Monday, June 17, 2019

Sex and marriage

I've been scratching my head all day over this article that appeared in the New York Times, misleadingly (and presumably click-baiting-ly) entitled, "How Should Christians Have Sex?"  Upon seeing the headline, my immediate reaction was, "Er, just like everyone else?"

But the article, it turns out, isn't about how to do the famous deed, but rather when.

It helps to understand that the word "Christian", in the headline and throughout the article, is used, not in the way we Catholics use the word (i.e. "those who acknowledge Jesus as Lord" or "those who are baptized", or "those whose ethnic or cultural heritage is Christian"), but rather in the way that Evangelicals have co-opted the term - something along the lines of, "Christians of the Evangelical persuasion".

The author, Katelyn Beaty, is from the generation of Evangelical young people who were subjected to church pressure to make "purity pledges":
A majority of adults who came of age in evangelical churches in the 1990s and 2000s were exposed to “purity culture,” a term for teachings that stressed sexual abstinence before marriage. We had our own rituals, such as “purity balls,” and our own merchandise, such as “purity rings.” I had a “Wait for Me Journal” that I kept as a college freshman; created by a prominent Christian pop singer, the journal was designed to hold letters to my future husband. It held out the promise that if I remained pure, then God would reward good behavior with a husband — surely before I turned 30 so that we could have lots of children.
Beaty, who is now in her 30s, has become disillusioned regarding the purity movement:
The effects of purity culture are well documented, in books like Linda Kay Klein’s “Pure” and in #exvangelical online communities. Rather than emphasize the gift of sex within marriage, purity culture typically led with the shame of having sex outside of it. One piece of youth-group folklore was a “game” in which a cup would be passed around a circle. At each turn, someone would spit in the cup, until the last person had a cup full of spit. “Would you want to drink this?” the youth pastor intoned. “No. And that’s how others will see you if you sleep around.” Young women, who were expected to manage men’s lust as well as their own, fared the worst.
If your initial reaction to this sort of thing is to roll your eyes and think, "Thank goodness I was never subjected to that stuff," I'd urge you to suspend your disdain and continue reading to the end.  Because Beaty has written what strikes me as a risky and authentic outlook from someone to whom a life of promiscuity does not appeal, and whose church formation hasn't fully prepared her for the world.  Like a lot of people, she'd like to fall in love and get married.  She seems to be struggling over formulating and articulating the principles that guide her intuition.  She glances at the principle of consent that guides much discussion of sex on college campuses:
To be sure, consent is a nonnegotiable baseline, one that Christian communities overlook. (I never once heard about consent in youth group.) But two people can consent to something that’s nonetheless damaging or selfish. Consent crucially protects against sexual assault and other forms of coercion. But it doesn’t necessarily protect against people using one another in quieter ways. I long for more robust categories of right and wrong besides consent — a baseline, but only that — and more than a general reminder not to be a jerk.
In this passage and in one or two others, Beaty seems to be reaching, perhaps unconsciously, for a view of marriage that harmonizes with a traditional Catholic view:
part of me wishes that the fairy tale of purity culture had come true. While I hate the effects that purity culture had on young women like me, I still find the traditional Christian vision for married sex radical, daunting and extremely compelling — and one I still want to uphold, even if I fumble along the way.
It's possible that, as someone whose background is Evangelical, Beauty may not have the sacramental vocabulary on the tip of her tongue that we Catholics may have at the ready.

But on the other hand, most Catholic passages I run across regarding marital sex read as though they were written by a lawyer, or by someone who has never actually been married.  Consider this paragraph from the Catechism:
1621 In the Latin Rite the celebration of marriage between two Catholic faithful normally takes place during Holy Mass, because of the connection of all the sacraments with the Paschal mystery of Christ.120In the Eucharist the memorial of the New Covenant is realized, the New Covenant in which Christ has united himself for ever to the Church, his beloved bride for whom he gave himself up.121 It is therefore fitting that the spouses should seal their consent to give themselves to each other through the offering of their own lives by uniting it to the offering of Christ for his Church made present in the Eucharistic sacrifice, and by receiving the Eucharist so that, communicating in the same Body and the same Blood of Christ, they may form but "one body" in Christ.122
Beautiful in a way, and no doubt true for many.  But how compelling is that particular vision for someone not already immersed in Catholic sacramentality?

And then there is the rather florid language of the Exhortation Before Marriage, which I believe is of pre-Vatican II vintage, and which is popular in some conservative Catholic circles:
Truly, then, these words [the marriage vows] are most serious. It is a beautiful tribute to your undoubted faith in each other, that recognizing their full import, you are, nevertheless, so willing and ready to pronounce them. And because these words involve such solemn obligations, it is most fitting that you rest the security of your wedded life upon the great principle of self-sacrifice. And so you begin your married life by the voluntary and complete surrender of your individual lives in the interest of that deeper and wider life which you are to have in common. Henceforth you will belong entirely to each other; you will be one in mind, one in heart, and one in affections. And whatever sacrifices you may hereafter be required to make to preserve this mutual life, always make them generously. Sacrifice is usually difficult and irksome. Only love can make it easy, and perfect love can make it a joy. We are willing to give in proportion as we love. And when love is perfect, the sacrifice is complete. God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, and the Son so loved us that he gave himself for our salvation. ” Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”
Surrender, self-sacrifice (including difficult and irksome sacrifice) ... is this passage about marriage, or marital sex?  Both?  Pregnancy?  All of the above?  Where's the romance?  Where's the toe-curling pleasure?  Where's the adventure and satisfaction of building a life together?  I'm not sure the fullness of marriage and marital sex have been articulated yet by the Catholic Church, either.

20 comments:

  1. Well, the passages you quote sound pretty much like they were written by celibate guys who over-theologize things. I haven't studied Theology of the Body very much, but my impression of it is that it was also very much a celibate guy's take.
    The writers of the cited passages also make the assumption that Catholic marriages always take place at a nuptial Mass, and employ that imagery. Ours didn't, my parents' didn't, and my grandparents' didn't. For the reason that they were mixed marriages at the time.
    I think you are right that the fullness of marriage and marital sex have not yet been articulated by the church. But maybe that's a good thing. Maybe it's up to married folk themselves to compose their own narrative.

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    1. "... maybe that's a good thing."

      Yes, I think so.

      Marriage is full of fun, sorrow, joy, and rage--sometimes all in the same week. Half of all married couples can't take that kind of roller-coaster and end up divorced. Any couple who manages to stick it out should not be hectored with a lot of info about what celibate theologians (or even other married couples) think ought to happen.

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    2. Unless it's the church ladies. They must be listened to on all subjects.

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    3. Oops, put this under the wrong thread: Haha! In RCIA they told us we should be making love with our husbands on Sunday afternoons. Both of us candidates had four-year-old boys who had outgrown naptime, and we and burst out laughing.

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  2. A lot of people--all women in my ken--who grew up with the evangelical emphasis on purity and virginity are making the talk-show rounds these days with their misgivings about the movement and its effects on their married sex lives, if not their decision to "wait."

    I am not sure why the news media thinks I need to know that Katie or Bitsy or Madison have lousy sex lives because they made a vow to their daddies to keep their "garden gate" locked.

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    1. I just really have a hard time imagining this "vow to their daddies" thing. Guess my dad and I never had that talk, or any other related to sex. Unless it was about bovine obstetrics. Heard more than I wanted to know about prolapses and retained placentae.
      I guess my parents relied on the nuns to put the fear of God about sexual sin into me.

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    2. This was a big deal in my in-law's church. It gave me the willies.

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  3. The purity ideology Beaty writes about is pretty close to what I got in high school from Cletus (?) Healey's textbook, Christian Marriage. We didn't hold pep rallies or pass around the cup full of spit, but that is what we were taught as the theory. OTOH, in practice, when the jocks exaggerated their conquests, Communion breakfast Catholic coaches just gave a chuckling tut-tut.

    Which left a lot of us confused and having to work the marriage thing out for ourselves.

    I still haven't read anything officially Catholic that bears any resemblance to my experience of 62 years of marriage. I don't expect to get any insight on marriage from my church in my remaining lifetime. The current official teaching, as summed up in CC 1621, is lovely liturgical thinking. But useless.

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    1. Something I do remember from my youth is that the main responsibility for "drawing the line in the sand" in a dating relationship was the girl's. Because she had the most to lose. Which meant that guys tried to push things as far as they could. The difference between then and now seems to be that nobody is drawing any kind of lines and sexual intimacy is expected in a casual relationship, never mind a committed one.

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    2. Katherine - I don't think the cultural disapproval of promiscuity has gone away, despite the veneer of acceptance promoted in the world of entertainment. At least, that's what I take away from what my kids chatter about.

      What perplexes me is how the kids these days get themselves, or don't get themselves, into situations in which promiscuity is possible. In the high schools around here, the homecoming and prom events are no longer events in which students ask one another on dates and attend as pairs. Instead, they attend in large groups of friends. In general, they communicate with one another electronically at least as much as face-to-face. And now, for the young adults, the dating apps are a frequent medium for meeting people. It seems strange to me, and not entirely good. The world is very different than it was in the late '70s and early '80s when I was trying to get dates.

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    3. Jim, for all we hear about the "hook-up culture", that has also been my observation of young people, that a lot of them struggle to find connection.
      There is also an intersecting "party culture", in which alcohol (and other substances) play a part in the decisions people make. And as we have seen some of those decisions come back to haunt them years later.

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    4. There was a wave, about 30 years ago, of off-Broadway shows about Catholic dating habits. The most famous was, "Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Shine Up?," based on the premise that Catholic girls were exhorted not to wear the shoes because they reflect what is above them. I thought that was a little over the top until a former Catholic girls school dean told me that not only were patent leather shoes discouraged, but her charges were told to take telephone books along on dates in case they had to sit on someone's lap in the car. (The book was to go in between.) So that is a fact.

      Boys were not driven to similar measures in my experience. It was assumed they would fumble around and pure Catholic girls would fend them off. Didn't always work (I hear).

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    5. My observation is that many young people have problems with intimacy (which doesn't have to be sexual) and commitment. If these are not modeled at home, there is no template for the kiddies to draw from later.

      I also think hover parents discourage dating--and pretty much any kind of growing up. I have a friend with an adopted daughter who seems overprotective and overbearing. I understand some of it, but her first year in college in another state is going to be hard. My family doc went on a rant the other day about how ignorant the young are about caring for themselves when they get out on their own.

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    6. Was the doc talking about stuff like eating healthy and getting enough sleep? Or was it more about relationships and boundaries?

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    7. Tom - the Black Patent Leather Shoes musical was based on a couple of books (maybe more than a couple) from the 1970s by John R Powers, a Chicago author. Quite a bit of it was based on his own experience growing up as a South Side Catholic.

      I read the books (at least the first couple, I don't know if there are more than two) around the time they came out, in the late '70s, maybe early '80s. They were pretty enjoyable reads. I'd put them in the class of the James Herriott "All Creatures Great and Small" series, which isn't really a bad class to be part of. Powers could be a bit less gentle, but for the most part they were light and humorous anecdotes.

      By the time Powers wrote those books in the 1970s, which is when I was going to Catholic schools, his look back to the 1950s was an exercise in nostalgia. The Catholic world, and I guess the world as a whole, already had changed.

      Powers was big in Chicago for a while. I think he may have had a Sun-Times column, and he also appeared in feature segments on one of the local newscasts for a while. I haven't heard about him in years.

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    8. According to Wikipedia, Powers passed away in 2013.

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    9. I enjoyed Powers stories. Many seemed to be arguments against clericalism.

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    10. Doc was talking about a lot of mental health issues with young people fearful of leaving home and having problems with excessive drinking, dope, etc. She seemed to be doing a lot of pre-college physicals with 18-year-olds who still wanted their moms in the exam rooms.

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    11. Jim, Commonweal still remembers Powers from time to time. That's my childhood church he was writing about.

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