Unitarian Universalist
Fellowship of the Emerald Coast
“What We Can’t Talk About And How It Can Hurt You”
Rev. Rod Debs
March 13, 2005
This morning I want to talk about Our Whole Lives, and about the taboo that
forbids us to talk about it. But first: Why are we living? What are we here for?
Two Christian Scriptures stuck in my mind as a kid, telling me what I’m here
for. From Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount I read: “Be ye therefore perfect, even as
your Father which is in heaven is perfect.” (Matthew 5:48, KJV) This
perfectionism is deeply rooted in our Western culture, Christian or not. There
has always been a little voice in my head---the voice of my mother or father,
school teachers, my conscience saying: You can do better. This is not good
enough. This is not perfect.
Biblical scholars claim that we misread this passage if we think it calls for
the modern notion of perfection. First century Judaism was a purity tradition
that might better translate this passage as calling for “wholeness”: Be ye
therefore whole and holy before the unnamable almighty. Beyond the prescribed
purity codes of behavior, mistakes were OK. Mistakes were the nature of living,
of exploring, experimenting, expanding competency. But wholeness meant a
rejection of bodily incompleteness or impure behavior, not perfection’s absence
of mistakes.
So in recent years when someone asks what is “salvation” for Unitarian
Universalism since we seem to be uncomfortable with a God who requires blood
sacrifice, human blood in payment for sins of the world, I have been saying that
salvation is being whole, not perfection.
What does it mean to be whole rather than partial, incomplete? Last month, Rev.
Bob Boerger described Jesus’ way as healthy living. The salvation Jesus taught
and lived began with community wholeness, the generous sharing of the common
table. Furthermore, Jesus sent his followers out to heal as well as to eat with
the people. Not magical faith healing, but the reorientation of our relations to
mutual relationships, peaceful integration of our bodies, minds, emotions, with
others and with the natural world: healthy living. Not error-free perfection.
Not cocoon isolation. Not absolute discipline and control. Rather healthy living
in community, wholeness.
A second verse disclosing to the Christian world Jesus’ purpose for humanity: “I
am come that you might have life, and that you might have it more abundantly.”
(John 10:10, KJV) Jesus’ reason for coming was reputed to be his desire that we
have “abundant life.”
What is life abundant? There may be different answers for different people.
Those desperate destitute who have no hope for abundance in this earthly life
have raised their sights to abundance in a glorious afterlife. You and I see the
global news of war-torn nations, not only incapable of producing food and
obtaining water, but murdered and mutilated by renegade bands of armed youth
conscripted to carry out ethnic cleansing, driving tens of thousands of refugees
into exile on uninhabitable deserts. I cannot bring myself to criticize the
faith that gives people hope for “pie in the sky by and by.” But such
otherworldly “abundant life” is not really the message of Jesus’ Sermon on the
Mount. Jesus’ message was a call to create the Kingdom of God here among us,
blessed life on earth here and now.
Perhaps it goes without saying, but “abundant life” has nothing to do with the
gospel of greed from television preachers who promise wealth, jobs, and magical
healing if only you mail your check to God, in care of the television ministry.
“Abundant life” is not “the one who dies with the most toys wins!” Abundant life
is not the American dream of wealth and possessions and privileged life style.
Nor is “abundant life” the path of self-denial, a sacrificial anti-body
spirituality of religious piety. You’ve heard the text, “Lay not up for yourself
treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break
through and steal: But lay up for yourself treasures in heaven….” (Matthew
6:19-20, KJV) That’s what I grew up with. Spiritual piety and sacrificial
self-denial created both a heavenly reward and a non-material, even anti-body
spirituality among the pious. My experience of such spiritual piety is that it
bred self-righteousness and mild asceticism, anti-body denial, not “life
abundant.” Piety was a constant struggle against the body, fraught with guilt
and shame whenever the body reared it’s hungry head.
The abundant life Jesus charged his disciples to create among them was not
otherworldly but here and now. Nor was it materialistic greed. Nor was it
anti-body sacrifice and spiritual piety. Bob Boerger is right. The abundant life
expounded by Jesus is healthy living, physical and relational health that yields
joy and peace, endurance and generosity, mutual regard and loving-kindness.
Neither otherworldliness nor crass materialism nor disembodied spiritual piety
can yield the peace and joy of “abundant life.”
I believe that “abundant life” involves our bodies’ relationships, sensual and
intimate relationships of the flesh. How we relate to our own bodies. How we
experience the natural world. How we relate bodily to other beings. How could we
know the wholeness of “abundant life” without healthy embodiment?!
In America it seems we have internalized a kind of perfectionist discipline
demanded by parents, teachers, cops and kings, by bosses, customers, and
stockholders. We think that success depends on getting it right, sacrificial
discipline, obedience to authority, serving the Master, deferred gratification.
Servanthood. Our god is perfection.
In this country we don’t have long lunches that take all afternoon. We don’t
have months of vacation as in Europe. We don’t take mid-day siestas as in hotter
climates. We don’t begin meetings whenever people arrive. We are driven by the
clock, by the narrow profit margin, by providing a more perfectly appealing
product to the customer. There is no wiggle room between being perfect and being
a loser.
This morning I want to talk about Our Whole Lives. I want to talk about the
abundant life that is taboo, yet drives us without conscious thought and without
the benefit of public discussion. I want to talk about our fleshly life of
sensual and intimate relations, what we can’t talk about in polite company or
anywhere else for that matter.
I’ve asked Patti and David Abraham and Melanie Harper to share three things with
us: something about how social shame controls us; second, tell us about the Our
Whole Lives curriculum jointly created by the UUA (Unitarian Universalist
Association) and the UCC (United Church of Christ); third, give us a taste of
the material or process of the OWL (Our Whole Lives) curriculum.
. . . .
I enjoy freedom of the pulpit, but the most precious part of life is taboo even
to me. Sensual and intimate relations are taboo topics. When I am speaking with
you one on one, I don’t ask, how are your intimate, sensual relationships? If I
were to raise issues of sensuality or intimacy, you might wonder if I have a
hidden, private agenda---lascivious intent. In the pulpit, to speak about
sensual and intimate relations is simply in bad taste.
Perhaps it’s just not important to most people! I don’t believe that for a
second. Movies don’t sell without bodies-beautiful or sensual intimacy or
violence. In fact nothing sells without sensual appeals, bathing beauties on
bikes, models selling cars and cleaning products and insurance. The best movies
address intimate relationships. There is a thriving global audience for intimate
sensual relations or the internet would not offer thousands of web sites that
shamelessly display almost every taboo to the privacy of our personal computers.
Relations of sensual intimacy are basic to our whole lives, as basic as food and
sleep. Imagine that eating was taboo. Imagine that no one dare talk about what
they ate, that sometimes they ate alone or in their car or on a secluded picnic
rather than in that one private room at home. What if you had to have a
government-issued license to eat with one person. What if you liked to explore
forbidden foods, even mild poisons, but there was no one you could talk to about
it? What if you binged and felt so guilty and ashamed that you were bulimic, or
that you became so guilty for eating that you became anorexic? What if
international cuisine or even healthy diet was taboo to talk about, to celebrate
or even to mention in public? How would we raise our children to healthy eating
if there were no public discourse of eating, free from shame?
Seicus, the Sexuality Education Information Council of the United States, has
described our AYS (About Your Sexuality) curriculum for teens to be the best in
the nation, the best for thirty years. Now the UUs and Congregationalists have
spent a decade of research and over a hundred thousand dollars to create the
best course on sensual and intimate relations, Our Whole Lives, with five
age-specific curricula including one for adults. This is the best thing that we
do as UUs.
If I could talk about it in pastoral conversations or from the pulpit without
you wondering what is my personal agenda, I would. But I can’t. I know that you
are discovering your own wisdom about the fullness of life. But there are many
of us who are also walking wounded. We are bumbling along without the benefit of
public discourse or even private wisdom sources. It’s not just politicians or
rock stars who are caught acting out destructive intimate relationships. Fifty
percent of marriages, our marriages end in divorce. Many more are walking
wounded. None of us intended when we said “I do” to have a painful relationship
that would end in divorce or go on interminably unhappily. I don’t have to read
about a judge using a hydraulic masturbation machine under his courtroom desk to
know that dysfunction of intimate, sensual relations strike the best and the
brightest.
What I do know is that we need a safe place, a safe process for public discourse
on sensual and intimate relations. I believe that we have it in the Our Whole
Lives curriculum. I can’t talk about it tastefully from the pulpit, and I don’t
think you want me to bring it up to you privately (heaven forbid). What we can’t
talk about is hurting us, and it will hurt our children as they grow up and
explore sensual and intimate relations.
Frankly, I’m no longer willing to waste my time talking about anything that
doesn’t make the blood flow. Life is too short. And precious. I challenge you to
dare to enter safe conversation about what matters most in our lives and what is
the source of our greatest joy and delight, our greatest pain and sadness. Let’s
dare to carefully explore the real core of our relationships. Patti, David and
Melanie have been trained as facilitors of Our Whole Lives adult curriculum and
are exploring times when you who are willing could hold introductory sessions.
Give them your name and contact information.
We Unitarian Universalists owe it to ourselves, we owe it to our community and
to our children to become more competent and conversant on healthy, abundant
living. I dare you! Thus ends the reading of the infomercial.