Sunday, June 8, 2008

Gay-and feeling God's love: reaction to the Times-Union

The Sunday (June 8) Florida Times-Union (Jacksonville, FL) news paper ran an article entitled "Gay-and feeling God's love". The article is outlined by the story of Sondra Best's journey from faithful church girl, to confused teenager, to bitter-against-God homosexual, to openly gay, active church member. The article also includes several pastors and church leaders who are openly gay and who lead churches which primarily "minister" to the homosexual community.

Jeff Brumley writes, "there is an array of organizations founded to help believers integrate homosexuality and faith and pushing for same-sex blessings and equal opportunity for church leadership and pastoral positions. ...[Gays], like heterosexuals, have gifts from God that can benefit the church and society."

So we are being more and more boldly addressed with the question of homosexuality on Christianity's main stage. How do we react?

One aspect of the article which I found sad, was the seemingly deep-seeded anger towards orthodox Christianity on the part of the gays quoted. Where does this bitterness come from?

I think the answer is two-fold:

1) God has instilled a sense of right and wrong (sensus divinitatis, in a sense) within everyone. Therefore, when a person is living an ungodly lifestyle, homosexuality, that person often becomes defensive, even angry, towards anyone who said person perceives to be threatening his or her way of life.

2) I also believe that we, as Christians, contribute to the bitter attitudes many in the homosexual community seem to have toward believers. Many times the Church seems to react to the sin of homosexuality as, somehow, an unforgivable sin. Homophobic christians can do much damage to the task of evangelizing the gay community.

Answering these two matters becomes increasingly complicated. I was just listening to comments by Dr. Al Mohler (check out his blog) on the issue of homosexuality, and Christians' place in the conversation. Dr. Mohler claimed that our dilemma is complicated by the fact that we can easily say too little, and thereby condone homosexuality by avoiding it; we can also say far too much and thus fail to love those in a homosexual lifestyle as we love ourselves.


In conclusion, we must take a strong stand against the progression of the gay community. However, we must also love as Christ loved, and care for people as Christ cared for people. I think that we should treat homosexuals in the same manor which we treat alcoholics and or drug addicts, liars, and even people who consistently loose their tempers. Sin is sin.


My fear, after reading Brumley's article, is that there is a growing contingent of people who think that God accepts their homosexual lifestyles. How plenteous is the harvest?


God be with us as we address homosexuality as a growing cultural phenomenon.

(More to come in the future...)

2 comments:

S.B. said...

I believe it important for the church today to don a stronger knowledge and faith; one that has the knowledge that all sins are equally loathed by God and leave us debased before Him, and so it is not a worse sin to be gay than to be an adulterer (which many men are if not all, naturally seeking to sate our flesh through lust and the indulging of it) - but it is sin to be proud of being gay as it is to be proud of being an adulterer, so that having parades for gays is alike to having parades for men who cheat on their wives or are panders; and one that has faith in Christ so deeply rooted as to trust His Word in all ways, and thus to live it, and so then to be humble yet bold in standing for truth - humble knowing our own sin, and bold knowing God's hate for sin - as well rejoicing that God overcomes all sin if we ask Him to.
I just watched this video and left it as a comment on Dr. Ebert's facebook for him to comment upon or annotate, and thought perhaps you would benefit as well to delve into the minds of others.
http://www.godtube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=6571f8d23687d2651fc8

Aaron Cline Hanbury said...

I'll take a look.