Creation & Covenant: The Significance of Sexual Difference in the Moral Theology of Marriage
by Christopher Roberts. But that book has little to say from the East apart from a couple of inadequate sections on Clement of Alexandria and Gregory of Nyssa. But we cannot fault Roberts, and for two reasons: first, no early Christians asked the question in any serious or systematic way of what, in theological terms, human sexual differentiation means; and, second, most of us in the Christian East have ourselves only begun to ask the questions of what, theologically, the meaning of both sex and gender are. For too long, the question either did not occur or, as when recently it did, we have often replied very inadequately. If Orthodox Christians hope to be taken seriously--as I do--in discussions about why marriage is between a man and a woman, and why the tradition of priestly ordination is reserved for men, then we must come up with deeper, more satisfying arguments that ultimately answer the question: what purpose did God have in mind in creating us male and female? I am myself trying to ask such questions in a book (under contract with T&T Clark) tentatively entitled "Sexual Differentiation and the Christian East: Sources Ancient and Modern."
Now a new book comes along to continue asking those questions:
Patricia Beattie Jung and Aana Marie Vigen, eds., God, Science, Sex, Gender: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Christian Ethics (University of Illinois Press, 2010)vii+287pp.
This is an interesting and important book that very clearly saw its goal as asking questions rather than providing definitive answers. As the great moral philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre put it in his book on Edith Stein
The editors, one a Lutheran and the other a Roman Catholic, gathered together over a dozen academics, almost all of them at Roman Catholics at Loyola University in Chicago--though there is an Episcopalian, Lutheran, and Mennonite among their number as well. This was designed as an interdisciplinary symposium, and so we have professors of biology, literature, sociology, anthropology, and philosophy alongside a half-dozen or so professors of theology. The one glaring absence here is, of course, that of the Christian East. One looks in vain in this collection for any reference, however passing, to any Eastern Christian figure--e.g., the Fathers, Bulgakov and the Slavophiles generally; and, more recently Elisabeth Behr Sigel, Verna Harrison, or John Behr--who, alongside such scholars as Eve Levin
The book is divided into three sections; the table of contents may be viewed here. The first section sets the scene with broadly "methodological" essays focusing largely on how religion and science may talk to one another. These are all short essays. Jon Nilson's, on Roman Catholic authority and moral theology, has a few things to say that may be of interest to those having no background whatsoever in the issues he addresses, but the ecclesiologist, ecumenist, or other specialist reader will find nothing new here.
The six essays in the second section are designed as reflections "on human sexual diversity." Of these, the most interesting and substantial is John McCarthy's "Interpreting the Theology of Creation: Binary Gender in Catholic Thought." Though marked by several typos, this is nonetheless a very thoughtful, respectful probing of reflection on creation theologically understood 'first and foremost [as] a 'relationship'" and "not a moment" (134). The author seeks to show that "statements of the Roman Catholic Church on sexuality and gender" are perhaps not "informed deeply enough by a Catholic theological reflection on creation" (133). Creation names a relationship of difference, and there is what he calls a "betweenness" in the relationship of creation-Creator. The author spends the rest of his chapter reflecting on this "betweenness" and trying to find language and categories to describe it. The obvious lacuna here is, of course, any reference to the profound and groundbreaking (if somewhat controversial) Sophiology of Bulgakov, which was precisely such an attempt to reflect on the "betweenness" in the Creator-creation relationship. That entire trajectory of theological speculation is unacknowledged in this otherwise commendable essay, which could have been strengthened by engaging Bulgakov and the argumentative tradition he inspired down to the present day.
The other essay that clearly suffers by ignoring the Christian East is the last one in the book by Patricia Beattie Jung and Joan Roughgarden: "Gender in Heaven: the Story of the Ethiopian Eunuch in Light of Evolutionary Biology." This is certainly an interesting and worthwhile essay, engagingly written, but it is unnecessarily weakened in three ways. First, and very surprisingly, it breezily conflates "sex" with "gender" and then baldly asserts that according to Roman Catholic teaching, "Gender is eternal" (225). But the Church has never said that. We simply do not know--beyond a rather general and vague sense that, in the age to come, we will remain embodied creatures, but in new, resurrected bodies where marriage (as with all the sacraments) will pass away, along with the need to procreate. Second, the authors assert that the story of the Ethiopian eunuch "has been much neglected and continues to this day to evoke little commentary." We are to take this assertion on faith, but should not do so. The story did not escape comment by Eusebius, St. Irenaeus of Lyons, St. John Chrysostom, Origen, Augustine, and others. It may not have been commented upon as much as other texts, but it was not entirely ignored. The authors go on to assert that this text "was rarely represented in Christian iconography." But there are Ethiopian (and other) icons of precisely this scene, and numerous recent studies
Still, in sum, this book, limited though it is to a Western perspective, is nonetheless useful in attempting to build bridges between theology and the sciences. Eastern Christian theology can perhaps benefit, mutatis mutandis, from some of the work here, and can certainly benefit from imitating the symposiasts' attempt to build bridges between science and theology--which has not often been recently done in the East
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