"Jesus never said anything about homosexuality"
About this Quote
Patricia Ireland’s line is a pressure-point disguised as a shrug: if you’re going to wield Christianity as a weapon against queer people, show the verse. It’s less a theological claim than a rhetorical audit, designed to shift the burden of proof back onto those who treat faith as a permission slip for policing. The intent is tactical: decenter the usual clobber-passages and drag the debate to the figure Christians say they follow, not the parts of scripture that can be recruited for culture-war enforcement.
The subtext is sharper than it first appears. “Never said anything” functions as both indictment and dare: indictment of a religious politics that obsesses over sexuality while skimming past Jesus’s recurring themes (poverty, hypocrisy, mercy); dare to religious conservatives to admit their fixation isn’t really about fidelity to Christ, but about social control and group boundaries. Ireland is also implicitly speaking to moderates in the pews, offering them a permission structure: you can remain Christian and reject anti-gay dogma without feeling like you’ve abandoned the center of the tradition.
Context matters. Ireland emerged as a prominent feminist and LGBTQ rights advocate during the late-20th-century battles over “family values,” when conservative Christian rhetoric powered policy fights on marriage, education, and public funding. In that climate, a short, quotable sentence is a tool of counter-messaging: it punctures the aura of biblical inevitability and reframes the issue as selective moral panic. Its power comes from what it exposes: that many loud religious arguments aren’t about scripture’s complexity, but about which identities get treated as problems needing sermons.
The subtext is sharper than it first appears. “Never said anything” functions as both indictment and dare: indictment of a religious politics that obsesses over sexuality while skimming past Jesus’s recurring themes (poverty, hypocrisy, mercy); dare to religious conservatives to admit their fixation isn’t really about fidelity to Christ, but about social control and group boundaries. Ireland is also implicitly speaking to moderates in the pews, offering them a permission structure: you can remain Christian and reject anti-gay dogma without feeling like you’ve abandoned the center of the tradition.
Context matters. Ireland emerged as a prominent feminist and LGBTQ rights advocate during the late-20th-century battles over “family values,” when conservative Christian rhetoric powered policy fights on marriage, education, and public funding. In that climate, a short, quotable sentence is a tool of counter-messaging: it punctures the aura of biblical inevitability and reframes the issue as selective moral panic. Its power comes from what it exposes: that many loud religious arguments aren’t about scripture’s complexity, but about which identities get treated as problems needing sermons.
Quote Details
| Topic | Bible |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Patricia
Add to List


