.

      I remember reading a Houston Chronicle article many years ago about the oppression of undocumented Latino workers who were not paid their wages. They had no recourse to the law because they would get deported. I remember learning about this and other injustices in the world in high resolution, but such occurrences were not in my life’s sphere. I read about poverty, read about injustice of all kinds, and was partially aware of inequities in our culture. Then my world changed. I graduated in 2002 from Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University with the standard preaching degree, a Masters of Divinity, at the age of 57. I was ordained an elder in the UMC at the age of 60. At first, my appointments were as an associate at churches with relatively well-to-do congregants. My refined bubble was burst by pastoral ministry with a more diverse group of people, but the upper middle class nature of the parishes was not all that different from my previous environment. In 2004 I was appointed