Re:virus: Gender and Nature in Contemporary NeoPaganism

From: kharin (hidden@lucifer.com)
Date: Wed Jul 24 2002 - 07:13:10 MDT


"Homosexuality is condemned and slavery condoned in the JCIZ, but if these tendencies were reversed, it would not compromise the underpinnings of the theological structure; gay/lesbian rights identical to those of straights and white/nonwhite equality are no metaphysical threat to the integrity of the system. The religious ramifications of feminism and environmentalism, however, strike it to its very core."

I think my reading is rather different. The opprobrium regarding sexuality in these texts (naturally I can speak with more authority regarding the bible than the koran et al) relates to what could be called a morality of shortage (as opposed to what David Starkey calls the present morality of excess) i.e individual preference (selfishness, greed) is regarded as being invidious to the interests of society as a whole (i.e. small populations suffering from diseases and famine could ill afford individuals engaging in non-precreative sex for much the same reasons as conceiving multiple children on the expectation that some will die), which might be why the Aquinan interpretation of the bible placed so much stress on the go forth and multiply argument.

More to the point, the bible does not seem to me univocal on the issues of environmentalism and feminism you address. It is, of course, rarely univocal on anything, but the depiction of homosexuality would certainly seem to be one of them; the only non-condemnatory passage I can think of regarding that is where a Roman Centurion asks Jesus to heal a male slave (the rather strained point being that most Romans couldn't have cared less whether their slaves lived or died).

"In the JCIZ, all deities are male, the first human is male, and any
central prophets or saviors are male."

Not quite, there are figures like the Virgin Mary whose own cult of mariolatry within Catholicism was extensive to say the least, and there are female saints. More to the point, a canon of that kind tends to be extremely flexible from the point of view of the worshipper. Certainly, studies relating to figures like Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe often suggested that appropriation of female aspects of the christian canon was central to the carving out a feminised version of religious discourse (the survival of myths regarding Pope Joan being a case in point). The same applies to those who repurpose the christian god as being female today. Regarding the purported feminine alienation in contemporary christianity, women make up a disproportionate amount of the Anglican church in the UK, whose acceptance of women priests was accordingly more of a survival tactic than a theological revolution. The point regarding women in christianity is that they are simultaneously revered as models of purity (Mary) and conde
mned as corrupt (Eve, Jezebel, Salome). While certainly a feminist issue, this seems to me more closely related to the issues of sexuality raised above.

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