I don’t keep up with beauty pageant news (Does anyone still watch these pageants?) so I’m late in coming to the story of Miss California’s comments about gay marriage.
At the Miss USA competition in late April Carrie Prejean was asked whether she believed in gay marriage. Though she didn’t win the competition, her answer to this question stole the show.
We live in a land where you can choose same-sex marriage or opposite. And you know what, I think in my country, in my family, I think that I believe that a marriage should be between a man and a woman. No offense to anybody out there, but that’s how I was raised.
Let’s set aside the fact that, in our day, a beauty pageant contestant’s comments about gay marriage is deemed very newsworthy. I’m interested instead in the fact that Miss California made her comments as a Christian with strongly held moral convictions. This observation was pointed out by a new friend over lunch last week and it’s had me thinking ever since. Of her career Miss California has said, “I am a Christian, and I am a model. Models pose for pictures, including lingerie and swimwear photos.” In other words, Prejean simultaneously feels comfortable opposing gay marriage and earning a livelihood from her barely covered body.
Is it appropriate for Christians to work as models or beauty pageant contestants? I have no idea. Again, what is most interesting about this story is that Prejean’s moral grid is applied to others (gay people who want to be married) while her own career as a model is viewed as morally neutral.
I don’t mean to pick on Miss California. Her understanding of Christian morality is likely representative of much of the American church. It is simply easier to sequester our judgement to particular issues while viewing our own actions as neutral. From my reading of Scripture, this type of moral cherry-picking is not an option for the follower of Jesus. We are to be people with a clear understanding of our own failures and little to say about the (perceived or actual) shortcomings of others. I suppose plenty of Christians live this way every day… it’s just not newsworthy.


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