Tuesday, March 30, 2021

What is True about Gender? The Scientific Data

 In the last post, I began a series on the truth, goodness, and beauty of the gender binary. Today, I continue the series by starting to look at the issue of truth. Today's post will examine facts. The next post will look at rationality. 

Truth and the Question of Gender

Truth is that which accords with reality. In scientific inquiry, truth is what accords with physical reality. In rational inquiry, truth is what accords with logical reality. Ultimately, in a universe created by the triune God, “truth is found when created reality appears in the light of its Creator and his disposition of it.”[1] Does the gender binary accord with truth?

Those who hold to the view that the gender binary is reality are now labeled as “transphobic.” This ad hominem attack aims to make the binary position seem irrational at best and bigoted at worst. But is that the case? Or is there truth to the binary so that the issue is one of what is true and rational rather than an irrational phobia? This post seeks to use empirical data to demonstrate that the gender binary is the true understanding of reality. The next post will build on this and use reason to prove it. 

Scientific Data

It is becoming common for transgender idealogues to speak of “sex assigned at birth.” The statement implies that sex is merely something foisted upon an individual by a doctor who declares, “It’s a boy” or “It’s a girl.” Embryologists, however, tell a different story based on empirical data. These doctors are not confused about how many sexes exist or the fact that sex is present at conception via a biological process. Christians add that this biological process is designed by God so that he assigns a person the identity of male or female.

At the moment of conception, the newly formed person is a male or female.  The chromosomes carried by the sperm determine the sex. An “X” carrying sperm from the male unites with an ovum from the female and generates a female, while a “Y” carrying sperm generates a male.[2] Thus, a person’s chromosomes determine his or her sex.

The genetic information normally determines the development of the body so that it manifests male or female sexual systems. “In biology, an organism is male or female if it is structured to perform one of the respective roles in reproduction.”[3] Thus, “the fundamental conceptual distinction between a male and a female is the organism’s organization for sexual reproduction” which provides “the only coherent way to classify the two sexes.”[4]

It is interesting to note that such a claim is universally accepted when it comes to other species. As Ryan Anderson notes, “No one finds it particularly difficult—let alone controversial—to identify male and female members of the bovine species or the canine species. Farmers and breeders rely on this easy distinction for their livelihoods. It’s only recently, and only in the human species, that the very concept of sex has become convoluted, and controversial.”[5]  

What about the Rare Cases of Physical Abnormalities in Individuals? 

That being said, “disorders of sexual development,” which rarely occur, “can result in ambiguous external genitalia, a mismatch between internal and external reproductive organs, the incomplete development of reproductive organs, and the formation of two sets of sex organs.”[6] Transgender proponents seize on this and claim that it demonstrates the existence of multiple and fluid genders (rather than distinct and classifiable abnormalities). To them, it proves that sex is not a binary but a spectrum.

However, there is not a “third” sex. There are still only two types of gonads, even if genitalia and organs are abnormal or mismatched. Therefore, “intersex conditions do not disprove the sexual binary . . . because intersex conditions are a deviation from the binary norm, not the establishment of a new norm.”[7] A disorder does not prove an order does not exist.  

“In cases involving intersex persons, there are body, chromosomal, and/or anatomical abnormalities that are medically diagnosable and empirically verifiable. No such parallel exists in the case of transgenderism.”[8] In transgenderism, there is no empirically verifiable evidence. Instead, the argument for transgenderism relies on an inner, subjective experience in which one's physical reality does not fit one's feelings (we will discuss that issue in the next post). Thus, acknowledging disorders of sexual development does not open the door to an endless spectrum of gender identities based on scientific data. “Intersexuality and transgenderism are apples and oranges.”[9]

In summary, the scientific data does not indicate that a person's sex is fluid or malleable. Instead, the data gathered by the scientific method demonstrates that the gender binary is in line with truth. In the next post, we will deal with which view fits reason and logic. 


[1] Geoffrey Wainwright, “The True, the Good, and the Beautiful: The Other Story,” Journal of Theology for Southern Africa 107, (July 2000): 24.

[3] S. Mayer Lawrence and Paul R. McHugh, “Sexuality and Gender Findings from the Biological, Psychological, and Social Sciences,” Special Report, The New Atlantis 50 (Fall 2016): 90.

[4] Anderson, When Harry Became Sally, 48.

[5] Anderson, 49.

[6] Anderson, 52.

[7] Andrew T. Walker, God and the Transgender Debate: What Does the Bible Actually Say about Gender Identity? (United States: The Good Book Company, 2017), 158.

[8] Andrew T. Walker, God and the Transgender Debate, 158.

[9] Andrew T. Walker, God and the Transgender Debate, 158.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

The Truth, Goodness, and Beauty of the Gender Binary: Introduction

Philosophers have long considered truth, goodness, and beauty to be “ultimate values.”[1] This is, in part, because these ideals transcend time, geography, and culture. Without truth, goodness, and beauty, human life could not continue to exist. If it did manage to carry-on for a while, it would be a terrible existence full of hopeless darkness and confusion. Thus, when evaluating two competing ways of viewing life’s most basic questions, it helps lay out a case for which one best accords with these ideals.

When it comes to the issue of gender, there are irreconcilable differences between the biblical view and the modern Western view. The Bible describes the creation of humanity in binary terms. “So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. And God blessed them. And God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply’. . . . And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good” (Genesis 1:27-28, 31).  According to the Bible, the binary of two sexes and two corresponding genders is “very good.”

This claim, however, is being rejected by some in modern Western societies. Cultural elites, political leaders, and the media supply a different narrative rooted in a different worldview. To them, the binary is outdated. More than that, they argue that the binary is not true, good, or beautiful. 

My plan is to do a series of blog posts to demonstrate that the gender binary ("male" and "female") is true, good, and beautiful while transgenderism is a denial of truth, morally fraught, and ultimately uninspiring. 

In doing this, I am not denying that there are some individuals who struggle with their gender. They are confused and hurting. We recognize that living in a fallen world means physical and spiritual suffering abound for all of us. All people are simultaneously sinners and sufferers. The gospel deals with both issues in a way that no human wisdom can. The gospel gives the hope of forgiveness and joy of knowing God. It connects us to God and his design for us. Christians believe true and lasting joy comes by living in accord with the truth, goodness, and beauty of God's design. That is where God is honored and humans flourish. Thus, the church offers the healing balm of the gospel to all people. 

In the next posts, we will begin examing the truth, goodness, and beauty of the gender binary. The goal is to equip us to value God's good design even as the cultural winds begin to howl in the opposite direction.


[1] Crispin Sartwell, “Beauty,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2017), ed. Edward N. Zalta, accessed December 31, 2020, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2017/entries/beauty/.

This is the beginning of a series of posts on the issue of transgenderism and the gender binary. It is an edited form of a paper I wrote for a doctoral seminar on cultural apologetics. I will be posting small sections of it at a time to make it easier to read. It has been edited for the blog.

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Jonathan Edwards on Being Pilgrims on Our Way to Heaven

They were strangers and exiles on the earth. For people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland. (Hebrews 11:13-14)

This earth is not our final home. How does that shape the way we live? How do we live in a way that shows that are seeking a different homeland? 

Jonathan Edwards preached a sermon on Hebrews 11:13-14 entitled "The Christian Pilgrim; or The True Christian Life, a Journey Towards Heaven." Below are some excerpts that might help you live in the world as a Christian bound for the heavenly country. What I find helpful is the way he does not deny the goodness of the gifts we have here in the present age. He just puts them in proper orbit around God. I also find the "journey" metaphor helpful (it is biblical, after all). A person who is traveling will stop and rest and enjoy the sights. However, he or she does not stop and set up a permanent home there. 

Seek God's Kingdom

We should seek first the kingdom of God, Matt. vi. 33. He that is on a journey, seeks the place that he is journeying to. We ought above all things to desire a heavenly happiness: to go to heaven, and there be with God, and dwell with Jesus Christ. 

Keep Good Gifts in Perspective (Enjoy them, don't cling to them) 

If we are surrounded with many outward enjoyments, and things that are very comfortable to us; if we are settled in families, and have those good friends and relations that are very desirable; if we have companions whose society is delightful to us; if we have children that are pleasant and hopeful, and in whom we see many promising qualifications; if we live by good neighbors; have much of the respect of others; have a good name; are generally beloved where we are known; and have comfortable and pleasant accommodations; yet we ought not to take our rest in these things. We should not be willing to have these things for our portion, but should seek a higher happiness in another world. 

We should not merely seek something else in addition to these things, but should be so far from resting in them, that we should choose and desire to leave these things for heaven; to go to God and Christ there. We should not be willing to live here always, if we could, in the same strength and vigor of body and mind as when in youth, or in the midst of our days; and always enjoy the same pleasure, and dear friends, and other earthly comforts. We should choose and desire to leave them all in God’s due time, that we might go to heaven, and there have the enjoyment of God. 

We ought to possess them, enjoy and make use of them, with no other view or aim, but readily to quit them whenever we are called to it, and to change them for heaven. And when we are called away from them, we should go cheerfully and willingly. ...

... We ought to look upon these things as only lent to us for a little while, to serve a present turn; but we should set our hearts on heaven as our inheritance forever.

Don't Get Distracted from Pursuing Your Homeland (don't get too comfortable here)

He that is going a journey, is not wont to rest in what he meets with that is comfortable and pleasing on the road. If he passes along through pleasant places, flowery meadows, or shady groves; he does not take up his content in these things. He is content only to take a transient view of these pleasant objects as he goes along. He is not enticed by these fine appearances to put an end to his journey, and leave off the thought of proceeding . . .

Remember that God is the Source and Substance of all True Joy

To go to heaven, fully to enjoy God, is infinitely better than the most pleasant accommodations here. Better than fathers and mothers, husbands, wives or children, or the company of any, or all earthly friends. These are but shadows; but the enjoyment of God is the substance. These are but scattered beams; but God is the sun. These are but streams; but God is the fountain. These are but drops; but God is the ocean. 

Work Hard to Keep Your Heart Fixed on Heaven 

Labor to have your heart taken up so much about heaven and heavenly enjoyments, as that you may rejoice at any time when God calls you to leave your best earthly friends, and those things that are most comfortable to you here, to go to heaven, there to enjoy God and Christ. 

On that last point, I encourage you to start a list of the wonders of heaven. Just look at it once a month or so and add a new thing to that list each time.