What could Paul have meant by ‘against nature’ (παρὰ φύσιν) as written in Romans 1:26? Striving for the well-being and health of all people

The article shows how modern-day homophobia and aversion in same-gender sex do not have its primarily ground in Paul’s use of para phusin , but that Augustine and present-day homophobes in the Christian (including the Reformed) tradition do have their roots in a non-Christian conviction without realising its intercultural and non-Christian origins.


Sketching the décor
The Christians who condemn homosexuality on biblical grounds will probably find their strongest biblical argument in Paul's letter to the Romans 1:18-32, especially the reference to same-gender sex as 'against nature': For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature [in Greek: παρὰ φύσιν]. And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which was meet. (Kings James Bible 1611; Rm 1: [26][27] The New Living Translation (Holy Bible 2015) of the Tyndale House Foundation (see Holy Bible 2015) translates the expression 'against nature' with 'against the natural way to have sex'. This is one of the many ways in which the Bible 1 provides the fundamental argument for homophobes to condemn 'homosexuality', as if same-gender sex is a divine sanctioned disgrace (cf. inter al Geyser 2002). However, some exegetes have tried to argue that Paul's remarks in Romans 1:26-27 should not be understood in an anachronistic way as references to 'homosexual' deeds. According to them (cf. Van Zyl 2016:2-8 of 13), they refer to either: • idolatrous temple prostitution (Lenow 2006:33-34;Malick 1993:333), or • the prejudice against impurity expressed in Israelite holy codes (Countryman 1988:117), or • the transgression of divine creational intention expressed in the Old Testament writing Genesis (Cranfield 1975:125;Jewett 2007:177;Schreiner 1998:95), or 1.Leviticus 18:22; 20:13, 1 Corinthians 6:9-11, 1 Timothy 1:9-10, Romans 1:26-27.
The point of departure of this article is postmodern philosopher Michel Foucault's 'archaeological analysis' of the history of sexuality, seen from the lens of the South African philosopher Johann Beukes. Foucault points out that since the circulation of the so-called handbooks on penance in the 6th century CE, same-gender sex was seen as a punishable sin. With regard to perspectives before this period, Foucault reflects specifically on the contribution of the Christian theologian , and particularly Augustine's interpretation of the Greek expression para phusin (παρὰ φύσιν) as 'against nature' as written in Paul's letter to the Romans (1:26). He argues that this interpretation by Augustine represents a trend in contemporaneous thinking of non-Christian writers such as Plutarch and Themistios. The aim of this article is to demonstrate that a much more influential stimulus from another non-Christian thinker, namely Artemidorus of Daldis (2nd century CE), created a common context that influenced Augustine's views and subsequently those on same-gender sex, sexual identity, and heterosexual marriage within the Christian tradition.
Whatever the counter hermeneutical argument -arguing for a culturally sensitive reading that tries to avoid anachronistic interpretation -the Greek phrase παρὰ φύσιν cannot but be understood as to mean 'against nature'. In the context of Romans 1:18-32, the phrase indeed semantically refers to 'against the natural way to have sex'. The question, however, is: why was the same-gender sex -considered to be 'anatomically' against the natural way to have sex -judged in biblical times as a divine sanctioned disgrace? Even more so, why would a 'disgrace' in antiquity remains to be an ignominy for Christians today or for present-day adherents of other Abrahamic monotheistic beliefs?

Procreation is the issue
It is being argued in this article that this expression, in contemporary Greek literature of the time, as well as later by both the church father Augustine who wrote in Latin and the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, is exclusively about the phenomenon of the priority that reproduction had in antiquity in biblical times. The culture was hierarchical by nature, and the dominant role that men played in the issues of gender decidedly influenced the perspectives about sexuality. The important place that procreation played in society so strongly influenced the Christian church, that, on the one hand, the Roman Catholic Church is until this day, officially opposed against the use of contraceptives, because 'it is a sin against nature' (Schenker & Rabenou 1993:15), and on the other, reproduction (proles) 2 is described in the classical formulary of marriage in the Reformed tradition as one of the three intentions that God would have ordained (cf. Botha & Dreyer 2007:1275-1298. The role that the biological family played in Reformed covenant theology -against Calvin's intention -has also indirectly influenced the same matter. Calvin did not see the covenant as being based on physical relationships, regulated by civil policy, but on the 'spiritual family', that represented the church. 3 However, 'covenant theology' is embedded in bio-politics, a form of 'civil religion' in antiquity. Its context was that of the biological 2.See Dreyer (2008a:733): 'Clearly the value of marriage cannot be located in proles (procreation) any longer. Such as value would be highly questionable in an overpopulated world where resources are dwindling to the extent that the existing population cannot be adequately supported'.
3. Calvin (1536) shared the Lutheran theory of the two kingdoms. Witte (1996) puts it as follows: 'Calvin used multiple terms to describe these two kingdoms: the heavenly kingdom, the Kingdom of Christ, the spiritual kingdom, the spiritual jurisdiction versus the earthly kingdom, the Kingdom of this world, the political kingdom, the civil realm, the temporal jurisdiction' (Witte 1996, note 24, viewed from https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1669582).
family and tribal insider group and the significance of procreation that also influenced the formative years of ecclesial institutionalisation. 4 The overemphasis of procreation goes back to the use of the expression para fusin (unnatural) that is also found in Romans 1:26. Christians who interpret the expression para fusin in light of the emphasis on the divine order of procreation through the sexual relationship of man and woman ground their conviction on the biblical creation narratives. Genesis 1:28 5 serves as locus classicus -the biblical text considered to be the most authoritative -for the divine ordinance of procreation and marriage. The prominence of procreation during post-biblical times was specifically perpetuated by Saint Augustine of Hippo (born 13 November 354 CE; died 28 August 430 CE). Augustine was the theologian more than all others who bridged the period between antiquity and medieval times and the 16th century Protestant Reformation by connecting para fusin in Romans 1:26 with Genesis 1:28.
Origen of Alexandria (c. 184 -c. 253) as well as Hieronymus of Stridon (Jerome) (c. 342-347) followed both Plato 6 and Aristotle 7 (see Beukes 2021a) and judged 'sexual pleasure' as an inferior physicality of the failing body in comparison to the higher values of the soul and therefore objectionable behavior. Augustine was of a similar opinion, especially in his post-conversion and post-Manicheanism period, especially his view on sin and concupiscence in his Confessions (see Van Oort 2020:93-106).
A few patristic scholars stigmatised the reference to samegender sex in Romans 1:26 as lewdness and therefore sinful, guilty to the so-called sin of onanism, for example, John Chrysostom, archbishop of Constantinople, who died 14 September 407 CE. In his 'Homilia IV', Epistola ad Romanos (see De Wet 2014:213-214), Chrysostom interprets 4.Civil religion was to relive again centuries later when a nation-state ideology would give rise to nationalism in the late 18th and in the 19th centuries. It was endorsed by the mystification of religious 'covenantalism'. In such a 'civil-like' religion, the biological kinship is equated with ecclesial membership that is ritualised by the baptism of children on the initiative of biological parents. The emphasis on biological kin as integral to divine redemption during the period of formative Christianity appeared again hundreds of years later in institutional Christianity. An illustration of the importance of 'bio-politics' can be seen in the custom of parents bringing their children to be baptised as members of the church.
5.According to the translation in the International Standard Version: 'So God created mankind in his own image; in his own image God created them; he created them male and female. God blessed the humans by saying to them, "Be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth, and subdue it! Be masters over the fish in the ocean, the birds that fly, and every living thing that crawls on the earth!' (Gn 1:27-28) (The Holy Bible 2011).
6.With regard to Plato (see Schofield [ed.] & Griffith [transl.], 2016, Plato: Laws), Price (1989:230) puts it as follows: 'This becomes explicit in Laws [Νόμοι]. An early passage there contrasts a kind of heterosexuality with homosexuality: "When male and female came together to share in procreation , the pleasure they experience seems to have been granted according to nature; but same-sex relations seem to be unnatural…' 7.According to Saxonhouse (1982:206), 'Aristotle does assert that by nature (phusei) the male is more capable of command than the female, though in abnormal circumstances (para phusin) the opposite may be true. On the other hand, the relationship between father and children is of necessity, and by definition, one of rule by the older and more complete (teleion) over the younger and incomplete. Not even in abnormal circumstances could the opposite hold'. Kullmann (1991) points out that what is 'according to nature', that is 'normal circumstances', is for Aristotle divinely ordained: 'Aristotle considers the procreation of an animal as a teleogical, goal-directed process…be found in nature… [O] Beukes argues that Augustine was in particular the initiator of the insight that feminine homoeroticism was 'underemphasised' in the period pre-Augustine, and that the same pertained during the time span between the patristic period and the beginning of the circulation of the so-called Libri Poenitentiales -handbooks on penance -from the 6th century onwards till medieval times (See McNeil & Gamer 1990). Foucault demonstrates that since that time same-gender sex was seen as a punishable sin. However, Augustine's interpretation of the Greek expression para phusin as 'against nature' represents a trend also found in the thinking of non-Christian writers such as Plutarch (c. 48 CE -c. 119 CE) (Walcot 1998) and Themistios (317-387 CE) 10 .
The contribution of this author is to demonstrate a much more influential impact from another non-Christian thinker, namely Artemidorus of Daldis (cf. Dreyer 2008b:513). I herewith want to show how modern-day homophobia and aversion to same-gender sex do not have its ground primarily in Paul's use of para phusin, but that both Paul and Augustine, as well as other present-day homophobes in the Christian (including the Reformed) tradition, do have their roots in a non-Christian conviction without realising its intercultural and non-Christian origins.

Artemidorus of Daldis
It is important to consider that para phusin (παρὰ φύσιν) is an expression that also appears in one of the oldest classifications of sex acts in the ancient civilisation, namely that of Artemidorus of Daldis (Asia Minor) in his work Oneirokritika (1.78-80), that was written in the 2nd century CE (see Harris-8.Wilkinson (1978:455) refers as follows to Augustine's view on onanism: 'St Augustine condemned married couples who practised infanticide, abortion or the use of "sterility poisons" (presumably contraceptives). He also condemned the Manichaean use of the so-called sterile period and unfruitful modes of intercourse in general, adding "That is what Onan, son of Judah did, and God killed him for it." Actually, the sin of Onan was his frustration of Judah's injunction that he should beget children by his brother's widow, not the method by which he did it. But the mistaken interpretation given to Genesis 38:8-10 by some Rabbis and St Augustine was perpetuated by St Jerome in the way he translated the passage in the Vulgate, with the appalling result that what became known as "onanism" was branded for all Christendom as a sin, and one worthy of the severest condemnation'.
9.However, see Donald Capps: '[T]he displacement of moral disapproval from masturbatory behavior to homosexual behavior leads to the stigmatization of those who engage in homosexual behavior, and an attitude of moral superiority and personal condescension inevitably follows' (Capps 2003:249 McCoy 2012). 11 Artemidorus distinguishes between three terms kata nomon (κατὰ νόμον), para nomon (παρὰ νόμον) and para fusin (παρὰ φύσιν). The first term kata nomon (κατὰ νόμον) can also be exchanged with kata ta erga (κατὰ τὰ ἔργα) and is usually translated as 'according to convention'. Pederasty (the Athenian custom of older men who prefer sex with younger men) 12 falls into this category.
Other matters, such as (male) masturbation, 'passive' sex by a woman with another woman, sex with a (male) deity or sex with a corpse (in a 'passive' or 'active' role), are classified 13 as para fusin (i.e. 'against nature').
In all probability, Paul's use of the expression para fusin in Romans 1:26 was influenced by the same culture as that of Artemidorus' (cf. Wengst 1987 (Foucault [1978] 1990), several scholars have stressed the significance of Artemidorus' substantial text for the study of ancient psychosexual ideologies' (Hall 2011:206;cf. also Davidson 2001:3-51).
12.For an accessible overview of the complex system of rules regarding Knabenliebe in classical Athens, see Waterfield (2002:xiii-xvi): 'apart from being an upper-class phenomenon and Athenian men's general preference for both heterosexual and same-sex anal intercourse for fear of unwanted pregnancies, the "love for boys" was deeply ritualised. While a postpubescent boy (around the age of 15) was "in bloom," as the Greeks called it, several older men, from their later twenties onward, would pursue him. These older men were "the ones feeling passion, while the boy would most likely feel little or nothing beyond sexual arousal [...] The boy was expected to be merely passive, to let the successful suitor have his way [...] This inequality is reflected in the relevant Greek terms: "lover" translates erastes, literally "a man feeling eros", while the boy is the eromenos, just the object of the lover's eros. What the boy got out of the affair -and that is why it was an upperclass phenomenon -was a form of patronage. 13.For the semantic difference, see, among others, Winkler (1990).
according to him could refer to the same-gender (vaginal, anal or oral) sex (see Brooten 2003:187, n. 11).
According to Augustine (De bono coniugali 17.19), the purpose of marriage for all peoples (= in omnibus gentibus), in other words for Christians as well as non-Christians, is the same, that is, to conceive (proles) children as well as to faithfully uphold chastity (fides). According to him (De bono coniugali 32.24), marriage has specifically for each Christian a further purpose and that is to protect the 'sanctity of the sacrament'. For Augustine (1999:48, 56), the implication of divorce and remarriage whilst the marriage partner is still alive is permanently inadmissible. Augustine was of the opinion that sex is for the sake of 'recreation' (in other words, emotional and biological satisfaction and pleasure [Latin concupiscentia]) -also in a marriage -equal to 'prostitution'. He viewed adultery a mortal sin (De bono coniugali 6.6; 8.8).
Compared to other immoralities on his list of sexualities that he described as para fusin, he counted sex for recreation as being the least, yet immoral. Amongst these, he lists incest (especially with your mother), adultery and prostitution (i.e. sex with a prostitute). According to him, the only acceptable moral sexual 'act' is firstly celibacy (according to Augustine 'the best') (De bono coniugali 7.6; 8.8; 9.9; 23.28) and secondly sex in the marriage with procreation in view. Should spouses not want to conceive children, they are, according to Augustine, obliged to refrain from sex, which means celibacy in the marriage.
Besides the acceptable sexual act in a marriage, there are, according to Augustine (De bono coniugali 11.12), other acts that are not 'deadly sins'. These acts are more 'morally' acceptable and refer to a man's vaginal coitus with his wife (not having procreation in mind, but pleasure; thus conupiscentia). This would be more acceptable to Augustine than vaginal coitus with a prostitute although still immoral.
As far as the sexual activity para fusin is concerned (in other words anal and perhaps oral sex), that of sex with a prostitute is objectionable (execrabiliter), but less so than if it happens with one's wife; as for the woman, it is more harmful (turpior) if she is the cause that her husband has sex para fusin with her, rather than with another woman. Here Augustine's androcentric orientation becomes very clear. In the marriage, the Christian woman should rather 'allow' her husband to commit adultery than to have sex with her if the aim is not procreation! 15 Not only does Augustine's male domination and anti-women feelings become apparent here but also that the prevailing cultural codes of shame and honour are more prescriptive than the three-part purpose of the marriage, namely (1) to create progeny (proles), (2) to uphold fidelity (fides) and (3) 15.Augustine, in De ordine 11.4.12, without condoning prostitution as such, does not object to married men engaging prostitutes if sexual gratification is the objective, with the knowledge and even encouragement of their wives ('Remove prostitution from society and lust will destroy everything' -in Latin: Aufer meretrices de rebus humanis, turbaveris omnia libidinibus). According to Johann Beukes (email correspondence), sex within marriage without the explicit intent to procreate was for Augustine a far bigger moral problem than any kind of sex outside of marriage, including same-gender sex.
the sanctification of the sacramental bond (sacramentum). Because of these three reasons, the marital status, according to him, offers more honour to the woman than virginity does (De bono coniugali 3.3). At the core of androcentrism is that the marriage gains a 'moral goodness' when children (rather boys than girls) are born from the marriage (cf. Børresen [1968Børresen [ ] 1981. The earliest available evidence, as far as I am aware, that divorce for Christians was prohibited because the solemnisation of marriage was to be permanent (i.e. is a sacrament), is found with Augustine (401 CE) in his publication De bono coniugali (32.24). Although this 'sacrament' (= 'permanency') argument could have been in force earlier, before 401 CE, history shows us that Augustine's controversy was directed at, amongst others, Jovian (cf. also Bullough & Bullough 1991). The latter was of the opinion that matrimony as much as virginity is equal to honour and reputation (i.e. just as undefiled). Augustine also expressed his opinion against the 'Peligianist', Julian of Eclanum, who reasoned in the same manner as Jovian did (cf. inter al. Wu 2007). Augustine, however, conveniently keeps silent about his own history of (Gnostic) Manicheism. Manicheism viewed marriage as 'evil' because of a Gnostic anti-matter ideology. The reception history of the notion of sacramentum, interpreted as being soteriologically beneficial as elaborated by Thomas Aquinas (the result of the marriage theology of Augustine), should be interpreted in terms of the word pair remedium of sacramentum. The last-mentioned term, although meant to be positively interpreted as a medicinum against deadly sin, in other words, that spouses practice sex without the intention to conceive children (in other words without using 'contraception') (see Mackin 1982) implies, according to the Harvard theologian, Fiorenza (1991:316), pessimism about sex. Therefore, for example, we find with Gregorius Nyssenus (Ode virginitate) a view according to which even a 'happy marriage' is regarded as being 'full of misery'. John Chrysostom mentions in the same manner 'virginity' life and 'marriage' death (Fiorenza 1991:316).

Unmasking prejudice
In general, my point of view and argument against the prejudice about gay and intersex people has several facets. I shall show at least five such viewpoints in this article, without a lengthy discussion.
Firstly, it is important to note that the term 'homosexuality' itself does not appear in the Bible but is used by translators to refer to the sexual orientation of people of the same gender. The term 'homosexual' was taken over by the English from German in 1892 (cf. inter al. Adrian Thatcher 2015:5-7;Stuart 2015:18-19). It does not originate from the Latin homo (human being), but from the Greek adjective homoios ( ὁμοῖος), or adverb (ὁμοίως), meaning 'alike' or 'the same'.
Secondly, we should take note that an influential organisation such as the American Psychology Association (APA) played an important role that constitutions the world over, considers discrimination against gay persons or intersex people as being inhuman (see, for example, the statement by the United Nations in 2017). 16 It is a criminal offense to discriminate against gay people and to subject them against their will to 'psychological' practices that try to evoke an aversion against their sexual orientation. The APA is the largest, professional organisation of psychologists worldwide with almost 140 000 members. The United Nations' Human Rights Report mentioned that in '2013, Australia adopted the Sex Discrimination Amendment (Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Intersex Status) Act' -'the first law to include intersex status as a stand-alone prohibited ground of discrimination'. In 2015, 'Malta adopted the Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act -the first law 16.'Intersex people are born with sex characteristics (including genitals, gonads and chromosome patterns) that do not fit typical binary notions of male or female bodies. Intersex is an umbrella term used to describe a wide range of natural bodily variations. In some cases, intersex traits are visible at birth while in others, they are not apparent until puberty. Some chromosomal intersex variations may not be physically apparent at all. According to experts, between 0.05% and 1.7% of the population is born with intersex traits -the upper estimate is similar to the number of red-haired people. Being intersex relates to biological sex characteristics, and is distinct from a person's sexual orientation or gender identity. An intersex person may be straight, gay, lesbian, bisexual or asexual, and may identify as female, male, both or neither. Because their bodies are seen as different, intersex children and adults are often stigmatized and subjected to multiple human rights violations, including violations of their rights to health and physical integrity, to be free from torture and ill-treatment, and to equality and non-discrimination' (see United Nations Human Rights 2017).
to prohibit surgery and treatment on the sex characteristics of minors without informed consent'. In a recent published article, Jones and Van den Heever (2020) refer to the legal act accepted in Germany on January 2019 that adopts 'intersex identity into law', and that this implies that 'intersex people can register themselves as such on birth certificates, passports and other official documents' (Jones & Van den Heever 2021).
Thirdly, it is unacceptable to equate same-gender sex to promiscuity. It is nothing else than 'hate speech' to describe the 'negative' (sic) (in Dutch: 'schaduwzijden') results of the present-day so-called 'sexual revolution' as a potential provocation of 'animal-like' behaviour (see De Bruijne 2019:356). Sexual immoralities, such as rape, human trafficking and gender-based violence, are mainly a heterosexual matter.
Fourthly, the recognition of the reality that there exist 'sexual minorities', amongst which are the 'homosexual persons', cannot be seen as a threat to heterosexual marriages. The 'crisis' that marriage as an institution experiences in today's spirit of the times has nothing to do with the expectation that gay people must be accepted with respect by society. 17 Fifthly, the view that gospel about Jesus of Nazareth calls upon us to condemn gay or intersex persons is an exegetical and theological-ethical mistake. 18 However, this study did not focus on the five above-mentioned points but only on the specific understanding of Romans 1:18-32. The magnifying glass is rather not as such on the exegesis of this part of the Bible and neither on the part of Paul's theology in general. Professor Jeremy Punt, New Testament scholar at the Stellenbosch University, has shown and discussed the most important interpretations of Romans 1:18-32 in the journal HTS Theological Studies. Punt's (2007) article provides a good overview of the existing exegesis. The focus of the article was specifically on the 'meaning' and the 'use' of the Greek expression para fusin (παρὰ φύσιν) in Romans  Dreyer (2008a), in her article '"De-centre-ing" sexual difference in public and ecclesial discourses on marriage', argues: 'If marriage is in a crisis today it certainly is not the fault of people who have, for the longest time, had nothing to do with this up till recently exclusively heterosexual institution. The crisis in which marriage finds itself, if it is in fact a crisis, was caused by social changes within the heterosexual world itself' (Dreyer 2008a:725-726).
18.See, for example, Hester (2005:13-14) who points out the significance of both the gender and the sexuality of the eunuch character with reference to Matthew 19:12. The eunuch represents a 'morally dubious "third type of human" embodying the worst fears of masculine vulnerability and sexual transgression'. I am in concurrence with Hester who interprets this Jesus tradition as an 'explicit rejection of the heterosexist binary paradigm for understanding the role and importance of sex, sexuality and sexed identity in the "kingdom of heaven"' (Hester 2005:13 Boswell (1982:13) insight that the New Testament 'is notably nonbiological in its emphasis' 20 but also rejects the view that the Christian Bible legitimating only 19. Dreyer (2008a:735), referring to, among others, Beukes (2002), puts it as follows: 'According to Beukes (2002:297) patriarchal dominance in the public discourse on sexuality should be "disempowered": "The decentering of the phallus not only creates new spaces, but even an entirely new identity: androgenous sexuality, from which polimorphic sexual identities emanate. Not much in Western society can be deemed purely male or purely female. Rather a highly androgenous quality has come to the fore. However, the sexuality of androgenous subjects and poligenious subjects such as queers, crossdressers and transvestites is as much publicized as vanilla sexuality. Their private spaces too have already been infringed. An open circle of radical discretion would provide and guarantee them a private space without exception, without discrimination, without value-judgements, specifically because every sexual condition is kept silent and non-public" (transl. Dreyer)". This insight can contribute greatly to pastoral engagement with gay people. From such a perspective all people who find themselves between maleness and femaleness will be respected in terms of the particular person him-or herself, whether gay, bisexual or heterosexual. In her article, 'The "sanctity" of marriagean archaeology of a socio-religious construct: Mythological origins, forms and models', Dreyer (2008b:499-527) agreed with the point of view of Ward (1998:52-72) 'who goes beyond the traditional question of whether marriage is a sacrament or not.
[Graham] focuses rather on marriage as a linguistic expression of intimacy in relationship. For him, heterosexual marriage is not the only possibility for expressing the intimate relationship between God and human beings. Same-sex relationships, for example, can provide a linguistic possibility of expressing this relationship, because such relationships can also embody values like intimacy, fidelity and unconditional love. The consequence of his argument is that the sexual difference between man and woman is not a prerequisite for God's salvific interaction with people' (Dreyer 2008b:500 procreative heterosexuality (Williams 1989). In his 10th Michael Harding Memorial Address to the Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement in 1989, he said: In fact, of course, in a church which accepts the legitimacy of contraception, the absolute condemnation of same-sex relations of intimacy must rely either on an abstract fundamentalist deployment of a number of very ambiguous texts, or on a problematic and non-scriptural theory about natural complementarity, applied narrowly and crudely to physical differentiation without regard to psychological structures. (Williams 1989) How long will we still have to wait until such a claim for love will be unconditionally shown to gay persons and intersex people by the church and society at large?