Uffman critique
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https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nszcRO7a87GG2Tg6S2_WfzR-S...
Uffman critique
The Church’s New Theological Clothes A response to Craig Uffman At the invitation of my brother Tobias Haller, I read Craig Uffman’s “Reimagining a Theology of Marriage”. I concur with Br.Tobias’s description of the essay as a helpful and thoughtful article. But, while in its context, the article is indeed helpful and thoughtful, and represents in one sense a serious engagement with the issues it confronts, at the same time, it left me feeling as though I was seeing an imitation of theology, not the real thing. It was similar to watching a lab-coated scientist in a sci-fi movie from the fifties, on a set complete with a “Jacob’s ladder” and a fake computer and the rest. All the actual lab stuff was missing from the set, and the chance any real science could happen there was long gone. This is not Uffman’s fault; it is not as though the climate could have produced a better or different essay. It is endemic of the times we are in that we are fundamentally unable to produce a coherent theology of marriage. The Problem We can see what is most telling about the problem here by examining one of the most stunning conceits in Uffman’s piece, and what’s wrong with it. Toward the end, in a somewhat self-congratulatory tone, he says, “it seems clear to me that it is indeed possible for us to imagine a theology of marriage that incorporates all the data - not just potentially procreative unions, but also non-procreative heterosexual and homosexual unions.” There is a sense in which it is, of course, possible, in the wild-eyed American conviction that anything is possible if only we set our minds to it. But I think what Uffman means is that a theology of marriage is possible on the basis of the reasoning he has already given, and that he genuinely believes that he has presented and discussed “all the data” in some meaningful and relevant sense. I have become convinced that a theology of marriage must be based on a theology of relationships, in which marriage is seen as one sort of relationship among many. This might indeed be “all the data”; if we had a coherent and compelling account of human relationships, we might well be able to see what is distinctive and holy about marriage, and then be able to ask ourselves how best to construct and understand the category of marriage within that framework. But Uffman knows, ahead of time, and his readers know, and everyone knows, and expects, and demands, that whatever the story is, “marriage” is good, “marriage” is special, “marriage” is better, and - left unsaid, “not being married” is bad. It’s not simply that Uffman’s “all the data” excludes such traditional Christian categories as the voluntarily single and celibate, or the widowed, or those too young for marriage. He does, of course, exclude them; their relationships are relatively unimportant, and not part of “the data” for Uffman, because their relationships are not “marriage-like”, and so can simply be ignored. Lurking in the background is the unstated assumption that of course however we define marriage, we will also make some cardinal moral pronouncements about sexual activity, about what kinds of partnerships are acceptable and not, and so forth. The omission of any discussion of other kinds of relationships (except for one brief moment, about which later) comes at a price. It is not that such relationships are wrong (presumably elderly widows are allowed to go out to plays with their friends, right?); it is that the only important thing is whether they can have sex. And, if sex is only for marriage, well then, since we’re really talking about who is allowed to have sex, consideration of other kinds of relationships, in which sex isn’t even on the table, is simply irrelevant and unimportant. So why indeed would a paper like this discuss marriage in isolation from other forms of human relationships? Why is that essentially always the case with such essays? Because the point of the paper is not to figure out “what the church can or should bless” (the church blesses a bajillion things, as Uffman notes, without fretting about official theologizing; priests can and do bless houses, cars, rosaries, babies, individuals, meetings, food, and, to their shame, military uniforms and weapons). No, if that were the point, we would simply move on. The point is that this particular blessing is also taken as a license to have sex, and that is important. Well, to Uffman it’s important. So, let’s talk about sex There is a stunning game of switcheroo which Uffman has been taken in by. The prestidigitator who accomplished the act was the late pope John Paul II, and it went like this. Once, the Church was confronted with describing what marriage was good for, in a theological context in which marriage was decidedly a second-class way of life, entirely inferior to the lifelong celibate living in religious community or otherwise committed to unmarried ecclesiastical service. And the answer was clear: babies. Marriage produced babies, and without babies, there can be no more priests and religious. Then time moves on, and in the 20th century the Roman Catholic Church needed to explain that it wasn’t actually trying to push the vast multitudes of Christians into a second-class and inferior status, and began describing the married state as equally valuable as the celibate, and needed to articulate as well that marrying people was not just the Church’s way of making new celibate clergy. Marriage needed to be good for the participants too. And so it was articulated that alongside procreation, there was another equally powerful point to marriage: it served to unify the partners. Marriage was thus both procreative and unitive. Sex (within marriage) was ok, because it made more Christians. So marriage was ok, because it created the place within which sex was ok. Oh, and yeah, it brings people together too. Now it’s not that nobody knew this. It’s just that the celibate authors didn’t know it, or didn’t let on that they knew it. Or, most likely, simply didn’t care.
6/16/2015 6:27 PM