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Bad arguments about religion: part 2: homosexuality and mixed fibres: the Bartlet gambit

There's a scene The West Wing where President Bartlet tears a strip off an evangelical Christian talk radio host. In the scene (you can see it on YouTube, or read a transcript), the evangelical tells Bartlett that the Bible says homosexuality is an abomination. Bartlet then launches into a series of rhetorical questions, asking how he should carry out other Old Testament rules which we'd now find ridiculous, if not downright evil: "My chief of staff, Leo McGarry, insists on working on the Sabbath. Exodus 35:2 clearly says he should be put to death. Am I morally obligated to kill him myself or is it okay to call the police?"
Let's call this the Barlet gambit: the President's argument seems to be that it's inconsistent for evangelicals to say "homosexuality is wrong because the Bible says so", because they're not also keeping these other rules which are also found in the Bible. The gambit is a favourite with people who argue with evangelicals about homosexuality: sometimes they even quote Bartlet.
Unfortunately, the Bartlet gambit fails as an argument.
What's wrong with it
Evangelical Christians have reasons why they're not keeping the Old Testament laws despite regarding the Old Testament as scripture. The question comes up in the New Testament itself, once we reach the Acts of the Apostles, where we read of the first non-Jews converting to Christianity (up to that point in the story, what will later become Christianity is still a movement within Judaism, although a few Gentiles are impressed with Jesus in the gospels). The Council of Jerusalem ruled that Gentile Christians are allowed to eat shrimp and wear mixed fibres and, luckily for penis owners, don't have to be circumcised.
So, according to Acts (which, like the rest of the Bible, is inerrant, remember), Christians sorted this stuff out in the first century AD. They aren't going to worry about atheists calling them hypocrites for wearing cotton/polyester blend while "hating the sin and loving the sinner".
Perhaps Barlet is specifically objecting to the evangelical's use of Leviticus, which does put homosexuality on a par with things which aren't kosher, rather than with things which are morally evil. Alas, even without Leviticus, there are other Bible passages which can be pressed into service against the gay, and you can rely on evangelicals to know most of them, because the issue has become a defining feature of evangelicalism. We could argue that these passages don't apply to modern committed homosexual partnerships, but evangelicals don't find these arguments impressive.
What to do instead
In the UK, many rank-and-file evangelicals are educated professionals. They didn't get into religion to give gays a hard time, and, unless they've completely disappeared up their own sub-culture, they tend to be a bit embarrassed by the anti-gay stuff. Still, because it's "what the Bible says", they feel they're obliged to go along with it anyway, even if the Guardian wouldn't approve (the evangelical jargon phrase for that sort of thing is that it's a "hard teaching" where you'll just have to "trust God").
If I were a gifted orator like Barlet, I think I'd appeal to their sense of justice. Is there perhaps something odd about the way churches accept straight couples who are openly in their second or later marriage (something about which Jesus had some strong words to say), but wouldn't be happy with an openly gay couple? Some hypocrisy there, maybe?
Or we might try empathy. There's the problem that, as Valerie Tarico says, evangelicalism "can re-direct our mother-bear instincts away from protecting vulnerable individuals and toward protecting the ideology itself. Believers may come to feel more protective of their religion than they are of actual human beings." Still, it might be worth a go: is it fair to say that gay people cannot form committed romantic relationships? Imagine yourself in their shoes. If you obey the evangelical rules, it seems rather a lonely place.
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Christians might argue that it matters whether the first marriage was performed in church or while the people taking part were Christian, but they will then run into further trouble: if civil ceremonies or ceremonies before conversion don't form marriages, some of their congregation are fornicating.
I'm not particularly interested in debating what "marriage" really is: I'd say it's a social convention which can be amended. Marriage was made for man, and not man for marriage, if you like.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-24 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)You may not be interested in debating what 'marriage' really is, but you're not going to get very far with your argument if you are not interested in understanding how the other side uses the word, either.
S.
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I've changed "is it fair to say that gay people cannot marry" to replace marry with "form committed romantic relationships", because I know many churches define marriage as being between a man and a woman. If it turned out that they could support some sort of union between two men or two women, they might not call that marriage.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-24 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)As for your change, the problem is that the Bible/orthodox Christian thought doesn't say that the place for sex is within 'a committed romantic relationship', it says the place for sex is within 'marriage' (leaving parents, becoming one flesh, mirroring God a la Gen 1:27). So the question of whether two people of the same sex can form a committed romantic relationship is, with the best will in the world, irrelevant to the other side's argument.
S.
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If the church does decide that committed gay relationships are OK, it will either called them marriages, or not. If it does, it'll change what "marriage" means, if not, it'll change the requirement that sex takes place only within marriage. Saying that the church cannot change either of these things is not useful: it's the church's choice.
mirroring God a la Gen 1:27
Are you a creationist, then?
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 02:08 pm (UTC)(link)S.
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I don't want to get into close Bible study on this because Christians do not accept such studies coming from atheists: many of them have the idea that non-Christians cannot interpret the Bible correctly, and this idea provides a theory of justified dismissal for any interpretation from an atheist which they don't like (you can see that on the uk.r.c thread: Mark Goodge wasn't interested in engaging my interpretations specifically because I'm an atheist and so don't have to abide by what the Bible says).
So, it's much better if Christians themselves come to an accommodation, even tacitly, as many of them have on divorce. No doubt if they did reach such an accommodation, it would have been written into the universe's blueprint all along: after all, there are no lies in religion, as Ken Macleod tells us.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)S.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-24 11:23 pm (UTC)(link)S.
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How many evangelical Christian groups spend their time campaigning for divorce to be illegal with the same vigour many of them campaign for homosexuality to be illegal, or at all?
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-24 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)S.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 12:05 am (UTC)(link)So which UK groups were you thinking of?
S.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 12:32 am (UTC)(link)Though, isn't Uganda in Africa? What has that to do with America?
So were there any UK groups you were thinking of, or not?
S.
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http://lmgtfy.com/?q=uganda+evangelical+christians+anti-gay
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 12:37 am (UTC)(link)So, leaving aside two foreign countries, which were the UK groups you were thinking of?
S.
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I never said anything about limiting this to "UK groups" - religious extremism seems to care very little about national boundaries.
And your caricature of the US religious right's apparently highly successful campaign to get gay people forced into the ccloset, or into ex-gay programmes in Africa, under threat of imprisonment or death as "three Americans evangelicals went to Uganda" is frankly offensive and does you no credit.
The point remains that nobody is doing anything like this when it comes to divorce. Your implication that they're equally frowned upon is absurd. Any minor disapproval of divorced members of their own flock is in no way equivalent to the systematic and organised campaigns of abuse and persecution directed at LGBT people by Christian churches around the world, but especially in the US.
And regardless of whether that takes the form of highly damaging "reparative" "therapy", into which people are duped and coerced, active campaigns to deny us marriage rights, colonial lobbying in 3rd world countries to enshrine the persecution of LGBT people in law, or just plain going out, finding a few gay people and beating the crap out of them, if you had a shred of human decency and integrity to you, you'd at least try to do your bit to encourage your religion to own its shit over this, rather than playing dumb.
I'm done here.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 01:05 am (UTC)(link)I'm not entirely sure how I can be held responsible for the actions of some unknown citizens of a foreign county in a third country, but if it helps you to hold me so, go for it.
S.
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(Anonymous) 2010-01-25 01:07 am (UTC)(link)S.
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Ugh. There's a reason I live in San Francisco and go back to West Virginia only when someone I'm related to is near death or has just died.
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And I think this part of your quote:
although certainly not with the same fervour that they oppose gay marriage
...is the most important part - there's absolutely no equivalence between the way they treat divorcees and the way they outright persecute LGBT people - they're on completely different scales.
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