Recently the Public
Orthodoxy site has published a piece by Giacomo Sanfilippo under the title “Conjugal Friendship”. In it Sanfilippo writes, “To the question,
‘Can two persons of the same gender ‘have sex’ with each other?’ we hear from
Holy Tradition a resounding no. Yet if we ask, ‘Can two persons of the same
gender form a bond in which ‘the two become one?’ the scales begin to fall from
our eyes. Holy Tradition possesses in germinal form everything necessary to
articulate, thoughtfully and cautiously, an Orthodox theology and spirituality
of what we now call same-sex love, adequate to the pastoral needs of the 21st century”. Like all liberals and heretics of every age,
of course the claim is made that the new heresy is actually just the old
Orthodoxy dressed in modern garb.
Those who have been following the LGBQT debate until now will recognize
that by the “the pastoral needs of the 21st century” is meant simply
conformity to the worldly spirit of our age and the insistent demands of
secular western culture.
Sanfilippo
is quite right in pointing out that in previous ages, the “ideal of friendship
as constitutive of ‘one soul in two bodies’” has a long and venerable
history. He cites the writings of Plato
and Aristotle, and the examples of David and Jonathan. (Making Christ and John another example is
pushing it, to say the least, and “Christ and John’s embrace in icons of the
Mystical Supper”--picture above--is simply disturbing visual trash.) He might also have added as a champion of the
glory of Philia the writings of C. S.
Lewis, especially in his book The Four
Loves. In it, Lewis opined that
friendship was a virtue under-valued in his day because it was so little
experienced in his day.
Of course Lewis’ day is not our day (he
died in 1963), and the disease of sexualizing everything which was seizing
western culture by the throat in Lewis’ day has progressed far and has
thoroughly throttled our own culture today.
Even then Lewis gave fair warning, cautioning against the idea that
“every firm and serious friendship is really homosexual”. In fairness to Sanfilippo, his paper stops
short of suggesting that all deep same-sex friendships are at base covertly
homosexual. But Sanfilippo does make
clear that by “conjugal friendship” he means what we would identify as gay
marriage.
There
several problems with the details in his presentation. By saying that the monastic/ liturgical rite
of “brother-making” (Greek adelphopoiesis)
“precedes by a century or two that of marriage”, he gives the impression that
somehow the late Byzantine rite of “brother-making”—i.e. sanctifying a deep
bond between friends for a specific purpose—somehow shares some sort of
ontological parity with marriage.
(Shades of John Boswell!)
Otherwise why mention the timing at all?
In fact of course marriage itself did not arise after brother-making,
but in the Garden. But the fact that the
current rite of marriage in its Byzantine liturgical form continued to evolve
after the form of brother-making ceased evolving is irrelevant. If anything it shows the shortened shelf-life
of the form of brother-making and its limited use. The rite of adelphopoiesis did not continue to evolve liturgically because the
need for it ceased to be felt.
Sanfilippo
also says that the term “sexual orientation” is modern, and its use “as a
marker of personal identity” was unknown to the ancients. That is true, but that does not mean that the
ancients felt no such desires, or that their words condemning homosexual
activity no longer apply to us today. It
simply means that they did not share our own modern obsession with personal
identity.
Also
problematic is his anachronistic identification of certain details of
friendship as suggesting a sexual component to the friendship. Mentions of “patristic encomiums to
friendship that have an almost romantic quality about them”, or an icon which “depicts
SS. Theodore of Tyre and Theodore Stratelates in military attire holding hands
like any modern couple” are misleading in the extreme. Again, Lewis could have
warned him. “Kisses, tears and embraces
are not in themselves evidence of homosexuality” he wrote. They are only evidence that all ancient friendships had a physical
component to them, and that the modern disease of sexualizing everything,
including friendship, had not taken hold of the ancients. Hard as it may be for some today to believe,
a friendship could be physical, and still not sexual.
The main
problems with Sanfilippo’s thesis are twofold.
First, he fails to see that friendship need not be confined to two
persons. His relentless pairing of
friends and talk about “one soul in two bodies” fails to see that friendship
need not be so confined. Again Lewis: “Two, far from being the necessary number for
Friendship, is not even the best...True friendship is the least jealous of
loves. Two friends delight to be joined
by a third, and three by a fourth…They can then say, as the blessed souls say
in Dante, ‘Here comes one who will augment our loves…’” Sanfilippo’s insistence on regarding
friendship as consisting of two persons when real friendship does not so
confine itself reveals his secret agenda.
Friendship is not necessarily the exclusive union of two that he would
make it. He is not in fact talking about
Friendship and Philia, but about
Marriage and Eros. For Eros
is exclusively and jealously about
two persons, as the Song of Solomon shows.
By focusing relentlessly upon friendship as pairing (e.g. talk of “the
two becom[ing] more perfectly a single I”) he distorts
the true nature of friendship.
The second
and most fundamental error in Sanfilippo’s message is the sexualisation of
Friendship. Friendship may be conjugal, if one marries one’s
friend and soul-mate. But most
friendships are not conjugal—that is, they are not sexual. The fact that healthy friendship is not
exclusive, jealous, or confined to two persons reveals this. One may have four friends or more, but (in
Christian thought) only one spouse.
Conjugal union is, by definition, a union of two and only two, because
it is sexual. Friends stand symbolically
side by side; spouses, face to face. The
face to face posture of spouses expresses, both symbolically and physically,
the sexuality of their union, and its essential difference from
Friendship. Sanfilippo’s talk of “two
persons of the same gender form[ing] a bond in which ‘the two become one’” deliberately sexualizes a non-sexual bond. Two persons of the same gender can indeed
have a friendship and form a bond. But
Sanfilippo’s use of the phrase “the two become one” (from the Biblical
description of marriage) introduces an alien element into the bond. He is
not helping scales to fall from our eyes, but simply our minds to become
confused. That confusion, part of a
modern secular sexualisation of practically everything in our culture, is
typical of homosexual concerns. It is
also characteristic of Public Orthodoxy,
and Fordham University.
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