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# Questions I have about sex
Mark Vernon got me thinking about how the Churchs teaching on sex may be evolving.
Published on: 17 Dec 2024
Updated on: 17 Dec 2024
I just listened back to Mark Vernon talking about sexual desire and Christian spirituality.
=> https://www.markvernon.com/the-gospel-sexual-desire-and-the-abuse-scandals-in-the-church-what-has-the-erotic-to-do-with-god
He recounts how his sex ed at an evangelical camp as a boy taught him to think hard about holding hands with someone, just in case it led to something immoral. He felt he had been taught a sexual naïvety, which has perhaps blinded people to the possibility of abuse and misunderstood the gospel.
He puts forward an alternative to that naïvety, whereby sexual experience is an image or a foretaste of love for, or union with, God, exploring thoughts by Origen, Julian of Norwich, Dante, William Blake, Iris Murdoch, and various parables and episodes from the Gospels themselves.
Part of whats so interesting about this, is I feel I got my first proper sex ed, as an adult, in an evangelical Christian context and it pretty much lined up completely with what he was putting forward.
Im also currently reading (as is Mark Vernon) Diarmaid MacCullochs epic history of Christian sexuality, [Lower Than the Angels][lower-than-the-angels].
=> https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/313582/lower-than-the-angels-by-macculloch-diarmaid/9780241400937
But so far (Im about a third of the way through and up to about the 5th century) there have only been odd glimmers of positive Christian understandings of sexuality. The overwhelming Christian consensus of the early Church (according to MacCulloch) is that sexual desire is a symptom of humanitys fallen state, not our longing for God.
So I want to know: what changed between Marks experience and mine? How is Christian teaching about sex changing right now? Was my experience typical of other Christians growing up today, in evangelical churches, across the denominational spectrum, across Britain, across the global Church? What *is* the Christian consensus on sex now, and how old is it, and where did it come from?
I guess Ive got two-thirds of a gigantic tome to work through, first of all. Thatll be a start. Any answers? Postcards please.