I really shouldn’t check the Trending topics on Twitter, it is a
horrendous waste of time. Recently, when I succumbed to curiosity, one
trending hashtag was #GodIsAWoman.
Well of course. I’m well used to agnostics, atheists and pagans
referring to God as female — some combination of feminism and of wanting
to offend Christians. Browsing the Tweets though, I saw that it was
trending because it’s the title of Ariana Grande’s latest single.
Watching the video rebuts the plausible assumption that this is a song
about female empowerment — or rather, it is, but specifically because of
the act of sex. The song is not redefining the creator as female; far
more heartbreakingly, it presumes that sex entirely surpasses God (if He
exists at all). The accompanying video, saturated with sexualised
religious imagery, and featuring a monologue from Madonna in which she
declares “you will know my name is the Lord” (apparently from Pulp Fiction’s misquote of Ezekiel 25:17),
whilst we see female legs splayed open. It’s abhorrent, but crucially,
it’s a truly tragic reminder of today’s prevailing religion. Sexuality
has been the predominant theme of pop since the 60s, but work like this
proclaims that not only is sex a cultural obsession, it has superseded
Christianity entirely.
Hozier’s “Take Me to Church”
has gone multiplatinum around the world, and similarly celebrates sex.
Years & Years’ last album was entitled “Communion”, and included a
track entitled “Worship” — greeted with tremendous excitement by
magazines such as Attitude and Dazed, these were of course, unmistakably about the sexual exploits of the band’s frontman, Olly Alexander (who was granted his own BBC documentary about sexuality)
Almost nothing makes me cry, yet I broke down in tears one morning
whilst reflecting on the television I’d seen the evening prior. Caitlyn
Jenner appeared on the cover of Vogue to international jubilation;
whilst on the Graham Norton show, Will.I.Am performed “Boys and Girls”
— #”The girls wanna play with boys, And the boys wanna play with girls,
And the girls wanna play with girls, Boys wanna play with boys. Oh boy,
don’t you love this world?”#. Contemplation of both was sufficient to
break me, I sat on the floor and sobbed for how my generation has
gleefully rejected God. Most of the time, to my shame, I don’t get
emotional, because we’re so drowning in this mire that the implication
doesn’t continually sink in. Songs that go so far as to appropriate
Christian words and imagery for the purpose of worshipping the new
religion should prompt me to lament regularly. Because, whilst the onus
is on us to refrain from judging; the jubilant celebration of sex that
contradicts God’s design evidences audacious shunning of God.
Use of religious references goes further still, proudly declaring
that sexuality has entirely eclipsed Christianity, such that its
components may be stolen and mutilated. It brings to mind the Philistines’ placing the Ark of the covenant of God (Yahweh) in a pagan temple; or wealth worshipping merchants contaminating the temple in Jerusalem with their exploitative money changing business.
The Twitter thread for #GodIsAWoman was filled with joyful praise of
Grande — she’s not merely an artist whose work is adored, she’s deemed a
noble heroine. This perhaps, is what’s newest — not only
hypersexualisation and the mocking of Christianity, but the new moral
code which deems these to be virtuous.
We need to have compassion. Most of our neighbours are unaware of the
ultimate joy, and the eternal life in heaven that they’re missing out
on.
“We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and
ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who
wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what
is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea.” — C.S. Lewis
.
Whilst, amongst demographics, there’s a loose correlation between
sexual liberalism and anti-capitalism, it is clear that that capitalism
is substantially responsible for the sexual revolution. Sex sells, thus
it’s become ubiquitous in our music, magazines, onscreen and in
advertising. Because media companies and others will grab more gazes —
and in turn rake in more profit — by parading increasingly sexualised
material in front of us, corporate greed has transformed what we now
consider normal. What would have been considered perverted by our
grandparents is now on daytime television. Importantly, just often
enough, it’s entwined with art and emotion that convinces us that it is
inherently good. The word “love” is used to refer to the most carnal
indulgence, and we’re taught things which were deemed “sexual
immorality” for millennia are in fact beautiful and virtuous.
That sexual liberalism is now deemed virtuous is another inference to
be drawn from appropriation of religion in sex themed media. Not only
are these music videos, screen scenes and so forth proclaiming that the
artists worship sex; perhaps they are also acknowledging the respect
long afforded to religion, and suggesting that sexual liberalism now
holds that moral superiority instead. Years & Years’ recent single, Sanctify, corrupts this word for cleansing by God to celebrate sex — specifically including BDSM.
The Bible considers marriage — even romantic intimacy within marriage — to be an illustration of Christ’s union with the Church.[1] This takes some fathoming — the Apostle Paul calls it “a profound mystery.”
This is not, of course, to say that God literally ‘has sex.’ But he
uses sexual union within marriage as a profound illustration — as an
artist might use paint as a medium for a self portrait, but is not
comprised at all of paint themselves. The tragedy is that humanity (for
whom this illustration was graciously given) takes the painting, and
paints all over it, grossly disrespecting the artist and hiding their
art’s message.
Of course, the tactic is well established; Madonna’s Like A Prayer being one of the best known chart songs appropriating religious imagery to discuss sex. Iconic ballads Halleluiah by Leonard Cohen and Heaven by Bryan Adams
— arguably two of the most covered songs in pop history — are less
speculated to be have explicit innuendo rife, but are undeniably also
misuse Christian references to elucidate intimate relationships. That
they are such popular songs is, surely in part these references; the
concepts and motifs linger in the hearts of secular Westerners. Of
course
What, ultimately, is the sensation within the mind that sex creates?
Like other emotions, it is somewhat a metaphysical enigma — is neither
matter, nor energy that can be observed, let alone scientifically
measured. Neurotransmitters dance — but they are ultimately molecules,
not sensation and the same neurotransmitter molecules contribute to
entirely different, separate relational experiences, oxytocin is deemed
largely responsible for the feelings of bonding in sex, but also in
parent/child relationships. If we believe in God, we believe that we can
experience emotions because we were crafted by an ultimate being who
themselves experiences emotions. Having studied biomedical sciences,
this seems to me incomparably more plausible than the theory that our
consciousness and its related neurotransmitter networks developed by the
chance deviations of atoms (in particular, the molecular processes that
underlie biology are not only too complex, but too interdependent to
have evolved by chance alone). If then, even our most intense emotions
exist because God gave us the ability to feel, then we know that we can
receive every bit as much joy in a celibate life with God (as in a life
with sex).
An NME article
just released argues that female sexuality in pop music has eclipsed
“religion”. It offers Dua Lipa’s streaming numbers surpassing the
world’s Christian population as evidence — illogical as this is — and
praises God Is A Woman. The writer claims that the Bible is “a load of
sh**e” and celebrates “There’s something brilliant about the way pop’s
women exert their sexuality onto the facade of religion… Pop, once
again, proving to be more powerful than God.”
Clearly demonstrated is the ignorance that most have of the
intellectual aspects; endless depth and emotional richness of
Christianity. Our culture’s addiction is ultimately a lame attempt to
satisfy hunger for what people don’t know they’re missing.
We might internally recoil at the ubiquitous sexual imagery and
innuendo plaguing our culture, and rightly so, as much as it will have
us labelled prudes. God wants us to keep our hearts and minds pure.
Vital though, is that we strive to emulate Jesus in how we outwardly
respond; resisting judgemental attitudes and words (though we may still
be accused of being judgemental simply for not endorsing liberal
sexuality). Paramount is that we recognise the urgency of proclaiming
who is truly deserving of worship. Paul tells us that “neither the
sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practise
homosexuality… will inherit the kingdom of God.” (1 Corinthians 6:9-10); whilst Christ tells us that “whoever believes and is baptized will be saved.” (Mark 16:16).
It’s response to Jesus that determines salvation — but continuing
sexual immorality evidences a heart that’s not yet believing in Christ.
Will we be His messengers in declaring that Ariana Grande is wrong?
No comments:
Post a Comment