Paul’s Corinthian Letter

peter and paul from the greek orthodox church websiteAs I’ve written about in prior posts, in my forthcoming book I do a wee bit of tracking the history of the relationship to the human body. Of course, one of the highlights is the Christian relationship to the body, and the writings of St. Paul. Here’s a small passage that explains that as founded, Christianity sees sex, and the concerns of the body, as an impediment to holiness. Holiness in human form – Jesus – being the guide for all humans, rejection and denial of the body is inevitable. This has strongly influenced how we today consider our bodies….

Christian writings make a tie to the body as impediment to a higher spiritual calling. The Apostle Pauls famous Corinthian Letter responds to the community in Corinth, which was agitating to create a Utopic society in preparation for the coming of Christ. As Peter Brown establishes in his brilliant text The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity, the Corinthians proposed a radical ideal.

[The Corinthians] would undo the elementary building blocks of conventional society. They would renounce marriage. Some would separate from pagan spouses; others would commit themselves to perpetual abstinence from sexual relations. The growing children for whose marriages they were responsible would remain virgins. As consequential as the Essenes, they would also free their slaves. Somewhat like the little groups described by Philo outside Alexandria, men and women together would await the coming of Jesus holy in body and spirit.

At a time when Christianity was just growing, the Corinthians radical notions threatened the inclusion of more mainstream elements, and so Paul wrote to put down this rebellion. That a critical concept within the religious fringe was abstinence is telling. That Paul himself was celibate points directly to early Christianitys troubled relationship to the body. In ministering the Corinthians toward sex, his words expose a very negative conception of the act. In Corinthians 7:36-38 Paul wrote:

If any one thinks that he is not behaving properly toward his betrothed [in some versions virgin], if his passions are strong, and it has to be, let him do as he wishes; let them marry – it is no sin. But whoever is firmly established in his heart, being under no necessity but having his desire under control, and has determined this in his heart, to keep her as his betrothed, he will do well. So that he who marries his betrothed does well; and he who refrains from marriage will do better.

Paul declares that marriage is a negative, undertaken only to ward off the sin of sex before marriage. Second, marriage, and sex, are negatives that are better to be refrained from altogether. Paul states this even more clearly in an earlier passage, Chapter 7 verses 32-34.

I want you to be free from anxieties. The unmarried man is anxious about the affairs of the Lord, how to please the Lord; but the married man is anxious about worldly affairs, how to please his wife, and his interest are divided. And the unmarried woman or girl is anxious about the affairs of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit; but the married woman is anxious about worldly affairs, how to please her husband.

Marriage calls into question the ability to focus on the Lord. Married people lack the quality of what Brown analyzes as “the undivided heart”, and are therefore lesser Christians than those who are married solely to Gd.

[excerpt from Somatic Ecology, copyright R. Bettmann 2009]

The purpose for me in researching this was to document exactly how negative our culture is in relating to the body. That negativity, with ancient roots, has some modern expressions.

and the day came…

Was just on flickr to do a random photoshop thing (thx JG) and saw this, and really liked it. The image isn’t that awesome. and the quote isn’t either. but somehow the two together were profound to me, for, I don’t know, thirty seconds.

Here it is:

day 341: and the day came when the risk
to remain tight in a bud was more painful
than the risk it took to blossom


copyright pam.ela on flickr

Quote by Anais Nin. (was on the flickr page – not my idea to combine.)

My thirty seconds of profound appreciation, it should be noted, was shorter than the amount of time it took me to write this post. ciest la vie.

The Creative Impulse

I don’t really have an understanding of my own creative impulse, though I do try to. Why do some people talk slowly, and others quickly? I do know that I didn’t dance today, and now can’t sleep. I haven’t written any new stories in quite some time, and was just now revisiting some old ones… Here is a new edit of “He Was Happy Here”, which I first wrote in ’06. I’ve heard before that there are a lot of characters for such a short piece – that it’s hard to follow.

He Was Happy Here

“Yeah well, I still dont believe he moved! I mean didnt he say he was happy here?”

Julie was scared by the inconstancy of geographic allegiances.

The loneliness that followed her parents move to Tuscon when she was 16 had been motivational: running for school underclass president had given her a means to connect to those around her. Then teaching. School board. Night MBA. Business Council. City Council. Mayor of Tuscon. Some friends – mostly the new ones – talked about the senate.

“I mean, really, can you count on him for anything?”

James had been Julies finance committee chair in her first election, and had remained involved. He had always said he would never leave Tuscon.

Susan was a new friend:

“Well, ya know, right? Mark shot himself in James home while he was away at Sundance.”

The brilliance of Susans insight was matched by the sheen of her nails. No flamingos. No designs of any kind. Just CLASS. One and a half inches of sheeny class, buffed like a well-loved gun.

Julie had cooked for Mark. Many times. Distraction, she frequently thought, that is the answer. People dwell too much. Just dont think about it: oh look there is a new restaurant on Felton St., and a sale on potting soil at Smith and Hawken.

“hmm, what was that – why is he moving? Oh, right, yeah, I heard. Well I still say you shouldnt say you stand for one thing if you stand for another. If you cant trust someone to keep their word on one issue, how can we know hell keep it on another?”

She was already practicing.

“Im thinking of having my next brunch at the Edison house.”

The Edison House on Hollow Dr. received its name from the fact that Thomas Edison had slept there in 1879. His rest in the building had been before it was a hotel, and before anyone knew who Thomas Edison was, but it was good sales.

Julie thought of how Mark had been happy in her home. How he had slept there. Did people ever put up those signs in their own homes, or was it just hotels? Maybe James should have his home designated, registered. She could make it happen. “Mark was happy here.” Before he shot himself on the night of April 21st while finishing off the last of Jamess Glenlivet and Codeine. No, wrong kind of thing to remember. Distraction. Just: he was happy here, and then nothing.

copyright 2006 – R. Bettmann

It’s surprisingly tricky to find character names. This edit makes the fourth or fifth name for the leading lady. I know so many people, and this one isn’t based on any particular humans. And even if it was, there’s little chance I’d actually make an allusion of that sort with a character name. Just not my style. How do you pick a name when you have relationships with each common name?

Please offer your feedback: smoke em if you got em.