Category Archives: Social issues

When marriage isn’t marriage

Should the state define marriage? Is it OK for attorneys-general to say that two blokes can marry each other?

And will Christians be inevitably cast out of society for thinking that what some define as ‘marriage’ is no marriage at all?

I can easily answer the last question. Here’s a section from the Anglican marriage service in the Book of Common Prayer. Though printed in 1662, a form of these words continues in present use.

The minster addresses the couple, and says:

I require and charge you both, as ye will answer at the dreadful day of judgement, when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed, that if either of you know any impediment, why ye may not be lawfully joined together in Matrimony, ye do now confess it. For be ye well assured, that so many as are coupled together otherwise than God’s Word doth allow are not joined together by God; neither is their Matrimony lawful.

Quite a serious warning!

These words make the Christian position clear: a marriage may be accepted by people while not accepted by God. Since there will be a judgement, God’s opinion is the one that counts.

What it means for me: even if the state defines non-marriage as marriage, marriage itself is not destroyed.

I know it would be unhelpful, and it would hurt people. Yet I do not need to speak of this as if it’s the end of the world. Christians already have centuries of living successfully in a world that includes pseudo-marriage.

Same-sex marriage is not about same-sex marriage

I’ve lifted the following quotation from an article in The Australian

In the Anglo-American world [including Australia], gay marriage has become one of those causes through which the cosmopolitan cultural elites define themselves and construct a moral contrast between themselves and ordinary folk. What’s really important for them is the sense of superiority experienced through the conviction that “we” are not like them. In this way, a clear moral distinction is drawn between the forward-looking attitudes of an enlightened, courageous minority and the backward-looking prejudices of a homophobic majority.

It’s an obvious point. The cause is about self-definition (‘I am …’) and moral contrast (‘… on the side of good’). We all want to say, ‘I am on the side of good.’ Fair enough, but I have a concern with using this cause as the test.

The reason: ‘the cause’ has become a tool more important than real people, gay or not.

To make another obvious point, sexual identity is a very sensitive thing. Moral and political contrasts in the past were on such matters as free trade versus tariffs, or whether responsibility lies more on the individual or the state.

To throw sexuality into the centre of this kind of debate … It’s going to get messy and hurt people. Yet, for that very reason, it’s important to engage.

So a real question is this: how can we engage the discussion, while striving with all integrity to help people not hurt them?

Chaplains in schools

This week’s federal budget included money for school chaplaincy. The most unfortunate thing about this is listening to raving loonie ideas as it is discussed on the airwaves – and it’s not just the callers who say weirdly offbeat stuff, it’s journalists too.

I wanted to find some of the facts of the program. The details below come primarily from this (pdf file), the National School Chaplaincy Program guidelines. There are more of the specific guidelines here. All from the website of the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations.

(Since I am a church minister, my personal thoughts on being a chaplain might be relevant. So, here it is: I am not against the idea, but would be a touch uncomfortable about being employed in such a position. I might do it, but my preference is for churches to pay for church workers.)

State religion?

Some folk froth at the mouth, stating that this program reverses the separation of church and state, that it ‘establishes’ a faith. There’s huge misunderstanding of church-state separation, but let’s leave that aside. Instead, look at who can be employed in this program.

To receive funding, schools and their communities must engage a school chaplain/secular Pastoral Care Worker and demonstrate how the services provided by the school chaplain/secular Pastoral Care Worker achieve the outcomes required by the Program.

Did you see that? Secular pastoral care worker. It’s in the guidelines. I have heard no one bother to mention this. Why not? If they did, it would end the ‘established religion’ hoo-ha. Paying someone from public money – be they of faith or not – does not compel citizens to believe the same. At most, it permits a place for such beliefs in our society.

By the way, the difference in qualifications between these two categories is the addition, for the chaplain, of appropriate training and authorisation by some religious body.

Religious teaching?

This one really got me today. People were agahast that chaplains used their position to teach their beliefs. Shock! That’s awful! They should just stick to the counsel that they are employed to provide.

Not so.

Secular pastoral care worker guidelines include this:
an individual pastoral care worker will in good faith express views and articulate values consistent with his or her own beliefs

Chaplain guidelines include nearly identical words:
an individual chaplain will in good faith express views and articulate values consistent with his or her denomination or religious beliefs

It’s expected that anyone employed in this program will express their beliefs. There’s no need for silence. Religious – or anti-religious – ideas are premitted.

Conversion?

This final criticism is closer to having some legitimacy. Are chaplains (and we should include secularists) using the program to get converts? Here’s the relevant principle in full (only partly quoted above):

While recognising that an individual chaplain will in good faith express views and articulate values consistent with his or her denomination or religious beliefs, a chaplain should not take advantage of his or her privileged position to proselytise for that denomination or religious belief.

This is the chaplain version. The secular version uses ‘advocate for a particular view or spiritual belief’ in place of ‘proselytise’.

It’s very clear that proselytising is out. Unfortunately, proselytise is not defined in the glossary. Does it ban any mention of conversion, for example? Some would say so. Or is it saying that conversion is ok, but the problem is undue influence and pressure? Many would agree with this. I have been party to discussions in other ministries that distinguish between proselytise and evangelise on the basis of coercion.

For my part, and comparing the chaplain guideline with the secular guideline, it seems to me that proselytise in these regulations has a low threshold. The difficulty that remains is finding where the line is drawn between acceptable exression of views and unacceptable.

So then, is there a summary? At least this, the politics of the chaplaincy program will continue to play out. Often with no regard to reality or to the nuanced situation in which it stands. Yet we can, I hope, each strive to understand what is actually in place, rather than the bogey-man so many heard speaking through the budget papers.

School scripture in NSW

Or Special Religious Education (SRE), as it is formally called. 

For those interested in the developments in NSW, you will know that the current state opposition announced they would scrap the competition between SRE and the new Ethics course. And within a couple of months announced a policy reversal.

I asked my local MP why. Via the local member, I got this response from the shadow education minister (Andrew Piccolli):

When the govt announced its change of policy to allow ethics classes to be held during SRE time we said we would change that policy and not allow ethics classes after the end of 2011. After we announced that the govt introduced a bill to legislate ethics. We voted against the bill however it passed with support of the greens. Now that ethics classes are the law and we wont (sic) be able to change it because of the LC [Legislative Council, ie NSW upper house] makeup we have said, reluctantly, that we will work with St James Ethics Centre and SRE providers to make sure the ethics classes work and that they dont impact on SRE classes. So more or less we have been boxed in to this position.

If I understand correctly, this says the retraction of the poicy was political in nature: we have been boxed in to this position.

I am not saying this is wrong or right – unlike some, I don’t think ‘politics’ is inherently evil! I am simply passing on what I heard, in case you are interested.

Endangered species & humans III

(Part I and Part II.)

What I said in the previous two blogs, in two sentences:
Thought #1 – humans have, and display, dominion over nature.
Thought #2 – humans’ sin deforms nature.

More particularly, that we people participate in helping endangered species, this very action displays these theological realities. That is, theoretical science and practical ecology ecology display – though not reveal – fundamental theological reality.

Now there’s a third idea, to conclude this mini-series.

Thought #3 – humans display God’s love of redemption and restoration.

God likens his work of saving sinners to the work of rescuing lost animals.

For thus says the Lord GOD: Behold, I, I myself will search for my sheep and will seek them out.
As a shepherd seeks out his flock when he is among his sheep that have been scattered, so will I seek out my sheep, and I will rescue them …
And I will feed them on the mountains of Israel, by the ravines, and in all the inhabited places of the country….
I myself will be the shepherd of my sheep…
I will seek the lost, and I will bring back the strayed, and I will bind up the injured, and I will strengthen the weak, and the fat and the strong I will destroy. I will feed them in justice.
From Ezekiel 34

Jesus spoke of the lost sheep, for the sake of whose safety the shepherd leaves 99 others.

Jesus called himself the good shepherd, who lays down his life for the sheep.

God is very familiar with the idea of lost and nearly dead animals.

Of course, people are more important than sheep. And these passages speak metaphorically of God’s people as sheep, as endangered animals.

Yet I think there’s some echo of likeness between God’s major concern for saving the people of his creation and concern for saving the animals of his creation. After all, all creation benefits by freedom when God’s children are revealed.

Helping endangered animals is a peculiarly human activity on earth. And it shows humans as we are: created (God’s image): defaced (in turn defacing the rest of the creation); and aware of rescue and redemption (re-created by external intervention).

Endangered species & humans II

(See part I.)

In part I, I nominated something good revealed about humans as we go about helping species at risk of extinction.

Now, something awful: our slavery to destruction.

The cause of much extiction is human. In the short-term, becasue we mess things up. We kill and eat all the dodos, for example. This in turn – possibly, it’s controversial – adversely affects a tree whose seeds were part of the dodo diet. But in the long-term view it’s even worse.

For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God.
(Romans 8:20f, esv)

Futility? Bondage to decay? Genesis 3, when the man rejects God:

“Because you have listened to the voice of your wife
and have eaten of the tree
of which I commanded you,
‘You shall not eat of it,’
cursed is the ground because of you

Perhaps I can coin a phrase: Anthropogenic global decaying.

Overall, we have good reason to look at successful conservation with mixed emotions: every temporary and small human success is mocked by the lasting and huge human problem.

Endangered species & humans I

I’ve enjoyed a couple of episodes of Last Chance To See. These are documentaries about endangered animals and the efforts to give them space to live. As described by ABC TV Australia:

Stephen Fry goes wild as he teams up with naturalist Mark Carwardine in search of some of the most endangered animals on the planet.

Last Chance to See originally started as a radio program and book from Carwardine and author Douglas Adams back in 1990. Twenty years on, and after the death of Douglas Adams, Stephen Fry and Carwardine retrace the vision of the original journey. (From here.)

It made me think about the nature of humanity. The theological nature, that is.

Thought #1 – humans have, and display, dominion over nature.

We don’t expect cats and rats to make an effort to protect New Zealand’s kakapo. But the immense effort and resources people put into this effort express one small part of Genesis 1:28

And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over every living thing that moves on the earth.” (esv)

Across all the cultures we meet in the series – in NZ, Mexico, Madagascar, Uganda, Indonesia, Brazil – this human reality is a constant.

Though not the only constant, of course …

Dumb gambling

This is a Belgian cyclist. A very good one – here he is winning the prestigious Giro di Lombardia). Note the sponsors.

The two major sponsors: a pharmaceutical company (despite cycling’s constant drug scandals, I’m sure they paid up without any sense of irony); and the Belgian lottery.

Philippe Gilbert is a great rider for the tough one day races – the classics. He doesn’t have as many opportunities in the three week grand tours. So he’s planning not to race the Tour de France in 2010. He’s quoted saying:

I’d only have three or four chances. I can lose more than win, it’s like playing the lotto.

That is – lotto is dumb and is only a chance to lose. It may not make his sponsors happy, but he’s right.