Updated Feb 14th 2018
This unit is being taught by me and Monica Melancthon at Pilgrim Theological College in Semester 1, 2018.
Part 1: March 2nd-4th (Sessions 1-6)
Part 2: April 27th-28th (Sessions 7-10)
Below is the outline of the content for each session, including a summary of the respective aims of each of the two parts. Check out the full schedule here
****
Part
1 of this Intensive will survey the contemporary interface between Christianity
and the discourses of sex and gender (and the contentions about them within
Christianity) and develop the concepts, language, and questions required to
develop informed, mutually critical but constructive conversations which occur
at that interface. With both a biblical scholar and systematic theologian
involved in the teaching, there will also be opportunity to explore the
relationship between doctrine and scripture.
Overview
A brief history of how
sex and gender have become major points of disputation in the relationship
between Christianity and Western cultures. Doctrinal discourse (and particular
doctrines) will be introduced as a dynamic and constructive enterprise able to
engage in lively, and not merely reactive, conversations with the discourses
about sex and gender.
Body in Christian Scripture and Early Christianity
Christian theology is an embodied theology embedded in creation, incarnation, resurrection and sacrament, making the body both the site and the recipient of God's revelation. Even so, the body has been problematic for theologians and the church. What do the Christian scriptures say about the body? How has the scriptural understanding of the body been received and understood by thinkers and theologians in the formative years of Christianity? How has these early understandings impacted our understandings of body and sexuality
Sex
and Gender: contemporary discussions
Historical,
philosophical, political and scientific developments have radically reshaped Western
discourses about sex and gender. These include feminist exposure of patriarchy,
Queer claims about gender fluidity, historical studies of the diverse meanings
of ‘sex’, and biological explorations of gender diversity and intersex. The
impact has been to place ideas about sex and gender very close to the centre of
the West’s cultural identity.
Sex,
Gender, Creation and Anthropology
Christian anthropology
is the default doctrinal locus of sex and gender. The idea of the gendered
human bearing the image of God has a complicated history within Christian
doctrine. Now it is even more complicated. Is there anything about human being
as imago dei that can be illuminated
by contemporary ideas of sex and gender, and vice versa? Also relevant are
recent developments in the broader doctrine of creation, notably evolutionary
diversity and disputed questions of the order of creation.
Sex,
Gender, and Eschatology
From Christianity’s
origins, belief in the resurrection and its associated eschatology has given
the body a pivotal place in Christian
thought. The resurrection at once affirms bodily existence but also points to a
transformed body. The early equivocation towards, but never absolute denial of,
marriage and sex was one manifestation of living in that tension. How does this
perennial tension within Christian thought engage contemporary discussions of
sex and gender.
Sex, Gender, Christology and Trinity
Classical Christology is usually seen as a barrier to conversations between doctrine and contemporary discourses of sex and gender. On the other hand, classical Trinitarian theology is almost the first-chosen partner for such conversations. Christology will be explored for its fruitfulness for an understanding of what human ‘nature’ is. The Trinity will be explored (with more caution than has sometimes been the case) for the understandings of personhood which flow from it. A conversation around these issues has much potential.
****
Part 2 will focus on using the framework developed in Part 1 to engage a variety of
specific and recent proposals for linking particular Christian doctrines to particular
areas of sex and gender. These will include desire, celibacy, orientation,
intersex, and marriage. Each of these proposals gives particular weight to
particular Christian doctrines. Each will be studied closely and critically
evaluated. But the framework will also be challenged by considering the issues
of sexuality and gender from a non-Western context, namely that of India. We
will conclude by canvassing how the insights gained unfold in the life of the
church, both locally and globally.
Proposal A: Sarah Coakley’s God, Sex and the Self. In this book, British theologian, Sarah
Coakley, explores the connections between the doctrine of the Trinity, desire
for God and sexual desire. Drawing on patristic writers, Coakley develops a
post-Freudian theology of desire.
Proposal
B: In his book Spiritual Friendship, American biblical
scholar, Wesley Hill, argues for a classical doctrine of marriage according to
which it is closed to gays and lesbians. He argues for celibate, covenanted
spiritual friendship as the appropriate structure for same-sex attracted
Christians.
Proposal
C: Robert Song’s Covenant and Calling also employs the
notion of covenant for same-sex relationships, but in his case for
relationships which involve sexual intimacy. Arguing from the doctrine of
creation, he argues that openness to pro-creation is a definitive element of
marriage. But his notion of covenantal
relationships embraces a connection between sexual intimacy and both
faithfulness and permanence.
Sexuality
in India
Discussion on sexuality in India is often limited to the Kamasutra or the many erotic temple sculptures or miniatures. The latter should be seen as 'irrigularities' or 'symbols' of artistic licence that are in fact lodged within an overarching narrative of repression.What is sexuality? How is it understood? Where is it embedded? What are the challenges that confront discussions on sexuality in India today? These are some of the questions that will be addressed.
Proposal
D: In Sex Difference and Christian Theology
Megan DeFranza argues, in part, from Christology for a concept of the imago dei which ‘decentres’ sex and
gender from that image. She developed this argument with particular reference
to the realities of the intersex community.
Proposal
E: Roman Catholic theologian, Jean Porter,
argues from a doctrine of nature and an understanding of natural law by which
procreation is paradigmatic for the institution
of marriage,but it is not essential to every marriage. Accordingly she extends
marriage to same-sex relationships.
Sex,
Gender and Christian discipleship, Christian witness, and church unity.
The issues explored in
the previous sessions have implications individual Christians. They also have
implications of the corporate life of the church. These include the
understanding of baptism and the composition of the Christian community; the
witness of the Christian church in a context where the church’s traditional
teachings on these matters have become a form of ‘anti-witness' (Robert Song);
and for the unity between churches of the West and those of other contexts
where the issues of sex and gender have are framed differently than they are in
the contemporary West. Against the background of the close nexus in the
contemporary West between sex, gender and cultural identity, the place of sex
and gender in Christian identity will also be explored.
|
Blogging about systematic theology, the theology of the Uniting Church in Australia, and the strangeness of Jesus Christ
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
Sex, Gender and Christian Doctrine: Semester 1, 2018
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment