Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and Homosexuality by Wesley Hill

Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and HomosexualityTakeaway: Sometimes not having something really allows you to look and understand.

One of the things I remember from a grad class about understanding diversity is that often people do not focus on their identity as “_____” until they are a minority in that area.  So people often do not think about their maleness, until they are in a class of all women.  They do not think about their Appalachia roots until they live in New York City.

Wesley Hill has a better understanding of the purpose and use of sex from a Christian perspective than most Christian books on sex or marriage that I have read.  I think it is in part because of his struggle to understand sexuality as a consciously gay (and celibate) Evangelical.

There are three things that this book really gets right.  One it is very consciously personal.  About half of the book recounts Hill’s struggle to understand his sexuality and his decision about why he feels that the only way he can be authentically Christian and still true to himself is to be celibate.  The second thing that he gets right is that he does not keep it personal.  He tracks two others Christians that also were both gay and celibate (Henri Nouwen and Gerald Manley Hopkins).  Hill is still young, as a 20 something he does not have the life experience to discuss celibacy as a long term lifestyle and I think he wisely brings in the experience of two now deceased men.  The picture of these men is not all that pretty, they lived tortured and lonely lives, but that is also part of what Hill will live as well if he continues to choose a celibate life.  The third thing that I really appreciate is a view of sexuality as something that is not a ‘right’.  And he views all of life as a possible means of teaching us to be like Christ.  This connectedness of life to Christ is important to how he understands God.  God is not a cosmic killjoy that says he can’t have sex out of meanness, but instead God has created a world that is fallen and that God uses the fallenness to mold us into the people he (God) wants us to be.

What I want for Hill is a better understanding of community and friendship.  I understand why he has issues with community and friendship, but I think it is a result of a weakness of modern American Evangelical theology more than anything else.  I want him to read Sacred Unions, Sacred Passions to help understand how cross-gender (or in his case other male) friendships can be non-erotic and fulfilling.   And I think that a better understanding of monastic theology would help him understand the role of community in faith formation better.

(2014 update: Hill has a cover story on Friendship in the Sept 2014 issue of Christianity Today and he has a  book is also on Friendship coming out in 2015 and Hill is part of a very good group blog http://spiritualfriendship.org/. I think he properly understands that celibate does not necessarily mean tortured and lonely. 2015 update: Bookwi.se reviewed his book on friendship)

Overall, I really recommend this book.  Anyone that has friends struggling with same gender attraction will find a better understanding of the struggle in this book.  Anyone that is struggling with celibacy (gay or straight) will find a good understanding of the role of celibacy in the church.  I also think many married people will find his understanding of sex useful because sex in marriage is not (or should not) be about personal fulfillment like what culture makes it out to be.

Note: There is a new version of the book, which is what is now linked to. I haven’t read the new version, so I am not sure what has been updated.

Washed and Waiting Purchase Links: Paperback, Kindle Edition, Audible.com Audiobook

___________

I received this book from the publisher for purposes of review.  I have passed it on to a friend.

Enhanced by Zemanta

0 thoughts on “Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and Homosexuality by Wesley Hill”

Leave a Comment