Thursday Theology #345
January 20, 2005
Topic: The ELCA Task Force report on Sexuality: Conscience-bound or Conscience-freed?
Colleagues,
Last week the ELCA released its Report and Recommendations on the
homosexuality issue. It is to be acted upon at this coming summer's "churchwide"
assembly. It addresses the ELCA's "canon law," the denomination's rules and
regulations, its operating procedures. It recommends that the ELCA stick with the
canon law now in place (no blessing of same-sex commitments, no pastoral
certification for non-celibate homosexuals), but recommends softening the edges of the
law to admit possible exceptions. These may proceed under the rubrics of
local pastoral wisdom for the blessings business, and local congregational wisdom
for calling homosexual pastors. But there are two minority reports from the
TF. One pushes the fence all the way down. The other calls for stiffening
the fence and disciplining those who climb over it.
The years of work put in by task force members must have been agonizing.
>From the grapevine I heard that one member said at the end, "X-years of my life
wasted." Not surprising, it is always agony to formulate canon law and keep it
aligned with Christ the cornerstone. Perhaps it can't be done. Such
non-alignment prompted Luther to toss the canon law of his day into the bonfire.
Wasn't Jesus talking about the same dilemma when he spoke his "Woe!" to the
theolgians for their laws about "tithing mint and dill and cummin" (i.e., trivia)
while "neglecting the weightier matters of justice, mercy and faith"? Was he
saying it can't be done?
Timothy Hoyer, pastor of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church in Jamestown NY, offers a
theological analysis of the ELCA Report. This venture didn't succeed
either, he says, in building on that primal cornerstone. Here is the case he makes.
Peace & Joy!
Ed Schroeder
THE BOUND CONSCIENCE
What assures the consciences of Christians that they are doing God's will?
Christians, out of love for God because of Christ, want to do God's will.
However, Christians relate to God as the Father of Jesus. They do not relate to
God merely as God. Thus, asking about doing God's will with no reference to
Christ amounts to omitting Christ. And that disregards what Christ has done to
make his Father the Christians' Father. Christians are actually free from
worrying about how to do God's will and are free to live following Christ as the
incarnation of God's will.
In the issues of blessing the marrriages of gay couples and the calling of
people in such relationships, the assuring of consciences is a concern of the
Task Force on Sexuality Studies. Let us take a look at how the Task Force
comforts consciences. Does the Task Force bind consciences or set them free in
Christ?
>From the Report of the Sexuality Task Force: "Such calling of a person
should be done with respect for those whose CONSCIENCES are BOUND [emph. added] to
an interpretation of Scripture that accords with the present policy of this
church" (p. 8). "Participants in this debate are disagreeing...because their
CONSCIENCES are BOUND to particular interpretations of Scripture and tradition"
(p. 11). "Indeed, in his [Luther's] own defense at the Diet of Worms, he
declared himself BOUND in CONSCIENCE by the Word of God" (p.11). "In the
responses of our sisters and brothers in this church we heard articulate, good-faith
statements of CONSCIENCES BOUND to the Word of God" (p. 11).
Consciences are either bound by God's law (or whatever words one uses as
synonyms for law, such as tradition, an interpretation of Scripture, the word of
God) or free in Christ. Consciences are free in Christ or bound by God's law
because there is Christ's forgiveness and there is everything else. Everything
else is what the law encompasses.
The Report and Recommendations have bound consciences by the law. The Report
assures the consciences of Christians that they are doing God's will when
they act "in the spirit of this law" (Report p. 13). When Christians ask how
they can know for sure that they are doing God's will, they ask because they have
doubts. They don't know if turning left is to do God's will or if turning
right is doing God's will. They feel they need something to guide them, to tell
them they are right, otherwise they worry that they might do something wrong.
The Task Force wants to calm the worries of Christian consciences by using
the law. However, godly minds cannot "be fortified against despair unless they
think that through mercy on account of Christ and not on account of the law
they with certainty have both righteousness and eternal life. This conviction
consoles, uplifts, and saves godly minds" (Book of Concord, Kolb-Wengert
edition, 166-167).
The problem with being bound to the law is that the ministry of the law is
sin and death (St. Paul), and that "good works do not bring peace to the
conscience" (BoC 170.358). Even worse, to trust the law as the assurance for doing
God's will is to deny knowing and trusting Christ as one's assurance. To trust
the law for comfort is to reject Christ's promise of forgiveness as the way
to give peace to the conscience before God. Christ, then, has died for nothing.
"For whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory
that overcomes the world, our faith. Who is it that overcomes the world but
whoever believes that Jesus is the Son of God?" (1 Jn 5.4-5) The "world"
includes Christians' consciences that nag them, bother them, condemn them, or falsely
comfort them with the assurance that their allegiance to the law gives them
good standing before God. For those who are nagged, bothered, and condemned,
the good news that overcomes those things is faith, believing that Jesus is the
Son of God.
"Do you not know that if you yield yourselves to any one as obedient slaves,
you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin [under the law (Rom
6.14)] which leads to death, or of obedience [faith], which leads to
righteousness? But thanks be to God, that you who were once slaves of sin [under the law]
have become obedient from the heart [faith] to the standard of teaching to
which you were committed, and, having been set free from sin, have become slaves
of righteousness. I am speaking in human terms, because of your natural
limitations" (Rom 6.16-19). To bind one's conscience to "an interpretation of
Scripture" is to yield oneself as an obedient slave of sin, which leads to death.
For when one is not bound to Christ's promise of forgiveness, the only other
outcome is death.
Being bound to "an interpretation of Scripture" leads to certain behaviors,
such as demanding others think the same way, demanding that others be condemned
for not being bound to the same interpretation of Scripture, threatening not
to share Christ's peace with those who are not slaves of the same master named
sin. A conscience bound to "an interpretation of Scripture" is "that worship
which offers God our own merits" (BoC 128.49), such as, "I am a good
Christian because I am orthodox," "I am a good Christian because I follow the church's
teaching that's been around for two thousand years," or "I am a good
Christian because I say the Bible is the true word of God." As it says in the Apology
of the Augsburg Confession, "It is not enough to believe that Christ was
born, suffered, and was raised again" (BoC 128.52), it is not enough to be
orthodox, or believe that the Bible is the true word of God, "unless we also add this
article, which is the real purpose of the narrative: 'the forgiveness of
sins'" (BoC 128.51). Forgiveness of sins is what sets a conscience free from
worry and also comforts the conscience that wants to know it is doing God's will.
To give people forgiveness, and to free people from death, from sin, from
God's judgment and condemnation, Christ died on a cross and rose from the dead,
thereby promising all people that he does forgive them, he is their peace with
God, and he assures them that believing him and following him is to do God's
will. Christians are now slaves to righteousness, that is, to Christ. Being
bound to Christ, the conscience now loves God, truly fears God, truly asserts
that God hears prayer, obeys God in all afflictions (BoC, Kolb/Wengert,
127.45).
Paul uses the expression, "slaves of righteousness," because of his hearers'
"natural limitations." In his letter to the Galatians, Paul uses Christ's
language of freedom. Being bound to Christ is to be free in Christ. "For
freedom Christ has set us free." "For you were called to freedom, brothers and
sisters." Paul got this freedom language from Christ, who in John 8 said, "If
you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the
truth, and the truth will make you free" (Jn 8.31-32). Jesus continues by saying
that everyone who commits a sin is a slave to sin and a slave does not have a
permanent place in the household. The slave dies. But, the son does have a
permanent place in the household. "So if the Son makes you free, you will be
free indeed" (Jn 8.36). The Son is the one who overcame death by his
resurrection.
So, instead of being bound to worrying about what is right and what is wrong,
worrying about pleasing God, worrying about being judged and not getting to
heaven, a Christian is free. To be free in Christ is to have faith, which
"arises and consoles in the midst of fears, receives the forgiveness of sins,
justifies us, and makes alive" (BoC 130.62). "Faith makes alive, because it
produces peace, joy, and eternal life in the heart" (BoC 137.100).
Being free in Christ also leads to certain behaviors, such as being forgiving
to others, loving others with Christ's love, being patient, kind, never
insisting on one's own way, understanding, bearing one another's burdens, sharing
Christ's peace, returning good for evil, loving one's enemies, doing good to
those who hurt one, tending the sick, feeding the hungry. "We also begin to
love our neighbor because our hearts have spiritual and holy impulses" (BoC
140.125). All that because of faith in Christ.
The promise of forgiveness is why Luther bound his conscience to Scripture
and the Word of God, for to him, Scripture and the Word of God specifically
meant the Gospel, the promise of Christ's forgiveness.
When binding the conscience to the law there will never be any peace with God
or with one another, as the Report so clearly illustrates by showing us the
diversity of views of those on both sides of the issue whose conscience is
bound to an interpretation of Scripture.
Only Christ's forgiveness gives the conscience peace with God and assures
Christians that they are doing God's will by their trusting Christ. Only when
the conscience is free in Christ is the Christian genuinely free--free from the
law's constant accusations that trouble the conscience or falsely assuage it,
free from death, and confident of the promised eternal life.
That the Report of the Sexuality Task Force does not offer Christ's
forgiveness as the way to free consciences with peace with God is troubling and depres
sing. Christ died and rose to bind people to him so that they could die with
him and rise with him. Being bound to "an interpretation of Scripture"
guarantees only death. Being free in Christ promises forgiveness, peace, and eternal
life. For Christ is risen.
PART 2
The Task Force's binding consciences to the law is a result of the eyes of
the Task Force being clouded by cataracts. Or, to use Paul's image, their eyes
are veiled to the fullness of what the law does. I would explain it this way.
People in this country, the United States, are raised by sayings such things
as, "If you live under my roof then you will obey the rules of this house."
"No one is above the law." "We are a country ruled by law, not by any one
person's whim." Everyone is supposed to be a law-abiding citizen. People hear
about Christian values equated with the Ten Commandments. Perhaps it is this
atmosphere of respect for the law that explains why the Report and
Recommendations from the Task Force for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Studies
in Sexuality (Report), even when it mentions law and gospel, is bound to the
law, and so, like a slave, has to follow the law and completely ignores the
gospel freedom of Christ forgiving all people by his death on a cross.
Perhaps the drama of Moses and the Ten Commandments, the "thunders and
lightnings, and a thick cloud upon the mountain, and a very loud trumpet blast, so
that all the people who were in the camp trembled" (Exodus 19.16), is what
literally enthralls the Report. Listen to its language:
"Key to our understanding of the Bible is that it is centered in Jesus Christ
and that it speaks to us in law and gospel. (Constitution, Bylaws, and
Continuing Resolutions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 2.02) The law
not only accuses us of sin; it also points to God's will for humankind. As
Lutherans, we understand that God's gracious concern is also present in the law,
which expresses God's concern for life, health, good order, and community.
(Deuteronomy 5:33) The sexual laws of Leviticus 18 have the same rationale.
(Leviticus 18:5)" (Report, pp. 12-13)
"We began this section with the biblical teaching that God's law is given for
our good, that we might flourish. It is in the spirit of that law, and in
the spirit of our gospel mission, to draw people in rather than to isolate
them." (Report, p. 13)
The Report mentions "law and gospel," but then goes on in its teaching using
only the law, as if there was nothing better than the law, as if the law is
the greatest thing God has ever given humanity.
The Lutheran Confessions also have their explanation for why the law is held
in such honor. They say that human nature thinks that righteousness is only
through the law. "For human reason only focuses on the law and does not
understand any other righteousness except obedience to the law" (BoC, 154.229).
Which explains why the writers of many psalms praise God's law, as in, "I will
never forget your precepts; for by them you have given me life" (Psalm 119.93).
The death and resurrection of Christ changed how Christians see God's law.
God's law was a guide for people until Christ came (Gal 3.23-26). Through
Christ the veil of Moses is taken off the law (2 Cor 3.12). "Deceived by human
wisdom, they did not see the true face of Moses but only his veiled face" (BoC,
Tappert, 139.229). By faith in Christ, God's law is seen for what it fully
is. "The law always accuses and terrifies consciences" (BoC, 126.38). Paul
calls God's law "a ministry of sin and death." Paul says that the law "brings
God's wrath." The law is the power of sin, and the law came in to increase sin
(Rom 5.20). Even more, Paul says, "I was once alive apart form the law, but
when the commandment came sin revived and I died; the very commandment which
promised life proved to be death to me. For sin, finding opportunity in the
commandment, deceived me and by it killed me. So the law is holy and just and
good" (Rom 7.9-12). The law is holy and good because it kills those who sin.
The Report in contrast says that God's gracious will for humans is in the
law, that the law makes life flourish, and that the law was given for our good.
That "peachy" view of the law is looking at the law without Christ, as Paul
and the Confessions clearly witness. When someone uses the perspective of
faith in Christ, the law is always God's deadly wrath against all people.
Consciences are bound to this law until faith in Christ frees them by his forgiveness.
But the Confessions then speak good news against those who think the law
makes life flourish. "We for our part preach the foolishness of the Gospel, which
reveals another righteousness, namely, that because of Christ, the
propitiator, we are accounted righteous when we believe that for Christ's sake God is
gracious to us. We know how repulsive this teaching is to the judgment of reason
and law and that the teaching of the law about love is more plausible; for
this is human wisdom. But we are not ashamed of the foolishness of the Gospel.
Because of Christ's glory we defend it and we ask Christ for the help of his
Holy Spirit to make it clear and distinct" (BoC, Tappert, 139.230).
When consciences are bound by the law, only faith in Christ, not human wisdom
or the work of a task force, can remove the covering from the law, the
covering that makes the law look like God's gracious will. The death of Christ,
"under the law," as Paul reminds us, obliterates any idea that the law is God's
graciousness.
So, what if, instead of "in the spirit of that law" the Task Force were free
to use the promise of Christ's forgiveness "to draw people in"? What if the
Task Force, and the whole ELCA, were to use the promise of Christ's forgiveness
as God's gracious will for humankind? What if they were to use the promise
of Christ's forgiveness as the guide for how to love and care for the people of
the church, which includes people who are gay? Those questions are asked
because Christ's promise of forgiveness has not been used. Christ's promise was
left out of the Report completely.
The law and its way of interpreting the Scripture were used by the Task Force
to reach its understanding and recommendations. If the people of faith
simply follow the Report, then Christ's promise will continue to be left out of the
next eight months of conversation and left out of the vote at the churchwide
assembly. That is no way to honor Christ. That is to deny knowing him.
There are eight months left for conversation. For the sake of Christ's glory
let the church see the law as it truly is: the ministry of sin and death.
And then, for the sake of Christ's glory, for after all, he is the one who died
and rose for us, let the church base its recommendations on the promise of
Christ's forgiveness working through love. For "freedom itself is the goal for
which Christ has set us free" (Gal. 5:1). Let that freedom be the Task Force's
goal as well, and the goal of the ELCA.