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The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Six

February 12, 2024 By Jerry Jones 1 Comment

Paul had no knowledge of the modern concept of sexual orientation.

Some revisionists assume Paul did not know about same sex orientation from birth and this influenced his perspective of sexuality.  They support their claim with two presuppositions:

(1) Paul saw sexuality as only heterosexual.  
(2) The medical world at the time of Paul did not know about orientations and genetic tendencies toward certain behaviors.  

Victor Paul Furnish states:  

The presuppositions about homoeroticism that shaped the views of ancient writers are now as outdated as any of their judgments about human anatomy and human reproductive system.  Especially because of the knowledge that has been gained about sexual orientation and the complex factors that are involved in its formation, the ancient presuppositions about sex and gender have been rendered obsolete.1 Victor Paul Furnish, The Moral Teaching of Paul: Selected Issues. 3rd ed. (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2009), 91.

Matthew Vines writes:

And we are about to see, the new information we have about sexual orientation actually requires us to reinterpret Scripture no matter what stance we take on same-sex relationships.  If non-affirming Christians choose to maintain their interpretation of the Bible on homosexuality, they will have to change their interpretations on something else: celibacy.2 Matthew Vines, God and the Gay Christian: The Biblical Case in Support of Same-Sex Relationships. (New York: Convergent Books, 2014), 41.

The Bible doesn’t directly address the issue of same-sex orientation—or the expression of that orientation.3 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 130.

James Brownson agrees: 

Writers in the first century, including Paul, did not look at same-sex eroticism with the understanding of sexual orientation that is commonplace today.4 James Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality: Reframing the Church’s Debate on Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013), 166.

This distinction is, of course, a modern one that would make little sense in the ancient world, where the notion of sexual orientation was absent.5 Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality,170.

Karen Keen believes same sex orientation is unchosen, yet indicates for some it is not permanent:

The church began to acknowledge that same-sex attraction is unchosen, often shows up during puberty, and does not change for the majority of people.6 Karen Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 101.

Concerning same sex orientation and science she writes:

He (Paul) assumed same-sex attraction is caused by rejecting God, an assertion we know is not scientifically accurate.7 Karen Keen, The Bible & Sexuality: A Course Reader. (Durham:Contemplatio Publishing, 2020),22.  Paul does not say same sex attraction is caused by rejecting God, but he does say same sex relationships are one of two illustrations or examples (idolatry being the other) of rejecting God.  

 Knowledge of Same Sex Orientation During the Time of Paul8 Robert Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Text and Hermeneutics. (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2003),264. “Many human emotions (for example, lust, anger, jealousy, covetousness) obviously run counter to God’s intended design for nature and cannot be pronounced ‘good’ simply because they are felt.  Paul attributes such sinful impulses to the fall of Adam (Rom 5:12-21).”

Like other issues that surround the LGBTQ+ conversation, revisionist authors don’t always agree on whether the genetic tendency for same sex orientation was known during the time of Paul. Consider the following affirming writers:

William Loader states: 

Plato certainly knew of theories about sexual orientation, such as the one espoused by Aristophanes which offers an explanation of why some women are attracted to women, some men to men, and the rest of us to the opposite sex (Plato Symposium 189-193).  This was known.  Philo cited it (Contempl. 57-63) and, like Plato, did not agree, but with more substantial grounds, for it contradicted Genesis.  God created only male and female.  Paul similarly assumes that all people are male or female and that their natural orientation is towards the opposite sex.  This, he argues, was distorted not because of Adam’s fall but as a result of a perverted understanding of God, producing in them a perverted orientation towards members of their own sex.9 Preston Sprinkle (ed.), Two Views on Homosexuality, the Bible. and the Church. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2016), William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill, 150.

It is very possible that Paul knew of views which claimed some people had what we would call a homosexual orientation, though we cannot know for sure and certainly should not read our modern theories back into his world.  If he did, it is more likely that, like other Jews, he would have rejected them out of hand, as does Philo… He would have stood more strongly under the influence of Jewish creation traditionwhich declares human beings male and female, to which he may have well be alluding in 1:26-27, and so seen same-sex sexual acts by people (all of whom he deemed heterosexual in our terms) as flouting the divine order.10 William Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012),322-324. Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 41, 102. “And as we are about to see, the new information we have about sexual orientation actually requires us to reinterpret Scripture no matter what stance we take on same-sex relationships…the concept of same-sex orientation didn’t exist in the ancient world.”  Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 99.)  “If there’s a substantial difference between the type of behavior Paul condemned and the intimate, committed, relationships of gay Christians, then he has not relegated our gay friends and loved ones to the proverbial dustbin.”  Loader believes it was “inconceivable that he (Paul) would have approved of any same-sex activity,” Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 322.

Bernadette Brooten believes sexual “orientation” was acknowledged in Paul’s day and was thought to be arranged by the stars.  She writes:

Although they considered female homoeroticism unnatural, ancient astrologers mentioned it dozens of times, attesting to broad societal recognition of the phenomenon.  Further, contrary to the view that the idea of sexual orientation did not develop until the nineteenth century, the astrological sources demonstrate the existence in the Roman world of the concept of lifelong erotic orientation.  Because of a particular   configuration of the stars…determined a woman’s erotic inclination for the duration of her life.11 Bernadette Brooten, Love Between Women: Early Christian Responses to Female Homoeroticism. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), 140.

In 2006 James Brownson commented on the relationship between orientation and action:

One is not morally responsible for one’s orientation, but one is morally responsible for one’s behavior…This distinction between inclination and action assumes something enormously important for moral thinking: the centrality of the will.  At the heart of moral responsibility is our ability to choose.  We are morally responsible for what we choose to do (and the subsequent implications and consequences of our choices); we are morally responsible, however for what we have not actively or passively chosen.  Moreover, the distinction between inclination and action is critical for understanding human freedom.  We are not slaves to our impulses, but have the ability to control them and to choose the good.  This assumption is the foundation of human society.  So there is good reason to distinguish between orientation and behavior, between inclination and action.12 James Brownson, “Gay Unions: Consistent Witness or Pastoral Accommodations?” 9.

He reverses his thinking in a later book written in 2013.13 Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 2013.

Justin Lee addresses both orientation and source: 

…the question of orientation origin has become a battleground for gays and Christians on all sides of the issue.  In actuality, these arguments are built on nothing.  Gay sex could still be sinful even if same-sex attractions are inborn; we humans are born with all kinds of sinful temptations.14 Justin Lee, Torn: Rescuing the Gospel-vs-Christians Debate.  (New York: Jericho, 2012), 68.

At this point, the evidence makes it look very likely that biology has something to do with sexual orientation, but scientists are still learning, and nothing is set in stone.  It’s not only that we don’t know what causes people to be gay; we don’t know what causes people to be straight, either!15 Lee, Torn, 67.

Paul’s world view was impacted by his understanding of Torah.  Because of this, if he had known about same sex orientation there is no indication he would have considered it acceptable.  

Genetics and Same Sex Orientation

Modern day affirming authors also represent different viewpoints regarding same sex orientation and its relationship to same sex activity today.   

Justin Lee states: 

…so whether behavior is sinful or not doesn’t tell us anything about whether the related attraction has biological roots…We all have inborn tendencies to sin in any number of ways.  If gay people’s same-sex attractions were inborn, that wouldn’t necessarily mean it’s okay to act on them, and if we all agreed that gay sex is sinful, that wouldn’t necessarily mean that same-sex attractions aren’t inborn.  “Is it a sin?” and “Does it have biological roots?” are two completely separate questions.16 Lee, Torn, 62.

If one is born with same sex orientation, Lee does not believe it is possible to change and rejects any claims of “success” by reparative therapy.  Granted for the most part efforts to change such orientation have failed, however Karen Keen indicates 23% have made that change.17 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 139. N.5.  “At this stage of the study it was 15 percent. The final number was 23 percent. This was still far lower than many of us in the ex-gay world wanted to admit, even though we regularly observed that most of us did not experience change.  We held on to hope by focusing on the few ex-gay leaders who seemed to ‘make it.’”  Prior to this understanding of a 23% success rate in changing one’s same sex orientation, Keen observed: “it eventually became clear that spiritual and therapeutic methods were not successful in changing most people’s sexual orientation.” Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 101.  Some have changed their same sex orientation (or at least the choice to act upon it) and have gone on to live heterosexual lifestyles, but this has not been the norm.  Whether or not people really “changed” as witnessed by the failure of ex-gay and therapeutic organizations is debatable.18 Some of the modern homosexual community deny changing orientation is possible.  Even some of the leaders of the ex-gay efforts agree.  For an opposite understanding, read: Stephen Black, Freedom Realized: Finding Freedom from Homosexuality & Living a Life Free from Labels. (Enumclaw, WA.: Redemption Press,) 2017.

John Corvina writes:

The fact is that there are plenty of genetically influenced traits that are nevertheless undesirable.  Alcoholism may have a genetic basis, but it doesn’t follow that alcoholics ought to drink excessively.  Some people may have a genetic predisposition to violence, but they have no more right to attack their neighbors than anyone else.  Persons with such tendencies cannot say “God made me this way” as an excuse for acting on their dispositions.19 John Corvino, Nature?  Nurture?  It Doesn’t Matter.  http://johncorvino.com/2004/08nature-nurture-it-doesnt/.

Science has indeed proven a genetic propensity for alcoholism.  That being the case, consider the following questions:

(1) Is drunkenness wrong for one born with the orientation or predisposition for alcohol?  Some pedophiles have used the studies on alcoholism to justify their conduct.  How these studies relate to same sex orientation is yet to be decided.  As far as the medical world can tell there has not been a “gene” discovered establishing same sex orientation.20 Jim Reynolds, Lepers Among Us: Homosexuality and the Life of the Church.  (Xulon Press: 2007). 81. For information about some of scientific literature see Mark Yarhouse and Stanton Jones.  Homosexuality: The Use of Scientific Research in Church’s Moral Debate.  (Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 2000), 35-38.

(2) If some in the LGBTQ+ community claim they were born with same sex orientation and cannot avoid acting upon that tendency, could those who work with other inclinations mentioned in 1 Corinthians 6:9 claim exemption by saying they were born with a tendency to lie, or be covetous or adulterous, and, as such, are not responsible for their actions? 

Michael Uklega summarizes the same observation: 

There is no such thing as nonabusive adultery; all adultery is wrong.  There is no such thing as nonillicit theft; the Bible clearly states that all theft is wrong.  Nor does the Bible teach such a thing as “responsible” covetousness.  The Bible emphatically declares that all reviling and swindling is illicit.  And without a doubt, homosexuality is placed in the same list of prohibitions in 1 Cor 6:9 and 1 Tim 1:10.  In the case of homosexuality, motives are not the issue.  To make them such finds no exegetical support in Scripture.21 Michael P. Uklega, “The Bible and Homosexuality Part 2: Homosexuality in the New Testament,” Bibliotheca Sacra 140, no. 560 (1983), 353.

 Paul’s Use of “Exchange” in Romans 1

After Paul establishes the need of redemption for the gentiles in Romans 1, his discourse becomes more descriptive.  In Romans 1:22 Paul says mankind exchanged worshiping the “Creator” for worshiping the “creation.”22 In the garden of Eden, the woman “saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye” (Gen 3:6).  She was guilty of loving the created (fruit) instead of the Creator.  In a similar way the gentles “worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator” (Rom 1:26).  Perhaps referencing his Jewish roots, Paul uses the term “exchange” that is reminiscent of Israel’s action when they made a “god” in the shape of a calf (Exod 32:4,8).23 Lev 19:4: “Do not turn to idols or make metal gods for yourselves.”  As Israel’s “turning” could be seen as a reversal, it could also be a form of “exchange;” God was exchanged for idols or metal gods. See 1 Thess 1:7-9: “turned from idols to serve the living and true God.” 24 ESV: “exchanged;” CEB: “traded;” NKJV: “changed.”  For more information concerning the parallels of the LXX to Romans see Martti Nissinen, Homoeroticism in the Biblical World: A Historical Perspective. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1998), 175.   The terminology of Psalm 106:20 is quite like that of Rom 1:23:

They exchanged their glorious God for an image of a bull, which eats grass.25
 Ps 106:20                                  Rom 1:23 
καὶ ἠλλάξαντο              καὶ ἤλλαξαν
τὴν δόξαν αὐτῶν                 τὴν δόξαν τοῦἀ φθάρτου θεοῦ
ἐν ὁμοιώματι μόσχου                ἐν ὁμοιώματι εἰκόνος

Three times in Romans 1:23 through 26 Paul uses this term:26 In the first two exchanges the divine is traded for a non-divine substitute.  In the third exchange what should have been natural is traded for an unacceptable substitute (unnatural).

(1) Romans 1:23:  “they changed (allasso ἀλλάσσω) the glory of the immortal God for images27 NLT: “And instead of worshiping the glorious, ever-living God, they worshiped idols made to look like mere people and birds and animals and reptiles.” made to look like a moral human being and birds and animals and reptiles.”28 “They swapped the glory of the immortal God for the likeness of the image of mortal humans” (1:23) N. T. Wright, The Kingdom New Testament: A Contemporary Translation. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2011),312.
(2) Romans 1:25: “They exchanged (metallasso: μεταλλάσσω) the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served created things.”29 Charles H. Talbert, Romans. (Macon, GA.: Smyth & Helwys Publishing, 2002), 70.  “What one worships will translate in how one behaves.”  Paul adds a prefix (meta) here to make the root term more emphatic.   
(3) Romans 1:26: The word for “exchange” in Romans 1:26 is μετήλλαξαν—the same term he uses in 1:25:  “Even their women exchanged natural sexual relations for unnatural ones.”  

Again, the prefix is added for emphasis.  

The dual use of “exchange” (metallasso: μεταλλάσσω) in Romans 1:26 and 27 connects rebellion against God and the “shameless acts” of Romans 1:27.30Richard Hays, The Moral Vision of the New Testament: A Contemporary Introduction to New Testament Ethics. (San Francisco: Harper Collins Publishers, 1996), 386-387.  Each time he uses the term, Paul shows how “foolish” they are even though they claimed to be “wise” (Rom 1:22).  The terms for exchange in Romans 1:23 and in Romans 1:26 are “parallel” concepts (idols for God and unnatural for natural) and are connected by the “exchange” of truth “for the lie” in Romans 1:25.  Gagnon outlines the results of this “exchange”: 

Quite appropriately, an absurd exchange of God for idols leads to an absurd exchange of heterosexual intercourse for homosexual intercourse.  A dishonoring of God leads to a mutual dishonoring of selves.  A failure to see fit to acknowledge God leads to an unfit mind and debased conduct.31 Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 253.

In summary, Romans 1:25-27 says:32 William Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,” Zeitschrift fur die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 108 (1) 2017,130. “Paul sees the perverted state of mind, passion, and subsequent expression in acts as the outcome of exchanging what is true for what is false.  The motif of change or exchange occurs as a central feature in Paul’s discussion.”
ἤλλαξαν τὴν δόξαν τοῦ ἀφθάρτου θεοῦ 
they exchanged the glory of the immortal God (Rom 1:23)
οἵτινες μετήλλαξαν τὴν ἀλήθειαν τοῦ θεοῦ 
they exchanged the truth about God (Rom1:25)
 μετήλλαξαν τὴν φυσικὴν χρῆσιν 
 exchanged natural intercourse (Rom 1:26)
“Paul’s argument is one about change or perversion which affects not only people’s actions but also their minds.  Thus ‘they became futile in their thinking, and their senseless minds were darkened.’”
 
(1)Instead of being turned toward God, man turned to himself (Rom 1:25).
(2) Instead of women being turned toward men, they turned to other women (Rom 1:26). 
(3) Instead of men being turned toward women, they turned to other men (Rom 1:27). 

An examination of Paul’s use of the term “exchange” in Romans 1 does not resolve the question of same sex orientation being acquired or hereditary.  However, its use does suggest that same sex activity had not always been the case for some who were currently engaged in it.33 Paul’s use of the term “exchange” in Rom 1:23, 25, 26 communicates the idea that something once considered true is no longer. It represents a departure from current or former conditions.  (1 Cor 15:51)

Loader emphasizes Paul’s opposition to all same sex activity regardless of its nature:34 Loader, The New Testament and Sexuality, 499-500.  “I am also convinced that Paul’s anthropology in relation to sexual orientation needs supplementing with the reality that not all who engage in sexual intimacy with those of their own kind are engaging in perversion.  Those who are not should not then stand under the same judgment, but like all, be challenged to exercise the expression of their humanity in a way which is conformed to and informed by the generosity and goodness of God who confronts our reality and challenges us to authentic fulfillment.”   

In Romans 1, therefore, the most likely explanation is that Paul assumes that people were created male and female with heterosexual orientation of their natural sexual emotions.  Those who denied God’s reality had perverted minds and engaged in perverted acts:  they worshipped idols.  As punishment35 I am not sure the perverted minds were a punishment from God as much as they were a natural result of denying God and worshipping of idols. God gave them over to perverted minds with perverted passions and desires whose intensity they followed by engaging in perverted acts, females with females, males with males, and for both their mindset and their actions they stand condemned.  Paul does not differentiate between people of different sexual orientation, either to exempt homosexuals, or to make sure both are condemned.  He may have known that some made such differentiation, but he would not have believed it.  Nor does he focus only on pederastic relations. Without differentiation he condemns all with such sexual attitudes and desires and all acts which give expression to them.  He does so within the context of deliberately highlighting what he assumes his hearers will agree is outrageous sin, in order then to bring them to see that in fact all are under sin and in need of the gospel, including those so willing to condemn.36 Loader, The New Testament and Sexuality, 326.

Paul offers no reason why some were participating in same sex relationships other than attributing immoral acts to the power of sin (Rom 7:14 through 17).   His foundation for opposing same sex relationships are the boundaries established by God in the creation story of Genesis 1 and 2 and Holiness Code in Leviticus, “there can be no homosexual acts at all in Israel.”37 Richard Elliott Friedman and Shawa Dolansky, The Bible Now. (Oxford: University Press,2000) 35.   By stating that both women and men had “exchanged…” Paul indicates a choice had been made.  Preston Sprinkle concludes:

For Paul, the question of orientation is irrelevant. Homosexual unions violate the boundaries of gender established by God at creation.38 Preston Sprinkle, “Romans 1 and Homosexuality: A Critical Review of James Brownson’s Bible, Gender, Sexuality, Bulletin for Biblical Research 24. 4 (2014), 526.

Summary of Assumption Six

Even though the “jury is still out” concerning all the implications and questions about same sex orientation, Reynolds offers some interesting insights about the ancient world: 

The fact is that the notion of the innateness of homosexual passion in some persons at the time of Paul existed in the myth of human origins expounded in Plato’s Symposium (5th Century BC) and other influential ancient texts, including the writings of Aristotle (4th century BC) and later Philostratus (3rd century A.D.). The ancient pagan cultural context with its myths of homosexual innateness is not all that much unlike the contemporary 21st century context with its arguments for the innateness and beauty of consenting adult homosexual passion.39 Reynolds, The Lepers Among Us, 153.

Preston Sprinkle states:40 Eph 4:17; 1 Thess 1:9; 1 Cor 12:2

Paul’s world contained a vast array of perspectives on sexual orientation, examples of consensual and nonexploitative same sex couples, and even homosexual marriages. There is no historical reason why we should assume that Paul could not have had examples of consensual same-sex relations before his eyes when he penned Rom 1.41 Sprinkle, “Romans 1 and Homosexuality: A Critical Review of James Brownson’s Bible, Gender, Sexuality,” 523. 

Today, questions still exist as to the reasons individuals might be homosexual. 

Justin Lee writes:

…we don’t know what causes people to be straight…we can make only educated guesses and realize that there’s still a lot we don’t know.42 Lee, Torn, 67.

Sprinkle agrees: 

Same-sex orientation is way too complicated and we certainly have not arrived at a bulletproof understanding of it…According to everything I have read we still have a long ways to go.43 Preston Sprinkle, People to Be Loved:  Why Homosexuality is Not Just an Issue. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2015),192.

In her book written in 2008, Lisa Diamond44 Diamond is an American psychologist and feminist.  She is a professor of developmental psychology and health psychology at the University of Utah.  Her research focuses on sexual orientation development, sexual identity, and bonding.  She is married to her “partner, soulmate, and wife, Judi” (Sexual Fluidity, 326).  Her research is more involved than can be covered in this short article. proposes that sexuality is “fluid”:  

Sexual fluidity, quite simply, means situation-dependent flexibility in women’s sexual responsiveness.  This flexibility makes it possible for some women to experience desires for either men or women under certain circumstances, regardless of their overall sexual orientation. In other words, though women—like men—appear to be born with distinct sexual orientations, these orientations do not provide the last word on their sexual attractions and experiences.  Instead, women of all orientations may experience variation in their erotic and affectional feelings as they encounter different situations, relationships, and life stages.45 Lisa Diamond, Sexual Fluidity: Understanding Women’s Love and Desire. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2008), 3.

Because some revisionists maintain God is relational and loving and he created some people with same sex orientation, he would not forbid them to act upon that tendency.  Consequently, a life of celibacy is not an option demanded by God or the church for gay and lesbian Christians. Undoubtedly, celibacy is not a gift everyone has (1 Cor 7:7;46 Paul’s option for celibacy is influenced by his eschatology, present famine, and devotion to God. Matt 19:11 and 12), but both Jesus and Paul taught it was an option for some people.47 Assuming same sex activity is approved by God, the revisionists have used 1 Cor 7:9 to justify their choices.  1 Cor 7:9 is directed toward heterosexual marriages.  Revisionists add Gen 2:18 (“it is not good for man to be alone”) as further support for same sex relationships.    Concerning lifelong celibacy, Karen Keen writes:

But the reality is that human beings are biologically made for sexual relationships, not for lifelong celibacy.  Pretending this is not true will only enhance the disorder evident since the sexual revelation.  People will have sex either within marriage or outside of it.48 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 74.

For the most part revisionists do not emphasize the impact families of origin or traumatic life events49 Lee, Torn, 131. can have on same sex attraction.  Neither Torah nor the New Testament distinguish between acquired or inherited behaviors.  James writes that one is drawn away by his “own evil desire” (Jas 1:14).  The “desire” is not the sin, but the action that follows.  Individuals can be born tendencies for rage, prejudice, and greed, but that does not mean God approves on the actions that might follow.  Granted it is difficult to accept that God holds people responsible for something over which they have no control.  However, assuming one is born with a same sex orientation does not provide free license to act on that tendency.  Orientation is not a sin,50 Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 175. “If same-sex erotic acts are always morally wrong, then the impulse to engage in those acts is also a manifestation of a disordered and sinful inner state…If the acts are sinful, all inclinations to such acts are to be understood as manifestations of a sinful nature and are to be resisted as such.” however acting on an orientation can be.  

Without Romans 1:26 and 27, 1 Corinthians 6:9, and 1 Timothy 1:10, the New Testament is totally silent concerning same sex relationships.  It does seem strange that the Holy Spirit does not provide exception if some same sex relationships were and are acceptable (2 Tim 3:16).

Whether or not Paul knew about people born with same sex orientation cannot be determined. Regardless Romans 1:18-32 is an attack on gentile behavior and their need for justification (Rom 1:17; 3:10, 23).   As illustrations to God’s opposition to all ungodly conduct, he uses the term “exchange” twice in reference to idolatry and once in reference to same sex relationships.  (Rom 1:23-26).  Same sex activity is not the subject of his polemic, but an illustration of behavior God rejects.  Even if Paul was aware of same sex orientation, considering his dependence upon Torah and the information revealed to him by the Holy Spirit (John 16:13; 1 Thess 2:13; Acts 2:4), there is no indication he would have accepted same sex relationships as approved of God. 

Questions For Consideration

(1) Could the attraction to animals (orientation) be considered “inborn” or “acquired?”   

(2) If the medical world concludes there is a sexual orientation toward bestiality, what would be the response of the modern affirming community? 

Filed Under: Christian Life, LGBTQ+

The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Five

December 26, 2023 By Jerry Jones 1 Comment

The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Five

The term unnatural (against nature) refers to heterosexual men and women engaging in non-procreative sexual relations. 

Romans 1:26 and the interpretation of the word “unnatural” is a critical part of the LGBTQ+ conversation:

Because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural (phusikan: φυσικὴν) sexual relations for unnatural (para  physin:  παρὰ φύσιν). 

             Affirming Scholars Who Exclude Lesbian Activity in Romans 1:26

  1. James Brownson:

…Romans 1:26…was understood to refer, not to lesbian sexual activity, but to nonproductive forms of heterosexual intercourse.1James Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality: Reframing the Church’s Debate on Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013), 244.

…in Romans 1:26 probably does not refer to same-sex activity but to dishonorable forms of heterosexual intercourse.2Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 222.

Therefore, there is good reason to question the contemporary assumption that Romans 1:26 refers to lesbian sexual behavior.3Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 208.

But as I have repeatedly noted, broad and generic concepts like “homosexuality” did not exist in the ancient world; and it is considerably less clear that Romans 1:26 even envisions same-sex eroticism between women.4Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 218.

In this context, the reference to “their women” in Romans 1:26 probably does not refer to same-sex activity but to dishonorable forms of heterosexual intercourse.5Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 222.

In other words, the “lesbian” reading of Romans 1:26 is completely unattested in the early church in the first 300 years of its life, despite fairly common discussion of this text among patristic commentators.6Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 207.

Brownson’s current understanding that Romans 1:26 does not refer to lesbian sexual behavior represents a 180 degree change from his teaching in 2006: 

Such behavior is rejected not only because of its links with violence, idolatry, and lust, but more importantly because it violates the essential creational intent of God regarding sexuality, distorting the “one flesh” union of male and female which is the basis for sexual ethics throughout the Bible…I believe that when Paul speaks in Rom 1:26f. of “nature,” he is referencing God’s creational intent,  that God intends genital sexuality to be expressed exclusively in the faithful union between a man and a woman in marriage, and that Paul speaks against homosexual behavior because it does not express that creational intent.7James Brownson, “Gay Unions: Consistent Witness or Pastoral Accommodations?  An Evangelical Pastoral Dilemma and the Unity of the Church,” 4.

During a question-and-answer period connected to the Reformation Project in Los Angeles on October 22, 2016, Brownson was asked about his understanding of lesbian activity in Rom 1:26.  The following was his answer: 

The most objective data about this is the fact (and I have looked very hard for information that contradicts this) to my knowledge that the first 300 years of the churches’ life, nobody read Romans as referring to lesbian sex and there are multiple instances of this referring to women engaged in oral or anal sex.  Non-reproduction sex is sex that is contrary to nature.  I know scholars who disagree with me and affirming scholars who disagree with me.

However, he expresses doubt to his conclusion:  

I am not willing to die on this hill.

  1. James Miller8Robert Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Text and Hermeneutics. (Nashville: Abingdon, 2001), 299. “Third, Miller fails to cite a single ancient source that explicitly refers to anal or oral intercourse as ‘unnatural’ or ‘contrary to nature. Yet female same-sex intercourse is cited as being just that… Anal and oral intercourse did not carry much of a stigma in Greco-Roman society. Even most later rabbis did not forbid such intercourse between a husband and a wife… The fact that Rom 1:26 puts the blame squarely and solely on women indicates that unnatural forms of heterosexual intercourse are not at issue.”

That verse 27 condemns male homosexual practice is clear.  However, verse 26 does not specify that the unnatural sexual partner of the women is another woman… There is little reason to read Romans 1:26 as a reference to female homosexuality and strong reason to understand Paul’s comments as a rejection of some or all unnatural (non-coital) heterosexual intercourse, the type of intercourse used in verse 27.9James Miller “The Practices of Romans 1:26: Homosexual or Heterosexual?” Novum Testamentum 37 (1995) 1, 11.

If a woman wishes to have non-coital intercourse with a man her options are those of the homosexual male, for once the woman decides not to use her vagina she has no other gender-distinctive orifice. In other words, the remaining options for the woman are oral intercourse, anal intercourse and intercourse which does not involve penetration.10Miller, “The Practices of Romans 1:26: Homosexual or Heterosexual?” 10.

Miller also ascertains lesbian activity was not a targeted issue for rabbis:

A similar situation may be found in Jewish culture.  In the Mosaic code male homosexuality is condemned but female homosexuality is ignored…The only restriction the rabbis placed on practitioners of female homosexuality was that they may not marry a priest, presumably because they do not quite measure up to the standard of virginity required in Leviticus 21.  The rabbis were familiar with the issue of female homosexuality, but in spite of their distaste they apparently knew of no tradition which forbids the practice outright and thus they gave it a marginal status in Priestly law.11Miller, “The Practices of Romans 1:26: Homosexual or Heterosexual?” 7.

(3)  Karen Keen:

However, it’s important to realize that early on Romans 1 was not always understood and interpreted as referring to female same-sex relations.  This underscores the importance of entering the world of the biblical authors rather than super imposing our modern assumptions on them.12Karen Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 121.

Keen expresses her reluctance to discuss Romans 1:26 by stating:

I will not be discussing the debate on whether Romans 1 refers to female same-sex relations.  The evidence is ambiguous.13Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 121.

Two years later in a second book Keen states:  

Significantly, Romans 1:26 is the only possible place in the Bible that refers to female same-sex relations.  But even this is not certain.  The text does not specify with whom the women exchanged the natural for the unnatural.  It doesn’t specifically say women were having sex with other women.  Some early church fathers, including Augustine thought Romans 1:26 referred to women having anal sex with men (likely as birth control).14Karen Keen, The Bible & Sexuality: A Course Reader (Durham: Contemplatio, 2020), 22.

Keen appears to support a double standard for men and women regarding same sex relationships:  

This is likely why Israelite men are prohibited from same-sex relations, but women are not.  Procreation potential was thought to reside in male ejaculation.15Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 21.

Old Testament sex laws do not prohibit female same sex activity because for Israelite authors sex requires penile penetration and ejaculation.16Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 22.

Keen believes while women are not condemned for same sex relations, they are forbidden to have sex with animals because of possible penetration:

Israelite women are however, prohibited from having sex with animals, a bizarre act, but one that hypothetically allows for penetration (Lev. 18:23; 20:16).17Keen believes sex with animals is wrong for women because it could involve penetration. Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 22. The prohibition  against bestiality in Scripture does not mention the danger of penetration. Three questions: (1) Would Israelite women be “prohibited from having sex with animals” provided the animals were female and there was no “hypothetical” danger for penetration? (2) Would it be acceptable for Israelite women to have sex with animals where penetration did not take place? (3) Would Israelite men be prohibited from having sex with animals provided there was no penetration? (Lev 18:23; 20:15-16; Exod 22:19; Deut 27:21).

Even though Keen denies women are even engaged in same sex relations with one another in Romans 1:26 and female same sex relations are not condemned in scripture, in her later book, The Bible and Sexuality, she entertains the “possibility” that same sex relationships between women are condemned:

Both traditionalist and progressive scholars agree that the biblical authors condemned male (and possibly female) same-sex relations…The references are too few and inconclusive for either traditionalists or progressives to dogmatically assert why same-sex relations were condemned.18Keen, The Bible & Sexuality, 27.

Keen further supports her understanding by redefining “unnatural”:

In common Greco-Roman and Jewish usage, the term “unnatural” often referred to sex that was non-procreative or violated the dominated/submissive paradigm for gender norms.  We don’t have clear evidence that the objection to same-sex relations was violation of anatomical complementarity only by itself.19Keen, The Bible & Sexuality, 23.

If Keen’s interpretation of “unnatural” as a non-procreative sexual relationship is correct, Abraham’s sexual relationship with Sarah was “unnatural.”  Sarah’s womb was dead and Abraham’s “body was as good as dead” (Rom 4:18-19).  The same would hold true of a married couple who because of age or medical issues could not conceive a child. 

Keen makes a case for the exclusion of homosexual women in Romans 1:26, however she shows the tentative nature of her position by using qualifying words and phrases in her writings:

  1. This is likely why Israelite men…
  2. The only possible reference to female same sex activity in the Bible is Romans 1. However, the text does not specify with whom women exchanged the natural for the unnatural…Thus, when Romans 1:27 says men did “likewise,” the biblical author intends to make a connection to sodomy with women.
  3. If this interpretation is accepted, the concern might have beenthat anal sex was used to prevent pregnancy, thereby enabling promiscuity.  In other words, men were wasting their seed20Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 21. Regarding men wasting their seed, Keen writes: “Concern for what happens to semen is also evident (e.g., Gen 38:8-10). This is likely why Israelite men are prohibited from same-sex relations, but women are not. Procreation potential was thought to reside in male ejaculation.” and women willingly participated…
  4. It’s reasonable to conclude that when Paul refers to para physin, his concern includes the non-productive nature of same sex acts.21Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 21, 23, 36.

In summary, Brownson, Miller, and Keen agree women are not involved in lesbian activity in Romans 1:2622Colby Martin, UnClobber: Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality. (Louisville: John Knox Press, 2016),132. “Not referring to lesbianism, but referring to men and women having sex in unnatural way (that is, non-procreative sexual intercourse).” but men and women are engaged in non-productive sex.

            Affirming Scholars Who Include Lesbian Activity in Romans 1:26

It is not uncommon for affirming scholars to reject what other affirming authors have written:   

(1)  Louis Crompton 

  Another controversy centers on Paul’s reference to “changing” or leaving the “natural use” of women.  Some interpreters, seeking to mitigate Paul’s harshness, have read the passage as condemning not homosexuals generally but only heterosexual men and women who experimented with homosexuality.  According to this interpretation, Paul’s words were not directed at “bona fide” homosexuals in committed relationships.  But such a reading, however well-intentioned, seems strained and unhistorical.23Louis Crompton, Homosexuality and Civilization: Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003), 114.

(2) Bernadette Brooten:24It is conceded by most writers (especially revisionists) on both sides of the LGBTQ+ conversation that Brooten has written the classic on the conduct of women in the Roman world.

Paul could have believed that tribades [the active female partners in a female homosexual bond JJ], the ancient kinaidoi [the passive male partners in a male homosexual bond JJ], and other sexually unorthodox persons were born that way and yet still condemn them as unnatural and shameful. . .  I believe that Paul used the word “exchanged” to indicate that people knew the natural sexual order of the universe and left it behind. . .  I see Paul as condemning all forms of homoeroticism as the unnatural acts of people who had turned away from God.25Bernadette Brooten, Love Between Women: Early Christian Responses to Female Homoeroticism. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), 244.

As we have seen, nearly all of the extent Roman-period sources on female homoeroticism condemn it as monstrous, unnatural, diseased, and more. Similarly, early Christian sources strongly condemn the sexual love between women.26Brooten, Love Between Women, 191.

Since, however, Paul was trained as a Pharisee and continued to view himself as “a member of the people of Israel,” we need to consider at least briefly his condemnation of female and male homoeroticism in the context of Judaism…Paul presents homoerotic behavior as contrary to nature, and he discusses female and male homoeroticism side by side.27Brooten, Love Between Women, 64.

The type of sexual relations engaged in by women most often called “contrary to nature” (para physin) in the Roman world sexual is relations between women.28Brooten, Love Between Women, 251.

This verse (Romans 1:27 JJ) makes explicit what v. 26 leaves open, namely the precise nature of the unnatural acts.  The phrasing is parallel: just as the females exchanged natural intercourse for unnatural, so too do males give up the natural use of women.29Brooten, Love Between Women, 253.

According to Brooten the terms “natural” and “unnatural” in Romans 1:26-27 are dealing with “unnatural relations” between women and “unnatural relations” between men.  Paul is NOT contrasting the “natural” with the “unnatural” between women and between men.30Brooten, Love Between Women, 255.

With this analysis of the text, women having sex with other women (exchanged) and “in the same way” (Rom 1:27a) men having sex with other men (“for one another” Rom 1:27b) are considered “unnatural.”31Brooten, Love Between Women, 245. Brooten agrees with traditionist writer Richard Hays’ stance against Boswell’s interpretation of Rom 1:26. John Boswell is among the earliest writers (1980) to support the absence of lesbian activity in Rom 1:26. Brooten writes: “Richard Hays correctly argues against John Boswell that Rom 1.26f condemns sexual relations between women and between men (rather than referring to persons who are not homosexual committing homosexual acts, which are unusual or peculiar but not contrary to nature).”

(3) William Loader:

Female to female eroticism was more widely condemned in the Greco-Roman world than male, so that perhaps Paul chose to begin with the most abhorred, but this is not certain.32William Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,” Zeitschrift fur die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 108 (1) 2017, 141.

For Paul as for Philo and other Jews of the time, contrary to nature is contrary to God’s created order…Paul is not just writing about acts or even intent to act, but about what he sees as a twisted orientation which is a manifestation of a twisted response to God.  Something has gone wrong with the mind.  It is darkened (Rom 1:21) and unfit (1:28).  Its orientation, not just the actions, is contrary to God’s creation.  For on the basis of his reading of Genesis 1:27, Paul, like other Jews of his time, believes that human beings are only male or female—in our terms, heterosexual.  Anything other than that is a perversion.33Preston Sprinkle, (ed.), Two Views: Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2013), William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill,149.

Loader also expresses his understanding of Philo’s (Paul’s contemporary) beliefs about sexuality in ancient Jewish and Christian thought:

In Philo we find the most extensive discussions of same sex relations…he targets both pederasty and adult-adult consenting sexual relations, including between women…34William Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 33.

He (Philo) gives us by far the most extensive repertoire of arguments against same-sex relations…What is not according to nature is not according to God’s creation and is to be condemned…He also condemns same-sex relations between women and between men where the context is not pederasty but consensual adult behavior.35Sprinkle (ed), Two Views: Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Homosexuality and the Bible, 27.

Loader and Wesley Hill agree on the meaning of “contrary to nature”:

I very much concur with Wesley’s understanding of “contrary to nature” in Romans 1:26-27 as alluding to what God created people to be.36Sprinkle, (ed.), Two Views: Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill, 149.

Even Keen highly esteems Loader for his understanding of ancient sexuality among revisionists.  She writes:

Loader is a top scholar on the subject of sexuality in ancient Jewish and Christian thought.37Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationship,24.

(4) Matthew Vines:

But in two verses (Rom 1:26-27), he described lustful same-sex relations between men, likely between women as well, and his words were starkly negative.38Matthew Vines, God and the Gay Christian: The Biblical Case in Support of Same-Sex Relationships. (New York: Convergent Books, 2014), 96.

Even when not dealing directly with Romans 1:26, Vines believes women as well as men were involved in same sex relationships:

While female same-sex relations were condemned nearly unanimously throughout the ancient world, they often didn’t draw as much attention as male same-sex relations.39Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 90.

Vines admits that Brownson wrote “the finest theological treatments of this issue” and his “biblical analysis is extraordinary careful and thorough” and shows an “uncompromising fidelity to the authority of scripture.”40Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 169.

  However he disagrees with Brownson’s exegesis of Romans 1:26 and sides with Brooten:

I’m inclined to agree with Brooten’s argument here, even though it isn’t definitive.41Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 204.

The inclusion of lesbian activity in Romans 1:26 by these four affirming authors (Crompton,  Brooten, Loader, and Vines) is significant.  Perhaps by taking the stand they do, Brownson Miller, and Keen are attempting to soften the teachings of Romans 1:26-27 against all same sex relationships.42Victor Paul Furnish, The Moral Teaching of Paul: Selected Issues. 3rd ed. (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2009), 66-74. Furnish provides examples of others who reference same sex activity: Josephus, Philo, Seneca, Plutarch, Dio Chrysostom, Musonius Rufus and the Sibylline Oracles. I disagree with his summary written in 88-92. He states that the Pauline texts do not provide “unambiguous proof that homosexuality and all homosexual activity are inherently degenerate, disordered, and degrading” Furnish, The Moral Teaching of Paul, 89.

                      “Natural” and “Unnatural”

  1. Definitions connected to creation
    “Natural” (physin)43Physin in noun form is found eleven times in Paul’s writings and three other times in the New Testament. refers to a predetermined social or biological behavioral conduct and means “God’s created order” or his intended purpose for the world and his people.  Acting “against natural” (para physin)  violates the order established by God.  In the LGBTQ+ conversation “against natural” is a rejection of the procreative complementarity established by the creation of male and female as defined in Genesis 2:24.  To support their position, revisionists have seemingly changed the definition of para physin  (against natural) to “against one’s personal (sexual) nature.”44Preston Sprinkle, People to Be Loved: Why Homosexuality is Not Just an Issue. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2015), 188.

When the Creator is rejected (Rom 1:23) it follows that God’s created order is also rejected. Paul states they “exchanged the natural (ten physiken) for what is against nature (para physin).”   This “unnatural” activity is a perversion (Rom 1:27).  For Paul, “natural” is what God created.45Paul uses the language of creation (arsen and thelus) rather the normal words for man and woman (aner and gune).

  Same sex relationships are an example of the “unnatural.”

2. “Natural” and “unnatural” defined by three non-affirming authors

Robert Gagnon provides the following translations of para physin:  

        Fifth, the translations “beyond nature” and “contrary to nature” for para physin cannot be played off against each other and, moreover, “nature” here has little to do with innate desires.  The meaning “beyond” (the more common and general meaning of para with the accusative) and “contrary to, against, in opposition to” (a specific sense of this general meaning) are not necessarily mutually exclusive.  Same-sex intercourse is “beyond” or “in excess of” nature in the sense that it transgresses the boundaries for sexuality both established by God and transparent in nature even to gentiles.46Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 389-390.

He further explains: 

However, Rom 1:27 is quite explicit about what “the natural use of the female” was exchanged for:  sex with members of the same sex.  For the “likewise” of 1:27 to be appropriate, both the thing exchanged, and the thing exchanged for must be comparable.  Hence, sex with members of the same sex, not non-coital sex, is the point of comparison between 1:26 and 1:27.47Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 298-299.

Richard Hays states:

There are abundant instances, both in the Greco-Roman moral philosophers and in literary texts, of the opposition between “natural” (kata physin) and “unnatural” (para physin) behavior.  These categories play a major role in Stoicism, when the right moral action is closely identified with action kata physin.  In particular, the opposition between “natural” and “unnatural” is very frequently used (in the absence of convenient Greek words for “heterosexual” and “homosexual) as a way of distinguishing between heterosexual and homosexual behavior.48Richard B. Hays, “Relations Natural and Unnatural: A Response to John Boswell’s Exegesis of Romans 1.” Journal of Religious Ethics. Vol 14 (1986), 192.

I have cited these texts at some length because they demonstrate that in Paul’s time the categorization of homosexual practices as para physin was a commonplace feature of polemical attaches against such behavior, particularly in the world of Hellenistic Judaism.  When this idea turns up in Romans 1 (in a form relatively restrained by comparison to some of the above examples), we must recognize that Paul is hardly making an original contribution to theological thought on the subject; he speaks out of a Hellenistic-Jewish cultural context in which homosexuality is regarded as an abomination, and he assumes that his readers will share his negative judgment of it.  In fact, the whole design and logic of his argument demands such an assumption.  Though he offers no explicit reflection on the concept of “nature,” it is clear that in this passage Paul identifies “nature” with the created order.  The understanding of “nature” in this conventional language does not rest on empirical observation of what actually exists; instead, it appeals to an intuitive conception of what ought to be, of the world as designed by God.  Those who indulge in sexual practices para physin are defying the creator and demonstrating their own alienation from him.49Hays, “Relations Natural and Unnatural,” 194.

Paul Pollard provides the following summary of “against nature” and “according to nature”:

The problem with homosexual lesbian sexual activity for Paul was that  it is unnatural.  The phrase he used, παρὰ φύσιν (para phusin, “against nature”), has a long and interesting history.  In Stoic and Hellenistic Jewish traditions, homosexual practices were seen as “violations of the created order” and “contrary to nature.”  Early traditions stemming from Plato, to the Hellenistic Judaism of Philo and Pseudo-Cyclades used language very similar to Paul’s in 1:26, 27 in the following ways:  (1) All the texts opposed same-sex intercourse by both men and women; (2) they describe such acts as “against nature” (para phusin) the same words used by Paul; and (3) they use the same words for “male” (arsen) and “female “(thelus) in reference to sexual activity “according to nature” (κατά φύσιν, kata phusin).  Paul’s language does not come from Leviticus 18:22 or 20:13, neither of which mention same-sex female acts or any appeal to “nature.”  In contrast, the writings of Plato, Philo, and Pseudo-Phocylides do appeal to “nature.”  Evidently Paul knew other ancient traditions making similar arguments to his, and he may have drawn from these Hellenistic Jewish arguments against homosexuality.50Paul Pollard, Romans: An Exegetical Study. (Searcy, AR.: Resource Publications, 2018), 63-64.

3. “Natural” exchanged for the “unnatural”51For more information on Paul’s use of “exchange” in Romans 1 see Assumption Six.

The women are targeted first for engaging in unnatural (para physin) relationships because they had turned away from “natural sex” (passive receptacles) to “unnatural.”  The New Living Translation translates Romans 1:26:

That is why God abandoned them to their shameful desires.  Even the women turned against the natural way to have sex and instead indulged in sex with each other.

Wesley Hill (a gay celibate Episcopalian priest) connects idol worship and same sex relationships to the meaning of “exchange”:

Finally, in Rom 1:26-27, God gives humanity up to same-sex sexual coupling—which is itself described as an “exchange” that illustrates or symbolizes the previous two.  Paul is giving same-sex intercourse a theological interpretation.  Such sexual coupling is not simply transgression of an arbitrary divine norm; it is, rather, a departure from the structures of creation, on a par with Israel enacted with its worship of a self-made golden idol.52Sprinkle (ed.), Two Views on Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. Wesley Hill, Christ, Scripture, and Spiritual Friendship, 136.

N.T. Wright translates Romans 1:26-27: 

So God gave them up to shameful desires.  Even the women, you see, swapped natural sexual practice for unnatural; and even the men, too, abandoned natural sexual relations with women, and were inflamed with their lust for one another.  Men performed shameless acts with men, and received in themselves the appropriate repayment for their mistaken ways.53N. T. Wright, The Kingdom New Testament: A Contemporary Translation (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2011), 312.

4. The term “likewise” in Romans 1:26-27

54 The following is the Greek “constructed” parallel between Rom 1:26 and 1:27: γὰρ θήλειαι αὐτῶν μετήλλαξαν τὴν φυσικὴν χρῆσιν (with men) εἰς τὴν παρὰ φύσιν,
ὁμοίως 
οἱ ἄρσενες              ἀφέντες      τὴν φυσικὴν χρῆσιν τῆς θηλείας (for unnatural ones)
Their women exchanged natural sexual relationships (with men)for unnatural ones    
     In the same way the men abandoned natural (sexual) relationships with women
(for unnatural ones)
The bold letters are not in the text but were added to show the parallel construction.

Paul begins 1:27 with the “likewise” (homoios)55“In the same way” (NRSV CEB) or “likewise” (ESV, ASV) parallels the same sex activity of women and men (1:26-27). The use of ὡσαύτως (translated “in the same way”) in 1 Tim 3:8 and 3:11 illustrates the same contrast between men and women as does 1 Tim 2:8-9. As the men had issues with proper prayer the women had issues with dress (ὡσαύτως καὶ γυναῖκας). The beginning phase for 1 Tim 3:8 and 11 are identical in form: Διακόνους ὡσαύτως σεμνούς, μὴ διλόγους (3:8) and γυναῖκας ὡσαύτως σεμνάς, μὴ διαβόλους (3:11). Robin Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality: Contextual Background for Contemporary Debate. (Fortress Press: Philadelphia, 1983), 114. “Since the following verse is without question an attack on male homosexuality, however, and since the two verses are so closely linked in the Greek, it is virtually certain that Paul and the tradition on which he is dependent has lesbianism in mind.”

“in the same way.”56In 1 Timothy 3:8,11 Paul uses a slightly different Greek word than he does 1 Corinthians 7:3-4 but it has the same meaning. In 1 Timothy 3:8,11 the Greek word is ὡσαύτως (hosautos) and in 1 Corinthians 7:3-4 the Greek word (used twice) is ὁμοίως (homoios). This is the same word for “likewise” found in Romans 1:27 and means “pertaining to being similar to something else in some respect.” Paul joins the overseers (1 Tim 3:2) and the deacons (1 Tim 3:8) with the phrase “in the same way.”

  The term refers to what the women were doing—that is having sexual relations with other women (Rom 1:26).  Both the women and the men of Romans 1:26-27 are guilty of sexually crossing the gender boundaries of creation.57Brooten, Love Between Women, 240-241. “The text speaks of ‘their women’ which points to the group nature of the transgression. Rather than the image of isolated individuals worshiping idols, the text invokes a picture of groups engaging in such religious practices. Jewish readers would think of groups of pagans. Thus ‘their women’ connotes the wives and daughters of the gentiles. The relativizing ‘their’ occurs only for the women (the text does not speak of ‘their men’). Indeed, it is a logical term in male- dominated societies, in which women belong to men and are seen in relation to them. The qualifying of women underscores their subordinate status within this culture.”

  Some revisionists have attempted to negate this wording.  

James Miller explains Paul’s use of “likewise in Rom 1:27: 

Thus the similarity in function described in Romans 1:26 refers to non-coital sexual activities which are engaged by heterosexual women similar to the sexual activities of homosexual males.58Miller, “The Practices of Romans 1:26: Homosexual or Heterosexual?” 10.

William Loader states: 

The connecting phrase at the beginning ὁμοίως τε καὶ οἱ ἄρσενες makes good sense if Paul in 1.27 is similarly talking about the same kind of behavior as in 1.26, this time between males.59Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,”141.

The men had “abandoned natural relations with women “in the same way” as the women when they “exchanged natural relations for unnatural ones.” 

Bernadette Brooten writes:

         Most interpreters believe that v 26 speaks about sexual relations between women, although a few suggest bestiality and anal intercourse.  I argue that “unnatural intercourse” refers specifically to sexual relations between women because (1) the “likewise” (homoios) of Rom 1:27 serves to specify the meaning of Rom 1:26; and (2) other ancient sources depict sexual relations between women as unnatural (Plato, Seneca the Elder, Martial, Ovid, Ptolemy Artemidoros, probably Dorotheos of Sidon).60Brooten, Love Between Women, 248-250.

This verse makes explicit what v. 26 leaves open, namely the precise nature of the unnatural acts.  The phrasing is parallel:  just as the females exchanged natural intercourse for unnatural, so too do males give up the natural use of women.61Brooten, Love Between Women, 253.

James DeYoung agrees with Brooten:

He compares lesbianism with male perversion (note the use of likewise).  Female pederasty was virtually unknown, but occurred between adults in mutuality, so the force of the comparison argues for male adult-adult mutuality.62James DeYoung, Homosexuality, Contemporary Claims Examined in Light of the Bible and Other Ancient Literature and Law. (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 2000), 158.

Ben Witherington writes:

Vv. 26-27 are about as clear a condemnation of homosexual and lesbian behavior as exists in the NT.  Paul speaks of actions, not inclinations, attitudes, or genetics.  He says quite literally that those who practice such behavior have exchanged the natural function of intercourse for that which is against nature.  In both Jewish and Greco-Roman tradition there was a long history of seeing such behavior as “unnatural” or counter to the way God originally created and intended things to be… Paul certainly believes there is a natural order of things that God put into creation which ought to be followed.63Ben Witherington, Paul’s Letter to the Romans: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004), 69.

The New Living Translation translates Romans 1:26b:

Even the women turned against the natural way to have sex and instead indulged in sex with each other. 

This same version translates Romans 1:27 as a direct parallel to Romans 1:26: 

And the men, instead of having normal sexual relations with women,64ὁμοίως τε καὶ οἱ ἄρσενες ἀφέντες τὴν φυσικὴν χρῆσιν τῆς θηλείας

burned with lust for each other.  Men did shameful things with other men, and as a result of this sin, they suffered within themselves the penalty they deserved.

 5, “Unnatural” as an inversion

The term unnatural can also be considered an“unnatural inversion.”  Paul provides two examples of this:

         (1) Man worshipped idols65Lev 19:4 “Do not turn to idols to make metal gods for yourselves.”

and not the God who made him (Ps 139:14; Rom 1:25).  Idol worship is an“unnaturalinversion” because man was never intended to worship something he created.66DeYoung considers homosexual relations as an inversion. “The following portions of Plato also support the view that the Greeks knew of homosexual condition or inversion, as well as the various practices of homosexual behavior.” DeYoung, Homosexuality, 205.

         (2) Same sex relationships were “unnatural inversions” because man with man and woman with woman lacked “fitness.”

Paul’s use of both words (natural κατὰ φύσιν and unnatural παρὰ φύσιν) in Romans 11:24 supports the concept of “inversion”:  

After all, if you were cut out of an olive tree that is wild by nature, and contrary to nature  (παρὰ φύσιν)67“For if you were cut from what is by nature a wild olive tree, and grafted, contrary to nature, into a cultivated olive tree, how much more will these, the natural branches, be grafted back into their own olive tree” (ESV).

  were grafted into a cultivated olive tree, how much more readily will these, thenatural  (κατὰ φύσιν ) branches, be grafted into their own olive tree!68εἰ γὰρ σὺ ἐκ τῆς κατὰ φύσιν(natural) ἐξεκόπης ἀγριελαίου καὶ παρὰ φύσιν (unnatural) ἐνεκεντρίσθης εἰς καλλιέλαιον, πόσῳ μᾶλλον οὗτοι οἱ κατὰ φύσιν(natural) ἐγκεντρισθήσοντal τῇ ἰδίᾳ ἐλαίᾳ (Rom 11:24). 

Gentiles were not originally part of the olive tree (God’s chosen people), and were “unnaturally” grafted in.  Under normal circumstances only the “natural” could be grafted into the olive tree.  God did an “unnatural inversion” in making the gentiles joined equally together with the Jews (God’s chosen people).  God can change the original design—not man as is the case in Romans 1.

6. Revisionists and the term “natural” in 1 Corinthians 11:1469οὐδὲ ἡ φύσις αὐτὴ διδάσκει ὑμᾶς ὅτι ἀνὴρ μὲν ἐὰν κομᾷ, ἀτιμία αὐτῷ ἐστιν. and Galatians 2:15

To promote their definition of “natural” revisionists use two texts:  1 Corinthians 11:14 and Galatians 2:15.  According to their interpretation, the term nature (φύσις) in 1 Corinthians 11:14 and Romans 1:26 refers to a man with long hair.  The meaning of any word—Greek or English—must be determined by its context.70A church decided to put their mission statement on the back wall of the auditorium. It read as follows: Affirming Relational Missional Equipping. Because of the changing definition of “Affirming” they decided to take it down.

  In the case of 1 Corinthians 11:2-16  Paul is dealing with men and women and head coverings.  Women were to pray with their heads covered so the glory of God could be seen by the uncovered heads of the men (1 Cor 11:7).  The word “nature” in the context of 1 Corinthians 11:2-16 has nothing to do with ethical behavior as in Romans 1:26.  Rather, Paul is referencing a long-standing cultural practice that would have been known by the Corinthians.  Robert Gagnon explains: 

If in Paul’s view inappropriate hairstyles and head coverings were a source of shame because they compromised the sexual differences of men and women, how much more would a man taking another male to bed be a shameful act (Rom 1:27), lying with another male “as though lying with a woman”?  Paul did not make head coverings an issue vital for inclusion in God’s kingdom, but he did put same-sex intercourse on that level.71Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 328.

Countryman summarizes the relationship of 1 Corinthians 11:14 and Romans 1:26:

Here “nature” seems to mean something like “widespread social usage.”  Paul draws an argument by analogy from such usage:  just as women in his world were expected to wear their hair long and men to wear theirs short, so, too, women ought to wear something on their heads when leading worship while men should not.  This usage of “nature,” however, is less likely to be relevant to the passage in Romans 1.72William Countryman, Dirt Greed & Sex: Sexual Ethics in the New Testament and Their Implications for Today (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1988), 114.

In Galatians 2:15 Paul uses the term “nature” to mean “birth.”73ESV, RSV, NLT: “birth.” NKJV, ASV, NASV: “nature.”

We who are Jews by birth and not sinful Gentiles.74Ἡμεῖς φύσει Ἰουδαῖοι καὶ οὐκ ἐξ ἐθνῶν ἁμαρτωλοί

Clearly the use of the term “nature” is not the same in 1 Corinthians 11:14 and Galatians 2:15.  Because the word for “unnatural” does not appear in 1 Corinthians 11:14 or Galatians 2:15, those texts are not helpful in determining the meaning of “natural” in Romans 1:26-27.75Additional examples of the Pauline use of “nature”: In Rom 2:14, φύσις means agreeing with traditions and customs. In Gal 4:8, φύσις pertains to something within a certain culture.

7. The use of “natural and unnatural” by ancient writers

Ancient authors other than Paul use the terms natural and unnatural in referring to heterosexual and homosexual behavior.  

Clement of Alexandria (150-215 CE)

In the second century Clement of Alexandria used the phrase para physin to describe women involved with other women: 

…women behave like men in that women, contrary to nature, (para physin: παρὰ φύσιν) are given in marriage (gamourmenai) and marry (garousai) other women.76Clement of Alexandria, Paidagogos 3.3.21.3 is quoted in Sprinkle, Did Adult Consensual Same-Sex Relationships Exist in Bible Times? 8.

Bernadette Brooten explains:

Like other authors of the Roman period, Clement defined relations between females and between males as unnatural (para physin); his discussion also overlaps conceptually with non-Christian discussions of homoeroticism.77Brooten, Love Between Women, 320.

Consequently, in addition to Christian sources, Clement also drew upon non-Christian literature to support his view of same-sexual behavior as unnatural, and he explicitly quotes Plato on this subject.  In addition to frequent references to Plato, Aristotle, Zeno, and Musonius Rufus, and numerous other philosophers whose views shaped early Christian thinking about gender…78Brooten, Love Between Women, 321.

          Josephus (first century CE)

The Law recognizes no sexual connections except the natural (kata physin)     union of man and wife, and that only for the procreation of children. But it abhors the intercourse of males with males, and punishes any who undertake such a thing with death.79Against Apion 2:24. Quoted by Hays, “Relations Natural and Unnatural,” 193.

Victor Paul Furnish explains:

        This description of the intercourse between husband and wife as “natural” implies that same-sex intercourse is “unnatural.”80Furnish, The Moral Teaching of Paul, 67.

      The Testament of Naphtali (Second Century BCE) 

              In the firmament, in the earth, and in the sea, in all the products of his workmanship discern the Lord who made all things, so that you do not become like Sodom, which departed from [lit.,”changed”] the order of nature.81Testament of Naphtali. 1-5,. Martti Nissinen, Homoeroticism in the Biblical World: A Historical Perspective. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1998),106.

                  Plato (428-347 BCE)

Concerning “natural and “unnatural” Plato writes:82Plato was a student of Socrates and a teacher of Aristotle.

     One could place the blame for this first and foremost on your two cities and on other cities that are especially devoted to gymnasia.  Regardless of whether one approaches this subject in jest or in earnest, there is one thing that one must recognize and that is that the sexual pleasure experienced by the female and male natures when they join together for the purpose of procreation seems to have been handed down in accordance with nature, whereas the pleasure enjoyed by males with males and females with females seems to be beyond nature,  and the boldness of those who first engaged in this practice seems to have arisen out of an inability to control pleasure.  And we are unanimous in accusing the Cretans of fabricating the story of Ganymede,…83Plato, Laws 636-B-D. quoted in Thomas K. Hubbard, ed, Homosexuality in Greece and Rome, 252.

    Joining with males and boys in sexual intercourse as though with females, adducing evidence the nature of animals and pointing out that (among them) male does not touch male for sexual purposes because that is not natural… Our citizens must not be worse than birds and many other animals which…when they reach (the) age (for breeding) pair off male with female according to instinct and female with male and for the remaining time they…(remain) firm to their first agreements of love.84Plato, Laws (836C.840D-E) as quoted in Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 179.

          Musonius Rufus (30-62 CE)

Regarding “against nature” Rufus states:

But of all sexual relations those involving adultery are most unlawful, and no more tolerable are those of men with men, because it is a monstrous thing and contrary to nature.85Musonius Rufus, “On Sexual Matters,” 12. quoted in Hubbard, Homosexuality in Greece and Rome, 394-395. Rufus was one of the four great Stoic philosophers of the Roman empire who lived around the time of Nero and his successors. In 65 CE he was banished by Nero.

Summary of Assumption Five

Greco-Roman history is threaded with all types of deviant sexual behavior.  Thomas Hubbard explains: 

Just as sexual behavior in Greece and Rome was irreducible to any single paradigm, moral judgments concerning the various species of same-gender interaction were far from uniform.  The widespread notion that a “general acceptance” of homosexuality prevailed is an oversimplification of a complex mélange of viewpoints about a range of different practices, as is the dogma that a detailed regimen of protocols and conventions distinguished “acceptable” from “unacceptable” homosexual behaviors.  There was, in fact, no more consensus about homosexuality in ancient Greece and Rome than there is today.86Hubbard, Homosexuality in the Greco-Roman World, 7-8.

As time passed from the Greek to the Roman period, attitudes about sexual behavior also changed.  However, the writers of these two periods are unanimous in their denunciation of same sex relationships.  None of the writers of these periods try to justify same sex relationships as “natural.”87Ptolemy, Tetrabiblos, 3.14. As quoted in Preston Sprinkle, “Did Adult, Consensual Same-Sex Relationships Exist in Bible Times?” published in the Center for Faith, Sexuality & Gender, 8. A second century Egyptian astrologer/mathematician (Ptolemy of Alexandria 100-170) refers to women who have “lawful wives.”

Both the ancient Israelites and the LGBTQ+ community agree that bestiality and incest are sinful, but why?  Bestially (sex with an animal not a human) is “against nature.” Incest ( sex with relatives Lev 18:6-17) is “against nature.”  Pederasty (older men having sex with boys) is “against nature.”  Same sex relationships (sex with the same gender) are “against nature.”  The common denominator which makes bestially, incest, pederasty, and same sex relationships “sinful” is that they are “against nature.” The gentiles could determine this using only creation (Rom 1:20) and the law “written on their hearts” (Rom 2:15).  If same sex relationships are approved of God because they can be mutual and permanent, could not the same be said for an incestual relationship that is also mutual and permanent? 

Paul’s opposition to same sex activity in Romans 1 is not based on “procreation” nor the “passive” nature of one person (i.e. a man acting as a woman), but rather it is based on making “difference” into “sameness.”  Consider: 

(1) Mankind changed from worshipping God (Rom 1:22) to worshipping images “like a mortal human being.”  Man worshipped himself (sameness). 

(2) Women changed from a sexual relationship (Rom 1:26) with men to a sexual relationship with other women (sameness). 

(3) Men changed from a sexual relationship (Rom 1:27) with women to a sexual relationship with other men (sameness).  

 The revisionists’ interpretations of Romans 1:26-27 do not fit the textual information.88The holiness code of Leviticus 17-26 and especially Leviticus 18-20 influences how Paul sees ethics. See his quotations in Romans 10:5, Galatians 3:12 (Lev 18:5) and Romans 13:10 (Lev 19:18, 34).

  Idolatry and same sex relationships are “reversals” and form the foundation of Paul’s rejection of idolatry and same sex relationships.  The only approved sexual expression in Scripture is found in creation (Genesis 1-2) and emphasized by Jesus in Matthew 19:4-6.89Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 254. Without knowledge of Leviticus 18:22 and Leviticus 20:13 pagans could understand same sex relationships were “against nature” because the sexual organs did not fit! As a result, Paul claims the gentiles were “without excuse” (Rom 1:20) whereas the Jews had “no excuse” for a different reason (Romans 2:1). The heterosexual activity provides both mutual and pleasurable experience.

  Foundational to Paul’s opposition to same sex relationships is the nature and character of God. 

*The terms “revisionist” and “affirming” are used interchangeably throughout.

Filed Under: Christian Life, LGBTQ+

The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Four

July 19, 2023 By Jerry Jones 1 Comment

1 Corinthians 6:9-11 and 1 Timothy 1:10 refer only to abusive relationships and do not address modern same sex relationships.

Key Terms:   Arsenokoitai and Malakoi  

Some revisionists attempt to make the two texts, 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10, irrelevant to modern same sex relationships. The main issue lies in the translation of the Greek words arsenokoitai and malakoi in 1 Corinthians 6:9 and arsenokoitai in 1 Timothy 1:10.1 William Petersen, “Can ARSENOKOITAI Be Translated by ‘Homosexuals”?” (1 Cor 6:9; 1 Tim 1:10) Vigiliae Christianae 40 (1986), 189. “Therefore, when viewed either from the perspective of the ancient world or contemporary society, the translation of ἀρσενοκοῖται by ‘homosexual’ is seen to be mistaken.” This is best illustrated in thirteen different translations of 1 Corinthians 6:9:2 Dale Martin, Sex and the Single Savior: Gender and Sexuality in Biblical Interpretation. (Louisville: John Knox Press, 2006), 43. “I am not claiming to know what ἀρσενοκοῖτes meant. I freely admit it could have been taken as a reference to homosexual sex.”

9 Don’t you know that people who are unjust won’t inherit God’s kingdom? Don’t be deceived. Those who are sexually immoral, those who worship false gods, adulterers, both participants in same-sex intercourse. Footnote:  or submissive and dominant male sexual partners. (Common English Bible)

9 Or do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor men who have sex with men(New International Version) A footnote says the words “men who have sex with men” is a translation two Greek words that refer to the passive and active participants in homosexual acts.

9 Or do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor practicing homosexuals (Today’s New International Version) 

9 Don’t you realize that those who do wrong will not inherit the Kingdom of God? Don’t fool yourselves. Those who indulge in sexual sin, or who worship idols, or commit adultery, or are male prostitutes, or practice homosexuality, (New Living Translation)

9 Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, (New King James Version) Footnote: defines “homosexuals” as those submitting to homosexuals and sodomites as “male homosexuals.

9 Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, (King James Version)

9 Do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! The sexually immoral, idolaters, adulterers, male prostitutes, men who engage in illicit sex, (New Revised Standard Version Updated Edition, 2021).  Footnote: the meaning of the two Greek words is “uncertain.”3https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1+Corinthians+6&version=NRSVUE

9 Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, (New American Standard Bible)4Preston Sprinkle, People to Be Loved: Why Homosexuality is Not Just an Issue. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2015), 119. “The NASB goes on to translate arsenokoites as ‘homosexuals,’ which is a terrible translation.” Footnote: The two Greek words could refer to submissive and dominant male homosexuals.

9Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! The sexually immoral, idolaters, adulterers, passive homosexual partners, practicing homosexuals, (New English Translation)

9 Surely you know that the people who do wrong will not inherit God’s kingdom. Do not be fooled. Those who sin sexually, worship idols, take part in adultery, those who are male prostitutes, or men who have sexual relations with other men, (New Century Version)

9 Don’t you know that the unjust will not inherit God’s kingdom? Don’t be deceived! Neither immoral people nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor practicing homosexuals of whichever sort, (The Kingdom New Testament by N.T. Wright)5The two words of 1 Cor 6:9 can be translated in three ways: (1) passive and active persons, (2) two examples of immorality, (3) two separate actions: male prostitutes and active gay men.

Robert Gagnon translates the text:6 Robert Gagnon. The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Text and Hermeneutics (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2001), 303-304. Bernadette Brooten, Love Between Women: Early Christian Responses to Female Homoeroticism. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1996), 260. “’men who assume a passive sexual role with other men’ (malokoi), and ‘those who have sex with men (arsenokoitai)’”. Victor Furnish, Moral Teaching of Paul: Selected Issues. 3rd ed. (Nashville: Abington Press, 2009), 80 “It could refer to ‘a male who lies [has sex] with a male’ or to ‘a male who lies [has sex] with’ either a male or a female. In this case the first meaning is likely because the word that immediately preceded it in 1 Cor 6:9b…” Or do you not realize that unrighteous people will not inherit God’s kingdom? Stop deceiving yourselves. Neither the sexually immoral (pornoi), nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate males who play the sexual role of females (malakoi), nor males who take other males to bed (arsenokoitai)…7 Ἢ οὐκ οἴδατε ὅτι ἄδικοι ⸂θεοῦ βασιλείαν⸃ οὐ κληρονομήσουσιν; μὴ πλανᾶσθε· οὔτε πόρνοι οὔτε εἰδωλολάτραι οὔτε μοιχοὶ οὔτε μαλακοὶ οὔτε ἀρσενοκοῖται

Considering the translation dilemma, some revisionists have taken a two-fold approach. 

According to the first approach arsenokoites and malakos are not unquestionable references to modern same sex relationships. Matthew Vines states: 

        So even the sexual use of malakos doesn’t necessarily refer to same sex behavior…as we’ve seen malakos doesn’t refer to merely a single act.  It encompasses an entire disposition toward immoderations.8Matthew Vines, God and the Gay Christian: The Biblical Case in Support of Same-Sex Relationships. (New York: Convergent Books, 2004), 122.

        So even if the compound word arsenokoitai did originate from Leviticus, that still wouldn’t tell us what it means in 1 Corinthians 6.9 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 124.

Regarding the connection of arsenokoitai (1 Cor 6:9; 1 Tim 1:10) to the Levitical texts, James Brownson10

 Andrew Goddard, Review: James V. Brownson, Bible, Gender, Sexuality: Reframing the Church’s Debate on Same-Sex Relationships. 

“Finally, even on Brownson’s home turf of biblical exegesis, there are a number of places where his claims are highly debatable and represent a minority view among commentators. These include his quick dismissal of the widely accepted view that arsenokoitai is a term originating in Paul’s reading of Leviticus 18 and 20, his view that lesbianism is not a concern in Rom. 1 (contra Brooten and others), and his reading of 1 Tim. 1 that makes no mention of the widely recognized echoes of the Decalogue in the vice list and instead conflates three broad terms so as to narrow the concern to the sex trade in young boys for older men.”
states that linking them “is speculative and lacks external confirming evidence.”11 James Brownson. Bible Gender Sexuality: Reframing the Church’s Debate on Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013),271. 

The second approach maintains that if the texts are describing same sex relationships, they are referring to those that are abusive.

Karen Keen writes:

The apostle Paul likely had in mind what he saw around him namely, pederasty or sex with male slaves and prostitutes.12 Karen Keen, Scriptures, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018), 18.

Matthew Vines states:

One of the most prominent forms of sexual exploitation in the ancient world was the practice of pederasty.  If arsenokoitai does refer to male same sex behavior, it’s likely that it refers to pederasty.13 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 125.

Such statements seek to eliminate 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10 from the discussion of modern same sex relationships.  The evidence and information surrounding these texts do not provide as much information as Romans 1:26-27, however they do supply additional information from Paul as to the practice of same sex relationships.

Even though Vines admits arsenokoitai  (1 Cor 6:9) could be connected to the Levitical text14 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 123., he contends that 1 Corinthians  6:9 and Romans 1 are not applicable to the committed same sex relationships that exist today15 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 114. “We’ve found that, while Paul’s words are certainly negative, they appear in a context that differs greatly from the debate taking place within the church today.”.  To support his claims, Vines redefines two Greek words (arsenokoites and malakos) in 1 Corinthians 6:9 and uses those definitions to influence his reasoning.  He limits arsenokoites to only abusive relationships and he denies malakos refers to the passive person in a same sex relationship.  He states:

The word malakos actually was more frequently applied to men who succumbed to the charms of women.16 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 120.

        So even the sexual sense of malakos doesn’t necessarily refer to same-sex behavior.  In fact, reading it as a reference in same sex behavior is a recent trend in biblical interpretation.17 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 122.

Vines’ assumption that Romans 1 does not apply to modern same sex relationships seems to have influenced his understanding of 1 Corinthians 6:9.  He does not view the clearer text of Romans 1 as relevant to all same sex relationships18 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 131., nor does he use that text to interpret a more confusing text (1 Cor 6:9).  Instead, Vines appears to reason backwards.  That and his new definitions of the two Greek words in 1 Corinthians 6:9 provide a questionable foundation for God’s approval of modern same sex relationships.  Even though Vines contends the Bible is silent “on committed same-sex relationships,” he admits this “silence” does not mean God approved.19 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 131. “Granted, the Bible’s silence on committed same-sex relationships doesn’t necessarily mean those relationships are blessed.”

Definition of arsenokoitai

The word for male in the Septuagint (Greek translation of Hebrew bible) is arseno and the word for bed is koite.  (NOTE: The English word coitus “sexual intercourse” is a derivative of koite.) The term means sexual acts happening in a bed.20 “Invariably κοίτηςhas, as one might expect, a verbal force on which is dependent the object or adverb specified, in the first half of the word.”  David Wright, “Homosexual or Prostitutes? The Meaning of Arsenokoitai, (1 Cor 6:9; 1 Tim 1:10),” Vigiliae Christianae, Vol 38, No 2 (1984), 130.  In 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10 Paul uses the term arsenokoitai which originates in the Levitical texts.21 Paul uses Lev 18:5 and 19:18 in Rom 10:5, 13:9; Gal 3:12, 5:14.  In both texts he addresses both consensual and nonconsensual same sex relationships. This indicates he chose the compound word22 Paul uses a compound word for idolaters (εἰδωλολάτραι).  The word είδωλο is the term for idol and λάτραι is the word for worship or serve.  Paul creates a compound word in 1 Thess 4:9 (theodidaktai: θεοδίδακτοί) from Isa 54:13 (didaktous theos).  Isa 54:13 says “taught by the LORD” and 1 Thess 4:9 says “taught by God.” on purpose and was not just addressing pederasty.  If Paul had meant to limit the 1 Corinthians 6:9 text to pederasty it stands to reason he would have chosen paiderastes (lover of boys). 

The Hebrew equilavent of the compound23 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved,108.  Other compound words can be formed using koite.  A doulokoites is one who sleeps with slaves.  A metrokoites is one who sleeps with his mother. Greek word24 ἀρσενοκοῖται arsenokoitai25 It is not unusual either in English or Greek to transform a verb into a noun.  Someone who “swims” (verb) can be called a “swimmer.”  Other examples include playwright, fishermen, and birdwatcher.  The word koitai means to “lie with” and “arsen” are men, hence arsenokoitai are men who lie with other men. Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 109.  Arsenokoitai is only used twice in the New Testament.  The term first appeares in the verb form around the first century B.C.E. in the Sibylline Oracles (2.73).  Since it is not used in other literature, some believe Paul “created” the word. used in 1 Corinthians 6:9 is mishkav zakar (“who sleep with other males”).  Arsenokoitai is defined in the Greek English Greek Lexicon as “a man who engages in sexual activity with a person of his own sex.”26 Bauer, W., F. W. Danker, W. F. Arndt, and F. W. Gingrich. Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. 3d ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 135.  It is quite possible mishkav zakar was commonly used in Paul’s day and being bilingual, he decided to use the Greek equivalent. The Hebrew phrase “lying with a male” (mishkav zakar) is used synonymously with same sex relationships regardless of age or role of either male.  Leviticus 20 condemns the behavior regardless of age or motive of the participant.  

James DeYoung expresses the same understanding:

Paul coined arsenokoitai from Leviticus 20:13, which forbids adult homosexual behavior without distinguishing forms. Paul does not make distinctions. Also, Leviticus holds both partners morally culpable to the point of being put to death and being “cut off.” Adult mutuality in same-gender behavior must fall within the parameters Paul gave the term.  Finally, Leviticus influenced Paul to use two terms, malakoi and arsenokoitai, in 1 Corinthians.27 James B. DeYoung, Homosexuality: Contemporary Claims Examined in Light of the Bible and Other Ancient Literature and Law. (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications 2000), 201.

Torah and arsenokoitai

Same sex relationships are opposed in Torah (Lev 18:22; Lev 20:13).  Paul was a well-educated Jew and as such he would have found harmonizing such behavior with creation and the ethics of Torah basically impossible.  When writing to the early Christians (who knew only Greek) in 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10, it was natural for him to use arsenokoitai,the Greek equivalent of Leviticus 18:22 and Leviticus 20:13.28 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 111-112.    Even though this was the first and only time the word is used in the New Testament, evidently Paul believed his readers would understand it.29 Combining words can be a problem in English.  For example, “outbuilding” and “outhouse” can have different meanings and yet the wording is similar.  The story is told of an American missionary who, through a German translator, preached a sermon on Job of the Old Testament.  The missionary later learned he had preached a sermon on “work”!  It is unimaginable that Paul could have approved of same sex relationships in a consensual, committed, monogamous relationship and condemn same sex relationships either in a casual or an abusive/non-monogamous context. 

Revisionist writers, arsenokoitai, and the Levitical texts 

Several influential revisionist writers admit the Levitical texts supply the background for Paul’s use of arsenokoitai in 1 Corinthians 6:9: 

  (1) Robin Scroggs states:

I have argued above that in early rabbinic legal discussion, the term most often used to describe male homosexuality is mishkav zahur, ‘lying with a male.’ Arsenokoites can be seen as a literal translation of the Hebrew phrase.30 Robin Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality: Contextual Background for Contemporary Debate. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983), 107-108. 

(2) Matthew Vines concedes:

So it’s possible that Paul coined the term arsenokoitai based on his familiarity with the Greek translation of Leviticus 20. 31 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 123.

(3) WilliamPetersen believes arsenokoitai connects to Leviticus and should be translated: 

the ones (masc.) who lie/sleep with men.32 William Petersen, “Can ARSENOKOITAI Be Translated by ‘Homosexuals”?” (1 Cor 6:9; 1 Tim 1:10)  Vigiliae Christianae 40 (1986), 187.  Peterson believes the translation of “homosexual” is unacceptable.  Sprinkle believes the NASB translation “is a terrible translation.”  Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 119.

(4) Williams Loader agrees:

Exploitation was a common feature in most same-sex encounters, but not all.  Thus it is better to take the word as closely cohering with what Paul condemns in Romans 1 and reflecting the prohibitions of Lev 18:22 and 20:13 on which it appears to be built. 33 William Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 331-334.

(5) David Wright is convinced the parallel text in Leviticus 20:13 (meta arsenos koiten gynaikos)34μετὰ ἄρσενος κοίτην γυναικός is so close to Paul’s arsenokoitai that it is “surely inescapable.”35 David Wright, “Homosexuals or Prostitutes? The Meaning of Arsenokoitai (1 Cor 6:9; 1 Tim 1:10),” Vigiliae Christianae, Vol 38, 2 (1984), 129.

Definition of malakos

The word malakoi (μαλακοὶ)36 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 122.  “New Testament scholar David Fredrickson has argued that malakoi in 1 Corinthians 6:9 be translated as ‘those who lack self-control.’  Based on the evidence, that translation stands on firmer footing than any interpretation that defines the word as a specific reference to same-sex behavior.  As we’ve seen, malakoi doesn’t refer to merely a single act.  It encompasses an entire disposition toward immoderation.”  in 1 Corinthians 6:9 is translated “sexual perverts” (Revised Standard Version) and “passive homosexual partners” (New English Translation).   Because there is no background information for malakoi its definition is more ambiguous.  Consider the following:

      (1) It can mean “soft” as in describing a garment (Matt11:8; Luke 7:25).37 It can be used to describe a male who shaves his chest hair.

      (2) It can mean “pleasant” (Pro 26:22). 

      (3) It can mean “gentleness” (Pro 25:15).38 Both Proverbs texts are from the Septuagint.

Sexually, the word refers to someone who is penetrated while arsenokoitai refers to the penetrator.  The term has been used to describe effeminate39 KJV boys or the “passive person” in same sex relationships, but it should not be assumed every malakoi was involved in same sex activity. 

Arsenokoitai and malakos as descriptive of same sex relationships

The Greek text of 1 Corinthians 6:9 reads “neither the adulterers (οὔτε μοιχοὶ), neither the malakoi (οὔτε μαλακοὶ), neither the arsenokoitai (οὔτε ἀρσενοκοῖται).”  The term malakoi is found between two immoral active behaviors—adultery and same sex activity—and can easily imply “soft.”  This understanding of malakoi 40 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 122.  “So even the sexual sense of malakoi doesn’t necessarily refer to same-sex behavior.” is also supported by Greek lexicons that define the term:  “to be passive in a same-sex relationship.”41 BDAG, 613.   Michael Ukleja makes the following observation about the definition of malakos when used with arsenokoitai:

  While there is some ambiguity with regard to μαλακός, it is not beyond reason to use the word representing the passive parties in homosexual intercourse. 

This is even more reasonable when it is in juxtaposition with ἀρσενοκοίτης which does imply an active homosexual role.  It is interesting that in Aristotle’s Problems, a lengthy discussion of the origins of homosexual passivity, he employs the word μαλακός.  In its general sense the word does mean “unrestrained,” but not without any particularity homosexual context.42 Michael P. Ukleja, “The Bible and Homosexuality Part 2: Homosexuality in the New Testament,” Bibliotheca Sacra 140, no. 560 (1983), 351.

Robin Scroggs further explains: 

If the malakos43 Malakos is singular and malakoi is plural.  Arsenokoites is singular and arsenokoitai is plural. points to the effeminate call-boy, then arsenokoites in this context must be the active partner who keeps the malakos as a “mistress” or who hires him on occasion to satisfy his sexual desire.44 Scroggs, New Testament and Homosexuality, 108.

Bruce Winter writes:

Furthermore, the citing of the term μαλακός first, with its very strong connotations of passive homosexuality, would have automatically expected a word describing an active homosexual.  It was not a reference to a male prostitute.  If Paul had been seeking a specific term proscribing that profession, the LXX’s choice of πορνεύων in Deuteronomy 23:17 would have provided him with an appropriate one (Cf. 1 Cor. 6:15) …

       This interpretation helps to answer the question why Paul used two words to describe homosexual persons (6:9), rather than one general term.  He referred to the passive and active partner in homosexual intercourse because Roman society and literature observed such a distinction.  Those who engaged in homosexual activity assumed either one role or the other.45 Bruce Winter, After Paul Left Corinth: The Influence of Secular Ethic and Social Change (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2001), 119-120.

Mark Smith observes the following:

Active/passive distinctions between male homosexual lovers have   been commonplace in every culture for which we have any evidence of homosexual activity in history, including our own.46 Mark Smith, “Ancient Bisexuality and the Interpretation of Romans 1:26-27,” Journal of American Academy of Religion IXIV/2, 228.

Roy Ciampa and Brian Rosner agree with Mark Smith:

With the next two terms Paul refers to homosexual behavior of one form or another.  Rather than referring to “male prostitutes and practicing homosexuals” (TNIV), they are better understood as referring to those who willingly play the passive and active roles in homosexual acts.47 Roy Ciampa and Brian Rosner, The First Letter to the Corinthians. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010), 241.

William Loader provides his understanding of the two words:

On balance, then, Paul probably uses the two terms with reference to men who engage in same-sex behavior, with the first referring to the willing passive partner, whether by private consent or as a male prostitute, “those who engage in sexual penetration by other men”, and the second referring to “those who engage in sexual penetration of other men”, which would have a broader reference and include, but not be limited to exploitation, also by force.48 Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 331-332.

       My own reading of the two terms which appear in the lists of 1 Corinthian 6:9-10 and 1 Timothy 1:10 is close to Wesley’s and concludes on the balance of probability, the words do refer to active and passive partners in male same-sex relations.49 Sprinkle, (ed), Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill,150.

The footnote of 1 Corinthians 6:9 in the English Standard Version reads: “The two Greek terms translated by this phrase refer to the passive and active partners in consensual homosexual acts.”  The footnote in the Christian Standard Bible reads:  “Both passive and active participants in homosexual acts.”The footnote in the Common English Bible says they refer to “submissive and dominant male sexual partners.”  Considering Paul’s use of Greek words, the situation described in 1 Corinthians 6:9 better fits a consensual same sex relationship than an exploitive one.  In addition, the word malakos appears in the list of those who will not inherit the kingdom of God.  If Paul had been referring to the practice of pederasty or sex with same sex nonconsensual partners, they would have been considered victims and not guilty participants.50 Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 328.

Arsenokoitai in 1 Timothy 1:10

1 Timothy 1:10 appears in the context of behaviors that do not conform to the gospel.  While

malokos is not found in 1 Timothy 1:10,  arsenokoitai is sandwiched between individuals who are immoral (porneia) and slave traders.  This indicates the seriousness of the conduct.51 πόρνοις, ἀρσενοκοίταις, ἀνδραποδισταῖς Assuming porneia includes adultery, arsenokoitai could be an additional form of “unfaithfulness” in the homosexual world.  If that is the case, adultery and homosexuality could be seen as condemned parallels.  According to Loader, slave traders could have easily been involved in supplying young boys for older men.52 Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 333.

As a trained rabbi Paul wrote using Torah as a foundation for his teaching.  Unacceptable behaviors have strong roots in Torah and 1 Timothy 1:10 closely parallels the fifth through the ninth commandments.

  • “who kill their fathers and mothers” (Honor your father and mother)
  • “murderers” (You shall not murder)
  • “sexually immoral” (You should not commit adultery)
  • “slave traders” (You should not steal)
  • “liars and perjurers” (You shall not bear false witness)

Summary of Assumption Four

Some revisionists believe that monogamous, consensual, and committed same sex relationships did not exist in the first century. However, information from secular sources both before and after Paul supports the existence of same sex monogamous relationships in the Greco-Roman era even though they were in the minority.53 See the information provided in Assumption Three.  For further information consider the following:

  1. Thomas K. Hubbard, Homosexuality in Greece and Rome: A Sourcebook Basic Documents. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003.
  2. Louis Crompton, Homosexuality & Civilization.Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003.

Paul’s stance regarding immoral behavior is pronounced throughout his ministry.54 Christian Reformed Church Report on Human Sexuality, 102.

(1)  He urges the church to avoid sexual immorality and not live like pagans (1 Thess 4:3-5).
(2)  He rebukes the church in Corinth for not standing against a man who is having sex with his stepmother (1 Cor 5:1-11). 
(3)  He states that Christians must not have sex with prostitutes (1 Cor 6:12-20). 
(4)  He mentions sexual immorality first in the “sin lists” of Galatians 5:19 and Colossians 3:5. 
(5)  He emphasizes that Christians are not to have even a “hint of sexual immorality” (Ephesians 5:3).
(6)  His possible references to “homosexual relationships” always appear in negative contexts (1 Cor 6:9-11; 1 Tim 1:10). 

Judaism rejected same sex relationships regardless of the situation (abusive or consensual). Paul’s writings reflect his love for and respect of Torah, and when Leviticus 18:22; 20:13; 1 Corinthians 6:9; 1 Timothy 1:10; and Romans 1:26-27 are read without any comment they are consistent in opposing these relationships.  

Much of the discussion of same sex behavior in 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10 has centered on the translation of two Greek words.  While arsenokoitai is easily connected to the Levitical texts the word malakoi has been more problematic.  Regardless, both texts are included in activities that Christians are to avoid.  

In addition to Paul’s use of malakoi and arsenokoitai to describe immoral behavior, in Romans 13:13 he incorporates a different word that is connected to the Levitical texts (as in 1 Cor 6:9).  Instead of using the common word for sexual immorality (porneia)55 1 Cor 7:2 “But since sexual immorality occurring… ” (διὰ δὲ τὰςπ ορνείας). he uses the Greek word for bed (koitais)56 ὡς ἐν ἡμέρᾳ εὐσχημόνως περιπατήσωμεν, μὴ κώμοις καὶ μέθαις, μὴ κοίταις καὶ ἀσελγείαις, μὴ ἔριδι καὶ ζήλῳ, which is the same term used for bed in Leviticus 18: 22 and Leviticus 20:13. The word is also used in Hebrews 13:4 (marriage bed).57τίμιος ὁ γάμος ἐν πᾶσιν καὶ ἡ κοίτη ἀμίαντος, πόρνους ⸀γὰρ καὶ μοιχοὺς κρινεῖ ὁ θεός (Heb 13:4).

Paul spent 18 months in Corinth and knew the Corinthians quite well as indicated by his “exchange of letters.”  That being the case it is very possible he knew of committed and monogamous same sex relationships.  Regardless, he makes no distinction between those relationships and other same sex relationships any more than he distinguishes between immoral behaviors committed by Christians and non-Christians.  

Paul condemns sinful behavior in 1 Corinthians 6:9-1158 Of the ten of the items in 1 Cor 6:9-10, six are repeated from 1 Cor 5:11.  Paul uses porneia six times in his corpus and five of them are found in 1 Corinthians 5-7.  but he also stresses how, as Christians, they have been washed, sanctified, and justified.  When the Greeks wanted to show a strong contrast, they used the Greek word alla.  This term appears before washed, sanctified, and justified therefore emphasizing what they had been and presently were.59 καὶ ταῦτά τινες ἦτε· ἀλλὰ ἀπελούσασθε, ἀλλὰ ἡγιάσθητε, ἀλλὰ ἐδικαιώθητε ἐν τῷ ὀνόματι τοῦ κυρίου Ἰησοῦ καὶ ἐν τῷ πνεύματι τοῦ θεοῦ ἡμῶν.  Regardless of the motivation for same sex activity, Paul targets the what and not the why.  He teaches they could not choose what they wanted to do with their bodies60 1 Cor 6:19 “your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit…received from God.” because they were not their “own” and “were bought at a price” (1 Cor 6:19b and 20a).  Failure to use one’s body correctly dishonors God (1 Cor 6:20b).

The list of sins in 1 Corinthians 6:9-11 form an inclusion61 “Inherit the kingdom of God” in 1 Cor 6:9 and at the end of 1 Cor 6:10 form an inclusion. of those who “will not inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Corinthians 6:9-10).62 All the sins are equally condemned.  The text has a twofold function:

(1) It reminds the readers of their past.
(2) It provides a warning to not fall back into their previous lifestyle.

He wants his readers to realize they WERE (past tense) among these who would not “inherit the kingdom of God,” but they were not NOW (present tense).63 Regardless of the sin, Paul emphasized their forgiveness.   Paul believes sinful behavior can be altered (1 Cor 6:9). 

In a summary of 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10, William Loader writes: 

Nothing in these writings suggests a departure from the wider Jewish rejection of same sex relations rooted in the Leviticus prohibitions and understanding of human beings as created either male or female.64 William Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,” Zeitschrift fur die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 108 (1) (2017),128.

Consider the following:

(1) If same sex, loving, monogamous, Christian relationships are acceptable, does the same hold true for envy, murder, deceit, gossip, and slander (also mentioned in Rom 1:28-29) if engaged in by loving, monogamous Christians?65 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 101.

(2) If God does not bless same sex relationships, is it wise to promote those relationships among God-loving Christians? 66 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 131.

(3) If same sex relationships are only wrong if committed outside of a mutual and committed atmosphere, would incest in a mutual and committed atmosphere be acceptable?

Filed Under: Christian Life, LGBTQ+

The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Three

April 29, 2023 By Jerry Jones Leave a Comment

Paul was only opposing pederasty (sexual behavior between an adult male and adolescent boy) and other abusive/non-consensual sexual relationships in Romans 1 and does not address modern same sex relationships.1

Jewish morals contrasted with those of other nations in second century B.C.E. “{Jews} are mindful of holy wedlock, and they do not engage in impious intercourse with male children as Phoenicians, Egyptians, and Romans, spacious Greece and many nations and others. Persians and Galatians and all Asia transgressing the holy law of immortal God, which they transgressed.” Sibylline Oracles 3.595-600 quoted in The Moral Teaching of Paul: Selected Issues (3rd ed) by Victor Paul Furnish, 66-67.

In the high cultural circles of ancient Greece same sex relationships between older men and young boys were common.

Linda Belleville writes:

Unlike today, same-sex relationships in antiquity were largely confined to the upper crust of Greek society. Also, unlike today, it was considered an “honorable service” for a young Greek male student to be intimate with his male mentor.2 Linda Belleville, “The Challenges of Translating Arsenokotai and Malakoi.” In 1 Cor 6:9; A Reassessment in Light of Koine Greek and First Cultural Mores,” Bible Translator 62 (2011), 25.

To responsibly address Assumption Three, a couple of issues need to be addressed:

  • Was Paul only opposing pederasty and other abusive same-sex relationships in Romans 1?
  • Does Paul address modern same sex relationships in Romans 1?

Issue One: Was Paul Only Opposing Pederasty and Other Abusive Same-Sex Relationships in Romans 1?

Affirming writers Matthew Vines and Robin Scroggs maintain pederasty and abuse are a central focus of the same sex relationships of Romans 1.

In 2014 Matthew Vines wrote:

Remember, the most common forms of same-sex behavior in the Greco-Roman world were pederasty, prostitution, and same-sex between masters and their slaves…

Paul viewed same-sex relationships as stemming from excessive sexual desire and lust, not as a loving expression from a sexual orientation.3 Matthew Vines, God and the Gay Christian: The Biblical Case in Support of Same-Sex Relationships. (New York: Convergent Books, 2014),130.
Robin Scroggs believes Paul was opposing pederasty in Romans 1:
I know of no suggestions in texts that homosexual relationships existed between same-age adults…Thus what the New Testament was against was the image of homosexuality as pederasty…4 Robin Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality: Contextual Background for Contemporary Debate. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983), 35, 126.

Much of my argument depends up on the judgment frequently stated above, that the only model of male homosexuality was pederasty, and that even deviations in the usual age patterns of pederasty did not disturb the functioning of the modeI itself….I do think I have presented enough to demonstrate amply that pederastic model was at the very least the dominant and always assumed pattern for male homosexual relationships.5 Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality, 130.

Response to the Pederasty and Abusive Relationships Only Explanation of Romans 1

To responsibly speak to this analysis, three areas need to be considered.

  • Other affirming writers (Loader, Brooten, and Crompton, Via, Pronk) do not agree with the pederasty and abusive relationship only argument.
  • Specific terms were used in the Greek language to describe pederasty.
  • The practice of pederasty experienced a transition in the ancient world.

1). Affirming writers with a different perspective

Affirming author Bernadette Brooten disagrees with the early writings of her predecessors (John Boswell and Robin Scroggs) regarding Romans 1:18-32. She states:

This material runs counter to John Boswell’s view that premodern Christians accepted love and marriage between women. Further, the ancient sources which rarely speak of sexual relations between women and girls, undermine Robin Scroggs’ theory that Paul opposed homosexuality as pederasty.6 Bernadette Brooten, Love Between Women: Early Christian Responses to Female Homoeroticism. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), 361.

In noting Robin Scroggs’ inconsistency with the men and women in Romans 1:26-27, Brooten writes:

If however, the dehumanizing aspects of pederasty motivated Paul to condemn sexual relations between males, then why did he condemn relations between females in the same sentence? Scroggs concedes that ancient authors normally did not assume a pederastic model for female-female relations.7 Brooten, Love Between Women, 253 (n 106).

Brooten further explains that Romans 1:27 cannot be limited to pederasty:

If Paul directed Rom 1:27 mainly against pederasty out of humanitarian concern for the passive boy partner, several interpretive problems emerge. Why does Paul apply the phrase “deserve to die” (Rom 1:32) to the foregoing acts, not distinguishing between victims and perpetrators?8 Brooten, Love Between Women, 256-257.

Even though Bernadette Brooten affirms Paul’s opposition to all same sex relationships in Romans 1, she supports the affirming community in the practice of modern same sex relationships.9 Brooten, Love Between Women, 302 “I hope that churches today, being apprised of the history that I have presented, will no longer teach Rom 1:26f as authoritative.” Bernadette Brooten thinks that Paul maintained “a gender asymmetry based on female subordination.” Perhaps this weighs into her reasoning.

Affirming writer William Loader also opposes the pederasty only interpretation of Romans 1. He concludes:

Our discussion above also reflects the widespread nature of such relations, including those under attack, which included, but by no means, limited to exploitive pederasty. The broader nature of the phenomenon, the reference to lesbian relations which does not fit pederasty…10 William Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 324-325.

He is not just talking about exploitation of slaves or about pederasty. He is talking about those whose passion is mutual, of consenting adults (with or for one another, Rom 1:24, 27).11 Preston Sprinkle, (ed), Two Views on Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2016) William Loader, Response to Megan K. DeFranza, 105.

Nothing, however, indicates that he is exempting some same-sex intercourse as acceptable. It is all an abomination for Paul. The mutuality implied in his description of what is attacked “for one another,” makes it unlikely that he is addressing only one-sided exploitative relations as in pederasty.12 William Loader, Making Sense of Sex (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013), 137.

Affirming author Louis Crompton concurs. Even though he died an active gay man at age 84, Crompton states the following about same sex relationships in Romans 1:

Some interpreters, seeking to mitigate Paul’s harshness, have read the passage as condemning not homosexuals generally but only heterosexual men and women who experimented with homosexuality. According to this interpretation, Paul’s words were not directed at “bona fide” homosexuals in committed relationships. But such a reading, however well-intentioned, seems strained and unhistorical. Nowhere does Paul or any other Jewish writer of this period imply the least acceptance of same-sex relations under any circumstances. . The idea that homosexuals might be redeemed by mutual devotion would have been wholly foreign to Paul or any Jew or early Christian.13 Louis Crompton, Homosexuality and Civilization (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003), 114.

In a discussion of homosexuality with Robert Gagnon, revisionist Dan Via stated:

Professor Gagnon and I are in substantial agreement that the biblical texts that deal with specifically homosexual practice condemn it unconditionally.14 Dan Via and Robert Gagnon, Homosexuality in the Bible: Two Views. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2003), 93-94.
Revisionist Pim Pronk agrees the scriptures do not support homosexuality:
Christians, as a matter of course, appeal to the Bible for their position on homosexuality, be it pro or con. It is for them a faith position, after all the people are eager to see it supported by the Bible. In this case that support is lacking.15 Pim Pronk, Against Nature? Types of Moral Argumentation Regarding Homosexuality. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993), 323.

Based upon their understanding of the Scriptures, affirming authors William Loader, Bernadette Brooten, Louis Crompton, Dan Via, and Pim Pronk believe Romans 1:18-32 includes both pederasty and consensual same sex relationships.16 Preston Sprinkle, People to Be Loved: Why Homosexuality is Not Just an Issue), Grand Rapids: Zondervan,2015), 192. “Call me old-fashioned but I do believe that Paul’s word in Romans 1 is authoritative for Christians.” Another affirming author Joel Hollier states 17 Joel Hollier, A Place at His Table: A Biblical Exploration of Faith, Sexuality, and the kingdom of God (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2019), 122. that “the majority of scholars” do not believe the Scriptures condemn monogamous same sex relationships. This seems to indicate his lack of knowledge of other scholarly affirming writers (specifically) and their understanding of the scope of Paul’s opposition in Romans 1.

2). The Greek language and pederasty

If Paul had wanted to only describe pederasty in Romans 1, he could have used specific Greek terms.18 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 116, 189. Pederasty comes from a compound word paiderastes 19 παιδεραστής meaning the lover of boys. Paid means boy or child and erastes20 ἐραστής is connected to love, hence together meaning “lover of boys.” Historically an erastes was usually an older man and the boy or slave an eromenos.21 ἐρώμενος Richard Friedman and Shawna Dolansky provide the following description of ancient pederasty:

The most common and idealized form of homosexual relationships between aristocratic males in Greece was known as paederastia: “boy-love.” An older male citizen, known in Athens as an erastes, would court a young adolescent youth of a good family much in the way a man might court a future wife. If his courtship was successful, the youth would become the eromenos to the erastes, and the erastes would educate, protect, and offer love to the eromenos. Social conventions dictated that when the youth became a man, the sexual nature of the relationship must end in order to avoid the shame associated with a full- grown male citizen being penetrated by a social equal. One could be an eromenos only in one’s youth, before becoming a citizen. In fact, while the eromenos must honor and respect his erastes, even as a youth he was never to reciprocate the sexual desire of the erastes, for this would bring shame on himself and his family.22 Richard Elliott Friedman and Shawna Dolansky, The Bible Now (Oxford: University Press, 2000), 33.

Historically these words were used by Jews, Christians, pagans, and anyone else who spoke Greek.23 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 116. In fact, it is not plausible that anyone would write or talk about pederasty without using the term paiderastes or other terms derived from it.24 Sprinkle agrees. “There were many Greek words used to describe pederasty (paiderastes [“the love of boys”], paidophthoros[“corruptor of boys”], paidophtoreo [“seducer of boys”]), and none of them are used here. Neither is there any explicit mention of master-slave relations, rape, or prostitution.” Preston Sprinkle and Jeff Cook. A Debate About Homosexuality: Part 5 “The Sin ‘of’ Homosexuality.”

3). The practice of pederasty experienced a transition in the ancient world

Even though other same sex activity continued, about four hundred years before Paul pederasty began to decline and the Romans started to view it as a “vice of the Greeks.” Mark Smith writes:

By the early second century BCE Rome had passed the Lex Sac(n)tinia and the edict De adtemptata pudicitia which made pederastic behavior and even the attempt to seduce a freeborn boy, liable to criminal prosecution. By the time of the Principate, pederasty becomes extremely rare in the sources, while at the same time there appears to be a significant increase in homosexual activity among consenting adults.25 Mark Smith, “Ancient Bisexuality and the Interpretation of Romans 1:26-27,” Journal of the America Academy of Religion IXIV/2, 233.

This decline indicates Paul’s instruction to the Romans included all same sex relationships—not only pederasty. Mark Smith further explains:

In sum, the extant sources for Greco-Roman homosexual practices demonstrate many exceptions to pederasty and a decline in the prominence of pederasty in the last three centuries immediately preceding Paul. Very few references to specifically pederastic activity occur in the literature and art of the last century before Paul’s era. Considerations of space prevent us from exploring the evidence for homosexual use of male slaves (which was commonplace) and the role of male homosexual prostitutes (both active and passive) for which there was apparently a viable market. Suffice it to say that they only offer a yet more varied picture of homosexual life in the ancient world, and none of these can be construed to conform to the “model” of pederasty.26 Smith, “Ancient Bisexuality and the Interpretation of Romans 1:26-27,” 237-238.

Although pederasty was considered normal and acceptable by the Roman conquerors during the period when the New Testament was written, first century Rome saw a transition from the Greek, romanticized view of homosexual activity to such activity being more abusive. Historian Thomas Hubbard writes:

Literature of the first century C.E. bears witness to an increasing polarization of attitudes toward homosexual activity, ranging from frank acknowledgment and public display of sexual indulgence on the part of leading Roman citizens to severe moral condemnation of all homosexual acts, even with slaves. One no longer finds the idealized and romantic images of Vergil and Tibullus, inspired by Greek models, but instead an obsessive interest in the most graphic and salacious aspects of same-sex relations.27 Thomas K. Hubbard, (ed.) Homosexuality in Greece and Rome: A Sourcebook Basic Documents. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003), 383.

According to David Wright, Jewish and Stoic writers alike opposed pederasty. He writes:

Although Paul said remarkably little about homosexuality…what he does say reveals a remarkable originality, in part by adopting the broader perspectives of the tradition that derived from the Old Testament and from Leviticus in particular.28 David Wright, “Homosexuality: The Relevance of the Bible,” Evangelical Quarterly 51:4 (1989) 300.

Mark Smith summarizes the sexual situation of the Greco-Roman world and its possible relationship to the modern world in this way:

I have no doubt that Greeks or Romans would agree that Kinsey’s continuum also represents their behavior, albeit with some differences in cultural expression. We have our Man-boy Love associations, our bathhouses, our bisexuals, and our committed monogamous homosexual relationships, as well as our faithful and less-than-faithful heterosexual marriages. On the one hand, then, we must conclude that there are significant similarities in the cultural expression of sexual activity between the Greco-Roman world and our own. On the other hand, we must be careful not to minimize the remaining cultural differences. The Greeks idealized youthful male beauty; we do not. Many Greeks and at least some upper-class Romans were widely tolerant of male homosexual activity, within certain limits; our culture tends to treat homosexuality as one of the more heinous of evils, perhaps as a result of our medieval European heritage. Women in Greek, and to a lesser extent in Roman, culture were held in extreme subjugation to their male superiors (Cantarella 1987), a far cry from our cultural assumptions and practices. Our conceptions of romance, dating, and meaning of marriage are to a large extent foreign to ancient cultures (Boswell 1994: 3ff.) Pederasty, in our culture, would be translated as sex with a minor and prosecuted as Lewd and Lascivious Conduct or Statutory Rape. If bisexuality was considered “normal” in Greco-Roman culture, it is not in ours, which emphasizes heterosexuality as the only “normal” sexual option. The distribution of sexual activity along Kinsey’s continuum may have looked somewhat different for ancient people than it does for modern Americans. Perhaps homosexual activity was more widespread among Greeks and Romans, as a result of the relative acceptability of such behavior in their cultures (though the evidence is by no means sufficient to make any judgments about relative frequency). These are legitimate distinctions between two cultures, and I have no doubt others could be added.29 Smith, “Ancient Bisexuality and the Interpretation of Romans 1:26-27,” 248-249.

In Karen Keen’s dialogue with Wesley Hill in Chicago in April of 2022, she admits she has some doubt as to what Paul was opposing in Romans 1.

In my own process of studying this, I was not able to come to an affirming position on the basis of exploitative argument. It is a credible argument and may well be the reality that all the passages that refer to this in scriptures are pertaining to exploitation. But I could not prove that was the only reason they condemned it.

Matthew Vines does not believe the New Testament addresses modern same sex relationships and has some doubts as to them being blessed:

Granted, the Bible’s silence on committed same-sex relationships doesn’t necessarily mean those relationships are blessed.30 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 131.

Justin Lee expresses a similar doubt about Paul and Romans 1:31 Justin Lee, Torn: Rescuing the Gospel-vs-Christians Debate. (New York: Jericho: 2012), 183.

Perhaps he would have condemned the gay sex even if it weren’t in the context of idolatry.

Despite Matthew Vines’ question regarding the Bible’s blessing same sex relationships and Justin Lee’s doubts about the influence of idolatry on Paul’s condemnation of gay sex, Karen Keen uses them to support her position of God’s approval of same sex partnerships:

Gay-affirming evangelicals believe that same-sex partnerships can be blessed by God. Prominent leaders in this group include Justin Lee and Matthew Vines.32 Karen Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2018) 13.

Neither Vines nor Lee see themselves as scholars on the matter. Matthew Vines writes:

I am not a biblical scholar, so I have relied on the work of dozens of scholars whose expertise is far greater than my own.33 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 2. According to Christopher Yuan, Vines “attended Harvard for three semesters and never received a bachelor’s degree.” (See: Yuan, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel, 149).

Justin Lee admits he is not “a preacher, or a theologian or a scholar.”34 Lee, Torn, 210.

These statements by Karen Keen, Matthew Vines, and Justin Lee indicate they are not 100% sure their understanding of Romans 1 is correct. This is significant, especially considering the firm opposition of their fellow affirming scholars including Loader, Brooten, Crompton, Via, and Pronk.

Issue Two: Does Paul Address Modern Same Sex Relationships in Romans 1?

Some affirming writers believe Romans 1 is not applicable to modern same sex relationships. Consider the following six examples:

1). Matthew Vines clearly states he does not necessarily believe same sex marriages are blessed, however earlier in the same book he makes the following observation:

…he wasn’t addressing what we think of today as homosexuality. The context in which Paul discussed same-sex relations differs so much from our own that it can’t reasonably be called the same issue.35 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 106. Throughout his book, Vines maintains Paul does NOT condemn modern-day same sex behavior. “We’ve found that, while Paul’s words are certainly negative, they appear in a context that differs greatly from the debate taking place within the church today.” (114) “…the context in which he would have been making that statement would differ significantly from our context today.” (126)

…what Paul was describing is fundamentally different from what we are discussing.36 Vines, God and the Gay Christian,103.

That isn’t to say that no one pursued only same sex relationships or that no same-sex unions were marked by long-term commitment and love. But such examples were rare…37 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 104.

It is important to observe that six years later Matthew Vines changed his understanding of “same-sex unions” from being “rare” to no longer existing “in ancient times.”38 Matthew Vines, For the Bible Tells Me So: Hermeneutics and the Debate About LGBTQ Inclusion (You Tube) (March 6, 2020).

Even though same-sex marriage is not mentioned in any part of the bible because same-sex relationships between social equals were not even on the radar screen in ancient times…

The notion of two men or two women of equal social status entering into a lifelong monogamous relationship would not have been accepted even by the most “progressive” Greeks and Romans, as such an arrangement would have undermined the patriarchal foundation of their societies.

A comparison of Matthew Vines’ writing from 2014 and his teaching in 2020 appears to show a progression in his efforts to justify modern same sex relationships.

Vines also states:

Ironically, that means the equal-status gay marriages we see today would not have been accepted in most of the ancient world.39 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 37.

2). Robin Scroggs does not believe the bible addresses modern same sex relationships:

The fact remains, however, that the basic model in today’s Christian homosexual community is so different from the model attacked by the New Testament that the criterion of reasonable similarity of context is not met.40 Scroggs, The New Testament and Homosexuality,127.

3). Justin Lee rejects Leviticus and Romans as applicable to modern same sex relationships:

The Leviticus and Romans passages had a clear context of idolatry, not committed relationships. If 1 Corinthians 6:9 was condemning the same things, or something else like pederasty then the Bible didn’t address committed gay relationships at all.41 Lee, Torn: 186.

4). Jeff Cook agrees and writes:

Monogamous same-sex relationships are nowhere in sight when reading Romans 1.42 Preston Sprinkle and Jeff Cook Debate. Part 6: “Gay Sex—What is Paul Cranked Up About?”

5). Regarding his understanding of pederasty in ancient literature Joel Hollier writes:

Of course, we know from the vast libraries of ancient literature available to us that there were numerous such models available to them, none of which were faithful, exclusive, or mutually self-sacrificing.43 Hollier, A Place at His Table, 126.

In fact, over the past forty years, the majority of scholars who have written theological works exploring the Bible’s view of homosexuality have concluded that the Bible as a whole does not condemn faithful, monogamous same sex-unions—their pillars have fallen also.44 Hollier, A Place at His Table, 122. Because of his book being a recent treatise (2019) there have been no reviews or references made to it by either traditionalists or revisionists.

6). Karen Keen makes the following comment about same sex relationships in antiquity:

But the biblical authors don’t write about the morality of consensual same-sex relationships as we know them today. To put it simply, to say that the biblical authors object to prostitution or pederasty is not to say that the authors object to monogamous, covenanted relationships. That would be comparing apples and oranges.45 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 20.

Progressives might respond to this concern by saying that the Bible does not speak to covenanted same-sex relationships and thus we can feel confident in discerning God’s will on the basis of virtues. In this they are correct; the Bible doesn’t address covenanted same-sex relationships as we know them today.46 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 57-58.

But the biblical authors don’t write about the morality of consensual same-sex relationships as we know them today.47 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 20.

In essence, Paul does not address the question of gay people who love God and want to share their life with someone in a caring, monogamous relationship.48 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 39.

Even so, Keen does not eliminate the possibility that consensual same sex relationships existed in Paul’s day because she uses the terms “rarely,” “rare,” and “primarily,” and “likely” in referring to them. She writes:

Consensual peer relationships are rarely mentioned.49 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 17.

Peer relationships were rare.50 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 20.

Homoeroticism during the Greco-Roman period consisted primarily of pederasty.51 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 17.

The apostle Paul likely had in mind the behavior he saw around him, namely pederasty or sex with male slaves and prostitutes.52 Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 18.

If, as Keen and others indicate, there is a possibility that Paul knew of “consensual peer relationships,” does it not stand to reason that Paul would have distinguished between them and pederasty and other abusive relationships?

In response to Preston Sprinkle’s review of her book (December 16, 2018) Keen writes:

But we can’t prove that Paul or other biblical authors knew monogamous, covenanted same-sex couples. For all we know their primary exposure was to the predominant exploitative practices. Neither traditionalists nor progressives can make a case on this basis alone. It remains speculative. That is why I focus on the Scriptural basis for mutuality.

Response to Romans 1 Excluding Modern Same Sex Relationships

At the beginning of his explanation of Romans 1, Matthew Vines writes:

There is no question that Rom 1:26-27 is the most significant biblical passage in this debate.53 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 96.

But his words in Romans 1 have long been read as a rejection of all same-sex relationships. What we need to ask is: is that a faithful application of the text today?54 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 99.

Vine’s question is a valid one and requires consideration of several topics:
(1) An examination of Romans 1.
(2) An examination of outside literary sources.
(3) The use of porneia in two texts.
(4) The research of Preston Sprinkle.
(5) Paul’s knowledge/travels and covenanted same sex marriages.
(6) Paul and dedicated monogamous same sex Christians.

1). An examination of Romans 1

According to the terms Paul uses in Romans 1:27-28, there is no indication this text precludes the actions from being consensual.55 Romans 1 is not a condemnation of only same sex relationships. The phrase of “sexual impurity” (Rom 1:24) includes several types of immoral sexual behavior (adultery, rape, prostitution). He makes a general statement about degrading “their bodies with one another” (Romans 1:24b)56 The Greek in Rom 1:24 is: “ho autos soma en autos” (τὰ σώματα αὐτῶν ἐν αὐτοῖς) which is not the exact term as “one another” in Rom 1:27 (ἐν τῇ ὀρέξει αὐτῶν εἰς ἀλλήλους). therefore implying mutuality. He describes men abandoning “natural relations” and committing “shameful acts with one another,” and receiving “in themselves due penalty for their error” (Romans 1:27b).57 It has been suggested the “due penalty” (antimisthian ἀντιμισθίαν) or “recompense” could refer to the soreness both persons could experience in anal intercourse. Sprinkle, (ed) Homosexuality: The Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Homosexuality and the Bible, 42. In the New English Translation of Romans 1:27a58 ἐν τῇ ὀρέξει αὐτῶν (auton) εἰς ἀλλήλους mutuality is again seen: “were inflamed in their passions for one another.”59 The prefix “ek” (exekauthesan: “inflamed”) showed intensity of the verb. Robert Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Text and Hermeneutics (Nashville: Abington Press, 2001), 237. Paul’s use of “themselves,” “their,” and “one another” indicate both partners were equally guilty.60 Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 325. He does not believe Romans 1 is limited to pederasty. In fact mutual responsibility is indicated four times in Romans 1:27b:61 The CEB translates Rom 1:27b: “Males performed shameful actions with males, and they were paid back with the penalty they deserved for their mistake in their own bodies.” The YLT:   “and in like manner also the males having left the natural use of the female, did burn in their longing toward one another; males with males working shame, and the recompense of their error that was fit, in themselves receiving.”
(1) “toward one another”62 See Rom 1:24 for “one another.” εἰς ἀλλήλους is a reciprocal pronoun.
(2) “men with men”63 ἄρσενες ἐν ἄρσεσιν
(3) “in themselves”64 αὐτῶν
(4) “their error”

In commenting about the phrase “for one another,” William Loader makes the following observation:

…Paul’s depiction in 1:27 of mutual desire (εἰς ἀλλήλους) suggest that what he has in mind is not primarily exploitative pederasty and certainly not limited to it. The same applies to Jewett’s speculation that Paul may have sexual abuse of male slaves in mind. Those who have interpreted Lev 18:22 as referring to some form of cult prostitution frequently try to read this into Romans 1, so that Paul’s focus would not be same-sex acts in general but those preformed within idolatrous ritual contexts.65 Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality, 325.

Paul’s terminology is also telling. If Paul had only been condemning older men having sex with boys, he would not have used a reciprocal pronoun “toward one another” and the phrase “men in men.”66 εἰς ἀλλήλους, ἄρσενες ἐν ἄρσεσιν The word for young (neotez)67 νεότης is used in 1 Timothy 4:12. The word for child (teknon) 68 τέκνον is used in Ephesians 6:4 and Romans 8:16-17 and 21.69 Obviously the three words have overlapping usages. Because of the terms used there is no indication the “mutual” same sex relationships were with slaves or prostitutes but rather with two equal men. The word used to describe adolescence (that spanned late childhood to early adulthood) is neaniskos. Because Paul held both individuals accountable, it was not reasonable for Paul to have included a “mounted boy.” 70 ὁμοίως τε καὶ οἱ ἄρσενες ἀφέντες τὴν φυσικὴν χρῆσιν τῆς θηλείας ἐξεκαύθησαν ἐν τῇ ὀρέξει αὐτῶν εἰς ἀλλήλους, ἄρσενες ἐν ἄρσεσιν τὴν ἀσχημοσύνην κατεργαζόμενοι καὶ τὴν ἀντιμισθίαν ἣν ἔδει τῆς πλάνης. (Rom 1:27) The text does not imply a power play of an older man with a young male, a master with his slave, nor a rape situation.71 Playing the part of the woman was degrading for men regardless if the sex act was forced or consensual.

According in the Hebrew Bible when homosexual conduct was mutual BOTH parties were punished (Deuteronomy 22:22-24). When such behavior was not mutual, this was not the case (as seen in rape situations Deuteronomy 22:25-27).72 The same use of mutual terms is repeated in Rom 1:24-27. Had Paul been targeting only pederasty, he would have clarified the culpability of the “innocent” party.

The same sex relationships Paul condemns is further defined at the beginning of Romans 1:27. He states, “in the same way” which means the men paralleled the mutual lesbian73 Bernadette Brooten has written perhaps the most important book on lesbianism in antiquity and its relationship to early Christianity (especially Rom 1:26). “Lesbian” comes from a 7th-6th century BCE gay poet named Sappho who was from the Greek island of Lesbos. Therefore “Lesbos” is the source for “lesbian.” activity of the women in Romans 1:26. There is no evidence older women exploited younger women, consequently this condemnation references same sex relationships between “men” and “men”74 The Greek phrase (“men in men”) and context indicate anal sex. The Latin Vulgate translates the Greek as masculi in masculos indicating the nature of the act.It can also be translated “men effecting shamelessness in men”, or “men working genitals in men” – in the LXX is a euphemism for genitals. and not “men” and “boys.”75 William Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,” Zeitschrift fur die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft (108:1 2017),140. “As Jewett suggests, anal intercourse might best explain Paul’s additional comment, which would be referring to the soreness of the anus or the penis or both. Jewett translates the words τὴν ἀσχημοσύνην κατεργαζόμενοι as ‘working (up) shame’ and referring to an erection, and ἣν ἔδει as a reference to construction of tightness, producing the subsequent soreness…But even without these readings which may be claiming too much, I (William Loader JJ) consider Jewett’s proposal the most plausible-thus far of the many suggestions with regard to the meaning of the words τὴνἀ σχημοσύνην κατεργαζόμενοι καὶ τὴνἀ ντιμισθίαν ἣν ἔδει τῆς πλάνης αὐτῶν ἐν ἑαυτοῖς ἀπολαμβάνοντες. Paul does not appear to assume the principle of matching punishments so that in the broadest sense God’s punishment for human beings’ perverted approach to himself in their minds is abandon them in their minds to a perverted approach to each other. Similarly, the perverted activity with the penis and anus produces punishment though soreness of both.” In connection with the damage of “men in men,” the phrase of “dishonoring their bodies’ (Rom 1:24) and “passion of dishonor” (Rom 1:26) could be added.

The parallel to female behavior stands. Is it possible that limiting Paul’s opposition to same sex relationships only to pederasty is an example of “reading into the text” a window of acceptability which is not there?

As Paul closes his condemnation of the gentiles in Romans 1, he mentions sins God opposes and states in 1:32, “that those who do such things deserve death.” There was no law which demanded death for these sins except murder. William Loader makes the following observations:

It is likely therefore that Paul remains focused here on same sex relations, where Lev 20:13 declares the death penalty for lying with a man as with a woman. The fact that he also attacks those who applaud such practices may well also reflect that focus, since it is a charge expressed, for instance, by Philo, who was concerned about public support for such practices. 76 William Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time.” Zeitschrift fur die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 108 (1) 2017, 145. Loader listed the following sources for Philo: e.g. Philp, Specleg IV 89; VitCont 53-56.61).

The final verse suggests that Paul still has same-sex relations in mind when he speaks of people propagating and promoting such sin…77 Sprinkle (ed.), Two Views on Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Homosexuality and the Bible, 41.

2). An examination of outside literary sources

According to the cumulative evidence, Paul was probably aware of ongoing consensual monogamous relationships.
(1). Plutarch and Monogamous Covenanted Same Sex Couples

Evidence indicates same sex relationships among equals was practiced in the Greco-Roman world. Mark Smith summarizes Plutarch’s (45 CE to 120 CE) awareness of such behavior in the following way:

Plutarch describes the famous Sacred Band of fourth century BCE Thebes, which became the military powerhouse of Greece. One qualification for membership in this elite military corps was to become the homosexual lover of another band member, on the assumption that lovers would fight more fiercely for each other. There is no evidence that there were any pre-adolescent members of this group; we must assume that they were all of prime fighting age. Pederastic practices would be unlikely in such a context, because they all must fight side-by-side as equals. Plutarch portrays Pelopidas as married at the same time that he was captain of the Sacred Band and, thus, attached to a male lover…Epaminondas, the great Theban military leader, was so attached to his lover, Caphisodorus, that the two fell together at the Battle of Mantinaea and were buried together like a married couple.78 Smith, “Ancient Bisexuality and the Interpretation of Romans 1:26-27,” 236.

Paul was well educated and assumedly knew the history of the Sacred Band of Thebes and the 150 consensual/committed /monogamous same sex couples willing to die for each other.

(2). Plato and Monogamous Covenanted Same Sex Couples

Several authors have commented on Plato’s acknowledgement of these relationships. Jim Reynolds writes:

Plato’s Symposium contained moving statements about the compassionate and beautiful character of same-sex love, describing various celebrants (including Socrates) during a time of light drinking after a banquet that occurred in 416 B.C. Plutarch’s Dialogues (750 B.C.) contained strong affirmation of loving same-sex relationships contending for their superiority over heterosexual lovemaking. The same attitude was defended in the Pseud-Lucianic Affairs of the Heart (ca. 300 A.C.). These references indicate that the ancient context contained powerful proponents of adult same-sex lovemaking not unlike the contemporary context of the early 21st century.
Then, as now, pagan writers advocated exploitative homosexual acts as well as homosexual acts of love. It is the lack of gender polarity, thereby distorting God’s created intent, that is at the root of the Biblical as well as the contemporary church’s opposition to homosexuality. (Romans 1:18-32, Genesis 1 and 2).79 Jim Reynolds, The Lepers Among Us: Homosexuality and the Life of the Church. (Xulon Press, 2007), 151.

Robert Gagnon makes the following observation about Plato (427 BCE to 346 BCE):

Even on the surface of it, the notion that mutually caring same-sex relationships first originated in modern times sounds absurd. Are we to believe that nobody with homosexual or lesbian urges in all of antiquity was able to provide a healthy example of same-sex love? In fact, moving statements about compassionate and beautiful character of same-sex love can be found in Greco-Roman literature. Among the example are the speeches in Plato’s Symposium. In it is narrated a series of discourses on Love (Eros) by various celebrants (including Socrates), during the time of light drinking after a banquet that occurred in 416 B.C.E.80 Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 350-351. Gagnon follows with several examples of committed and loving relationships.

James DeYoung summarizes the information from Plato in the following manner:

Second, given Plato and other evidence, it seems beyond reasonable doubt that the ancients knew virtually all forms of homosexuality, including orientation, centuries before Paul.81 James B. DeYoung, Homosexuality: Contemporary Claims Examined in Light of the Bible and Other Ancient Literature and Law. (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications 2000), 157.

Since Plato lived from 427 B.C. to 346 B.C. the discussion among Greek intelligentsia was underway hundreds of years before the apostle Paul. The following portions of Plato also support the view that the Greeks knew of homosexual condition or inversion, as well as the various practices of homosexual behavior. Indeed, some of them touted them as superior to heterosexuality—an early example of “gay pride.”82 DeYoung, Homosexuality, 205. DeYoung follows with extensive quotes from Plato and other ancient writers.

(3). During the classical Greek period, pederasty was a common practice among the socially elite Greeks, but this does not mean there were no mutual same sex relationships. Thomas Hubbard summarizes the Grecian influence on homosexual activity:

Greek homosexual activity, despite popular misconceptions, was not restricted to man-boy pairs. Vase-painting shows numerous scenes where there is little or no apparent difference in the age between the young wooer and his object of courtship.83 Hubbard, (ed.) Homosexuality in Greece and Rome, 5.

3. The use of porneia in two texts

(1). Corinthians 7

In Corinthians 7:2 Paul uses of the plural form of “sexual immorality”84 The plural form can be used to describe “several acts” and not necessarily “many kinds.” The singular use can describe a “category.” therefore indicating he was aware of different kinds of immoral sexual behavior.85 In 1 Cor 7:2 Paul uses the plural form of porneia (πορνείας) to show the extent of immorality in Corinth. He would have been aware of the brothels in the Greco-Roman world. In Romans he claims people were so depraved that “they invented ways to do evil” (Rom 1:30). See Mark 7:21-22. As such, the term could have included the sexual sins of 1 Corinthians 6:9. It is also quite possible the “many people” (Acts 18:8) in Corinth included types of same sex relationships and other relationships considered to be immoral.86 Acts 18 10; 1 Cor 1:26-31; 1 Cor 5:1- 2

(2). Acts 15

Paul and Barnabas had had great success teaching the gentiles and consequently the church was confronted with the issue of circumcision and salvation among the gentile converts (Acts 15:1).87 Acts 13:46; 14:1, 27; 15:12 To clarify the matter a letter was constructed by the apostles, elders, and the Holy Spirit (Acts 15:8, 23, 28) to the gentile churches outlining the behavior they were expected to follow as believers (Acts 15:23). Significantly the letter follows the same order88 The original letter mentioned by James follows a different order (Acts 15:20). The abstaining “from food polluted by idols” (ἀλισγημάτων τῶν εἰδώλων) in Acts 15:20 is qualified in Acts 15:29 with “food sacrificed to idols” (εἰδωλοθύτων). “Sexual immorality” is connected to “idolaters.” (Rev 2:14, 20; 1 Cor 6:9; Gal 5:19-20 εἰδωλολατρία) or was something to be avoided (1 Thess 4:3). The “what is strangled” is followed by the mention of “blood” (Gen 9:4). Hans Conzelmann, Acts of the Apostles: A Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1987), 118-119. Conzelmann believes the letter (Acts 15:29) follows the order of Leviticus 17-18. as Leviticus 17-18. Because of Paul’s ministry to the gentiles (Acts 9:15), his knowledge of their past,89 1 Cor 6:9-11; 12:2; Rom 1:26-27 and his understanding of Torah, it can be assumed he had a major influence on the contents of this letter. Gentiles were expected to abstain from:90 Paul alludes to the letter written to gentile believers declaring “we have written to them our decision” (Acts 21:25). This correspondence follows the order of the letter in Acts 15:29. Later Paul adds a note regarding eating foods sold in the market (1 Corinthians 10:25; Romans 14:2).
(1) food sacrificed to idols (Leviticus 17:7)
(2) blood (Leviticus 17:12)
(3) meat of strangled animals (Leviticus 17:13; Genesis 9:4)
(4) (porneia) sexual immorality (Leviticus 18:1 through 23)91 “Sexual immorality” (Acts 15:29) is the translation of the Greek word porneia. In Acts 15:29 porneia does not appear in the plural as found in Mark 7:21 and 1 Corinthians 7:2. However the singular form could have included several examples of immorality.

As in 1 Corinthians, Paul chooses the plural of the term porneia in this text which most likely includes same sex relationships.92 As same sex relationships can be included in porneia (Acts 15), according to the LXX the word can also include adultery. In Hosea 2:2b “adulterous” and “unfaithfulness” are both mentioned. “Let her remove the adulterous look from her face and the unfaithfulness from between her breasts.” The first word is zenuniym and means “fornication” or “sexual unfaithfulness.” The second word, na’pupiym, means “adultery.” There does not seem to be a clear distinction between them other than the first term is perhaps broader. The LXX uses the word porneia to describe the “look from her face” and the word adultery moikeia to describe what was “between her breasts.” In three New Testament texts porneia (sexual immorality) and moikeia (adultery) are listed separately: Mark 7:21, 1 Corinthians 6:9, and Matthew 15:19. Because the writers mention “adultery” in addition to sexual immorality, adultery appears to be a subset of sexual immorality (porneia).

In the Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, Walter Bauer and Frederick Danker translate Acts 15:29 as “abstaining fr. things offered to idols, blood, things strangled, and irregular sexual union.”93 Bauer, W., F. W. Danker, W. F. Arndt, and F. W. Gingrich. Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. 3d ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 103. The lexicon translates “εἰδωλοθύτων καὶ αἵματος καὶ πνικτῶν καὶ πορνείας” as: “abstain fr. things offered to idols, blood, things strangled, and from irregular sexual union Ac 15:29.” They then refer the reader to Leviticus 18:6-30, especially Leviticus 18:20. By defining porneia mentioned in Acts 15:29 as “irregular sexual union” and referencing the Leviticus texts, it appears their understanding of porneia includes same sex relationships in addition to incest, adultery and bestiality.94 The sins of Leviticus 18 are bookended by “I am the LORD your God” (Lev 18:2 and Lev 18:30.) The section begins with the admonishment by God to “Keep my decrees and laws” (Lev 18:5). After the sins are listed God says: “Do not defile yourselves in any of these ways because this is how the nations that I am going to drive out before you became defiled” (Lev 18:24). Lev 18:27 acknowledges “all these things were done by the people who lived in the land before you.”

Question: Would the gentile believers have understood the letter commanding them to abstain from sexual immorality (porneia) ONLY applied to abusive same sex relationships, and not to consensual, monogamous, and committed relationships?
Reply: It was not necessary for apostles and elders to make a distinction between two “kinds” of same sex relationships because Judaism was united in opposition to ALL same sex relationships. A distinction between same sex relationships (abusive/consensual versus polygamous/monogamous) was foreign to Jewish understanding.

4. The research of Preston Sprinkle

In his book Brownson contends Paul does not address consensual, committed, and monogamous relationships95 Brownson maintains the bible neither affirms nor condemns committed same sex relationships which means God overlooked these relationships in the first century and continues to do so. and does not know of any such relationships. Preston Sprinkle who has written and lectured extensively on same sex relationships from the viewpoint of a traditionalist summarizes evidence to the contrary:

Paul’s world contained a vast array of perspectives on sexual orientation, examples of consensual and nonexploitative same sex couples, and even homosexual marriages. There is no historical reason why we should not assume that Paul could not have had examples of consensual same-sex relations before his eyes when he penned Rom 1.96 Preston Sprinkle, “Romans 1 and Homosexuality: A Critical Review of James Brownson’s Bible, Gender, Sexuality.” Bulletin for Biblical Research 24.4 (2014), 523.

In any case, consensual and loving homosexual relationships can be seen during the Roman period as well. For instance, Xenophon’s second century AD novel An Ephesian Tale depicts a young man named Hippothous who falls in love with another man of the same age named Hyperanthes.97 Sprinkle, People to Be Loved, 63. See Sprinkle. “Romans 1 and Homosexuality: A Critical Review of James Brownson’s Bible, Gender, Sexuality,” 527 for more examples of consensual same sex love.

5. Paul’s Knowledge/Travels98 Preston Sprinkle, Did Adult Consensual Same-Sex Relationships Exist in Bible Times? 9. With the limitations of the literature from the Greco-Roman era, Paul’s information in Romans 1 becomes even more important. Paul did not have the elite status of other Greco-Roman writers because he was a “leather worker” (Acts 18:3) from Tarsus. He attempts to “level the playing field” (Galatians 3:28) by writing in the common language of his day. and Covenanted Same Sex Couples99 Sprinkle, Did Adult Consensual Same-Sex Relationships Exist in Bible Times? 1-12.

Paul’s world view (Acts 22:3; Philippians 3:5) encompassed the known world as far as Spain (Romans 15:24). He would have crossed paths with followers of Epicurean and Stoic philosophers (Acts 17:18), those in the slave community,100 Eph 6:5; Col 3:22; 1 Cor 7:21; Phile 1:16 and those engaging in the “sexual creativity” of Corinth (Acts 18:11). We have already confirmed the possibility of long term committed, loving, and long-term same sex relationships during Paul’s time.101 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 104. “That isn’t to say no one pursued only same sex relationships or that no same-sex unions were marked by long-term commitment and love. But such examples were rare… “ His numerous travels, knowledge of the Greco-Roman world, education, awareness of contemporary writings, and interactions with people from a variety of backgrounds would have exposed him to various forms of same sex relationships102 1 Cor 6:9-11; 12:2; 1 Tim 1:10 including casual, abusive, consensual, and even those which were committed/monogamous.

Paul was known as the apostle to the gentiles103 Acts 14:46; Rom 11:13; Gal 2:8) which implies his knowledge of their culture. In his letters he mentions the gentiles had turned from idols (1 Thessalonians 1:9), did not know God (1 Thessalonians 4:5;104 “Not knowing God” is connected to sexual sins (1 Thess 4:1-8). The name of God is mentioned five times in eight verses. Acts 17:23), were sinful (Galatians 2:15), and were engaged in sexual immortality (1 Corinthians 6:9). The Corinthian church had a background of paganism (1 Corinthians 12:2) and in 1 Corinthians 5:1 Paul indicates he possesses detailed knowledge of occurring sexual immorality that was not even tolerated by pagans. In Ephesians 4:17, he instructs his readers to “no longer live as the Gentiles.”

There are no indications in any of Paul’s writings that consensual, committed, and monogamous relationships were not included in his instruction of Romans 1:26-27. If Paul meant to only condemn pederasty and abusive same-sex relationships, and not those in consensual, committed, and monogamous same-sex relationships, it seems he would have made that clear. Just as he did not feel it was necessary to list the different types of incestual relationships (Leviticus 18:7-17), he did not list the types of same sex relationships that violated Christian ethics.

It also stands to reason that Paul was involved in the conversion of people involved in same sex relationships. As part of their response to repentance Paul called all believers out of sexual immorality (1 Corinthians 6:11). The type was insignificant.105 1 Cor 1:26; 6:9-11; 12:2; Acts 18:8-11; 1 Tim 1:10; Eph 5:8 He gives no hint that those involved in same sex monogamous and committed relationships could continue in those relationships after their conversion any more than those involved in other types of sexual immorality.

6. Paul and Dedicated Monogamous Same sex Christians

As far as can be determined, Paul was never confronted with committed and monogamous Christians in same sex relationships.106 Why a person is born with the same sex attraction cannot be answered any more than why a person is born blind (John 9:1-4) or with a “thorn in the flesh” (2 Cor 12:7). In the situation of the blind man, Jesus said, “but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him” (John 9:3). Of his own situation Paul said, “Therefore, in order to keep me from becoming conceited, I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me” (2 Cor 12:7). If he had been:
(1) What would have been his response?
(2) Would he have reasoned that same sex relationships within the context of idol worship were sinful but lawful when engaged in by consensual, committed, and monogamous Christians?
(3) Would he consider same sex relationships today acceptable or sinful based on the circumstances?

We can only surmise Paul’s answers to these questions by using his own words. His attitude toward immoral Christians (assumed to be dedicated and God-loving) in Corinth (1 Corinthians 5:11) is telling. He cautions the churches up and down the Lycus Valley to not even hint (aroma) at immorality by their actions (Ephesians 5:3). He writes to the Thessalonians:

It is God’s will that you should be sanctified that you should avoid sexual immorality, that each of you should learn to control his own body in a way that is holy and honorable, not in passionate lust like the pagans who do not know God. (1 Thess 3:3-5)

The Corinthian Christians tried to rationalize immoral behavior because, “I have the right to do anything” (1 Corinthians 6:12), and “Food for the stomach and the stomach for food” (1 Corinthians 6:13). Paul did not agree. In fact, his message was more in tune with, “My only right as a Christian is to give up my other rights” (1 Corinthians 8:9-10; Romans 14). What one could do or could not do with their own body was a major concern for him. Just as Paul’s message was counter-cultural as he opposed consensual, heterosexual, immoral behavior (1 Corinthians 5:9-11),107 In the Jewish world a Jewish husband could have sex with a non-virgin, a non-married woman, or a non-pledged woman and not be guilty of adultery because there was no property violation. he was counter-cultural in his opposition to same sex relationships.

Summary of Assumption Three
Basis Of Paul’s Opposition to Same Sex Relationships

Even though some teachings from Torah do not appear to be repeated in the New Testament (such as the practice of the levirate marriage, Deuteronomy 25:5 through 10), the same cannot be said for same sex relationships especially in the light of the teachings in Romans 1:18-32.

Paul was opposed to ALL same sex relationships under any circumstances whether by Christians or pagans, abusive or consensual. If same sex relationships among Christians were approved by God, Paul made no attempt to differentiate them from same sex relationships among pagans who had rejected God for idols.

Romans 1 has two revelations: the righteousness of God (Romans 1:16-17) and God’s punishment for ungodliness and unrighteousness (Romans 1:18). As mankind cannot be saved without a knowledge of the gospel (Romans 10:14-15) mankind cannot be condemned without a knowledge of sin. Both gentiles and Jews were without excuse—the Jews had the law (Romans 1:20; Romans 2:1), and the gentiles had creation (Romans 1:20, Psalm 19:1-6, Ecclesiastes 3:11) and the law that was “written on their hearts” (Romans 2:15). If Paul meant to imply consensual same sex relationships were acceptable to God as opposed to abusive ones (pederasty), how were the gentiles to know the difference having only creation and the law “written on their hearts?” The law “written on their hearts” confirms knowledge that is intuitive, natural, and intrinsic. Both signify same sex relationships were not God’s intention at creation. Even though Paul affirms the capacity of the “heart” to believe (Rom 10:10), scripture also warns the heart can be deceived (Jeremiah 17:9; Hosea 10:2). Such is the case with all sin.

Succinctly put, the “Genesis marriage” is supported both by Jesus (Mark 10:6 through 9) and by Paul’s analogy of Jesus and the church compared to husband and wife (Ephesians 5:21-33). Even though same sex relationships are not mentioned in Genesis:
(1) They oppose the creation ideal found in Genesis. When God created the earth, sun, moon, stars, seas, and animals they were designed to work together to accomplish certain purposes. The same was true of man and woman. Veering from this plan creates “irregularity” and can be traced back to the “orderliness” or “design” of creation.108 “according to their kinds” (Gen 1:12, 21, 24, 25). “And God saw it was good” (Gen 1:10, 12, 18, 21, 25). “God saw all that he made, and it was very good” (Gen 1:31) Same sex relationships do not fit the “design purposes” of creation.
(2) They oppose the ethics in Torah which are connected to character of God.
(3) They oppose Jesus’ explanation of God’s plan for marriage (Matthew 19:1-12).
(4) They oppose the complementary nature of pairs (male and female), i.e.: man was to leave father and mother (male and female), and man was joined to his wife (male and female).
(5) They oppose God’s plan because of the nature of the partner, i.e.: 109 Even if done in a mutual and committed manner, none of these behaviors could be considered acceptable. adultery involves sex with someone other than a spouse; incest involves sex with a relative; bestiality involves sex with an animal; same-sex relationships involve sex with one who is biologically the same.

Filed Under: Christian Life, LGBTQ+

The LGBTQ+ Conversation: Assumption Two

April 13, 2023 By Jerry Jones 1 Comment

The background for Romans 1:18 through 32 1

The most radical effort to do away with Rom 1:18-32 as opposing same sex activity has been put forth in Martin Colby’s effort to cast doubt on it being “Pauline writings.” Colby Martin, UnClobber: Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality. (John Knox Press: Louisville, 2016), 118. “There is compelling reason to believe that these fifteen verses were not written by, or at least original to, Paul. This composition, word choice, and overall flow of the Greek are notably un-Pauline in comparison to the rest of his body of work.” is the Wisdom of Solomon. 2 In addition to its link with the Wisdom of Solomon, Keen also emphasized “impartiality and divine justice” as the focus of Romans 1. “Paul eventually develops his argument of sin in later chapters of Romans, but at this point he is focused on impartiality and divine justice.” Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 38.

Karen Keen maintains the Wisdom of Solomon is the backdrop for Romans 1:18 through 32. The Wisdom of Solomon was written in first century BCE and is considered a non-canonical apocryphal book. She writes:

This connection has long been recognized by scholars…. The point is that Genesis is not the backdrop for Paul; Wisdom of Solomon is the text he is engaging. That has crucial implications for understanding the meaning of Romans 1. 3Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 38.

Paul doesn’t use Wisdom merely to copy it. In fact, he overturns the position of Wisdom that gives Israel greater favor before God than the pagans. 4Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships. 38. Keen used a commentary by Andres Nygren to support what she has stated. A careful reading of Nygren reveals he attributed his understanding of the Gentles from what anyone would know about them plus what could be understood from the Old Testament in addition to Jewish literature such as the Wisdom of Solomon. The following is what Nygren wrote:  “It is a dark page which Paul writes about the unrighteousness of the Gentiles. He had gathered the material from conditions that were manifest to anyone who observed them, their idolatry and their moral waywardness. He could have found the same in the Old Testament and the wisdom literature of the Jews. (cf. especially the Book of Wisdom, chaps. 13-14) They direct attack against paganism with its idolatry. They marshal tables of indictments” (Emphasis mine JJ) Andres Nygren, Commentary on Romans. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1983, 112. Later in his commentary, Nygren will reference the influence of the Book of Wisdom on Romans 2. “These chapters (Book of Wisdom 13-14 JJ) clearly supply the key to the second chapter of Romans.” Nygren, Commentary on Romans, 114.

Instead of Genesis, Paul makes his argument in conversation with the Wisdom of Solomon.5Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 37.

Colby Martin agrees:

The tone, language, and arguments of Romans 1:18 through 32 are nearly identical to those found in Wisdom. And this was intentional.6Colby Martin, UnClobber: Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality (Louisville: John Knox Press, 2016), 123.

Karen Keen’s Thesis About the Wisdom of Solomon and Romans Rejected

Traditionalists and revisionist writers both connect creation with Romans 1 rather than the Wisdom of Solomon. Consider the following quotations from traditionalist writers:

Robert Gagnon writes:

(1) Scripture rejects homosexual behavior because it is a violation of the gendered existence of male ordained by God at creation.7Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice, 487.

(2) Roy Ciampa and Brian Rosner write:

Paul opposed homosexual behavior on the basis of creation theology and because it is marked as a vice in the Torah and was stressed as a vice by Jews. 8Roy Ciampa and Brian Rosner, The First Letter to the Corinthians (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010), 242

(3) Preston Sprinkle writes:

Homosexual unions violate the boundaries of gender established by God at creation. 9Sprinkle, “Romans 1 and Homosexuality: A Critical Review of James Brownson’s Bible, Gender, Sexuality, 526.

The following are five examples from revisionists stressing creation as the backdrop of Romans:
(1) William Loader writes:

The perverted approach to God results in a perverted mind, which produces passions which head in a perverted direction, producing acts which are contrary to what God intended in nature as divine creation. 10 Loader, “Reading Romans 1 on Homosexuality in the Light of Biblical/Jewish and Greco-Roman Perspectives of Its Time,” 145.

The current order of creation as portrayed in Genesis also influences Paul’s stance on same-sex relations. 11William Loader, The New Testament on Sexuality (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2012), 496.

On Romans 1, I also find much common ground with Wesley. Clearly Paul has the creation stories in mind, both in his depiction of idolatry and images of animals and when he speaks about same-sex relations. Here I would note in particular the language of “male” and “female” (Rom 1:26-27), which must be alluding to Genesis 1:27.12 Sprinkle, (ed.), Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill,149.

In addition to creation being the basis for Romans 1, William Loader also believes the fall was connected to Romans 1:

Of course, for Paul all sin traces its origin to the fall, and the sin in Romans 1 is no exception. Paul’s argument is Romans 1, however, is not that the particular sin of having a perverted sexual response derives from the fall, but that it derives from having a perverted response to God. One perversion, as he sees it, produces another.13Sprinkle, (ed.), Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. William Loader, Response to Wesley Hill,149.

(2) Bernadette Brooten writes:

For Paul, same-sex love in Rom 1:26f is a sin against the social order established by God at creation…13 Brooten, Love Between Women, 264.

“Men….with men.” The Greek term for “men” is literally “males,” which includes men of all ages. The language calls to mind both Gen 1:27 (that God created humanity “male and female”) and Lev 18:22; 23:13 (on lying with a male as with a woman). Romans, like Leviticus, condemns same-sex relations between males of all ages, not only pederasty.14 Brooten, Love Between Women, 256.

She also mentions Clément’s understanding of Romans:

Clément’s view, as a Christian, of what it means to be a human male or female—his theological anthropology—-shapes his condemnation of female homoeroticism. For him, the Genesis creation narratives lay the framework for understand nature as gendered, while Christ’s maleness further helps to delineate human nature.15Brooten, Love Between Women, 323.

(3) Wesley Hill writes:

The backdrop for Paul’s indictment is, however, equally crucial for an understanding of its precise contours. Paul appears to be telling a story rooted in Israel’s Scripture and specifically in the Genesis creation narratives. .…In short, the story of God’s making the world, God’s giving a command to Adam, and Adam’s subsequent “fall” form the backdrop for Paul’s diagnosis of the human condition in Romans 1.16Sprinkle, (ed.), Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. Wesley Hill, Christ, Scripture, and Spiritual Friendship, 134-135.

Paul’s view of same-sex sexuality appears to be stamped by his reading of God’s design for human beings as found in the book of Genesis.17Sprinkle, (ed.), Homosexuality, the Bible, and the Church. Wesley Hill, Christ, Scripture, and Spiritual Friendship, 137.

(4) James Brownson writes:

The purity laws attempt, in general, to replicate the order of the original creation, where there was “a place for everything, and everything was its place.” They tend toward preserving what was perceived as the order of creation, and avoiding inappropriate mixtures. 18Brownson, Bible Gender Sexuality, 269.

Prior to Brownson changing his position on same sex relationships, he stressed the importance of creation in respect to modern homosexual relationships. He writes:

…it violates the essential creational intent of God regarding sexuality, distorting the “one flesh” union of male and female which is the basis for sexual ethics throughout the Bible. 19Brownson, “Gay Unions: Consistent Witness or Pastoral Accommodation?” 4. it does not express that creational intent. 20 Brownson, “Gay Unions: Consistent Witness or Pastoral Accommodation?” 4.

(5) Matthew Vines writes:

It’s true, though, that some aspects of the language in Romans 1 do recall language in Genesis 1”…. Words like “creation” and “Creator,” “females” and “males,” and “image” and “likeness,” among others, appear in both passages.21 Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 110.

Creation and Pauline Ethics22Sin can be defined as doing harm against someone else (slander/rape/murder/stealing), falling short of God’s expectations, and transgression (crossing over) but it can also be defined by not living according to the creation design.

The creation account in Genesis 1-2 shaped Paul’s worldview and throughout his letters he uses creation for teaching purposes. For example:

  • 1). When Paul deals with the issue of head coverings for women and men in the assembly, he incorporates creation (1 Corinthians 11:8 through 12).
  • 2). When Paul addresses the false teachings in the church at Ephesus, including acetic food practices, he alludes to creation (1 Timothy 4:1-3).
  • 3). When Paul explains the nature of submission in a marital context, he references creation (Ephesians 5:31).
  • 4). When Paul wants to describe the new self of the Christian, he uses the image of the creator (Colossians 3:10).
  • 5). When Paul declares Christians “are God’s handwork” he adds they were “created in Christ Jesus to do good works” (Ephesians 2:10).
  • 6). In a similar way to Colossians 3:10, Paul writes the new self was “created to be like God” (Ephesians 4:24).
  • 7). In describing the mystery, Paul refers to “God who created all things” (Ephesians 3:9).
  • 8). In dealing with immorality, Paul quotes Genesis 2:24 (1 Corinthians 6:16).
  • 9). Even though it is not a direct reference to creation, Paul uses Eve’s deception by the serpent to illustrate how the Ephesian women were deceived by false teachers (1 Timothy 2:14). In dealing with the deception of the Corinthian church, Eve is used as an example (2 Corinthians 11:3).
  • 10). Paul uses Adam to explain the fall (Romans 5:12 and 14; 1 Corinthians 15:22).
  • 11). Paul reminds his readers that God created all things through Jesus (Colossians 1:16; John 1:3) and “everything God created is good” (1 Timothy 4:4).
  • 12). When Paul explains Jesus, he uses Adam as the contrast (1 Corinthians 15:45).
  • 13). When Paul references “the grace given us in Christ Jesus,” he states it was “before the beginning of time” (2 Timothy 1:9).

As Paul taught new Christians how they should see themselves, he incorporates creation. For example:

  • 1). As Paul completes his emotional letter to the churches of Galatia, he places the Christian life in proper perspective.
    Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything; what counts is the new creation (Galatians 6:15).
  • 2). Paul declares the new creation is the result of reconciliation:
    Therefore, if anyone is in Christ the new creation has come. The old has gone, the new is here (2 Corinthians 5:17).

The Creation Story of Genesis 1 Through 3 Compared to Romans 1

A strong parallel exists between the information in the first chapters of Genesis and Romans 1.23For Paul to deal with the woman first, (Rom 1:26) follows the “fall story” in Genesis. The following topics are significant in both:

  • 1). lie: Romans 1:25; Genesis 3:5
  • 2). shame: Romans 1:27; Genesis 3:1 and 8
  • 3). knowledge: Romans 1:19 and 21 and 28 and 32; Genesis 2:17; Genesis 3:5
  • 4). death: Romans 1:32; Genesis 2:17; Genesis 3:4 and 5, and Genesis 3:20, and Genesis 3: 22 and 23
  • 5). wisdom: Romans 1:22; Genesis 3:5

The emphasis on creation in Romans 1 is also seen by Paul’s choice of words.

  • 1). Romans 1:2324They exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images (eikonos) in the likeness of (homoiomati) mortal mankind (anthropou) and birds (peteinon) and animals (tetrapodon) and reptiles (herpeton) Rom 1:23 repeats some of some the same terms used in Genesis 1:26,25 Then God said “Let us make mankind (anthropon) in our image (eikona) in our likeness (homoiosin) so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds (peteinon) in the sky over the livestock (ktenon) and all the wild animals and over all the reptiles (herpeton) that move along the ground” Gen 1:26for example: image, likeness, mankind, animals, and reptiles.
  • 2). When referring to women and men, Paul does not use the usual terms for females and males26Paul used θήλειαι (females) and ἄρσενες  (males) instead of the normal words for women and men (andres and gynaikes). but rather employs the words for females and males found in Genesis 1:27 in the Greek Old Testament.27Theleias occurs five times and arsenes occurs nine times whereas gune occurs 215 times and aner occurs 216 times in the New Testament. These were the two words used in the LXX Gen 1:27) in connection with God creating a male and a female. CEB, ASV and NKJV (footnote) have males and females.
  • 3). When referencing God, Paul says “Creator” not “Father” 28Eph 1:2, 17; 4:6; 3:14; 6:23 (Romans 1:25). 29 Besides Genesis 1-2 there are forty verses in Psalms about creation and creation was stressed in Isaiah 40-55. In Isaiah 40-55 the following references to creation: (1) “beginning” 40:21; 46:10; (2) “created” 40:26; 41:20; 43:7; 45: 8, 12, 18; (3) “Creator” 40:28; 42:5; 43:15; (4) “maker of all things” 44:24; 45:9; (5) “create” 45: 7 (twice); 45:18. Harold Shank, Listen and Make Room (Abilene: Abilene University Press, 2020), 24.

William Loader connects Paul’s opposition to same sex relationships and creation in the following way:

Indeed, his declaration of perversion applies to both men and women and to both the active and passive partners. The allusion literally to “males” and “females” probably has in mind creation of male and female (Gen 1:27) which along with the prohibitions of Leviticus will have shaped Paul’s stance.30Loader, Making Sense of Sex, 137-138. Vines, God and the Gay Christian, 90. “That understanding also sheds light on why Leviticus contains no parallel prohibition of female same-sex relations.”

Because of the many references and allusions to creation that are woven throughout the 24 verses of Romans 1:18 through 32, Paul’s foundation for his denunciation of the gentile world was God’s original intent and creation. In this way, he connects “creation” with “truth.” The condemnation of the gentile world did not rest on their disobedience of the Torah as was the case with the Jews (Romans 2). The condemnation of the gentile world rested on their failure to see God in creation,31“exchanged the truth about God for the lie” as the Creator 32Romans 1:25; 1 Peter 4:19 and to adhere to the law that was “written on their hearts” (Romans 2:15).33Gentiles don’t have the Law. But when they instinctively (Emphasis mine JJ) do what the Law requires they are a Law in themselves, though they don’t have the Law Rom 2:15 (CEB) For that reason, “the wrath of God” was presently “being revealed 34 Ἀποκαλύπτεται is a present passive indicative 3rd person singular. There are two revelations in Romans 1: (1) The righteousness of God is revealed in the gospel (1:16-17). (2) The wrath of God is revealed through his punishment of the wicked (1:18). With both “revelations” Paul established the fact that God does not punish those who do not know (ignorant) or who are not guilty. from heaven against all wickedness of people who suppressed the truth by their wickedness” (Romans 1:18). The “suppression” resulted in both idolatry (vertical) and same sex relationships (horizonal). Whether same sex relationships were done abusively (pederasty 35Pederasty was a sexual practice in the Greco-Roman world involving older men sexually abusing young boys (age), slaves (status) or prostitutes. For the most part the boy might receive some gifts, be prideful for his beauty and some possible educational benefits. Originally the relationship was for mentoring purposes, but this was not always the case. In pederasty there was always the issue of dominance where one was active and the other passive (dominator/dominated). or involved consensual, committed, and monogamous individuals, it was against the character of God and the creational intent and design.

In summarizing creation’s significance in understanding biblical sexuality, Thomas Schreiner writes:

A New Testament perspective on homosexuality is anchored in the Old Testament and Jewish tradition. The indispensable framework for interpreting the NT teaching on homosexuality is Genesis 1–2, the creation narrative. We read in Genesis 1:26–27 that God made man in his own image, but the image of God is reflected in two distinct genders, male and female. The distinction between man and woman is underlined in the fuller account of their creation in Genesis 2:18–25. The physical differentiation of the man and the woman, and yet the amazing complementarity of such for bearing children indicates that marriage consists of the union of one woman and one man. The creation narrative, then, functions as the paradigm for males and females, and how they are to relate to one another sexually. The two different genders signify that marriage and sexual relations are restricted to the opposite sex, and that same sex relations are contrary to the created order. 36Thomas R. Schreiner, “A New Testament on Perspective on Homosexuality” Themelios 31, no. 3 (April 2006), 1.

Paul’s Use of Non-Inspired Sources37The only other possible references to apocryphal books would be the citations in Jude 9 (Testament of Moses) and Jude 14 and 15 (First Book of Enoch).

Paul was widely traveled and well educated, consequently he would have had a broad knowledge base38In addition to what he could have learned from Dr Luke (Col 4:14). The books of Luke and Acts support Luke having a broad education. of information available in the Greco-Roman world. Quite possibly he could have known about the Wisdom of Solomon as he did other Jewish literature of his time that addressed the wickedness of the gentile world. For example:

  • 1). Paul quotes the poets in (Epimenides and Aratus of Soli in Cilicia)39In addition to what he could have learned from Dr Luke (Col 4:14). The books of Luke and Acts support Luke having a broad education. when establishing the nature of God and his connection to mankind in Acts 17:28
  • 2). When Paul opposes the false teachers of Crete in Titus 1:12, he quotes one of their own poets Epimenides (600 BCE) who said, “Cretans are always liars, evil brutes, lazy gluttons.” Note: Paul was not indicating ALL Cretans were liars, but he used the quote to shame the false teachers and anyone who would follow them.40Gordon Fee, 1 and 2 Timothy Titus (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 2011), 179.
  • 3). The quotation in 1 Corinthians 15:33 was taken from a proverb called Thais written by the Greek poet, Menander.
    When Paul does quote outside sources in his writings, it is clear they are direct quotes. In Acts 17:28 he claims, “your own poets” said “we are his offspring.” In Titus 1:12 he claims one of the Crete prophets said: “Cretans are always liars, evil brutes, lazy gluttons.” In contrast, Keen provides no examples of any direct quote from the Wisdom of Solomon in Romans 1:18 through 32.

Because the wisdom of Solomon was probably written around the first century BCE,41Talbert, Romans, 63. Rom 1:22-23 (Wis 14:12); 1:20 (Wis 13:8); 1:24-27 (Wis 14:22-27); 1:29-31 (Wis 14:23-26); 1:28, 32 (Wis 14:22b); 1:27 (Wis 14:31; 16:24); 2:1 (Wis 15:1-6 esp. v. 2).
there is the possibility Paul may not have had access to it.42Brooten, Love Between Women, 294-295. However, even assuming that he did, it would not have been the norm for him to build an entire case on materials not in the Torah. If he had used the Wisdom of Solomon instead of the creation story as the background for Romans, Paul’s opposition to same sex relationships could have been easily misconstrued as lacking both divine foundation and divine condemnation.43Even though Keen believed “Of all the New Testament texts, Romans 1 provides the most information for analysis and remains the text in the church’s debate on same sex relations” she did not devote a large portion of her book to this key text. On whether Romans 1 deals with same sex relations among women she felt the evidence was “ambiguous” and will not discuss it. Keen, Scripture, Ethics & the Possibility of Same-Sex Relationships, 18, 121 n.14.

Granted, Paul’s denunciation of the gentiles in Romans 1:18 through 32 does hold a striking resemblance to some information in the non-canonical Wisdom of Solomon 13 and 14 which connects idolatry to sins—including sexual ones. It is not beyond reason that Paul would condemn similar sins found in the Wisdom of Solomon and use “creational” understanding to bolster his case.44Wisdom of Solomon 14:12: “For the idea of making idols was the beginning of fornication, and the invention of them was the corruption of life.”

Summary of Assumption Two

Michael Ukleia summarizes Paul’s knowledge of his world as follows:

As far as Paul’s knowledge of such sins is concerned, it must be remembered that Tarsus was the third intellectual city in the world, ranking behind Athens and Alexandria. Paul grew up there and would have learned about the Greco-Roman world along with its associated philosophies and practices. He could quote Stoic poets. He could cite familiar Stoic virtues. He had learned popular debating techniques. In Tarsus he would have learned about homosexual practice called pederasty. He would have been familiar with the view among the Greeks that homosexual was highly regarded as a form of love.45 Michael Ukleia, “The Bible and Homosexuality Part 2: Homosexuality in the New Testament.” Bibliotheca Sacra 140 (1983), 354.

Paul depended on guidance from the Holy Spirit (John 14:6), an understanding of creation,46Paul saw God in three roles: God of creation, God of the Exodus, and God/Father of the son of God. God revealed himself by what he did. Paul’s view of monotheism and election shaped his teachings and his life (Eph 4:6; 1 Tim 2:5; Acts 17:27-28) his respect for the Torah, and his knowledge of Jesus’s teachings 47 1 Cor 7:10; 9:14; Acts 20:35; 1 Thess 2:13 as the basis for comprehending the will of God.48For the importance of creation in Romans 1, see the following source: Reformed Review 59.1, (Autumn 2005). James Brownson, “Gay Unions: Consistent Witness or Pastoral Accommodations? An Evangelical Pastoral Dilemma and the Unity of the Church,” 3-18. Even though Genesis does not provide explicit commands about sexuality it does provide a foundation for commands in the New Testament. Attempting to find approval for same sex relationships undermines God’s design and the creational intent.

Filed Under: Christian Life, LGBTQ+

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