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I. INTRODUCTION: NOT ALL WOUNDED ARE COMING HOME
The Creator's original intention for human beings that combined royal, priestly, and shepherding notions can, paradoxically, appear all the more vibrant when we contemplate its demise. Buried in the profound wreckage of sexual abuse lie the vestiges of a majestic plan that dignifies humankind. But a foundational element of paradise - sexual innocence in community has been spoiled by, among other things, the treachery of sexual abuse.
Reflecting on the Creator's intentions can help shed light on the crushing effects of sexual abuse. To ignore the sexually broken among us is to reject the ethics of biblical community, a breakdown the abused have already endured. Moreover, turning a blind eye to sexual abuse also sanctions dualisms (body/spirit) and disconnects (sexuality, evil). Yet for a growing number, these are more than philosophical ideas; the abused have lived in these distortions.
Sexual abuse and the propensity to abuse is a larger black plague that spiritual conversion does not stamp out. It is alive in your city and in your church. The abused are the "shrieking silent," the "exit- watchers." One has to know what to listen and watch for, but they are there. But a surprising number of adult victims have already abandoned the Church - they have their reasons.
II. GOALS AND ASSERTIONS: ACKNOWLEDGING THE WOUND
This study is one voice at the table in a much-needed dialogue. The goals are to further educate Christian leaders by normalizing the crisis of sexual abuse, create an understanding that promotes healing for the abused, and foster biblical-theological reflection among biblical educators, pastors, and church leadership, by deepening our insight into foundational creation texts with an eye to sexual abuse. These are texts pertaining to the image of God (Gen 1:26; 9:6), the creation mandate (Gen 1:28; Ps 8:5-8), and human sexuality (Gen 1:27; 2:23-24).
It is hard to improve on Patrick D. Miller's insightful description of a constructive theological investigation: "the biblical theologian is after an understanding of God and the world that will make sense of other data than the Scriptures and so will think in a large fashion about the way specific and concrete texts illuminate fundamental realities."1
1. Fundamental realities and...