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Friday, January 3, 2014

‘Hate the Poor’ & Other Acts of Sodomy

Quick trivia question: For what sins was the Biblical city of Sodom condemned to destruction?

If you lean toward a populist understanding of this Genesis 19 story, your immediate reaction might be to say, “For being homosexuals!” due to the fact that the angry mob of men outside Lot’s door demanded to have forcible sex with his two visitors, angels in disguise.   If you’re more influenced by current Biblical scholarship, your answer might be, “For violating the ancient laws of hospitality, because any injustice to strangers is seen by God as a horrific act!”

I submit that a reasoned response to both those approaches should be: Slow down, cowboy, and read the question again.

For what sins was the Biblical city of Sodom condemned to destruction?

The simple fact is, when Sodom was condemned, no acts of forced angel rape or violations of sacred hospitality against those angels had yet taken place.  The decision to destroy Sodom had been made before the angels arrived there.  God had already sat with Abraham and announced his intentions, and Abraham had already negotiated with the Lord, convincing Him to spare the city if one hundred righteous men could be found, or even fifty, or even thirty, or even, in the end, ten.  That caveat notwithstanding, the destruction decision had been made already.  Anything involving the angels who visited Sodom was a secondary incident, and any conclusions drawn from their story by either populist or progressive Biblical scholars is simply inference.

For my part, I take neither view.  I prefer a stance far more conservative than those of the progressives or even of the traditionalists.  More on that below.

Word Play

As a linguist, I’m intrigued by the origins of words we adopt; as a Christian, I’m especially intrigued by those with etymologies rooted in Scripture.

Take the word “onanism,”  for example.  It’s fallen out of fashion recently, but the word derives from the story of Onan, an Old Testament character who “spilled his seed on the ground”  during sex with his brother’s widow, refusing to provide his dead brother an heir. This act of defiance sounds a lot more like the Roman Catholic Rhythm Method of birth control than anything else, but “onanism” took on a life of its own in the late 1700s and started to refer exclusively to male masturbation.  Since the Bible has no direct spiritual legislation about male masturbation, the term “onanism” became a handy tool for preachers keen on suppressing it.  Presumably, female masturbation was not a pressing concern of the era.

Like “onanism,” our current use of the term “sodomy” as referring to anal sex also might be only tangentially connected to its source story.  Even if one accepts the populist interpretation of the text, “sodomy” would literally be an act of desiring (although not actually having) sex with angels  (think nephilim and the days before Noah).  It might also refer to the other atrocities tied to the text (e.g., to offering one’s own daughters to be raped, or to drunken incest, which Lot’s daughters performed soon after).

But if I really wish to redefine the term “sodomy,” I’d be better served investigating what the Lord originally found so vile about the people of that city … male and female, not just the guys.  I could spend all day drawing conservative vs. liberal inferences from Genesis 19, but why do that when I have other parts of Scripture that tell me directly what the Lord says it means to “be like Sodom”?  Permit me to abandon modern liberalism, to abandon modern conservatism, and to get downright reactionary on you.  Let me travel back to the days of Ezekiel and Isaiah.

Being Like Sodom

The destruction of Sodom left a lasting imprint on the Hebrew culture.  The prophets used Sodom as an example of wickedness for scores of centuries after the story was first told.  Interestingly, the prophets never used it as a symbol of homosexuality or violations of hospitality.  Let’s listen to Ezekiel’s take on what it meant to be like Sodom:

“Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed, and unconcerned; they did not help the poor and needy.  They were haughty and did detestable things before me.  Therefore I did away with them as you have seen.” (Ezekiel 16:49-50)

Holy smokes, sulfur, and brimstone! Right there, the Lord reveals his exact motivation for destroying Sodom!  The Lord slew them to a person because they were:
  • arrogant – they were awash in their own sense of superiority and self-esteem
  • overfed – while the rest of the world was on tight rations, they stuffed themselves
  • unconcerned – they presumed no retribution for their arrogance and gluttony
  • did not help the poor – their wealth stayed with them, and the poor languished
  • did not help the needy – the oppressed, the handicapped, the sick, the lame, they all went unnoticed


What made them haughty?  What acts made them detestable?  The very ones listed above, with nary a mention of inhospitality or angel rape.

How does one escape being like a citizen of Sodom?  Isaiah joins Ezekiel by telling us clearly in his prophecy’s first chapter, where God urges Israel to turn from the ways of Sodom by doing those things Sodom wouldn’t do:

“Hear the word of the Lord, you rulers of Sodom … Learn to do right; seek justice.  Defend the oppressed.  Take up the cause of the fatherless; plead the case of the widow.” (Isaiah 1:10, 17)

So Scripture does, in fact, tell us the sins of Sodom, at least the ones worth mentioning explicitly: arrogance, being overfed, being unconcerned, not helping the poor and needy, being haughty, not doing right, not seeking justice, not defending the oppressed, failing to take up the cause of the fatherless, not pleading the case of the widow.  Add to that a reference in Jude 7 about sexual immorality, too, and you have an exhaustive list, and a powerful condemnation.  It leaves nothing to inference, nothing to guessing.  It is the word of the Lord.

Our Modern Sodom

When I hear U.S. evangelical preachers claiming that America is becoming a modern-day Sodom, I agree with them.  Sure, they make that declaration for all the wrong reasons … they assume they’re talking about gay marriage, background checks on guns, socialism, and other modern horrors.  But in Scriptural reality, we become more like Sodom every time we or one of our leaders makes a move to hurt the poor, the fatherless, and the oppressed.  Worse, we become as blind as the residents of Sodom every time we buy into the anti-Biblical notion that a nation should not strive to provide social justice and welfare to its most vulnerable inhabitants.

Ignore the poor?  That is a Sodom Mindset.  Despise the hurting?  That is a Sodom Heart.  Go through life with the assumption that the less fortunate must deserve their plight, somehow, some way?  That is the same error made by Job’s friends, and Isaiah and Ezekiel see it as the mark of a Sodomite.

Please, America, know this: 
  • Every time a U.S. politician makes cuts to programs that feed the hungry … we see a true Biblical act of sodomy.
  • Every time a legislative body moves to hamper a minority’s freedom to vote and participate in government … we are seeing sodomy.
  • Every time a well-fed person of power works to limit school lunches for the needy, we are seeing sodomy.
  • Every time a candidate berates the poor as lazy at her 3,000-dollar-a-plate fundraiser, we are seeing sodomy.
  • Every time a politician says that private charities and not public largess should care for our elderly, our veterans, our disabled, our mentally ill, and our starving children in fatherless families, we fall deeper into the errors of history’s most sinful city.   


I hear the pushback.  There are those who would say, “But welfare makes people lazy!”  And I will answer, Yes, there are poor people who cheat, just as there are rich people who cheat, just as there are working class and middle class people who cheat.  But I ask you this: If there are even one hundred people on public assistance who are there righteously, would you spare them your wrath?

What if there were only fifty such people?

And please, don’t be angry if I continue, but what if there were only ten such people?  Would you spare the system your wrath if there were only ten such righteous people being saved by the public generosity of our nation?  Or would you destroy the righteous with the wicked?

I pray you, Lord, that we save our nation from modern day Sodomizers.

Marana Tha,

Cosmic Parx / YoYo Rez

9 comments:

  1. A friend just introduced me to your blog today, and I must say I really appreciate your insights! Thank you.

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  2. This article was good up until the end when it fell into its own hate speech. Are you a sodomite if you want the wealth of the country spent wisely? Are you a sodomite if you believe that it is the nondelegable responsibility of the individual, not the government to help the needy? If you believe that the government is best at producing more dependence (not laziness)? If you believe all governments eventually use this dependence to grow into an oppressive force? We may have differences of opinion on how to help the poor but does that justify redefining hateful slurs and throwing them at each other?

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  3. Somebody needs to look up the definition of "hate speech".

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  4. For an excellent article on the Scriptural role of government in administering social justice, I recommend the blog _God's Politics_ by evangelical author Jim Wallice, CEO of _Sojourners_ . His entry "Caring for the Poor is Government's Biblical Role" can be found at:

    http://sojo.net/blogs/2012/08/30/caring-poor-governments-biblical-role

    God bless all who find these ideas provocative and worth struggling with!

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  5. Thank you, Nell, I agree this does not amount to hate speech (a poor choice of words and my apologies to Cosmic Parx). It is, however, intolerant and insulting to make sodomites of everyone with alternate views of government involvement vs. individual responsibility in helping the needy.

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  6. Mark -- I agree that taking a word back to its Biblical roots and then finding its applicability in the modern activities of a fallen world can certainly feel shocking and disconcerting. Feeling insulted by the rigors of the Word of God and its implications has a long history ... in fact, the Sodomite Lot’s own sons-in-law laughed at the idea that that God would destroy their city for the neglect of the poor and the oppression of the needy, those reasons Ezekiel and Isaiah make so clear.

    I can see you feel strongly about this from a secular, political perspective. If you have a Biblical perspective that promotes the idea that only individuals … not individuals and nations … are responsible for the well-being of that nation’s poor, needy, and oppressed, I would read that Biblical perspective carefully and prayerfully. For now, I maintain a viewpoint that the Lord judges nations for their collective behaviors, a common tenet of evangelical Biblical understanding.

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  7. Most excellent reasoning. I am agnostic, but I had a pretty intensive religious upbringing, and I find your discipline in reading the actual words of the bible refreshing.

    Although it does take a wack at the common stereotype of Old Testament writers as a bunch of ignorant goat-herding bigots. Maybe I need to examine my own free-thinking prejudices as well?

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  8. I think your fallacy, the source of Mark's reaction, is that you reach the conclusion that it is the responsibility of government to correct all of these great wrongdoings in our society. God judged the people (all of them, not just the government) of Sodom. I would submit that we are in this predicament because the Church at large made up of individuals has fallen away from its first love and is now living predominantly unto self. The governmental evils are only a guage of the heart of the people - and that heart is rotten! Great analysis, but in my opinion, wrong conclusion and corrective. Yes, the people of God should call out these acts of governmental sodomy. However, the only lasting corrective would be to examine our own hearts and correct our behavior so that it aligns with the heart of God. Then build churches that are biblically faithful and in communities where we can actually engage with the poor, the downtrodden, and those who have suffered injustice.

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    1. I see your point but, like you, I disagree with your conclusion. It's a false dichotomy to presume that Christians can't BOTH correct themselves AND correct their governments simultaneously. In a democratic republic, we the people are the government, so we *must* do both. Therefore, while others wait for the members of churches to correct themselves and then embark on rebuilding, I'll spend my time helping the poor and the orphaned, despising cold governments and whoring churches that bed together to legislate hate toward particular classes of citizens, and voting for those citizen leaders whose behaviors (rather than whose lips alone) serve the goals of a Gospel of peace.

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