| |
Christian Sexuality: Normative and Pastoral
Principles
by Russell
E. Saltzman (Editor)
Published jointly by ALPB Books and Kirk House
Publishers. Available at www.Amazon.com
and at www.kirkhouse.com
List Price: $15.00

Lee Griffin, M.D., Psychiatrist,
Theologian
A vital read. This volume constitutes
a clarifying light of truth.
Paul L Maier, Professor of
History
In support of the overpowering
evidence of scripture and two millennia of church tradition.
Walter Sundberg, Professor
of Church History, Luther Seminary (From the Back Cover)
An indispensable text for those
who feel that the mainline church in America has lost its way
in sexual ethics.
Jaynan Clark Egland, President/CEO,
WordAlone Network (From the Back Cover)
A faithful presentation of Christ's
boundless love that confronts each of us with real and necessary
boundaries.
Book Description
This book is a collection of nine
essays mostly by Lutheran scholars and church leaders who, from
various perspectives (scriptural, theological, pastoral, socio-scientific),
defend the church's traditional advocacy of an other-sex prerequisite
for sexual unions. The essays are revised versions of presentations
made at the Conference on Christian Sexuality held in Kansas
City in October 2002, sponsored by the American Lutheran Publicity
Bureau and attended by some 300 Lutheran (ELCA) pastors and
lay persons from around the country. Although all the authors
have in view the sexuality discussion going on in the Lutheran
Church (ELCA) and all but two are members of that denomination,
the aim of most of the essays is to provide a broad Christian
perspective on sexuality and homosexuality. One of the two non-Lutheran
contributors is Robert A. J. Gagnon, associate professor of
New Testament at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary and author
of two influential books on the Bible and homosexual practice.
Gagnon provides a 50-page essay entitled "Does the Bible Regard
Same-Sex Intercourse as Intrinsically Sinful?" offering the
fullest discussion to date of both the relevance of the creation
texts for an other-sex prerequisite and the weakness of claims
that Paul and the ancient world generally had no concept of
exclusive and innate homosexual desire. Gagnon also mounts a
cumulative case against the contention recently put forward
by Lutheran New Testament scholar Mark Allan Powell, in the
book Faithful Conversations edited by James Childs for the ELCA
sexuality discussion; namely, the contention that the Bible
permits exceptions to a general prohibition of homosexual behavior.
Gagnon's essay can be viewed as a companion piece to his essay
in Homosexuality and the Bible: Two Views (co-authored with
Dan Via). Robert Benne, professor of religion and ethics at
Roanoke College and author of Ordinary Saints and other books,
provides a 10-page essay on the subject of "The Limits of Tolerance:
Homosexuality and the ELCA's LPD (Liberal Protestant Drift)."
Benne advocates a strategy of "gracious tolerance" that nurtures
persons in homosexual relationships without blessing homosexual
unions or ordaining persons in such unions. In a 20-page essay,
James A. Nestingen, professor of church history at Luther Seminary,
explores the subject: "Is There a Law? The Lutheran Reformation
and Homosexual Practice." Nestingen examines homosexual practice
in light of the law/gospel conversation in which Lutherans must
engage. Merton P. Strommen, a research psychologist and specialist
in youth and family ministry who has authored a number of books
(including The Church and Homosexuality) describes in his 15-page
essay the forces at work in our culture to normalize homosexuality,
and the impact this is having on youth ("Homosexuality: A Youth
Issue"). Russell E. Saltzman, pastor of Ruskin Heights Lutheran
Church in Kansas City, commentator, and editor both of this
volume and of the Lutheran publication Forum Letter, discussesas
a divorced pastorthe accommodation granted to divorced
pastors and why it is not analogous to non-celibate homosexual
pastors ("Clergy and Divorce," 12 pages). In a 14-page essay
Amy C. Schifrin, pastor of Bethlehem Lutheran Church (St. Cloud,
Minn.) and former seminary pastor at Pacific Lutheran Theological
Seminary, draws on her personal experiences to address the conundrum
of ritualizing homoerotic relationships ("Ritualizing Life or
Ritualizing Death"). The book also contains essays by: Thomas
A. Skrenes, "Some Thoughts from a Pastor Who Serves as a Bishop"
(9 pages); Phillip Max Johnson, "The Spiritual Nature and Destiny
of the Human Body: A Pastoral Perspective on Human Sexuality"
(16 pages); and Father Jay Scott Newman, "Homosexuality in Ecumenical
Perspective" (8 pages).
Go back to: (Books)
|
|