Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Sexual Ethics.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Sexual Ethics."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sexual Ethics

2 Learning objectives To explore a range of Christian and secular viewpoints To apply these to homosexuality, contraception and pre-marital sex To seek insights from Kant, Natural Law, utilitarianism and situation ethics

3 Old Testament view Sex is created by God as means of procreation (Genesis 1 and 2) Sexual relations with other tribes forbidden (1 Kings 11:1-13) Adultery punished by stoning (Leviticus 20) In Levitical code, women property of men and socially inferior

4 New Testament view Jesus says little about sexual relations, mentioning “sexual immorality” once (Mark 7:21) Paul sees the body as the Temple of the Holy Spirit, bought back from slavery (1 Cor 6:12-20) Paul condemns homosexual practices as abominations (Romans 1: 21-27)

5 And yet there is a radical equality
“There is no longer Jew nor Greek, male nor female, slave nor free: you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28) Jesus allowed unclean women to touch him (Mark 5:30) and wash his feet, (Mark 14:6). It’s as if the radicalism of Jesus wasn’t fully grasp by the Rabbi, Paul.

6 Augustine and the Fall Augustine ( ) saw the Fall of Man as the origin of sexual lust and passion. Before the Fall, sex was an act of will. After the Fall, women desired men and men ruled over women. Sexual shame required modesty. Sex was for marriage, and should be done out of duty (to procreate) not pleasure.

7 The tree of knowledge (of sex?)

8 A dualism comes in The body is the seat of wicked desires and passions
The soul had to overcome these temptations We “do not do what we want, but the very thing I hate is what I do” (Romans 7:15) The flesh must be “put to death”, says Paul

9 Aquinas Sex is for procreation, a primary good
“Any act from which of its nature generation cannot follow” is wrong. Aquinas condemns masturbation, homosexual acts, and acts where “the natural style of intercourse is not observed”. Adultery “conflicts with right reason”, even though natural, and breaks the primary precept living in society.

10 Put to death the deeds of the flesh

11 Questions arising Might God have created us with different natural sexual inclinations? Is an “unnatural” sex act (like masturbation) wrong if it harms no-one or (like living together) is done with consent?

12 Roman Catholic catechism
2357 “Basing itself on Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexuality as a grave depravity, tradition has always declared that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered. They are contrary to the natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved”.

13 “inherently disordered”

14 Summary of Catholic view
Homosexuality is like a disease. Breaks the natural relation to sex: procreation, so contra naturam But…if an alcoholic gives up drink the benefits are clear, yet if a homosexual is in a loving relationship, what bad effects are there?.

15 A rationalist might claim
Given that key aspects of human nature include culture and history, any moral principle must be tested, verified, retested, and refined according to human experience, which may change according to time and/or place, there can not be one “answer” that fits for all times and places

16 Six moral tests Is your view……………….. Comprehensive Comprehensible
Consistent Credible Convincing Christian?

17

18 Marital sex and Humanae Vitae 1968
“It is an error to think that a conjugal act which is deliberately made against natural law and so is intrinsically dishonest, could be made honest and right by the context of a lawful married life.”

19 But the RC Church is rethinking
The regulation of conception appears necessary for many couples who wish to achieve a responsible, open and reasonable parenthood in today’s circumstances. If they are to observe and cultivate all the essential values of marriage, married people need decent and human means for the regulation of conception. They should be able to expect the collaboration of all, especially for men of learning and science, in order that they have at their disposal means agreeable and worthy of man in the fulfilling of his responsible parenthood.” Pontifical Birth Control Commission

20 Focus 1: The Physical Act
Look at the nature of the sexual faculty Designed for procreation, in marriage context Focus on the individual “act” Therefore, each and every sexual act and expression should be open to the possibility of procreation; anything that obstructs this is intrinsically disordered (contra naturam) Key value is following this “natural function”.

21 Focus 2: Personal Looks at the individual and the couple in their whole, real life situation Stresses the relational aspects, especially love and “responsible parenthood” Evaluates single acts within this total context Key values are personal and interpersonal flourishing (eudaimonia)

22 Tension between Physical and Personal
Tension Between Paradigms “…objective criteria must be used, drawn from the nature of the human person and human action, … which respect the total meaning of mutual self-giving and human procreation in the context of true love…” Gaudium et Spes, 1965:51 “it is not permissible, even for the gravest reasons, ... to make into the object of a positive act of the will something which is intrinsically disordered, ... even when the intention is to safeguard or promote individual, family or social well‑being.” Humanae Vitae 1968:14

23 A way out for Catholics: conscience
Remember the Principle of Conscience in Moral Living Sanctuary of Conscience Sacred Place: Where we meet God Safe Place: No outside authority may enter Primacy of Conscience Always follow your conscience Even when “erroneous” But take care to form and inform

24 Kant and sexual ethics Difficult to universalise eg adultery
Difficult for heterosexuals to want a universal law legalising homosexual acts Kant argued that “sexual love is a degradation of human nature” (link with his dislike of passions) As soon as someone is an object of someone else’s lust, they are being used as a means to an end. In the contract of marriage, sex is fine

25 Utilitarianism and sexual ethics
Pleasure is a supreme good Shared pleasure can build happiness in a relationship Consensual sex is what most seem to desire to be fulfilled, so maximises happiness Bad consequences eg STDs should be avoided But is consent enough to make something “good”? (eg sex with minors?) Mill saw sex belonging to “lower pleasures” Harm principle eg long term pain of affairs

26 Freud and sex Sexual shame comes out of parental influences on the superego Being moral may not accord with our real natures at all…the conscience needs to mature Failure to control sexual urges will undermine the development of a virtuous character and can lead to pathological shame

27

28

29 Task Draw a grid, placing the three issues, pre-marital sex, homosexual sex, and contraception on one axis and Kant, utilitarianism and natural law on the other Fill in the boxes, summarising different approaches to sexual ethics

30 Further task Taking the recent Church of England Report Issues in Human Sexuality, describe and explain the differences in moral reasoning between Anglicans and Catholics on the issues mentioned here. NB There isn’t one RC or Anglican view!


Download ppt "Sexual Ethics."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google