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Bruce Jenner’s Transformation Is A Lose-Lose For Liberal Ideology
Bruce Jenner’s Transformation Is A Lose-Lose For Liberal Ideology
Culture
Bruce Jenner’s Transformation Is A Lose-Lose For Liberal Ideology
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Bruce Jenner’s Vanity Fair coming-out party reaffirms traditional gender norms, even as he attempts to flee from them.
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By Daniel Davis
June 3, 2015
THE FEDERALIST
[emphasis in boldface type by Abyssum]
Judging from the new cover of Vanity Fair, it appears that Bruce Jenner’s highly publicized transformation to purported womanhood has finally reached its climax. The title reads, “Call me Caitlyn.” The actual meaning? “Call me woman.”
As we’ve seen in recent months, the transgender movement sees itself as the next civil-rights frontier. It clearly hopes to copy the LGBT movement in winning public approval by securing more and more media exposure. But as the movement makes its public appeal, some internal contradictions in liberal sexual ideology are quickly emerging. One major contradiction looms large for the transgender movement, and it deserves attention.
The Deconstruction of Everything
For years, a major aim of the sexual revolution has been to deconstruct gender differences as being “social constructs,” mere cultural projections of what maleness and femaleness are and mean. This critique evacuated gender of any physical meaning and reduced it to an existential feeling—a feeling of being male or female, regardless of one’s sexual biology.
The effect of this critique has been to relativize gender, and thus to abolish it as a meaningful category. Because you can no longer tie “femaleness” to a normative set of traits or acts (for example, wearing dresses or marrying men), the category itself cannot help but lose its meaning. To call any particular act a “male” or “female” act would be to revert back to antiquated, repressive, patriarchal norms—norms that only serve to foster social inequality.
This is the ideology that governs liberal sexual philosophy, and it collides head-on with major aspects of the transgender movement. Transgenderism is unavoidably based on a kind of gender essentialism. It recognizes gender identities as being associated with certain socially accepted norms. What does it mean, for example, that Jenner’s “gender” is female? It means that he gets a sex change. It means that he poses in traditionally female attire for the cover of Vanity Fair. It means that he reaffirms traditional gender norms, even as he attempts to flee from them.
So Now Femininity Has Meaning?
In fact, he cannot help but reaffirm them, for they are the only tangible way of expressing gender. Inner feelings must inevitably take on flesh, and gender—understood as a mere feeling—must inevitably express itself in material form.
This is a problem for the broader liberal sexual movement. It wants to celebrate transgenderism, but it cannot do so without referring to—and thus, at least tacitly affirming—gender norms. To celebrate Jenner’s femininity is actually to commit a liberal heresy: to revert back to a form of gender essentialism.
There’s a flip side to this coin. As we noted, liberal sexual philosophy strips the term “gender” of all normative meaning. It reduces gender to a cultural phenomenon. In doing this, it robs transgenderism of its key claims to gender authenticity, and therefore of its right to moral affirmation. Consider it this way: If gender has no real connection to biology and certain social traits, then someone’s claim to a gender identity is virtually meaningless. And if it is meaningless, how can we be morally obliged to recognize it—let alone even understand it?
Marc Lamont Hill of the Huffington Post caught on to at least part of this problem on Twitter recently. After making clear that he supports for Jenner’s new gender identity, check what he wrote below.
Hill understands that affirming someone’s gender identity involves affirming some cultural instantiation of that gender identity. As a post-colonial liberal, he wants to tear down those standards because, in his view, they perpetuate social injustice and gender inequality. Hill wants to affirm people’s gender identity in the abstract, but refrain from affirming the particular instantiation of that identity.
Unfortunately for Hill, the transgender community is seeking an embodied affirmation, one that sees gender identities as rightly fitting with a certain biology, a certain set of clothes—a lived femininity. Caitlyn Jenner doesn’t want to be affirmed in the abstract. He wants America to affirm his gender identity in terms of a lived femininity, and that means affirming his sex change and clothes as feminine. Those cultural norms are exactly the kind of “repressive” gender norms that Hill and other progressives want to abolish.
Hence, the liberal contradiction. If you truly celebrate Jenner’s transition, you have to do it by recognizing some cultural narrative about womanhood, thereby perpetuating gender “inequality.” But if you’re committed to the abolition of gender norms, there’s no way you can affirm Jenner’s femininity, except in the meaningless abstract. It’s a lose-lose.
What Is Gender, Anyway?
The root problem that led to this contradiction was the divorcing of gender from sexual biology and social traits. Having critiqued gender norms as being social constructs (and oppressive ones at that), gender has now become a free-floating abstraction that is wholly disconnected from material norms.
The glaring problem is that for gender to actually mean anything, it must instantiated in particular ways of being—a particular biology, particular clothes, and a particular way of relating to the opposite sex. Even if these ways of being were all socially constructed, they would be essential to any meaningful understanding of gender. When gender is unhinged from biological sex and from generic social traits, it is an empty term, devoid of content and meaning.
The transformation of Bruce Jenner into Caitlyn Jenner only proves this reality. For Bruce to actualize his “true gender”—his femininity—he had to get a sex change and dress up as a woman. His “gender” had obvious implications for how he would live.
There’s no getting around this connection between gender and sex, between gender and social traits. It testifies to the eternal fact that human beings are fundamentally soul and body. However much we might try to be gender Gnostics and suppress this objective connection between the body and the soul, we cannot achieve the separation. Just as the soul depends on the body, gender depends on biology. If we wish to speak of gender, we must speak of the body—and that’s not going to change.
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Daniel Davis is a writer and 2014 graduate of Wheaton College. After graduating, he moved to Washington DC to intern at the American Enterprise Institute. He currently interns at Townhall Media and regularly writes for Values & Capitalism. Email him at daniel.davis@my.wheaton.edu.
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Between the Vanity Fair spread and “she’s so pretty” convos, we’ve smuggled in the same old cis/Eurocentric narratives about womanhood.
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@marclamonthill wooooo tell it
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@marclamonthill Thank you.
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@marclamonthill not to mention how quick people are to shame Kris Jenner bc Caitlyn is pretty.
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@marclamonthill She chose to do the spread. Sorry, we cis folks don’t get to tell trans people how to present themselves to the world.
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@marclamonthill I wouldn’t tell a black person how they should position themselves for equality.
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@marclamonthill‘s mentions about be


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@Jewles My critique isn’t of HER, it’s of US.
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@marclamonthill Don’t think you can tell a trans person how they should choose to position themselves. Not your place.
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@marclamonthill so true. Money bought that beauty – plain and simple. It’s not that way for less advantaged trans ppl.
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@marclamonthill Why specifically say the Vanity Fair spread is the problem then?
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@marclamonthill Sorry, I just feel like cis people have to take the bench on this. Not our struggle, not our place.
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@Jewles Im not feeling his stream of tweets right now either. Youre expressing yourself better than I can
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@Jewles@marclamonthill I think it’s problematic when we urge folks to “bench” any voice that affirms#TransLives speaking for themselves.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill He’s NOT affirming her voice. He’s making her decision about HIS agenda. It doesn’t work that way.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill Cis people don’t get to tell trans people they shouldn’t want to be beautiful even if it is “eurocentric.
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@Jewles@marclamonthill is accurate on the pervasiveness of a Eurocentrism in validating narratives in all stories of oppression.
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@Jewles@marclamonthill Well I believe he said “we’ve” and laters refers to “us”. The critique is laid at our cis-portrays of TransLives
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill I’ve not seen anyone say her transition is only laudable because she’s a pretty white woman.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill So either I know good people or I’m just an idiot.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill MY critique is of him insisting on creating negativity where there was none previously.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill It’s not an issue that has anything to do with him or the causes he furthers.
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@GabrielPaul_M@marclamonthill He’s inserting himself in a situation that has nothing to do with him.
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M But that’s not what I’m saying. My critique is not of Caitlyn AT ALL. Not even a little bit.
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@Jewles@marclamonthill Well now we need to have a conversation on respectability &white privilege in the framing of TransLives in that case
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M I’m critiquing how we only accept certain Trans lives. The ones that fit hegemonic notions of femininity.
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M I’m challenging US to do better.
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@marclamonthill@GabrielPaul_M Well then your “we” doesn’t include anyone I’ve seen talking about her today.
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M And on what basis do you decide what has to do with me? Or the causes I further?
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M For the record, I’ve been doing trans advocacy for years. I’ve written, organize, and worked for decades.
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@marclamonthill@GabrielPaul_M The people saying “oh she’s pretty” aren’t the problem, the people killing trans people are.
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@marclamonthill Kind of funny though, because a lot of European women are hairy, have bigger noses… Not celebrated traits.
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M Agreed. But that’s connected to a culture that believes trans bodies shouldn’t exist. We simply exceptionalize a few.
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@Jewles Were not personalizing individual stories We’re looking at the framing of lives that are celebrated & whose aren’t.@marclamonthill
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M Well obviously, “we” doesn’t literally include every human being in the world. It’s a general critique of our culture
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@marclamonthill@GabrielPaul_M I agree, that is most definitely an issue, but that’s not what you initially said is all.
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@marclamonthill@GabrielPaul_M And now that I have people attacking me for pointing that out, I’m gonna end this convo.
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@GabrielPaul_M@Jewles@marclamonthill Laverne Cox is a great example of not having white privilege & acknowledged non-Euro Centric beauty
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M I don’t know who’s “attacking” you. I’m simply responding to your critique. I believe I’ve done so respectfully.
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@marclamonthill I didn’t say you were attacking me, but mentions are exploding with people doing just that, so I think I’m all set.
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@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M But I am curious to know why you say that trans rights aren’t something that I’ve engaged, or are a “cause” for me.
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@marclamonthill I’ve not memorized your resume. My apologies.
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@Jewles I wasn’t asking nor was I expecting you to have memorized my resume. Such a statement implies that I was the one being presumptuous.
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@marclamonthill No snark intended,but what does “cis” mean?I googled it and just got sociology mumbo/jumbo.Would really like to understand.
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@Jewles I was just curious to know why u made the assumption rather than ask or research.Memorization or previous knowledge wasn’t necessary
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@marclamonthill Then why should I automatically KNOW you’re a trans activist?
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@SKiNNYiLL@marclamonthill yes, yes thank you for saying that.
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@Jewles That said, it’s all good. I just didn’t think that characterization was fair. And I’m sorry if you felt “attacked” by me or others.
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@marclamonthill I’ve not ever seen you mention trans issues in the time I’ve been following you, is all.
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@marclamonthill@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M Society likes to celebrate “passable” Transgender individuals. The good looking ones are acceptable
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@intreeg_me@Jewles@marclamonthill I love me some Laverne! I hope WE can continue to affirm TransLives of color to let stand n their truth!
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@marclamonthill Once again, never said I felt attacked by you, and you needn’t apologize for others.
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@Jewles All good. Here’s one piece I’ve done: http://www.ebony.com/news-views/why-arent-we-fighting-for-cece-mcdonald …
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@marclamonthill@Jewles@GabrielPaul_M Most don’t have the luxury of money to pay to make themselves look “beautiful”.
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@marclamonthill I’m just not interested in seeing cis folks try to tell trans people what to do, which is what your first tweets suggested
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@marclamonthill I also think that we can still celebrate that even marginal acceptance of any public trans figures is a big deal
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@Jewles I didnt say u should automatically know i was one.I’m saying u didn’t have to automatically say i WASN’T one.There are other options
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@Jewles But again, I’m not interested in dwelling on that point. As you said, there are so many life or death issues to talk about…
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@Jewles Agreed. It’s a big deal. But I want to do my part, as an ally, to push the conversation forward.
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@Jewles My first tweet was telling the rest of the world what to do, not trans folk.
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@marclamonthill I get that now, but it doesn’t read that way is all. The limits of 140 characters.
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@SFDiva2@marclamonthill Cis basically means one identifies with their sex designated to them at birth.
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@marclamonthill LOL! A man lecturing me about womanhood? How precious!
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@40MulesAnd1Acre how did I lecture you about womanhood?
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The latest tragic twist in the “Bruce Jenner saga” (more on that below) illustrates yet again one of the great errors of our day: the rejection of the truth that our bodies have something to tell us about who we are and what we are called to do and be. Most moderns see the body as merely a tool of sorts. Assertions are made that one can do as one pleases with one’s own body, and that a person’s sex (male or female) is purely incidental—merely an arbitrary quality one “happens to have.” Many say that our sex should not speak to anything deeper than genitals and that other “mere” physical differences are to be set aside to one degree or another. In effect, it would seem that our bodies have little or nothing to say to us. According to modern culture they are incidental.
The rejection of the body as instructive or in any way determinative has reached its zenith in the attempted normalization of homosexual activity, the redefinition of marriage, and now, sexual “reassignment” surgery.
As regards homosexual acts, any non-ideological analysis of the body will indicate that the man was not made for the man, nor the woman for the woman. Rather, the man is made for the woman and the woman for the man. This is set forth quite clearly in the pure physicality of things. St. Paul calls homosexual acts παρὰ φύσιν (para physin), meaning “contrary to the nature of things.”
As regards so-called sex “reassignment” surgery, I must point out that the soul is the form of the body. Now of course I can hear the objection that somehow we are not only physical beings and thus to use simply physical arguments is not proper. While this is true, but the body cannot be ignored. The soul is the form of the body. That is to say, our soul, its essence and abilities, gives rise to the structure and physical attributes of the body.
What is meant by saying that the soul is the form of the body? Consider for a moment a glove. What is the form of a glove? What determines how a glove is formed, shaped, and designed? Well, of course, it is the hand. It is both the shape of the hand and its capacities that give rise to the design and function of the glove. A glove with only three fingers or one with eight fingers would be a poor glove indeed. The proper form of the glove is the hand. And it is not just the shape of the hand that dictates the design of the glove, it is also the required functioning of the hand. Fingers need to move and work together for the hand to achieve its purpose. A glove that was extremely stiff and permitted the fingers no movement would be a poor glove. A good glove protects the hand but also permits it to achieve its proper end. Thus the fully functioning hand is the form (or blueprint) of the glove.
In the same way, the soul is the form (or blueprint) of the body. Our bodies have the design they do because of the capacities of our souls. We are able to talk because our souls have something to say. Our fingers are nimble yet strong because our souls have the capacity to work at tasks that require both strength and agility. We have highly developed brains because our souls have the capacity to think and reason. Animals have less of all this because their souls have little capacity in any of these regards. My cat, Daniel, does not speak. This is not just because he has no larynx; Daniel has no larynx because he has nothing to say. The lack of capacity in his animal soul (or life-giving principle) is reflected in the design of his body.
Sexuality is more than skin-deep. When it comes to sexuality in the human person, our sex (or as some incorrectly call it, gender, (gender is a grammatical term that refers to the classification of nouns and pronouns)) is not just a coin toss. Our soul is either male or female and our body reflects that fact. I don’t just “happen” to be male; I am male. My soul is male; my spirit is male; hence, my body is male. So called “sex-change” operations are a lie. Cross-dressing is a lie. “Transgender” and other made-up and confused assertions cannot change the truth of what the soul is. You can adapt the body but you cannot adapt the soul. The soul simply says, “Sum quod sum” (I am what I am).
The modern age has chosen simply to set all this aside and to see the body as incidental or arbitrary. This is a key error and has led to a lot of confusion. We have already seen how the widespread approval of homosexual acts has stemmed from this, but there are other confusions that have arisen as well.
Consider for example how the body speaks to the question of marriage. That the body has a nuptial (i.e., marital) meaning is literally inscribed in our bodies. God observed of Adam “It is not good for the man to be alone.” This fact is also evident in our bodies. I do not wish to be too explicit here but it is clear that the woman has physical aspects that are designed to find completion in union with a man, her husband. Likewise the man has physical aspects that are designed to find completion with a woman, his wife. The body has a “nuptial” meaning. It is our destiny; it is written in our nature to be in a complementary relationship with “the other.” But the complementarity is not just a physical one. Remember, the soul is the form (or blueprint) of the body. Hence, the intended complementarity extends beyond the physical, to the soul. We are made to find completion in the complementarity of the other. A man brings things to the relationship (physical and spiritual) that a woman cannot. A woman brings things to the relationship (physical and spiritual) that a man cannot. It is literally written in our bodies that we are generally meant to be completed and complemented by someone of the “opposite” (i.e., complementary) sex. And this complementarity is meant to bear fruit. The physical complementarity of spouses is fertile, fruitful. Here, too, the body reflects the soul. The fruitfulness is more than merely physical; it is spiritual and soulful as well.
It is true that not everyone finds a suitable marriage partner. But, from the standpoint of the nuptial meaning of the body, this is seen as less than ideal rather than as merely a neutral “alternative” lifestyle called the “single life.” (Uh-oh, there I go again.) If one is single with little possibility of this changing, then the nuptial meaning of the body is lived through some call of love and service to the Church (understood as the Bride of Christ or the Body of Christ), and by extension to the community.
Another consideration in this has to be the question of celibacy in the Church and of the male priesthood. If the body has, among other things, a nuptial meaning, whence do celibacy and virginity for the sake of the Kingdom find their place? Simply in this: priests and religious sisters are not single. A religious sister is a bride of Christ. She weds her soul to Christ and is a beautiful image of the Church as bride (cf Eph 5:21ff). Fully professed sisters even wear the ring. As a priest, I do not consider myself a bachelor. I have a bride, the Church. She is a beautiful, though demanding, bride! And do you know how many people call me “Father”? The religious in my parish are usually called “Sister,” but the Superior is called “Mother” by all of us. And here, too, our bodies reflect the reality of our call. A woman images the Church as bride. A man images Christ as groom.
It is another error of modern times to say that a woman can be a priest. Jesus Christ didn’t just “happen” to be a man. He is the Groom of the Church; the Church is His Bride. The maleness of the Messiah, Jesus, was not just the result of a coin toss. Nor was it rooted merely in the “sociological requirements of the patriarchal culture of his time.” It is not merely incidental to His mission. He is male because He is groom. The priests who are configured to Him are also male because the body has a nuptial meaning and the Church is in a nuptial relationship to Christ. Christ is the groom; the priests through whom He ministers to His bride are thus male. To say that a female can image the groom is, frankly, silly. It demonstrates how far our culture has gone in thinking of the body as merely incidental, rather than essential and nuptial.
The body does not lie. Our culture lies and distorts, but the body does not. Many today choose to consider the body incidental, a mere tool that can be refashioned at will. But the Church is heir to a well-tested and far longer understanding that the body is essential, not incidental, to who we are. Our differences are more than skin deep. The soul is the form (or blueprint) of the body and thus our differences and our complementarity are deep and essential. Our dignity is equal, but our complementarity cannot and should not be denied. God himself has made this distinction and intends it for our instruction. The body does not lie and we must once again choose to learn from it.
Bruce Jenner needs our concern, not our applause. He cannot undo his maleness by amputation and silicone bags. There is something deeply sad here in him and those like him. They need real help to accept themselves as God made them. Some years ago, Johns Hopkins Hospital stopped doing these surgeries since many of the staff there were uncomfortable cutting off healthy organs and mutilating bodies. Dr. Paul McHugh of Johns Hopkins explained recently why it is better to understand this issue as one of mental illness that deserves care not affirmation:
This intensely felt sense of being transgendered constitutes a mental disorder in two respects. The first is that the idea of sex misalignment is simply mistaken–it does not correspond with physical reality. The second is that it can lead to grim psychological outcomes.” [Elsewhere in the article he notes the high suicide rates, etc.]
The transgendered person’s disorder, said Dr. McHugh, is in the person’s “assumption” that they are different than the physical reality of their body, their maleness or femaleness, as assigned by nature. It is a disorder similar to a “dangerously thin” person suffering anorexia who looks in the mirror and thinks they are “overweight,” said McHugh. [**]
There is something equally sick in the so-called “transabled movement” wherein people cut off their own limbs because they “feel” like their body is supposed to be disabled. The disown certain limbs and use power saws to cut them off. Please tell me the difference between those who cut off limbs and those who mutilate their gentiles or cut off breasts. More on the “transabled” movement here: Choosing to be disabled
We are in a time of grave distortion and even the loss of simple common sense. It doesn’t seem that things can get much more confused than “gender reassignment.” I am sure, however, that things are going to get a lot more confused. But this confusion is not for us, fellow Christians. Our bodies are not ours to do with as we please. They are not canvases to be tattooed with slogans or endlessly pierced; they are not to be used for fornication, adultery, or homosexual acts. Neither are they to be mutilated or carved up into apparently new forms.
Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and that you are not your own? For you have been bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body (1 Cor 6:19-20).
Do not be deceived. Do not be confused. God was not “mistaken” in the sex He made you. Whatever internal drives, temptations, or disturbing thoughts one might have, the body was not made for sexual immorality or to be mutilated based on any internal rejection of our self. The call for every human being is to be chaste and to love our body as from God.
There is a quirky and clever video that turns the table on the question of ordination. It also goes a long way to say that we cannot, in the end, simply pretend to be what we are not. Our bodies do not lie, even if we try to.

Marc Lamont Hill
Lex
Lisa Bloom
#BlackLivesMatter
Julianna
A.L.I.S.T.
Miss Anne Thrope
MaidenOfThottingham
Gabriel Paul
Ingrid Elkner
Trill Since tha 90’s
SFDiva
Nan Hayes
Eric Stamps
40MulesAnd1Acre
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