Singleness and Humanity

by the Rev’d Dr Lucy Morris

In today’s world, the concept of singleness is rich, complex and full of variety. There are
as many perspectives on the subject as there are people. So I’d better state at the start of
this reflection, I speak as someone who has never been truly legally or relationally single
as an adult, as I married my partner once we had completed university. So I write as an
observer, listener in many conversations and a reader.

This reflection is being written at this time because I attended the Anglican Church of
Australia’s General Synod in May 2022 and listened to a rhapsodical concept of chaste
singleness intentionally contrived to fit within the conservative biblical constraints
controlling sexuality. It was debated as a formal statement to the Synod within the context
of other debates about same-sex relationships, marriage and human sexuality, drenched
with theology, hermeneutics and exegesis.

The statement Affirming Singleness was written in support of the Anglican Church of
Australia’s Faithfulness in Service’s Code of Conduct for Clergy and Lay Church Workers.
The Statement endorsed the widely contested requirement all are called to take
‘responsibility for their sexual conduct by maintaining chastity in singleness and
faithfulness in marriage.’ (FIS7.2)

In the debate, singleness was envisaged as a blessing with sexuality the controlling lens
used to describe the whole gamut of experiences in the fullness of our humanity. This is
skewed to ensure the concept of ‘singleness’ keeps control of recalcitrant sexual bodies
and minds, and predominantly, female bodies and those who dared to claim different
sexualities and gender identities.

I realise I am writing six weeks after the debate so this reflection is in response to my
emotional memory as much as from what I can remember spoken by the mover, Rev’d Dr
Danielle Treweek of the Statement itself and subsequent debate.

Chaste singleness was defined in ‘relation’ to marriage, between two people, one male,
one female, and chaste singleness or heterosexual marriage, are the only acceptable
states for human beings; and, only when married can sex be permitted for the purpose of
procreation.

The definitions and perspective felt thin, narrow and controlling, without the rich diversity of
God’s creation seen with the eyes of love. It was seen through narrowed eyes of
judgement, careful boundaries discriminating the approved and the unacceptable. The
‘other’ was the shadow of singleness which had dared to shift perhaps into partnering
without marriage and such people who were therefore unchaste, or displayed by others
who were non-heterosexual, and obviously not ‘normal’, even though apparently loved,
while certainly pitied, rejected and needing to be fixed. Such a variation cannot, I’m told be
considered as right or God-blessed. Chastity until marriage along with the experience of
singleness was conflated and both characteristics of living as single or as a couple, must
ensure chastity is maintained until the person/couple is married, or they and God’s world
will disintegrate.

Singleness has been culturally weaponized, both out of judgement and pity, historically
and currently. This was evident in some of the debate at General Synod as well as more generally in our Australian Christian culture. Singleness was acknowledged as being an
experience both desired and dreaded, but it did not deal with our culture which still
perceives it as an apparent deficit and has established economic, relational and
theological barriers which are unhelpful.

Singleness is seen as being a failure in many cultures, for both women and men.

Singleness has become an impossible barrier to living a ‘desirable’ life with our economic
structures designed for couples, where two incomes are needed to pay the rent or
mortgage! Singleness has been a consequence in some cultures through the lack of
women available to marry or refusal of women or men to marry to suit the cultural
expectations. The demands by parents for children to marry and have children is
becoming an impossible burden. Desired singleness was offered as a paean of praise and
justified by New Testament writers, while the single person behaved themselves sexually
and culturally appropriately in their binary gendered norms.

Marriage has always been intended economically to consolidate assets and power of
families through control of bodies and personhood and maintaining ownership of chattels –
children through procreation and proven, controllable paternity.

In these contested times, the internet has, contradictorily, made it harder to meet other
people and covid has slammed shut opportunities for relationships to flourish by physical
connections. The absence of family physically close by has intensified for many the need
to reinvest in physical proximity and closer relationships while the search for a partner has
become harder for those who wish for one.

In my parish, I have couples who are married but live apart, couples not married who live
together. Older couples choosing not to marry because of the burden of supporting
families and financial expectations from children when they die and the desire to avoid
arguments, conflict and the tax man. Their shared intimacy enables singleness and
togetherness to be redefined joyfully and differently in their respect for each other and love
for God.

People also live apart because our culture and theology deny them respect and
recognition for their love for another person who doesn’t fit the required heterosexual
stereotype.

People living together because the culture demands they live together when there is no
love or respect in the family home, instead contempt, hatred and violence flourish.

Patriarchal control over children and partners in family, work and life is an abomination and
leads to death. How on earth or in heaven can we imagine our God of love endorsing and
requiring this form of living death, and we are putting God there because of our own
demands and willful blindness. Our certainty kills people, emotionally, spiritually and
physically.

In this reflection, singleness seen solely through the demanding lens of religious chastity
does not begin to tell the story of joy or sadness or satisfaction and human love in all its
glorious shapes, guises and diversity; it merely offers a thin slice of possibility which does
not satisfy. The belief God’s presence exists in our human demands on one another to live in particular ways, hurting ourselves and those around us, I can’t see as acceptable to
God. This is not love as God offers and provides.

As someone said to me recently, ‘I can’t be fixed’. My response through tears was to
affirm they weren’t broken. Our culture and theology is being used to give life or
purgatory, heaven or hell, unwanted or desired singleness, solitariness and close
partnerships, hidden relationships or marriage. I know which way I wish we could be, and
it isn’t the way that has often been described.

I haven’t begun to explore other issues of singleness, such as solitariness, loneliness,
singleness imposed because of life’s circumstances, illness and death, or loss of love, or
singleness as a discipleship choice. The experience of singleness arising through death,
divorce, abuse or love are all choices which lead in different ways when our culture may
demand another. How our faith enables such conversations to explore God’s invitation to
life, is through love not power to control or fear.

Have I resolved my physical, emotional or spiritual experience from General Synod on this
issue? No! I have not done justice to the debate or the mover of the Statement who was
passionate about her research and results. This is my present response, and any
misunderstandings are mine. The Statement Affirming Singleness was passed along tribal
lines, which perhaps says it all. Given the debate was about Faithfulness in Service, a
contested document and dealing with chastity in a conflicted debate, my final comment in
this reflection, is we underestimate God’s rich diversity and abundant transforming love at
our own peril.

I’ll continue to think about this!

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