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- Article: Homosexuality
and the Bible
Author: Walter
Wink
-Walter Wink is Professor of Biblical
Interpretation at Auburn Theological Seminary in NYC. He has
taught at numerous seminaries. He is a United Methodist
minister, works for a Presbyterian seminary, and attends Quaker
meetings. His books include "Unmasking the Powers",
"Engaging the Powers", "The Powers That Be",
"The Bible in Human Transformation", and many more.
An expanded 16-page booklet-form version of the
article below (copied by permission) is available for a cost of as
much as $1.50 to as little as $0.30 per copy, depending upon
quantity ordered.
Go to http:www.bridges-across.org/ba/wink.htm for more information.
The article follows:
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Homosexuality
and the Bible
- Sexual issues are tearing our
churches apart today as never before. The issue of
homosexuality threatens to fracture whole denominations, as the
issue of slavery did one hundred and fifty years ago. We
naturally turn to the Bible for guidance and find ourselves mired in
interpretive quicksand. Is the Bible able to speak to our
confusion on this issue?
The debate over homosexuality is a remarkable opportunity, because
it raises in an especially acute way how we interpret the Bible, not
in this case only, but in numerous others as well. The real
issue here, then, is not simply homosexuality, but how Scripture
informs our lives today.
Some passages that have been advanced as pertinent to the issue of
homosexuality are, in fact, irrelevant.
One is the attempted gang rape in Sodom (Gen. 19: 1-29). That
was a case of ostensibly heterosexual males intent on
humiliating strangers by treating them "like women," thus
de-masculinizing them. (This is also the case in a similar
account in Judges 19-21.) Their brutal behavior has nothing to
do with the problem of whether genuine love expressed between
consenting persons of the same sex is legitimate or not.
Likewise, Deuteronomy 23:17-18 must be pruned from the list, since
it most likely refers to a heterosexual prostitute involved in
Canaanite fertility rites that have infiltrated Jewish worship; the
King James Version inaccurately labeled him a "sodomite."
Several other texts are ambiguous. It is not clear whether I
Corinthians 6:9 and I Timothy 1:10 refer to the
"passive" and "active" partners in homosexual
relationships, or to homosexual and heterosexual male prostitutes.
In short, it is unclear whether the issue is homosexuality alone, or
promiscuity and "sex-for-hire."
Unequivocal Condemnations
Putting these texts to the side, we are left with three
references, all of which unequivocally condemn homosexuality.
Leviticus 18:22 states the principle: "You [masculine]
shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an
abomination." The second (Lev. 20:13) adds the
penalty: "If a man lies with a male as a woman, both of them
have committed an abomination; they shall be put to death, their
blood is upon them."
Such an act was considered as an "abomination" for several
reasons. The Hebrew
pre-scientific understanding was that male semen contained the whole
of nascent life. With no
knowledge of eggs and ovulation, it was assumed that the woman
provided only the
incubating space. Hence the spilling of semen for any
procreative purpose -- in coitus
interruptus (Gen 38:1-11), male homosexual acts or male masturbation
-- was considered
tantamount to abortion or murder. (Female homosexual acts and
masturbation were
consequently not so seriously regarded.) One can appreciate
how a tribe struggling to
populate a country in which its people were outnumbered would value
procreation highly,
but such values are rendered questionable in a world facing total
annihilation through
overpopulation.
In addition, when a man acted like a woman sexually, male dignity
was compromised. It was a degradation, not only in regard to
himself, but for every other male. The patriarchal-ism of
Hebrew culture shows its hand in the very formulation of the
commandment, since no similar stricture was formulated to forbid
homosexual acts between females. And the repugnance felt
toward homosexuality was not just that it was deemed unnatural, but
also that it was considered un-Jewish, representing yet one more
incursion of pagan civilization into Jewish life. On top of
that is the more universal repugnance heterosexuals tend to feel for
acts and orientations foreign to them. (Left-handedness has
evoked something of the same response in many cultures.)
Persons committing homosexual acts are to be executed.
This is the unambiguous command of scripture.
Whatever the rationale for their formulation, however, the texts
leave no room for maneuvering. Persons committing
homosexual acts are to be executed. This is the unambiguous command
of scripture. The meaning is clear: anyone who wishes to
base his or her beliefs on the witness of the Old Testament must be
completely consistent and demand the death penalty for everyone who
performs homosexual acts. (That may seem extreme, but there are
actually some "Christians" urging this very thing today.)
It is unlikely that any American court will ever again condemn a
homosexual to death, even though Scripture clearly commands it.
Old Testament texts have to be weighed against the New.
Consequently, Paul's unambiguous condemnation of homosexual behavior
in Roman 1:26-27 must be the centerpiece of any discussion.
For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions.
Their woman exchanged natural relations for unnatural, and the men,
likewise, gave up natural relations with women and were consumed
with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men
and receiving in their own persons the due penalty for their error.
No doubt Paul was unaware of the distinction between sexual
orientation, over which one has apparently very little choice, and
sexual behavior, over which one does. He seemed to
assume that those whom he condemns are heterosexual, and are acting
contrary to nature, "leaving," "giving
up," or "exchanging" their regular sexual orientation
for that which is foreign to them. Paul knew nothing of
the modern psychological understanding of homosexuals as person
whose orientation is fixed early in life, persons for whom having
heterosexual relations would be contrary to nature,
"leaving," "giving up" or "exchanging"
their natural sexual orientation for one that was unnatural to them.
In other words, Paul really thought that those whose behavior he
condemned were "straight," and that they were behaving in
ways that were unnatural to them. Paul believed that
everyone was "straight." He had no concept of
homosexual orientation. The idea was not available in
his world. There are people who are genuinely homosexual
by nature (whether genetically, or as a result of upbringing
no one really knows, and it is irrelevant). For such a person
it would be acting contrary to nature to have sexual relations with
a person of the opposite sex.
Likewise, the relationships Paul describes are heavy with lust; they
are not relationships of consenting adults who are committed to each
other as faithfully and with as much integrity as any heterosexual
couple. That was something Paul simply could not envision.
Some people assume today that venereal disease and AIDS
are divine punishment for homosexual behavior; we know it as a risk
involved in promiscuity of every stripe, homosexual and
heterosexual. In fact, the vast majority of people with
AIDS around the world are heterosexuals. We can scarcely
label AIDS a divine punishment, since non-promiscuous lesbians
are at almost no risk.
And Paul believes that homosexuality is contrary to nature, whereas
we have learned that it is manifested by a wide variety of species,
especially (but not solely) under the pressure of overpopulation.
It would appear then to be a quite natural mechanism for preserving
species. We cannot, of course, decide human ethical
conduct solely on the basis of animal behavior or the human
sciences, but Paul here is arguing from nature, as he himself says,
and new knowledge of what is "natural" is therefore
relevant to the case.
Hebrew Sexual Mores
Nevertheless, the Bible quite clearly takes a negative view of
homosexual activity, in those few instances where it is mentioned at
all. But this conclusion does not solve the problem of
how we are to interpret Scripture today. For there are other
sexual attitudes, practices, and restrictions which are
normative in Scripture but which we no longer accept as normative:
† Old Testament law strictly forbids sexual intercourse during the
seven days of the menstrual period (Lev. 18:19; 15:18-24), and
anyone who engaged in it was to be "extirpated," or
"cut off from their people (kareth, Lev. 18:29, a term
referring to execution by stoning, burning, strangling, or to
flogging or expulsion; Lev. 15:24 omits this penalty). Today
many people on occasion have intercourse during menstruation and
think nothing of it. Are they sinners?
† Nudity, the characteristic of paradise, was regarded in Judaism
as reprehensible (II Sam. 6:20; 10:4; Isa. 20:2-4; 47:3).
When one of Noah's sons beheld his father naked, he was cursed (Gen
9:20-27). To a great extent, this taboo probably even
inhibited the sexual intimacy of husbands and wives (this is still
true of a surprising number of people reared in the Judeo-Christian
tradition). We may not be prepared for nude beaches, but
are we prepared to regard nudity in the locker room or at the old
swimming hole or in the privacy of one's home as an accursed sin?
The Bible does.
So if the Bible allowed polygamy and concubinage, why don't we?
† Polygamy (many wives) and concubinage (a woman living with a man
to whom she is not married) were regularly practiced in the
Old Testament. Neither is ever condemned by the New
Testament (with the questionable exceptions of I Timothy 3:2,12 and
Titus 1:6). Jesus teaching about marital union in Mark 10:6-8
is no exception, since he quotes Gen. 2:24 as his authority (the man
and the woman will become "one flesh"), and this text was
never understood in Israel as excluding polygamy. A man
could become "one flesh" with more than one woman, through
the act of sexual intercourse. We know from Jewish
sources that polygamy continued to be practiced within Judaism for
centuries following the New Testament period. So, if the
Bible allowed polygamy and concubinage, why don't we?
† A form of polygamy was the levirate marriage. When a
married man in Israel died childless, his widow was to have
intercourse with each of his brothers in turn until she bore him a
male heir. Jesus mentions this custom without criticism
(Mark 12:18-27 par.) I am not aware of any Christians
who still obey this unambiguous commandment of Scripture.
Why is this law ignored, and the one against homosexual behavior
preserved?
† The Old Testament nowhere explicitly prohibits sexual relations
between unmarried consenting adults, as long as the woman's economic
value (bride price) is not compromised, that is to say, as long as
she is not a virgin. There are poems in the Song of Songs that
eulogize a love affair between two unmarried persons, though
commentators have often conspired to cover up the fact with heavy
layers of allegorical interpretation. In various parts
of the Christian world, quite different attitudes have prevailed
about sexual intercourse before marriage. In some
Christian communities, proof of fertility (that is, pregnancy) was
required for marriage. This was especially the case in
farming areas where the ability to produce children-workers could
mean economic hardship. Today, many single adults, the
widowed, and the divorced are reverting to "biblical"
practice, while others believe that sexual intercourse belongs only
within marriage. Which is right?
† The Bible virtually lacks terms for the sexual organs, being
content with such euphemisms as "foot" or
"thigh" for the genitals, and using other euphemisms to
describe coitus, such as "he knew her." Today
most of us regard such language as "puritanical" and
contrary to a proper regard for the goodness of creation.
In short, we don't follow Biblical practice.
† Semen and menstrual blood rendered all who touched them unclean
(Levee. 15:16-24). Intercourse rendered one unclean until
sundown; menstruation rendered the woman unclean for seven days.
Today most people would regard semen and menstrual fluid as
completely natural and only at times "messy," not
"unclean."
† Social regulations regarding adultery, incest, rape and
prostitution are, in the Old Testament, determined largely by
considerations of the males' property rights over women.
Prostitution was considered quite natural and necessary as a
safeguard of the virginity of the unmarried and the property rights
of husbands (Gen. 38:12-19; Josh. 2:1-7). A man was not
guilty of sin for visiting a prostitute, though the prostitute
herself was regarded as a sinner. Even Paul must appeal
to reason in attacking prostitution (I Cor. 6:12-20); he cannot lump
it in the category of adultery (vs. 9). Today we are
moving, with great social turbulence and at a high but necessary
cost toward a more equitable, non-patriarchal set of social
arrangements in which women are no longer regarded as the chattel of
men. We are also trying to move beyond the double
standard. Love, fidelity and mutual respect replace
property rights. We have, as yet, made very little
progress in changing the double standard in regard to prostitution.
As we leave behind patriarchal gender relations, what will we do
with the patriarchalism in the Bible?
† Jews were supposed to practice endogamy -- that is, marriage
within the 12 tribes of Israel. Until recently a similar
rule prevailed in the American south, in laws against interracial
marriage (miscegenation). We have witnessed, within the
lifetime of many of us, the nonviolent struggle to nullify state
laws against intermarriage and the gradual change in social
attitudes towards interracial relationships. Sexual
mores can alter quite radically even in a single lifetime.
† The law of Moses allowed for divorce (Deut. 24:1-4); Jesus
categorically forbids it (Mark 10:1-12; Matt, 19:9 softens his
severity). Yet many Christians, in clear violation of a
command of Jesus, have been divorced. Why, then, do some
of these very people consider themselves eligible for baptism,
church membership, communion, and ordination, but not homosexuals?
What makes the one so much greater a sin than the other, especially
considering the fact that Jesus never even mentioned homosexuality,
but explicitly condemned divorce? Yet we ordain
divorcees. Why not homosexuals?
† The Old Testament regarded celibacy as abnormal and I Timothy
4:1-3 calls compulsory celibacy a heresy. Yet the
Catholic Church has made it mandatory for priests and nuns.
Some Christian ethicists demand celibacy of homosexuals, whether
they have a vocation for celibacy or not. But this
legislates celibacy by category, not by divine calling.
Others argue that since God made men and women for each other in
order to be fruitful and multiply, homosexuals reject God's intent
in creation. But this would mean that childless couples,
single persons, priests and nuns would be in violation of God's
intention in their creation. Those who argue thus must
explain why the apostle Paul never married. Are
they prepared to charge Jesus with violating the will of God by
remaining single? Certainly heterosexual marriage
is normal, else the race would die out. But it is
not normative. God can bless the world through people
who are married and through people who are single, and it is false
to generalize from the marriage of most people to the marriage of
everyone. In I Cor. 7:7, Paul goes so far as to call
marriage a "charisma," or divine gift, to which not
everyone is called. He preferred that people remain as
he was - unmarried. In an age of overpopulation, perhaps
a gay orientation is especially sound ecologically!
† In many other ways we have developed different norms from those
explicitly laid down by the Bible: "If men get into a fight
with one another and the wife of one intervenes to rescue her
husband from the grip of his opponent by reaching out and seizing
his genitals, you shall cut off her hand" (Deut 25:11 f).
We, on the contrary, might very well applaud her for trying to save
her husband's life!
† The Old and New Testaments both regarded slavery as normal and
nowhere categorically condemned it. Part of that
heritage was the use of female slaves, concubines and captives as
sexual toys, breeding machines, or involuntary wives by their male
owners, which II Samuel 5:13, Judges 19-21, and Numbers 31:17-20
permitted -- and as many American slave owners did some 150 years
ago, citing these and numerous other Scripture passages as their
justification.
The Problem of Authority
These cases are relevant to our attitude toward the authority of
Scripture. They are not cultic prohibitions from the
Holiness Code that are clearly superseded in Christianity, such as
rules about eating shellfish or wearing clothes made of two
different materials. They are rules concerning sexual
behavior, and they fall among the moral commandments of the
Scripture. Clearly we regard certain rules, especially
in the Old Testament, as no longer binding. Other things
we regard as binding, including legislation in the Old Testament
that is not mentioned at all in the New. What is our
principle of selection here?
For example; virtually all modern readers would agree with the Bible
in rejecting:
incest
rape
adultery
intercourse with animals
But we disagree with the Bible on most other sexual mores. The
Bible condemned the following behaviors which we
generally allow:
intercourse during menstruation
celibacy
exogamy (marriage with non-Jews)
naming sexual organs
nudity (under certain conditions)
masturbation (some Christians still condemn this)
birth control (some Christians still forbid this)
And the bible regarded semen and menstrual blood as unclean, which
most of us do not.
Likewise, the bible permitted
behaviors that we today condemn:
prostitution
polygamy
levirate marriage
sex with slaves
concubinage
treatment of women as property
very early marriage (for the girl, age 11-13)
And while the Old Testament accepted divorce, Jesus forbade it.
In short, of the sexual mores mentioned here, we only agree with the
Bible on four of them, and disagree with it on sixteen!
Surely no one today would recommend reviving the levirate marriage.
So why do we appeal to proof texts in Scripture in the case of
homosexuality alone, when we feel perfectly free to disagree with
Scripture regarding most other sexual practices?
Obviously many of our choices in these matters are arbitrary.
Mormon polygamy was outlawed in this country, despite the
constitutional protection of freedom of religion, because it
violated the sensibilities of the dominant Christian culture, even
though no explicit biblical prohibition against polygamy exists.
If we insist on placing ourselves under the old law, as Paul reminds
us, we are obligated to keep every commandment of the law (Gal.
5:3). But if Christ is the end of the law (Rom.
10:4), if we have been discharged from the law to serve, not under
the old written code but in the new life of the Spirit (Rom. 7:6),
then all of these Old Testament sexual mores come under the
authority of the Spirit. We cannot then take even what
Paul says as a new law. Christians reserve the right to
pick and choose which laws they will observe, though they seldom
admit to doing just that. And this is as true of
evangelicals and fundamentalists as it is of liberals and
mainliners.
Judge for Yourselves
The crux of the matter, it seems to me, is simply that the Bible
has no sexual ethic. There is no biblical sex ethic.
Instead it exhibits a variety of sexual mores, some of which changed
over the thousand-year span of biblical history. Mores
are unreflective customs accepted by a given community.
Many of the practices that the Bible prohibits, we allow, and many
that it allows, we prohibit. The Bible only knows a love
ethic, which is constantly being brought to bear on whatever sexual
mores are dominant in any given country, culture, or period.
The very notion of a "sex ethic" reflects the materialism
and splitness of modern life, in which we increasingly define our
identity sexually. Sexuality cannot be separated off
from the rest of life. No sex act is "ethical"
in and of itself, without reference to the rest of a person's life,
the patterns of the culture, the special circumstances faced, and
the will of God. What we have are simply sexual mores,
which change, sometimes with startling rapidity, creating
bewildering dilemmas. Just within one lifetime we have
witness the shift from the ideal of preserving one's virginity until
marriage, to couples living together for several years before
getting married. The response of many Christians is
merely to long for the hypocrisies of an earlier era.
- I agree that rules and norms are
necessary: that is what sexual mores are. But rules and
norms also tend to be impressed into the service of the Domination
System, and to serve as a form of crowd control rather than to
enhance the fullness of human potential. So we must
critique the sexual mores of any given time and clime by the love
ethic exemplified by Jesus. Such a love ethic is
non-exploitive (hence, no sexual exploitation of children, no using
of another to their loss), it does not dominate (hence, no
patriarchal treatment of women as chattel), it is responsible,
mutual, caring, and loving. Augustine already
dealt with this is his inspired phrase, "Love God, and do
as you please."
Our moral task, then, is to apply Jesus' love ethic to whatever
sexual mores are prevalent in a given culture.
This doesn't mean everything goes. It means that
everything is to be critiqued by Jesus' love commandment.
We might address younger teens, not with laws and commandments whose
violation is a sin, but rather with the sad experiences of so
many of our own children who find too much early sexual intimacy
overwhelming, and who react by voluntary celibacy and even the
refusal to date. We can offer reasons, not empty and
unenforceable orders. We can challenge both gays and
straights to question their behaviors in the light of love and the
requirements of fidelity, honesty, responsibility, and genuine
concern for the best interests of the other and of society as a
whole.
Christian morality, after all, is not an iron chastity belt for
repressing urges, but a way of expressing the integrity of our
relationship with God. It is the attempt to discover a
manner of living that is consistent with who God created us to be.
For those of same-sex orientation, as for heterosexuals, being moral
means rejecting sexual mores that violate their own integrity and
that of others, and attempting to discover what it would mean to
live by the love ethic of Jesus.
Morton Kelsey goes so far as to argue that homosexual orientation
has nothing to do with morality, any more than left-handedness does.
It is simply the way some people's sexuality is configured.
Morality enters the picture when that pre-disposition is enacted.
If we saw it as a God-given-gift to those for whom it is normal, we
could get beyond the acrimony and brutality that have so often
characterized the unchristian behavior of Christians toward gays.
Approached from the point of view of love, rather than that of law,
the issue is at once transformed. Now the question is
not "What is permitted?" but rather
"What does it mean to love my homosexual neighbor?"
Approached from the point of view of faith rather than of works, the
question ceases to be "What constitutes a broach of divine law
in the sexual realm?" and becomes instead "What
constitutes obedience to the God revealed in the cosmic lover, Jesus
Christ?" Approached from the point of view of the
Spirit of the rather than of the letter, the question ceases to be
"What does Scripture command?" and becomes "What is
the Word that the Spirit speaks to the churches now, in the light of
Scripture, tradition, theology, psychology, genetics,
anthropology, and biology?" We can't continue to build ethics
on the basis of bad science.
- In a little-remembered
statement, Jesus said, "Why do you not judge for yourselves
what is right?" (Luke 12:57).
Such sovereign freedom strikes terror in the hearts of many
Christians; they would rather be under law and be told what is
right. Yet Paul himself echoes Jesus' sentiment
immediately preceding one of his possible references to
homosexuality: "Do you not know that we are to judge angels?
How much more, matters pertaining to this life!" (I Cor. 6:3).
The last thing Paul would want is for people to respond to his
ethical advice as a new law engraved on tablets of stone.
He is himself trying to "judge for himself what is right."
If now new evidence is in on the phenomenon of homosexuality, are we
not obligated -- no, free -- to re-evaluate the whole issue in the
light of all available data and decide, under God, for ourselves?
Is this not the radical freedom for obedience which the gospel
establishes?
Where the bible mentions homosexual behavior at all, it clearly
condemns it. I freely grant all that. The
issue is precisely whether that Biblical judgment is correct.
The Bible sanctioned slavery as well, and nowhere attacks it as
unjust. Are we prepared to argue that slavery today is
biblically justified? One hundred and fifty years ago
when the debate over slavery was raging, the bible seemed to be
clearly on the slave holders' side. Abolitionists were hard
pressed to justify their opposition to slavery on biblical grounds.
Yet today, if you were to ask Christians in the South whether the
Bible sanctions slavery, virtually everyone would agree that it does
not. How do we account for such a monumental shift?
What happened is that the churches were finally driven to penetrate
beyond the legal tenor of Scripture to an even deeper tenor,
articulated by Israel out of the experience of the Exodus and the
prophets and brought to sublime embodiment in Jesus' identification
with harlots, tax collectors, the diseased and maimed and outcast
and poor. It is that God suffers with the
suffering and groans toward the reconciliation of all things.
Therefore, Jesus went out of his way to declare forgiven, and to
reintegrate into society in all details, those who were
identified as "sinners" by virtue of the accidents of
birth, or biology, or economic desperation. In the
light of that supernal compassion, whatever our position on gays,
the gospel's imperative to love, care for, and be identified with
their sufferings is unmistakably clear.
In the same way, women are pressing us to acknowledge the sexism and
patriarchalism that pervades Scripture and has alienated so
many women from the church. The way out, however, is not
to deny the sexism in Scripture, but to develop and interpretive
theory that judges even Scripture in the light of the revelation in
Jesus. What Jesus gives us is a critique of
domination in all its forms, a critique that can be can be turned on
the Bible itself. The Bible thus contains the principles
of its own correction. We are freed from bibliolatry,
the worship of the Bible. It is restored to its proper
place as witness to the Word of God. And that word
is a Person, not a book.
"With the interpretive grid provided by a critique of
domination, we are able to filter out the sexism, patriarchalism,
violence, and homophobia that are very much a part of the Bible,
thus liberating it to reveal to us in fresh ways the inbreaking, in
our time of God's domination-free order.
An Appeal for Tolerance
What saddens me in this whole raucous debate in the churches is
how sub-Christian most of it has been. It is
characteristic of our time that the issues most difficult to assess,
and which have generated the greatest degree of animosity, are
issues on which the Bible can be interpreted as supporting either
side. I am referring to abortion and homosexuality.
We need to take a few steps back, and be honest with ourselves.
I am deeply convinced of the rightness of what I have said in this
essay. But I must acknowledge that it is not an airtight
case. You can find weaknesses in it, just as I can in others'.
The truth is, we are not given unequivocal guidance in either area,
abortion or homosexuality. Rather than tearing at each
others' throats, therefore, we should humbly admit our limitations.
How do I know I am correctly interpreting God's word for us today?
How do you? Wouldn't it be wiser to lower the decibels
by 95 percent and quietly present our beliefs, knowing full well
that we might be wrong?
I know a couple, both well known Christian authors in their own
right, who have both spoken out on the issue of homosexuality.
She supports gays, passionately; he opposes their behavior,
strenuously. So far as I can tell, this couple still
enjoy each other's company, eat at the same table, and, for all I
know, sleep in the same bed. [He is speaking of the
Campolos. See http://www.bridges-across.org/ba/campolo.htm for a
debate between Peggy and Tony Campolo.]
We in the church need to get our priorities straight. We
have not reached a consensus about who is right on the issue of
homosexuality. But what is clear, utterly clear, is that
we are commanded to love one another. Love not just our
gay sisters and brothers, who are often sitting besides us,
unacknowledged, in church, but all of us who are involved in
this debate. These are issues about which we should
amiable agree to disagree. We don't have to tear whole
denominations to shreds in order to air our differences on this
point. If that couple I mentioned can continue to
embrace across this divide, surely we can do so as well.
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