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Sex Life at Divinity School

I once knew a single woman pastor who was dating. What a very delicate situation she dealt with! A veteran minister warned her, “You have everything to lose.”

We tend to expect the preacher to be a model of virtue, which is a terribly unfair burden to put on a human. A woman, even now, carries a far heavier burden, since traditionally all women have been expected to be models of “virtue” in the form of celibacy outside of marriage.

So many of us still carry the deep grooves of those expectations. Even the most open-minded might take notice seeing the lady preacher sneaking back into the parsonage in the morning wearing last night’s cocktail dress. She is not supposed to have a sex life.

So, a bold group of women students at Duke Divinity School decided they needed to discuss this situation and their personal experience and conflict.
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The [P] Club

What did they call their discussion group? The [P] Club, the “P” standing for “pastor preaching purposeful passionate practical powerful” and for — take a deep breath — pussy. The Pussy Club.

“We need to take that word back,” says one of the women in the documentary The [P] Club, for positive use rather than as an insult. The letter P is in brackets to indicate that it stands for many things.

The hour-long movie is fascinating, especially to one of my 40-years-older generation. These are brave women of vastly different philosophies and experience talking straight into the camera about the struggle to be both a sexual and religious woman. I think it would be hard enough to talk about one’s sex life in a documentary, much more so as a woman with plans for the ministry.

One of them, coming from a free-wheeling secular college culture, said that on her arrival at the Duke divinity school, she thought: “This is not a place where you talk about sex.” For this group of women, that was soon to change.

As a Duke undergrad alum, I have to say I’m proud of the divinity school for accepting these honest, thoughtful, non-hypocritical women, and not somehow pressuring them into hiding.

The desire for sex and the desire for a religious life can be two tremendously strong pulls and can be in tremendous conflict. One club member says of her younger self: “I want to be this church kid. I want to follow God.” That never does stop the hormones, though.

The stories some tell do include the predictable and so often deserved complaints about repressive church sex ed and/or lack of it.

*One had heard a woman she knew speak to a church youth group about how she didn’t save sex for marriage and how hard this was for her pastor husband. “This was a woman I kind of trusted…For years and years, her voice still echoed in my head… that ‘damaged goods’ thing. If I had sex before marriage, I would be a disappointment.”

*Another said that a woman’s sexuality was often compared to various foods. “You are a slice of cake” …If you give away all the bites of your cake, what are you going to have for your husband on your wedding night and isn’t he going to be so-o-o-o sad that you didn’t save him any cake or lollipop or pie?” (Sarcasm does come through in the tone.)

*For another speaker, the silence at church on the subject of sex seemed to imply that “either God is mad at you or God is not interested.”

But that’s not the whole story in these interviews. Accounts of relationships and sexual experience and decision-making get at least as much attention. And one student who had thought of the church as a patriarchal rigid “moralistic place of judgment” found in her studies deeper traditions “that felt like life, felt like water, like food I needed.” (I’m curious about these deeper traditions.)

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Several of the club members had felt pulled between the two poles of “purity culture” and “hookup culture.”

Several had had sexual activity forced upon them. “This was so ugly,” said one. “The fragile pieces of myself went to church the next day.” When she heard there the words “deliver us from evil,” she seized upon them. “Shit! that was my prayer!…I didn’t want that encounter to … make me cold and hard.”

An African-American woman in the group pointed out that there’s a “false universal womanhood,” that black women often don’t have time for such discussions. Still, she has come to some meetings and talks about her choice of celibacy for the time being.

These speakers are women who have stuck with God and church. One finds a congregation with “kick-ass lady pastors.” At the end of a gathering, the club prays together.

What conclusions did any of them come to on the subject of sex and God?

*“This needs to be talked about…the messiness and the holiness.”
*When to have sex “is a decision I want to make for myself with discernment from God.”
*The group conversations have helped. “It’s important to have a community that surrounds you … as you live into your whole body.”

The [P] Club was directed by Christine Delp, a Duke undergrad at the time. It’s available for individuals as well as for churches and college ministries to use for discussion.

It’s distributed by Resource Center for Women & Ministry in the South, with support from Ripp Fellowship for the Documentary Arts and the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke.

Subtitle: “Church, Let’s Talk About Sex.”

Duke Chapel

Duke Chapel

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Comments

  • August 17, 2016 at 1:24 pm Reply

    Hmmmm…I guess I never really thought about women clerics and the problems they might have concerning sexuality. One assumes they are celibate – or nearly so . I see that is a poor assumption.

    • Peggy Payne
      August 17, 2016 at 3:12 pm Reply

      Kenju, I read that single men seeking a job as minister are also discriminated against. It’s generally preferred by churches that they be married with children.

  • Nicholas E Stratas
    August 17, 2016 at 5:58 pm Reply

    Thanks for this! Of course sexuality and sex are God given, an essence of each of our physical manifestation here on this earth and ever present whether we disconnect or not-
    Nicholas

    • Peggy Payne
      August 17, 2016 at 6:25 pm Reply

      We do agree on this, Nicholas: summoned or unsummoned….

  • Maureen Langer
    August 17, 2016 at 7:14 pm Reply

    Not being a religious person myself, I’m not sure how appropriate my comment is however I cannot help but wonder how would a person navigate choosing to follow some absolute precepts of their religion and not others? Where does one draw the line?

    • Peggy Payne
      August 17, 2016 at 7:38 pm Reply

      Very good question, Maureen. I’m pretty sure, though, that the Bible says simply to avoid sexual immorality, saying nothing about sex outside of marriage. So the question becomes: what constitutes sexual immorality?

      But following some precepts and not others is a pretty common practice — and I think what people do is go by what they believe rather than every jot of dogma. It’s what I do, anyway.

  • August 18, 2016 at 3:28 am Reply

    Not a problem I’ve eveer had or ever would, and I’d want to leave such complicated decisions between the person and their personal relationship with their own imagery of God. I do see and sympathize with the Religious as they have to come to terms with themselvces And their community/congregation about these complex issues. Not a conflict I’d want to struggle with. b

  • Peggy Payne
    August 18, 2016 at 1:55 pm Reply

    Especially hard if religion is your line of work, b.

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