Friday, March 31, 2023

Blogaround

1. TANF: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) (March 13) "The wild thing here is, our current system was created under the assumption that poor families simply couldn't be trusted to collect welfare honestly. But the past couple of decades have proven that it's actually politicians and government officials who've been relentlessly abusing this system."

2. Asexual Advocacy in India: An Interview with Dr. Pragati Singh (March 27) [content note: mention of rape] "And there were so many such things being shared by people that I realized in my country, for my people, asexuality is not just about a flag, right? Or microidentities, or a label, it's not about that. It's about people literally making life and death decisions. People going through severe depression because they're being raped, or because they're being forced into a marriage. And you know in my country, unfortunately, marital rape is not even recognized as rape. It's legally not recognized as rape."

3. What If All the Men Around You Have Lust Problems? (March 24) "I have never, ever heard any of these pastors or authors talk about how women are whole people and we shouldn't objectify them." Wow, very good post. Sheila Gregoire says that it's NOT true that all men "struggle" with "lust", and if a man has lust problems, that man should not be allowed near young girls, until he gets himself under control. This is completely different than what I've always heard in Christian culture, which is that it's normal for men to "struggle with lust" and so women have to dress modestly to help them out.

She says if you're in a church like that, LEAVE THAT CHURCH. Wow. I'm really surprised to see her saying that, since as far as I know, she is evangelical.

Also this was a good line from her post: "It’s terrible to say, but non-Christian families have far less problems with lust than Christian ones. Even if porn use is just as high, objectification of women is more often seen as anathema, rather than as normal."

But, also, I think we need a better definition of lust, otherwise people will think that simply being attracted to people is a serious issue that means that church should bar you from interacting with people, etc... Gregoire is aware of this problem, and does provide a better definition- she says noticing is not lust; it's when someone dwells on those thoughts, that's lust. Or when you see someone as a sex object rather than as a person. I personally don't want to define it in terms of policing thoughts, because I'm ex-evangelical (lol there is a lot more that could be said about that). How about this: What if we say "lust" means you're being a creep/ aren't treating someone with respect/ aren't viewing them as a whole person. And so, to not lust, it's not about "don't think about sex, don't think about sex!" because we all know that if you say "don't think about [something]" then everyone will naturally think about it- what if we define "not lusting" in a more positive way, where you make sure to respect them and treat them as a whole human being, not a sex object, regardless of what sexy thoughts you may or may not have about them.

But what do I know, I'm asexual.

4. Cops Sue Afroman For Sharing Video Of Their Unfounded Raid Of His House (March 24) "Above and beyond that, alleging a privacy right over the conduct of a raid ostensibly on behalf of the public amounts to a face-melting level of stupidity. This is basic constitutional law. There’s no undercover work here, these are cops taking actions that they would have gladly blasted to the whole world if they had found any evidence."

5. Kansas City Cop Blows Whistle On Department's Jim Crow Policing (March 28) "Williams's suit further claims that officers were told to meet their ticket quotas in minority neighborhoods because it would be 'easier to write multiple citations on every stop.' Noting that minority residents might feel cranky about all the over-policing, the command staff allegedly advised to 'approach every car with the mindset to be ready to kill everybody in the car.'"

And another one from Wonkette: Sixty-Three Years Later, White Mom Finally Gets 'Ruby Bridges' Banned From Elementary School (March 27) "Every teacher but Barbara Henry, who had been hired specifically for her previous experience teaching in integrated schools, refused to teach her. But she went back and sat alone in that classroom as Henry's only student. Every day. For a year. At the age of six."

6. Tamping alone (March 29) "I try not to use phrases like 'America’s declining social capital' when talking to customers who are buying things like tampers, but I do ask whether they might just want to  borrow one from a neighbor or from their brother-in-law or somebody. That’s usually a better solution for them, for their budget, for neighborliness and social capital, for America, and for democracy in general."

7. It’s Time to Change My Pseudonym (March 15) This is a post from "Jackson Wu", a blogger at the Patheos Evangelical channel, about why he's not going to use the pseudonym "Jackson Wu" any more. Long story short, he's a white guy (but he worked as a missionary in China for 15 years, and he speaks Mandarin Chinese), and he's gotten a lot of backlash recently for using a Chinese-sounding name on his blog. (Especially after he published a post that strongly criticized a book by an African writer about the problems in Western missions.) And then, someone posted his real name on Twitter, so he has decided to use his real name (Brad Vaughn) on his blog now.

I live in China, so I have some thoughts on this.

First of all, I've followed his blog for a while. I like it. (If I had to guess, I would have guessed that he's a Chinese American who moved to China and lived there over 10 years.) He's evangelical, so I don't agree with a lot of his beliefs, but I appreciate him discussing Christian concepts from a more Chinese perspective. And, giving up your own culture to go live as an immigrant on the other side of the world, well, I admire that. To have that lived experience is a very significant thing. 

About having a Chinese name: Well, yes, I think if you come live in China, you should choose a Chinese name. I have a Chinese name. Mostly I use it for things like signing up for food delivery apps. It's not "cultural appropriation," it's "making life easier for the delivery drivers who don't know how to read English." And Vaughn says that Chinese people in China think it's great that he uses a Chinese name- and yes, I can confirm that. It communicates that he really wants to learn their culture and be like them.

It's, uh, a bit weird that he's responding to his critics by talking about how useful/good/etc it is to have a Chinese name in China. I don't think anyone was criticizing him for using a Chinese name in China. The issue was that he writes a blog, in English, so that means it's for a mostly-western audience, where he uses a Chinese-sounding pseudonym, and one of the main topics he blogs about is discussing evangelical Christian beliefs from a Chinese perspective. (And then he criticized a book by an African writer talking about her experiences as an immigrant in the US- to make that criticism as a white person is a different thing than making that criticism as an Asian person.) I mean, it's fine that he wants to discuss Christianity from a Chinese perspective- but to do so as an ethnically Chinese person is a different thing than to do it as a white person who has a lot of experience in China. So yes, I do think it was a problem that he was misrepresenting himself.

As for the part about the Chinese government persecuting Christians- yes, I believe him there, but I think American readers will get a skewed picture of the actual situation. Vaughn is specifically talking about house churches in China. There are also churches in church buildings in China. You can search on any map app and find a church near you. You can walk up to the building and there will be a sign posted that says what time the service is on Sunday. I've done that. American Christians have this impression that Christianity isn't allowed at all in China, but that's just not true. The thing is, these churches in church buildings are monitored by the government, and there are restrictions on what they can say. (Though I've been to services at Chinese government-approved churches and they seemed like pretty normal Christian churches to me- whatever restrictions there are, they are not obvious to the average churchgoer.) The house churches are a totally different story. House churches do what they want, but then they have to worry about persecution.

8. Getting to ‘No’: How I Negotiated My Bride Price Away (March 24) "But she remained unconvinced. 'If a man doesn’t pay a financial price to marry you, he won’t value you as much in the marriage,' she replied."

Like I said before, I married a Chinese man and nobody gave me any money. (We got some cash as a wedding gift, but nothing like this asymmetrical "bride price" thing.) This is more of a tradition in the countryside rather than in big cities.

9. Donald Trump indicted by Manhattan grand jury on more than 30 counts related to business fraud (March 31) "Donald Trump faces more than 30 counts related to business fraud in an indictment from a Manhattan grand jury, according to two sources familiar with the case – the first time in American history that a current or former president has faced criminal charges."

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

"To Glorify God"

Fire. Image source.

I wanna tell a little story about when I started this blog, back in 2012. Specifically, I made a deliberate decision that I was *not* blogging "to glorify God."

Yeah... so... back then, I was very evangelical, and so of course everything I did was supposed to be "to glorify God." What does that mean, exactly? The best I could tell was, it means people see something that I do, and they think, "Wow, God is even more awesome than I thought!" Whatever I do should serve the purpose of showing how amazing God is. Or, to interpret it a bit more loosely, I have to do my best to make sure that everything I do is what God would want me to do.

I used to post a lot of Christian things on Facebook, back then. Writing long Facebook posts where I shared my testimony, having arguments about why I believed it's a sin to "act on" one's feelings of same-sex attraction, whatever random thoughts I had about my obedience to God, etc etc etc. And whenever I wrote some big long thing on Facebook, I very carefully prayed over it. I checked over every single part of my writing, because I really really wanted to make sure that every single sentence was what God wanted me to say. 

If I wasn't sure if some little phrase "glorified God", I deleted it. I remember one Facebook post I wrote, which in an early draft included the phrase "if we can't figure this out, we're screwed" or something like that. During the editing process I stopped there and wondered if it was really okay to use "screwed" like that. Isn't that kind of a bad word? I felt that emotionally, "screwed" conveyed what I was trying to say, and no other word could quite capture the same feeling, but still I wasn't sure if God was really okay with me saying that. And since I wasn't sure, I eventually decided I couldn't in good conscience publish the Facebook post with that phrase in it. Everything I wrote needed to glorify God. Everything needed to be what God would want me to write. I finally changed the word "screwed" to something else, and published that post.

That's what I mean. Whenever I wrote some long post about God, I made sure to think through everything very carefully, to pray about it, until I was sure that it was really what God wanted me to write.

When I started this blog, I asked myself, "Am I blogging to glorify God?" And I decided, no. I remember that it was an actual question I had to think about, and an actual decision I made. This blog would be different from all my previous writing on Christianity. This blog would be about saying what I needed to say. Asking the questions I needed to ask. Even if I wasn't sure if God was okay with me asking.

I decided I wasn't going to get stuck, asking myself "does God really want me to say this?" before I hit "publish" every time. You can't get anywhere, if you do that. The conversation can never even start, if I have to make sure I'm really really confident that it's a conversation that's going to make God look good, before I even say anything.

I decided the purpose of my blog was not "to glorify God."

The 5th post I published was God kills Uzzah (2 Samuel 6). (If you don't know this story from the bible- it's about when God killed Uzzah for touching the ark of the covenant, because it was falling off a cart and Uzzah tried to catch it.) And yes, there are things in that post that I would not have said, if I had wanted to make sure that every single thing I said "glorified God."

I love God and I trust God and I'm gonna call it like I see it: God is being really unreasonable here.
...
People always say "God loves everybody" but I don't know if it's true.  Did God love Uzzah?
...
In conclusion, I don't like it and it's not fair.  But God can do whatever he wants so... whatever.  I guess.  I'm still not okay with this.  Anyone have any insights to add?

I read that and I'm like, damn, shots fired. Look at what little Perfect Number comes up with when she says what she really thinks, rather than limiting herself to what "glorifies God." This is a great start. (Also, it's normal to cringe when you come across something you wrote 10 years ago, right? That happens to everyone, right?)

I believed that there was a way to ask questions and express doubts and still "glorify God." But, it was tricky. I would have to come to a conclusion first, and then based on that, I would decide how to frame the story. For example, one acceptable "doubt" narrative in evangelicalism might be "I had doubts about [whatever] and I thought God was not being fair. But then I realized the bible says this because [some reason] and I was not able to see it because [some sin or weakness that I have]. So now I see that yes, this belief about God is right."

At our bible study groups in college, I felt like I could ask any question at all about the bible and how certain parts of it seemed wrong. But, we couldn't just leave it there- we couldn't conclude the bible study still believing "this seems wrong." We had to come up with some explanation to convince ourselves that it made sense- or at least to convince ourselves that even if we don't understand the reason, obviously God is always right, so we can trust that it does, somehow, make sense.

When I stated this blog, I didn't have a "conclusion." I just had my questions. And without the conclusion, how do I know if me posting these questions is going to make God look bad? 

So I deliberately made that decision, and this blog has never been about glorifying God.

Instead, I blog because I have a "fire in my bones" like the prophet Jeremiah:

But if I say, “I will not mention his word
    or speak anymore in his name,”
his word is in my heart like a fire,
    a fire shut up in my bones.
I am weary of holding it in;
    indeed, I cannot.

I have things to say, and I just need to say them, so here we are. That's what this has always been about, for the past 10 years.

At the beginning I wondered if, in a roundabout way, I would end up "glorifying God." I don't really care about that anymore, though. God doesn't need me to do PR for Them. If They didn't want people to talk about, say, the problem of evil, maybe They shouldn't have made a world that has evil. I just call it like I see it.

So... I used to be very very careful about making sure everything related to Christianity that I posted publicly was approved by God. Spent a lot of time praying, so I would be confident that it was really what God wanted me to say. When I started this blog in 2012, I decided it would NOT be like that. I wouldn't blog "to glorify God"- I would blog because I had things I needed to say, and some of those things didn't have a neat, tidy conclusion about why God/the bible is always right. I blog because I have a "fire in my bones." I still do.

---

Related:

They Prayed About It (a post about the #NashvilleStatement) 

Accepting Myself (or, I'm Great, and It Doesn't Matter What God Thinks) 

Katy Perry's God-Given Freedom

Monday, March 27, 2023

Blogaround

1. Journal Club: LDS Aces (March 22) "For example, churches generally don’t have any official policy on asexuality, so it tends to be a mixed bag based on local leaders. There are also a lot of practices surrounding reproduction and marriage that don’t explicitly refer to asexuality but have profound implications."

Another post also from Siggy: Three arguments on AI Art (March 25) "If one person looks at AI art, and thinks about how it’s eliminating artists’ jobs and violating consent, that’s what the art represents to them, and that makes it ugly. Likewise, if someone else looks at AI art and thinks of the new possibilities and increased accessibility, they will have a higher opinion."

2. A Chinese City Offers Free High School Tuition for Third Child (March 23) China's one-child policy ended in 2016, and now the government is panicked about the low birth rate and trying to get people to have more children. (It's not really working.)

And another one from Sixth Tone: How an Army of Elderly Influencers Took Over China’s Instagram (March 21) "During the lockdowns, millions of over-60s downloaded and learned to use food delivery, payment, and health apps for the first time. They often did so out of necessity: It was difficult to buy groceries — or complete mandatory COVID tests — without them."

3. Extremism leads to more extremism (March 22) Oh, yikes. Answers In Genesis has been featuring articles by "Harry F. Sanders" which is a pseudonym. Here's a youtuber who tracks down "Harry F. Sanders's" other online postings and it's all extremist anti-semitic conspiracy theories and the like.

4. The kingdom of heaven is like: Minnesota House passes "trans refuge" legislation after late-night debate (March 24) "Democrats pushing the legislation forward say it will protect trans patients and providers of gender-affirming care from legal action in other states where such care is banned or restricted, creating a safe haven in Minnesota. It's structured similarly to a proposal that passed the House earlier this week that's works as a 'shield law' for people seeking and providing abortions at a time when laws vary after the fall of Roe v. Wade."

5. Distributor, newspapers drop 'Dilbert' comic strip after creator's racist rant (February 27)

6. After Utah lawmakers allowed book banning, one parent went after the Bible (March 24) 

7. Cakes and ale (and drag queens) (March 24) "That all had another layer of complication in Shakespeare’s day, when only male actors were permitted on stage. That meant the part of Olivia was played by a man dressed as a woman who was falling in love with a man dressed as a woman dressed as a man."

8. GOP rep suggests replacing libraries with ‘church-owned’ alternatives (March 24) "As conservative politics has become more extreme, libraries have become more common targets."

Saturday, March 25, 2023

I need to talk about this "selfish and small" nonsense

Image text: "Love yourself." Image source.

[content note: this is about patriarchal Christian men talking about sex. first paragraph is sexually explicit.]

So, on March 1, The Gospel Coalition posted some, uh, Christian patriarchal smut, about how a man pouring out his semen during penis-in-vagina sex is the ultimate example of generosity, and a woman allowing it is the ultimate example of hospitality, and this shows us the gospel, and Jesus also penetrates the church. (Yes really, that's what it said.) This was, uh, quite possibly the most WTF thing I had ever heard, and I wrote my response here: This May Be The Most WTF Christian Article On Sex I've Ever Read. My entire Twitter feed was full of people talking about TGC's article. It was such a terrible article.

Anyway, on March 6, Denny Burk (a big-name complementarian Christian) published a post, saying that he didn't agree with the explicit sexual language in TGC's article, but still, a correct Christian approach to sex should place a higher priority on procreation than on pleasure. Here's the excerpt that has people mad, from his post Taking a Dog by the Ears [archive link]:

The egalitarian rejection of asymmetry necessarily backgrounds procreation and foregrounds pleasure and physical climax. Physical climax becomes the necessary focus of egalitarian sex because it’s something that, at least in principle, can be mutual. This is the entire point of books like The Great Sex Rescue. Perhaps there is a place for focusing on such things, but when you do it to the exclusion of procreation, you turn sex into something that’s finally selfish and small, because it’s focused only on the couple, and not the bigger world that together they can create.

UGHHHH.

So, he's saying, sex is supposed to be about procreation, first of all. We shouldn't focus on pleasure, that would be "selfish and small." By some WILD COINCIDENCE, men's orgasms are a key part of this "procreation" aspect, but if we want to say "women's orgasms are just as important as men's", well, that's selfish and small. If procreation is the most important, men get to have orgasms, and women get to throw up a hundred times and get all their internal organs smushed during pregnancy. Just a total coincidence that it worked out that way. Not misogyny at all.

(As an aside: I gotta say, I was very surprised to see Burk saying sex has to be about procreation. I've never heard that idea from anyone in evangelical culture [complementarians like Burk are part of evangelical culture]- isn't that more of a Catholic thing? In my experience, evangelicals are like "there's this stereotype that Christians think sex has to be just for procreation, with the lights off and get it done as fast as possible, but that's not right! Actually sex is a beautiful gift from God and it's supposed to be fun!" Though, to be fair, I don't think Burk is saying that literally every time you have sex, you have to have the possibility of getting pregnant, you can't use birth control- I don't think he's saying that. I think he's saying something more along the lines of, you have to have sex in a way that resembles the way that people get pregnant, though you don't have to literally not use birth control etc. Similar argument to how anti-gay Christians say marriage has to be a man and a woman, because that's where babies come from, and then people respond by asking "so, you wouldn't allow an infertile straight couple to get married? You wouldn't allow a straight couple that's, say, 60 years old get married?" and the anti-gay Christians respond, "well it's not like *every* couple has to literally be able to have babies, but they have to at least be different genders, to point to the idea of having babies." I am very curious about whether he believes, as many complementarian men do, that a wife should do oral sex or a handjob on her husband when her vagina is not available [having her period, just gave birth, etc] because men "need" it. That would not be consistent with the idea he's presenting here, that sex should at least have the appearance of the kind of sex that leads to pregnancy.)

Ugh, okay. Ugh. Usually my approach is to present some logical arguments about why some idea is right or wrong, but I'm not going to do that here. Instead, I just want to talk about why this makes me so mad.

Okay, so, here's why it makes me so mad: There's no way to argue against this "selfish and small" idea, from within the evangelical ideology that I used to believe. It's a whole logically-consistent system, where one of the foundational axioms that it's built on is that we can't just enjoy things because we want to. That would be "selfish." If you're doing something that makes you happy, you have to have a more holy-sounding reason than just "it makes me happy, and that is a good thing in and of itself." No. That's "selfish." Maybe even sinful. 

Your happiness can only be a byproduct of obedience to God. You seek God first, you obey God, and as a result, you have a happy life- but of course that's not the motivation, that would be selfish, of course the motivation is that we obey God's rules simply because it's the right thing to do and we love God so much, and then as a cool side-effect, it makes us happy.

It really is an entire system where people are not allowed to listen to their own feelings and their own desires about what they want. You're not allowed to pursue what you want unless you have a sufficiently religious-sounding reason why it's what God wants you to do.

So... why would female orgasms matter, in that system? Simply because a woman wants to have an orgasm... no, that's not a good enough reason. That's "selfish and small." And for cis men... I mean, they do have a "good enough reason" why they need to be having orgasms, it's because it's necessary for pregnancy. But cis women... sure it's fine if the orgasm happens as a side effect of your very godly hetero having-sex-in-the-way-God-intended, but you can't prioritize it.

My point is, the reason this makes me so mad is that you can't argue with it, from within that system. Makes me feel trapped, just thinking about it.

All you can do is fall into depression, and then go to therapy, and have your therapist tell you over and over that you have to accept yourself, you are good enough in yourself, you can't base your self-worth on anyone else's opinion (not even God's). Until you finally believe it. 

And then you come out of it mad as hell. When you realize for the first time what they took from you. You weren't allowed to want what you want. You weren't allowed to feel your feelings. You weren't allowed to enjoy things simply because you enjoyed them. You had to be suspicious of everything that made you happy, because it might be a sin.

Scene from "The Avengers" where Bruce Banner says, "That's my secret, Cap... I'm always angry" before turning into the Hulk. Image source.

This isn't about orgasms. (I'm asexual.) This is about an anti-human ideology where you have to "put God first." Has to be in this order- "Jesus, others, yourself." You can't just be happy. You can't just pursue what you want- you have to make yourself believe that "God called me" or whatever.

I'm angry because Denny Burk said "selfish and small" and I know I have no answer that would mean anything at all from an evangelical perspective. It's an ideology that does not consider human happiness to be an inherently good thing. The only good thing is following God.

---

Related:

Christianity and "Selfishness": Here are the Receipts 

I Deserve God's Love

Accepting Myself (or, I'm Great, and It Doesn't Matter What God Thinks) 

Honest Lent: "Seek First God's Kingdom" Doesn't Work If You Have Autism

On Telling My Chinese Husband What I Want For Christmas

Friday, March 24, 2023

Why I Don't Want to be at a "Revival"

A group of people kneeling in prayer at the altar, at the Asbury revival. Image source.

My posts on the Asbury revival:

February 13 Blogaround
"There is no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred": What people do with "revival"
Does God Use Miracles To Take Sides? 
The Logistics of a Revival 
Why I Don't Want to be at a "Revival"

---

So I've written a bunch of posts about the Asbury revival, which happened in February. My overall perspective on it is, I think to some extent it really is from God, but also I'm HIGHLY SUSPICIOUS of anyone in evangelical Christian culture who says it's inherently a good thing, and we want it to happen everywhere. And anyone who tries to tell us their opinion on "this is what it means." 

Anyway, this post is about why I don't want to be at a "revival."

So, I've seen photos from the Asbury revival. A crowd of people raising their hands, singing- man, the energy in that room must have been incredible. A bunch of students kneeling at the front, right there at the stage. Wow, yeah, I used to do things like that, and part of me misses it.

But then I pull myself back and say, no, I can't be doing things like that. This is not a safe environment for me to express my feelings about God. If these people knew what I really believed, they would say I'm not a real Christian. I can't be so open and honest about how I feel about God, I can't let them see that, they are not safe.

When I was evangelical... I was so devoted to God, so overtaken with obsession for him, so passionate, and I showed it during the worship music time at church services or Christian events. Dancing, shouting, raising my hands, kneeling. I showed everyone how I felt about God. I always heard Christians say "when you worship, it's just you and God, you shouldn't care what other people think" and I really bought into that.

And the whole time, I also bought into a Christian ideology where we judged other Christians and labelled them as "not real Christians." If they didn't believe in hell. If they interpreted a key bible verse differently than we did. If they accepted LGBTQ people. If they didn't "put God first."

I've heard other ex-evangelicals say, it's the ones who are the most devoted to following Jesus, who take it the most seriously, who end up following Him right out of the church and rebelling against the entire ideology. 

I was fiercely passionate about God when I was evangelical, and I would say I still am now. And at every step along the way. 

I didn't turn away from God; instead, I discovered that my God had been a monster all along, and I couldn't in good conscience obey him any more... But there was a better God there, once I'd hacked through the cardboard cut-out of a God I used to worship. A better God. A queer God, for lack of a better term. I use the term "queer" here because it encapsulates something very important about the difference between my Christianity now and my Christianity back then. One was about beating yourself down to stay within the rigid rules that God put you in. The other is about the amazing beauty of human creativity and the diversity of human experience, the joy that we find in discovering ourselves and our world, where God is alive everywhere, in every person- in Them we live and move and have our being. I suspect the best way to find out which side of this divide a particular person or church is on is to ask them their position on LGBTQ inclusion.

(Okay maybe I'm being a little naive there, thinking that churches that accept gay couples are perfect utopias... It's possible to accept gay couples and still have a lot of harmful anti-self and/or patriarchal ideology.)

Anyway, my point is, I worshiped in front of all these evangelical people, and then, as I followed what they said Jesus told us to do, I changed my beliefs into the sorts of beliefs that people who get branded "fake Christians" have.

Maybe it was when I stopped believing in hell. Maybe that's the first time I crossed the line into "evangelicals would say I'm not a real Christian."

It's only directly happened to me a few times- Christians saying I'm not a real Christian, I'm rejecting God because I just want to sin, etc. I'm not really bothered by those specific times. The thing that actually hurts is how I spent so many years in a Christian culture where it was totally normal to say "so-and-so is not a real Christian because they believe the wrong thing about XYZ"- that was normal, that was what we did. I don't remember anyone ever challenging it. We knew all the right answers about what God wanted and the correct way to read the bible, and, well, we're not arrogant, we're just telling the truth! 

That's the culture I was in, when I let everyone see how much I love God, and then I became the kind of Christian who's a "fake Christian" and I feel so bad that I let them see how much I love God. People are too polite to say it to me directly, but I know. I know. I used to be evangelical, so I know.

I know I'm a "false teacher" now. 

So I see the photos of the Asbury revival, and part of me wants to experience that, but part of me says, no, these people are not safe, I can't show them how I really feel about God. The pull of the light side and the pull of the dark side, so to say. The question of "which side is which?" is left as an exercise for the reader.

But, wait, I have one caveat: I would worship with queer Christians.

If it's a group of queer Christians... we've all been through some shit, we know what's what, and we still choose to follow Jesus. That is a totally different situation than a worship service at your average church. I could worship with queer Christians, because I know they don't judge me like that. Even if some of them judged me, some others would surely step up and say, no, we are not the arbiters of who is and who is not a "real Christian."

Yes, I could worship with queer Christians.

But with a group of conservative/evangelical Christians... no, I shouldn't do that. I'm not safe there. If they knew what I believed, they would say I'm not a real Christian. People like that don't get to see how I feel about God.

---

Related:

"You Weren't There, the Night Jesus Found Me"

The Christianity of GCN Conference 

My Identity was in Christ

The things I've never let myself say about worship 

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Also a few videos I need to share here:

This Chinese song is how I feel about God:

Also, God is a girl.


Wednesday, March 22, 2023

Blogaround

1. After 3 Years of Lockdowns, a Chinese Border City Struggles to Rebuild (March 14) "After COVID hit, however, the city’s frontier location became a liability. With China wary of infections spreading across the border, Ruili faced a string of weekslong lockdowns. From early 2021, the border was sealed entirely, and surrounding neighborhoods were evacuated. Undocumented migrants from Myanmar were rounded up and forced to return home."

2. The Story of Lazarus and the Making of the New Testament (January 19) "It is possible that Jesus on one occasion told a story about a poor man called Lazarus, and on another day, by remarkable coincidence, he actually raised a man of the same name from the dead. But other interpretations offer themselves."

And another from the same blog: How the Churches Forgot the Amalekites (2022) "The last Christian who will seek to exterminate another nation on the pretense of killing Amalekites has not yet been born." This is a really important point. There are passages in the bible where God commands his people to commit genocide. In western culture in modern times, churches tend to just awkwardly skip over those passages. But throughout history, Christians have literally used those passages to justify genocide- and this continues to happen in some parts of the world. If we just don't talk about those passages, that's not good enough. We have to engage with them and answer them.

3. Belinda Carlisle - Heaven Is A Place On Earth (Official Music Video) I'm sure I've posted this before, but here it is again. This is actually my religion. Just like Jesus taught us to pray: "Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven."

4. The Biblical Case for Affirmation (w/ Matthew Vines) (March 13) A 1-hour-45-minute podcast. I am and will always be a bible nerd, so I loved this. My position is different from Vines's, though, because I don't think we need to carefully study ancient Roman history in order to find out if we're allowed to treat queer people with basic human decency. (Or, in evangelical language, I reject the authority of Scripture.) But wow, I am so impressed by how much of a bible nerd he is. Like, chapter and verse.

5. A distinction without any meaning (March 19) "Biologists have managed to reprogram stem cells taken from a male mouse into female oocytes, then fertilized them with sperm from another male mouse, and produced healthy offspring — that is, they’ve made mice with two fathers. ... The creationists at Answers in Genesis are made somewhat uncomfortable about this, since it violates their fantasies about the rigidity of sex determination, and recruited their tame in-house crank with a Ph.D., Nathaniel Jeanson to write a rationalization for them."

Also from the same blog: Why would Tim White and UC Berkeley hoard old bones? (March 14) "It’s just the weirdest defense: our bookkeeping is so bad and ignorance is so great that we have no idea whose remains these are, therefore we ought to be allowed to keep them."

6. And here's another worship song I like: My Deliverer - Rich Mullins

7. Everyone’s asking if Joel made the right choice. But Joel didn’t make one choice. He made many. (March 15) [content note: spoilers for "The Last Of Us"]

8. Idaho hospital to stop labor and delivery services citing "political climate" and doctor shortages (March 18) "'The Idaho Legislature continues to introduce and pass bills that criminalize physicians for medical care nationally recognized as the standard of care. Consequences for Idaho Physicians providing the standard of care may include civil litigation and criminal prosecution, leading to jail time or fines,' Bonner General said in its news statement."

9. Minnesota Republican Unable To Stop Communist Governor From Giving Kids Food (March 15) "'I have yet to meet a person in Minnesota that is hungry,' Drazkowski said, in front of other people who could see and hear him."

10. HPV and Purity Culture (March 17) "To these individuals I say, 'I am sorry. Your virginity is not and will never be more important than your physical health.'" AMEN TO THAT.

I also did not get the HPV vaccine... it was very new and controversial when I was a teenager... Thinking about it now, it strikes me as odd that the response wasn't "wow great news, a vaccine that prevents cervical cancer" but instead more like "this is a vaccine for sluts? eww how could a good parent let their daughter get that?"

11. There is a God, But I Do Not Believe In Him (March 14) "God would have us know that we must live as people who manage our lives without God. The God who is with us is the God who forsakes us." Yeah this... this is very close to what I believe.

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

"Boys Can't Stop"

Racoon. Image source.

[content note: purity culture is rape culture]

Okay so I want to talk about this 2021 post from Sheila Wray Gregoire, Fixed It For You! We Fix a Survey Question So It Doesn't Enable Date Rape. Gregoire's post is addressing the idea that girls have to be the "gatekeepers" of sex, because boys can't control themselves. This is obviously a harmful idea, and I definitely was taught this and I totally bought into it, back then. I'm glad to see Gregoire's post addressing this.

Specifically, this post is about a survey question described in the book "For Young Women Only," by Shaunti Feldhahn and Lisa Rice. (A book which promotes purity ideology.) Gregoire criticizes this question and the way that Feldhahn/Rice interpret the results in their book. Gregoire says this gives boys an excuse if they rape someone.

Here's the image that shows the survey question, from the book "For Young Women Only":


Image text:

Survey says:

Whether or not you are currently involved with a girlfriend, if you were to be in a make-out situation with a willing partner who does not signal a desire to stop, how do you feel about your ability to stop the sexual progression?

Why would I want to stop the sexual progression? 30%

Almost no ability. When the door is opened, it's just too tough to stop the fun. 18%

Some ability, but it would require a massive effort, and I might go further than intended. 34%

I find it easy to stop the sexual progression. 18%

Okay, so... first of all... uh... as an asexual I would like to know, what "sexual progression"?

I did not understand what this question meant when I first read it- though if I was seeing this back when I believed in purity ideology, I would have just nodded along like "oh yes, one thing leads to another, and then you have sex" because that's what everyone said- even though it didn't make any sense to me at all.

From reading the rest of Gregoire's blog post, I *think* this is what it means: So, when people are making out (this means spending a lot of time kissing), the natural next step is to do something kinda sexual like maybe feeling their partner's sexual parts with clothes still on (???), and then the next natural step after that is something like taking clothes off (?????) and so on, and at some point the next natural step is to have sex.

This is extremely confusing to me, because to me, kissing and sex are completely different things. Like, yes in some ways they are related- for example, the only person I want to make out with is my husband, and also the only person I want to have sex with is my husband. But the idea that making out naturally (???) leads to sex is just completely weird to me.

Especially if I was making out with someone I had never had sex with before. Like, sex is just a whole completely different thing, obviously requiring a whole conversation and soul-searching about what I want- it is very much *NOT* a natural step after kissing, what on earth.

Anyway, so, apparently, as far as I can tell, that's what Feldhahn and Rice's survey question was asking about. They asked boys, suppose you are making out with a girl. How much ability do you have to stop the series of steps that goes from there to sex?

I'm like ?????

OKAY BUT ANYWAY. Let's see what Gregoire has to say about it. (Note that apparently she accepts the idea that there is a "sexual progression" from making out to sex and everyone understands what it is. As an asexual, I squint suspiciously at that.)

Feldhahn & Rice combine the answers like this: 82% say they have little ability/responsibility to stop.

THEY CONCLUDE: “WITH A GUY, IF YOU WANT TO BE ABLE TO STOP IT, IT’S BEST TO NOT EVEN START.”

They use words like, “a sizeable minority feel no responsibility to stop.” “Be careful.” “Be cautious.” “Watch out.”

They say, “boys needed the girls’ help” to stop.

What is this telling girls? You are responsible for stopping in a make out situation, because he can’t/won’t. If you go too far, then, it’s your fault, because you know he can’t stop.

Yes. I am glad to see Gregoire calling this out, because it is really harmful ideology. 

And, yeah, back then I literally believed "boys can't stop." (I also believed that girls would similarly reach a certain point where our desires overtake us and we can't stop ourselves from having sex- and I feared this would happen to me- but boys reach that point much much sooner than girls.)

I remember the first time I read on a feminist blog that "consent can be withdrawn at any time." (ie, if you consent to sex, but then later you change your mind and withdraw consent, your partner absolutely can and must stop, otherwise it's sexual assault.) And "just because you consent to one thing doesn't mean you consent to everything." (ie, if you consent to making out, and your partner forces/coerces you to also have sex, that's sexual assault and it's not your fault.) I was just COMPLETELY SHOCKED. Just completely, utterly shocked. I had never heard anything like that before- in fact, I had heard the exact opposite. I believed that once you start doing sexual stuff, boys lose the ability to control themselves- they really can't stop. I was just totally, completely shocked when I came across that feminist blog that said men are better than that, and it is totally reasonable to hold men to that standard. It was so unbelievable to me. I really believed "boys can't stop", just like Feldhahn and Rice say in their book.

Also, I want to stop here and mention: Asexual men exist! Purity proponents like Feldhahn and Rice say they don't, but they do!

Continuing on with Gregoire's blog post:

THE REAL ISSUE HERE IS THAT THEY ASKED BOYS ABOUT A CONSENSUAL SITUATION, AND THEN APPLIED THE DATA TO NON-CONSENSUAL ONES. THAT IS NOT A VALID USE OF THE DATA.
...
They surveyed 400 predominantly non-Christian boys, and said: (a) in a consensual situation where she wants to keep going; (b) what ability do you have to stop?

The problem is that (a) and (b) do not logically go together. What does his ability to stop have to do with her wanting to keep going?

Okay, wow, yes. They asked boys about a consensual situation, and then applied the data to non-consensual situations. I'm really glad Gregoire is pointing this out, because in my experience with purity ideology, there's no awareness of consent at all. Like, people wouldn't even notice that a consensual situation is different from a non-consensual situation.

Also, interesting that Gregoire points out these are "predominantly non-Christian boys." She's making the point that it's likely these boys don't believe it's a sin to have sex outside of marriage, and so it's likely that they'll see nothing wrong with having "sexual progression" if their partner is consenting. Therefore, it's weird that Feldhahn/Rice are using this to scare girls whose situation is totally different- for example, "pure" girls who have made it clear to their boyfriends that they are NOT interested in having sex.

Because purity culture is so oblivious to the concept of consent, there's this idea that non-Christian boys will totally coerce their girlfriends into having sex. If they don't believe it's a sin, then they have nothing to stop them, right? I remember Libby Anne wrote a really good blog post about this- Sex and Respect. Libby Anne talks about how completely confused she was when she started dating Sean, who was not a Christian and didn't believe sex was a sin, but also didn't pressure her into anything, simply because she told him she was not willing to do that. Honestly, yes, I understand how mind-blowing that is. He treated her like her unwillingness to have sex was a good enough reason on its own. He didn't care about the bible or sin or purity or whatever. He truly cared about respecting what she wanted or didn't want, and she said she did not want to have sex. And that is a good enough reason to stand on its own.

From a purity-culture perspective, that's wild and unbelievable.

Anyway, going back to Gregoire's blog post: She says that in order to get good data, we need to ask questions about 3 separate things: the respondents' own personal boundaries about sex, how they would behave in consensual situations, and how they would behave in nonconsensual situations. Here is how Gregoire would write these questions for boys:

Regardless of any past sexual experiences, which of the following statements best describes you currently:

  • I am saving sex for marriage
  • I do not feel I will be ready to have sex until I’m older
  • I am not sure if I am ready to have sex now or not
  • I feel ready to have sex now
  • I am actively having sex/I am actively pursuing a sexual partner

If you were in a make-out situation with a willing partner who does not signal a desire to stop, how likely are you to want to stop that sexual progression before it leads to sex?

  • Very likely – we would not have sex
  • Likely
  • Somewhat likely
  • Somewhat unlikely
  • Unlikely
  • Very unlikely – we would have sex

...

If you were in a make-out situation and your partner signalled she would like to stop, how likely are you to stop that sexual progression?

  • Very likely
  • Somewhat likely
  • Somewhat unlikely
  • Very unlikely

You may notice that the first question is not ace-friendly! It assumes that respondents definitely want to have sex eventually, and the question is whether it will be now, some time in the future, or only when they're married.

Also, yeah, like I said, look at how this "sexual progression" thing is talked about in this question. Like the idea that making out leads to sex... like it just assumes that everyone knows that's how it works.

(And Gregoire seems to think everyone is straight! How odd!)

Rebecca Lindenbach is Gregoire's co-blogger, and she chimes in here:

Note from Rebecca: You may have read “For Young Women Only” and not gotten the impression that Feldhahn and Rice were talking about non-consensual situations. We don’t think that they meant to talk to girls in date rape situations, but the problem is that they fail to emphasize that these are consensual situations. They fail to mention that these are situations where she wants it as much as he does. Instead, they tell girls to “watch out” and to be afraid of boys who have little ability and feel little responsibility to stop. If a girl were to be date raped, her boyfriend could easily use Shaunti’s own words to prove to her that it was, in fact, her fault without having to look too hard at all. The caveat in the book about rape means nothing when Feldhahn has written an entire chapter grooming girls for rapists and abusers to take advantage of them in the name of “it’s just too tough to stop the fun.”

Very good point! If a girl is raped, Feldhahn's exact words here say that it's the girl's fault for consenting to making out. She should have known that boys can't stop.

And continuing on, Gregoire says this:

Note that in the original question, Feldhahn asked about the boy’s ability to stop. What does that word imply in context? To imply that a boy may not have an ability to stop the sexual progression implies that some boys can’t help but rape (even in a consensual situation, one should still have an “ability” to stop). But she asked this in the same question she’s measuring boys’ desire to stop. In doing so, she conflates desire and ability to stop sex but then talks about them throughout the chapter as if they are one and the same.

This is very important. As I see it, there are 2 separate aspects of this: First, there's the question of whether people are overtaken with desire and lose their self-control and can't stop themselves from having sex. The answer to that is, if one person withdraws consent, then the other person does have the ability to stop, and should be held to that standard. And second, there's the safety issue. We need to warn girls that even though boys can stop, and should be held to that standard, there are boys out there who are rapists and you need to be aware of that danger. (If you meet a boy like that, don't date him! There exist boys who are not rapists- date them instead.)

These are 2 completely separate issues, but in purity teaching (such as what we see in Feldhahn/Rice's book) they are conflated. Purity culture teaches that boys really don't have the ability to stop themselves from having sex, if a girl has done something that arouses the boy. And therefore if a girl gets raped it's not really rape, it's just what happens when you're alone with a boy, you should have known that, and it's your own fault for kissing him. All boys are like that, they said.

But in reality: Boys can stop, but some of them don't because they choose to be rapists, and that's never the victim's fault, but as a practical matter you should be aware of the safety concerns associated with this. I have never EVER heard purity proponents discuss this as a safety issue; instead it's what you deserve if you commit the sin of kissing a boy/ being alone with a boy you're attracted to/ wearing clothes that you think the boy will like/ etc.

And about the first aspect, the question of whether one's desires can make it more difficult to put a stop to the, uh, "sexual progression." So... yes... okay I have no idea about having a desire for sex, but I can give an example from my own experience with cuddling. So, when I was dating my first boyfriend, let's call him BF1, there were times we were sitting on the couch together, late at night, in the common area of the dorm after everyone else had already gone back to their rooms. Sitting there, cuddling. Like, enjoying hugging each other. And we would say things like "oh I should really go back to my room, it's late, I have class tomorrow", or I would think things like, "I shouldn't spend so much time doing physical things like this with him- it's taking away my purity." But we would continue to sit there and cuddle for a while. It was very hard to leave and go to our separate dorm buildings for the night.

So, I am guessing that the idea that it's "hard" to "stop the sexual progression" is kind of like that. It feels so good and you want it, but also part of you doesn't want it, for reasons that feel kind of faraway and unimportant at that moment, and you just want to ignore those things and keep going. I feel like I can kinda understand that.

But if it's someone, right there, saying "no", or your partner laying there sort of unresponsive and you can't tell if they're enjoying it or not, uh, that's a much more serious thing than some vague guilty sense that you're not acting according to some moral decision you once made. That should be a major red flag, and pull you out of the "wow this feels so good" haze.

I really wonder how consent fits into this purity-culture narrative of a couple who was working so hard to be "pure" and not have sex, but then one night they "stumbled" and somehow ended up having sex and ruining their purity. (I also talked about this question in this post about the book "Boundaries in Dating."

One possibility is that Partner A doesn't really know what's going on or how to respond to it, doesn't feel like they have time to even stop and think about what they want, and Partner B keeps going and having sex with them- this is sexual assault. Partner B is raping Partner A. But books like "For Young Women Only" present this as just the normal way that it goes when you start kissing a boy- they don't say it's rape, they say this is how we can expect boys to behave, therefore girls must not even start any "sexual progression" at all. So Gregoire is saying that "For Young Women Only" is WRONG about this, and sending very harmful messages.

But what if it actually is consensual? What would that look like? I imagine it's like, both partners have said that they want to be "pure", but in that moment, keeping their "purity" feels unimportant, because of their attraction and desire, and so they make the decision to go ahead and have sex anyway. But, I imagine they usually don't say so explicitly. It's consensual in the sense that they are both choosing to do it, but, they don't actually say so out loud, and they don't ask each other for consent. They can't; that would be a sin. If you actually say out loud that you are choosing to have sex, that's a much more serious sin than "oh we got carried away and it just happened somehow." Yeah, in purity ideology, it's impossible to have a healthy understanding of consent. And my concern here is, how do you really know that your partner is consenting, if you didn't explicitly ask them? Sure, if you've had sex with them before and you can understand their nonverbal consent, that's fine, but I'm talking about a situation where 2 "pure" "virgins" "stumbled" and it "just happened."

And if you know the other person doesn't want to do it on some level... how does consent work in that case? Like you know the next day they're going to feel guilty for "losing their purity", but right now they are explicitly telling you that they consent. Do you have an obligation to say "no, I don't think you really want this" and put a stop to it? Or is that even worse, because you shouldn't act like you know what someone "really wants" better than they know themself?

Another comment from Gregoire's co-blogger, Rebecca Lindenbach:

Rebecca here for a minute: frankly, it’s bizarre to ask boys who want to have sex (as many non-Christian boys do) if they would have an “ability” to stop consensual sex! Can you imagine if this question were asked of married, Christian men? I’m pretty sure that more than 90% would answer, “Why would I want to stop?” Does that mean that over 90% of Christian married men are marital rapists? Of course not. They’d most likely be answering based on the “want” in the question, not the “able.” Of course we feel out of control during really good sex, but we know that we’re able to stop (I mean, if you were having sex and a raccoon jumped through your window onto the bed, you could stop is all I’m saying.)

YES! OH MY GOODNESS. Yes, absolutely, it is bizarre that they asked boys who presumably want to have sex whether they would be able to "stop" actions that were leading to sex. Wouldn't the respondents be confused, like "why would I want to stop?" (Which is the first option that Feldhahn/Rice offer as an answer to their survey question- but honestly it reads to me like the message that Feldhahn/Rice are trying to tell girls is "wow, look how SCARY boys are, they don't even WANT to stop, OH NO.")

It totally blows my mind that Lindenbach makes a comparison with married Christian men being asked if they would be able to stop "sexual progression" with their wives. She makes such a good point! But I have never EVER heard any comparison like that- in conservative Christian ideology, being married is a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT SITUATION than being unmarried. There is no comparison between a married couple and unmarried couple having sex. The unmarried couple is sinning! Oh, the horror!

And also this bit- "I mean, if you were having sex and a raccoon jumped through your window onto the bed, you could stop is all I’m saying." This little aside is MORE HELPFUL than any purity book I've ever read. Oh my goodness.

Because, in purity land, I got the impression that when you're having sex, it's like you're in a weird parallel universe where everything is different. Where you're just floating along on your feelings of attraction and love for your partner. Where everything just feels so good. A bizarre parallel universe where you have a desire to play around with each other's genitals. (??? Makes no sense on the face of it, so obviously sex must take place in a weird altered reality where that seems like a desirable thing to do.) And it feels so romantic, like you're "becoming one" with your partner, like you're "giving yourself", like you're expressing your love in the most deep and intimate way.

But, let me tell you, sex very much happens in this same reality that we live in. It's an extremely practical thing. You might feel cold. You might feel annoyed at how the blanket keeps slipping off you. You ask your partner "so, what position do you want to do?" You have to learn what method of playing-around-with-genitals works well for you. Sometimes your kid wakes up in the middle of the night and you have to stop having sex.

It's just messing around with each other's genitals, that's literally all it is. If that doesn't sound like something desirable, but you assume that when you're actually in that situation and you cross into the parallel universe, it will make more sense, well let me tell you, no, it doesn't. It really just is doing stuff with each other's genitals. In this universe.

This "racoon" comment makes me think about how totally surprised I was, when I first started having sex, and I was totally in control of my actions the whole time. Nothing happened "automatically." In fact, I couldn't even figure out how the penis is supposed to go in the vagina. (Because, it turns out I had vaginismus.) I had to spend a lot of time figuring that out. Like, thinking scientifically about it. A lot of trial-and-error. It is such a SCAM that for all these years, they had me afraid that sex was going to "just happen."

ANYWAY.

Then Gregoire says:

Rape is not a matter of inability; rape is a conscious choice. To imply that boys’ crossing girls’ boundaries is a matter of “inability” as Feldhahn and Rice did rather than as a matter of sin and abuse is highly problematic, to put it lightly.

AMEN TO THIS!

Next, Gregoire and Lindenbach have a bunch of criticism of the wording of Feldhahn and Rice's survey question response options. Yes, those options were badly written. I agree. (I won't quote all of that in this blog post- if you're interested, go read it in Gregoire's post.)

And then, Gregoire points out that Feldhahn/Rice's conclusion, "For a guy even more than a girl, making out often starts a physical drive towards sex that requires a major effort to override" makes a comparison between boys and girls, but this is not a valid use of the data because Feldhahn/Rice did not ask girls the same question!!!!!

The most similar question that Feldhahn and Rice asked the girls was this:

Many people joke that boys “only think about one thing.” This question is designed to determine whether girls think about and want that one thing as much as boys do. In your experience, if a girl and her boyfriend make out from time to time, but have not made the move to a sexual relationship, do you think the girl thinks about and physically wants sex with him as much as he probably does with her? {Choose One Answer}

  • [46%] Yes, I think in that situation she’s wanting to go to bed with him as much as he wants it (whether or not she actually does go to bed with him).
  • [42%] No, I think it’s probably the guy that most wants the relationship to progress to actual sex. Most girls would be fine with continuing to make out, without crossing that line.
  • [12%] No, I think it’s probably only the guy that wants the relationship to progress to actual sex, and she actively doesn’t want to cross that line (even if she enjoys making out).

(Note from Rebecca: I have… a lot of thoughts about this question.)

I too have a lot of thoughts about this question.

Like, my first impression reading "if a girl and her boyfriend make out from time to time, but have not made the move to a sexual relationship" is, that seems totally fine. They probably both enjoy that and don't need it to "move" to sex (here's that weird "sexual progression" idea again). But then the question assumes that the boy wants to have sex, and asks whether the girl wants it equal to how much the boy wants it, or less than how much the boy wants it. This is so bizarre! What if the boy doesn't want to "move" to sex? What if the girl wants sex more than the boy does? What if they want it but they choose not to because of their own personal boundaries? 

ALSO WHY ARE WE ASSUMING EVERYONE IS STRAIGHT?

And, uh, there's a lot more you can criticize in this question. (Like, I'm having a lot of trouble figuring out the difference between the 2nd and 3rd options.) But let's just move on instead of spending time on that.

Anyway, near the end of the post, Gregoire says this:

If a girl who had been date raped read this book, would she know that she had been assaulted? Or would she blame herself? After all, if you want to stop, it’s better not to start! Guys feel little responsibility or ability to stop. You should watch out. Be cautious. Guys need you to do the right thing.

This is rape culture. It formed the basis for a whole chapter in her book. And it was based on extremely faulty research methods.

Church, we simply must do better. Please. What are we doing to our teenage girls? And who are we expecting our boys to turn into?

I gotta say, I was very surprised to see Gregoire use the term "rape culture" here. Because, as far as I can tell, Gregoire is evangelical, and believes sex outside of marriage is a sin. I don't think I've seen people in that subculture use the term "rape culture."

Yeah, this is something that confuses me about Gregoire's post taking a stand against this purity-related date rape justification. I'm pretty sure Gregoire believes you shouldn't have sex outside of marriage. And, as I see it, there's a straight line from there to "it wasn't really rape." Here's how the logic goes:

  1. You shouldn't have sex before marriage
  2. because your virginity belongs to your future husband, and any sexual experience you have before marriage is taking away from what's his
  3. therefore if you have consensual sex before marriage, or if you are raped, both of those hurt your future husband- the difference is whether you are to blame or not
  4. therefore we should carefully scrutinize the victim's actions and see if she is to blame.
  5. Oh, you enjoyed the kissing? Wow that's suspicious. How could you be so reckless with something that belongs to your future husband? Really really shady to put your future husband at risk just because you enjoy kissing some other boy.
  6. Therefore it was your fault. It wasn't really rape.
I'm wondering which of points 1-5 Gregoire disagrees with, since she definitely disagrees with point 6, the conclusion.

When you introduce another person (the hypothetical future husband, or, sometimes, God) who is supposedly harmed by a woman's previous sexual experiences, then it becomes a totally different thing than if it's just about the victim and her safety and her healing and her right to have her consent respected.

All right, and 1 more thing I want to say: When I was dating my first boyfriend, BF1, I totally believed boys were all like this. Boys were all heartless leeches trying to take away my purity.

As it turned out, BF1 was a decent human being who respected my consent. But I totally didn't notice, because I had completely bought into the "you can't trust boys" warnings. BF1 said he wanted to kiss me, and I said no, and then weeks later I was surprised to find that he still wanted to kiss me but hadn't mentioned it, because he didn't want to pressure me. Like, it made no sense to me. I couldn't comprehend this idea of "he didn't want to pressure me"- because in purity culture, they said that boys are always pressuring girls, that's what you should expect from boys, they are all like that. And non-Christian boys, well, you should be even more scared of them, because they don't even have these beliefs about "purity" and "sin" holding them back. (BF1 was not a Christian.)

I didn't have a category to put him in. I didn't have any concept of the existence of boys capable of caring about girls' consent. Sure, I believed that if I explicitly said "no", a boy should stop, but that he would also tirelessly try to find ways to sneak around that. To pressure me, or set up a situation where I wouldn't say "no", and then he could get what he wanted.

And then, when my parents told me I could bring him home to visit for a week, I was very concerned about that. I thought, it's not a good idea, sleeping under the same roof... what if... you know... "one thing leads to another"... And BF1 was a bit horrified, like "you think I would try something???" And I tried to explain to him, no, it's not about you or "trying" something, it's like... you know... it will just happen if we're in a situation with too much temptation.

And he said, "I can control myself." Like it was so easy, he was so confident, he didn't see it as an issue at all. He was completely sure he wasn't going to accidentally rape anybody.

Then I was even more concerned because he apparently was not aware of this big terrible danger. He didn't know that sometimes people are trying not to have sex, but it somehow happens anyway, and this is how good Christians unfortunately lose their purity.

(If you're wondering- yes, in fact, he was right, it was not an issue at all.)

Anyway... 

So, to sum up: Feldhahn and Rice's purity-culture book "For Young Women Only" tells girls that boys have little ability to stop themselves from having sex, once you start making out with them. This is completely false. In reality, consent can be withdrawn at any time, and everyone is capable of respecting their partner's consent. I'm glad to see Gregoire calling attention to this and pointing out how harmful it is.

---

Related:

6 Ways Purity Culture Did NOT Teach Me About Consent 

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Sunday, March 19, 2023

The Shanghai Lockdown and Shared Trauma

Bloomberg photo from May 2, 2022, showing empty highways in Shanghai. Image source.

Complete list is here: Index of Posts About the March 2022 Shanghai Covid Outbreak 

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March 16-21, 2022: First lockdown. 6 days.

March 23 - May 31, 2022: Second lockdown. 69 days.

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On March 16, 2022, I wrote I'm in Lockdown. And... it lasted for 2 and a half months. 

What to say about it? It was bad. I don't want to go read my blog posts from then to summarize how bad it was. Actually just now I checked Wikipedia, and their article covers it well: 2022 Shanghai COVID-19 outbreak. Though, I will say, the Wikipedia article mentions food shortages, but just from the words "food shortage" you don't understand how bad it was.

I remember going outside to take out the trash every night- we were only allowed out of our apartment building to take out the trash and pick up deliveries- and there were no traffic sounds at all. No sounds of people walking down the street. Only birds. It was so quiet. So bizarre.

Little Square Root would watch all 4 Toy Story movies every day, while my husband and I worked from home.

And the vegetables we were able to get- they were raw, so raw. Dirt all stuck to the bottom. On more than one occasion, I found a live snail in the vegetables.

I wanted to decorate Easter eggs, but no, we didn't do that. Because we had no way of knowing when we would have the opportunity to buy more eggs. We couldn't use up any eggs on that.

And, I eat mushrooms now. I never really liked mushrooms before, but during the lockdown, that was what we had, so I ate them. And now I am fine with eating mushrooms.

And the fear and the anxiety... every day seeing all these things on social media- so many of them that the government couldn't censor them fast enough- and just stuck in our home wondering if it will happen to us. Will we need medical care and the ambulance won't come? Will our son test positive for covid and be taken away from us? Will we have to go to quarantine, and desperately try to find some pet service who can take our cat?

Something I was thinking about recently, is this: It feels so weird to think that everyone in Shanghai had similar traumatic experiences. Everyone. Every random person you see on the street. Every waitress at every restaurant. Every person you sit next to on the subway. They all have a story about what terrible things happened to them in March-April-May 2022.

Usually, with trauma, you don't talk about it because other people won't understand. But this is different. If I'm talking to someone in Shanghai and I mention something about not being able to buy food during lockdown, they will nod along, because they know. It happened to them too.

A few weeks after the lockdown ended, I was out with friends, and someone there was visiting from Beijing. He said he had heard all kinds of stories from people in Shanghai. "One of my colleagues from Shanghai organizes international training courses for hundreds of people," he said. "And then I heard that during the lockdown, she was organizing all her family members to click on an app at the same time, to try to buy some eggs." And we are all like, yeah. Yeah, that's what happened. That's what happened.

It's a weird thing, having a whole society of 25 million people, that all experienced this bad thing. Yes, some people had it worse than others. Some people continued to earn a salary during lockdown, some did not. Most people were locked down at home, but some were sleeping on the streets, at the airport, at their job. Some people already knew how to cook from scratch with Chinese vegetables, and some people didn't even own a pot. Thousands of people tested positive for covid and were taken to quarantine centers with terrible conditions. Some people had emergencies and couldn't get anyone to come help.

So, some had it worse than others, but still, it was bad for everyone.

I guess this is also what happens when a natural disaster strikes an area. Everyone there has a story about how bad it was for them. In my hometown, there was The Ice Storm. I'm too young to remember it, actually, but everyone who is from my hometown and is older than me knows about The Ice Storm.

You could say the same about the covid pandemic itself. Everyone in the world was affected by it, except maybe some isolated groups of people who have no contact with the rest of human society, I guess. 

And for international people in China- Every single one of us has a story about how we weren't able to get out of China and see our families for 3 years, or about how we jumped through so many hoops to get back into China and then stayed 14 days or 8 days or 21 days alone in a quarantine hotel (or, even worse, with a small child in a quarantine hotel). Or about getting stuck outside of China, for months, while your spouse and child are still in China. Or about going to another country in early 2020 to "wait it out" and then the border closes and the only thing you can do is find a shipping service to ship whatever things you really need from your apartment in China, and abandon the rest. Every international person in China has at least one of those traumas.

Such a strange thing... We don't talk about it, but we all lived through it. And if someone did talk about it, everyone would nod along and say "that happened to me too."

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Links:

China Briefing

China to Resume Issuing All Types of Visas for Foreigners (March 14) Okay, this is HUGE, why can I not find a decent English article on it? There's just this paywalled Wall Street Journal article, and "China Briefing", a site I have never heard of. Also this one from Reuters but it's not exactly what I'm looking for, though it does generally cover the same information. (The perspective I was looking for was, "YOU GUYS. Here are the new visa policies" which is what the China Briefing article is, though in more formal language.)

Anyway, this is HUGE! Tourist visas to China! And if you had a tourist visa issued before March 28, 2020, that visa is now valid again (as long as it's not expired now- these are 10-year visas). Important background info on that is, on March 28, 2020, China banned all foreigners from entering the country, even if you had a valid visa or residence permit.

This is like, wow. Getting very close to "back to normal."

The New York Times

U.S. Will Lift Covid Testing Requirement for Travelers From China (March 8)

Sixth Tone

Past the Peak, China’s Schools Prep For a Normal Semester (February 13)

That's Mags [not sure if this will load if you are outside China- I couldn't get it to load with VPN on]

6 Countries Scrap PCR Test for China Returnees (February 28) On February 28, Chinese embassies in Cambodia, Hungary, Malaysia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Sri Lanka announced that travelers coming from these 6 countries will not be required to get covid-tested to enter China. It's likely that more and more countries will be added to the list, as time goes on.

SHINE

Up close with Disney characters once again (March 6) So, during the past 3 years, when you go to Shanghai Disneyland and meet characters, there are marks on the floor showing where you have to stand, to social-distance from the Disney characters. (And this is enforced! There are only 2 places I've seen social-distancing enforced in China. The other one was standing in line for covid-testing during lockdown.) Apparently that's over now.

Hong Kong to lift mask mandate from March 1 (February 28)

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Blogaround

1. My Latest Book! On “The Many Lives of Psalm 91” (December 8) I am a huge bible nerd, so I am really interested in this book.

2. And it leaves me reeling (March 14) Another very good post from the Slacktivist about revival. Referring to the revival that almost maybe started in 2015, he says, "But whatever revival might have begun there was quickly squelched as InterVarsity began furiously backpedaling, insisting that none of the repentance and renewal pledged by thousands of young people at that event would be allowed to become meaningful or lasting."

3. Why the Effort to Make the Texas Abortion Bans More Humane Is Doomed (March 14) "From the time of previous eras’ abortion bans, exceptions were tailored more to prevent free access to the procedure than to address real problems in pregnancy, and state abortion laws today are no exception."

4. Oscars 2023: Everything Everywhere All At Once cleans up with seven awards (March 13) Yes!

5. Handsome Dancer - Coincidance (2015) Okay I'm sure I must have posted this video before, but this is so ridiculous and funny and everyone needs to watch it.

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