Lennaret :
I don't see the real Jesus joining up with the Westboro Baptist  Church in 
Kansas City. 
Spitting in someone's face and next tell them how much Jesus loves  them 
just doesn't 
go over real well with people. He's not making a political  statement but 
rather that 
if you want to build a friendship with someone don't start by  telling them 
in a 
loud agitated voice how lousy they are and what all their faults  are. 
It doesn't work real well.
 
Well, let's hope not.  Westboro is strictly Looney-Tunes stuff.
 
----------------------------------------
 
So, it's OK for the guy addicted to pornography or the prostitute  to 
preach 
judgment to the homosexual? I think that's called hypocrisy. The  real 
Jesus 
didn't care much for that. 

Two things to say :
( 1 ) Since we are all sinners, therefore we can never say anything about  
anyone ?  
This makes sense how ?
 
( 2 )  What makes you think I was talking about pornographers  preaching to 
homosexuals ?
The actual idea was something along the lines of a doctor talking   with a 
patient who
refuses to do something required for recovery from an injury or disease. As 
 when 
a doctor might say, strongly, "if you continue to disregard my  
recommendations
you will drop dead in four months, and your excuses are worthless."
 
-------------------------------------------------------
 
What patient would want to go to a hospital if he knows he's going  to be 
shot dead in the foyer? 
 
I'm totally clueless about what you mean.
 
 
(you might be on to something here though with the "hospital"  analogy).

Yeah, it struck me that this idea has real uses. Came to me out of the  
blue.
Would gladly attribute the source if  I  knew what it was.
 
Neurons firing is sequence because of a pattern of thought ?
Suppressed memory of experiences rising to the fore because they now are  
suddenly relevant ?
Something I read and reworked unconsciously ?
Professor Jacobsen's voice in my ear after all these years ?
Rev Hintz's voice in my ear after all these years ?
Unseen inspiration of the Holy Spirit ?
All of the above ?
 
-------------------------------------------------
 
 
Billy
 
 
==============================================================
 
 
 
 
 
 
message dated 10/13/2010  [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   writes:

Hi  Billy,

On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 12:54 PM, <[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
> wrote:




Lennart :
I can see why you think highly of David Fitch's essay. I also thought  
mostly highly of it 
until I got to the following statement :
 
The wisdom in Scripture towards gay relations, pre-marital sex etc.  should 
not be easily discarded because of science or other presumed  modernist 
authorities.



[Lennart] Actually, I think he's saying the absolute opposite of what  you 
think he's saying. 




This sums it up very well. The Evangelical community assumes that  science 
has come down
on the side of the homosexual position. This is pure 100% bull poop.  
Completely false.
 
What this statement shows is that Evangelicals don't want to do the  
necessary 
research, actually studying psychoanalytic literature, actually reading  
the Journal
of Homosexuality critically ( it is pro-homosexual but filled with  
information that
if you know what you are doing can easily be turned to the researcher's  
advantage ),
actually reading books like Charles Socarides "Homosexuality A Freedom  Too 
Far,"
actually reading the shelf of books now available in criticism of the  APA, 
and
so much else.
 
What this statement shows is defeatism based on ignorance of actual  
science.
Yes, the author's intentions are all for the good. But since he has  
already conceded
defeat what else can anyone expect except a search for ways to  surrender
the field of battle while making it look more-or-less good to one's  
supporters
by means of deflecting the outcome, viz, bringing up other sexual  issues,
making much out of the church's mission, talking about how difficult it  
all is
and pointing out that you can lose in one area while winning in  another, 
etc.
 
Then there is this doozy, also late in the essay :
 
There are large parts of wisdom here which have little to do with  whether 
Scripture 
actually prohibits pre-marital sex, gay sex. 
 



[Lennart]  Again, you seem to want to assume moral ambiguity  where there 
is none. Rather, instead of thinking in terms of "right" and  "wrong" I think 
Fitch is saying that there's wisdom that speaks to WHY a  certain behavior 
might be wrong that goes way beyond a more shallow "OK" and  "Not OK".  



Let's muddy the waters, shall we ?  Let's deflect attention from  the issue 
before us,
homosexuality, and bring up pre-marital sex.
 
But what absolutely infuriates me is how this is all, in the end,  
accomodationist.
 
Gosh, does the Bible really criticize homosexuality ?  Answer,  damned 
right it does.
Unequivocally, and  in many passages. But how would Fitch  know ?  He seems 
to
read the Bible to find ways to agree with those whom the Bible  condemns.
As if, since he knows he is wrong about basic science, let's find  some
face-saving way to compromise with homosexuals.
 
But if you --anyone, like Fitch--  take the view, because you are  too 
befuddled or 
incompetent to do the necessary empirical research, that science  "proves" 
the homosexual viewpoint, then, of course, you will seek ways to  "dialogue"
with the establishment, with people who, years ago, decided that  they
did not even want  to do any research and were happy to make  their
decisions based purely on status considerations .  And why not,  since
Christian faith doesn't matter any more, anyway ?
 
 As for this comment, I am incredulous :
 
To put a sign up, or announce our position against GLBTQ relations,  or to 
somehow protest all GLBTQ issues in front of City Hall, in essence  puts us 
in 
a judging position towards those we do not even  know.



[Lennart]  I don't see the real Jesus joining up with the  Westboro Baptist 
Church in Kansas City. Spitting in someone face and next tell  them how 
much Jesus loves them just doesn't go over real well with people.  He's not 
making a political statement but rather that if you want to build a  friendship 
with someone don't start by telling them in a loud agitated voice  how 
lousy they are and what all their faults are. It doesn't work real  well.




If we are even remotely honest we necessarily judge others. The Bible  is
absolutely filled with such judgements. We should do our best, not  worst,
be honest, not disingenuous, and show compassion when it is called  for,
but judge we must or we have no conscience or backbone.
 
So what if we don't know someone we judge ?  Did that stop people  of the 
time
from condemning the Nazis ?  Did it stop the early Christian  community from
condemning sinners outside the Church ?
 
True, the idea is to seek to win sinners over, but at no time are we  told 
to
compromise with them,  or accommodate them, just as people not  long ago
did not compromise with the Nazis and fought against them for all of  WWII.





 

I believe evangelicalism’s tendency to publicly judge and  condemn on 
these issues  forecloses the possibility for discerning  alongside not only 
GLBTQ peoples, but  the many who are struggling with  sexual brokenness 
even inside our church communities.

 
Alongside the perverted ?  WTH ?  Hey, let's open the Church  to neo-Nazis, 
let's show
neo-Nazis compassion and love and all will be well if we seek to  
understand them.
Let's walk alongside the neo-Nazis and admit our own political  brokenness 
and
not foreclose the possibility of acceptance of Hitler  worshippers.
 
This is pure nonsense when it is boiled down. Absolute crap, if  you want
a totally honest opinion.
 
As is this :
 
... there is a delicate sense in which no judgment can be made  against 
GLBTQ or any  other sexual issues, until we have a  redemptive 
sexual community that can humbly invite and listen and ask  
the GLBT to join us in repentance and renewal of all sexual  desire.
 
Balderdash. False. Ridiculous.



[Lennart]   So, it's OK for the guy addicted to pornography or the 
prostitute to preach  judgment to the homosexual? I think that's called 
hypocrisy. 
The real Jesus  didn't care much for that. 
In a sense a church is a hospital. Christians are the doctors and nurses  
and
administrators and medical technicians and so forth. Doesn't mean that  the 
medical staff
can't also get sick, but there is a helluva lot of difference between  them 
and their patients.
A doctor does not humbly listen to a sick person, he seeks to find our  the 
details of
his illness and diagnose the remedy   --whether or not the  patient likes 
it-- because
strong medicine may be what is needed for a cure.

[Lennart]   What patient would want to go to a hospital if he knows he's 
going to be shot  dead in the foyer? (you might be on to something here though 
with the  "hospital" analogy).


And what is blazes is this gobbledygook ?  
 
One of evangelicalism’s biggest problems is we have no compelling  sexual 
vision 
which  makes sense of celibacy as a fulfilling calling. We  have little or 
no sexual ethic 
except  the glorified desire of Hollywood lopped onto  heterosexual 
monogamous 
marriage. We have no theology of desire formation. It is  “lust,” and 
enjoy it, 
only while married  to one person. We have no concept of  the “ordering of 
desire.” 


Celibacy as a fulfilling calling ?  For whom ?  On this  matter I totally 
reject Paul's view
except when there is no choice and you must make the best of a bad  
situation. His view
is 180 degrees in opposition to Song of Songs and is therefore 100 %  wrong 
as far as
I am concerned. And just what does "ordering of desire" actually mean  ?
All that such a phrase does is to open the door to still another   range
of compromises with the "moral vision" of  the NY Times and  Hollywood.

[Lennart] Well, if someone has the call I don't want to be the one to  say 
"you're weird". Paul's view is clear and you are certainly free to reject  
it (and, if memory servers me right I think he allows for that possibility  
which is not always the case).

If there is some reluctance about this, read Michael Medved;s  criticisms
of the movie business some time for actual moral clarity. For actual  morals
expressed by an actual  Jewish believer  --who is also smart  and who
actually does all the research necessary to be well informed.


OK, all of this now off my chest, how does a Christian relate to society  ?
Answer : There is no one answer. For some cases strong opposition  is 
called for,
in other cases strong compassion, in still  others dispassionate  
observation and
simply trying to learn.  And so forth. In all cases we are  discussing 
judgement calls.
We are, indeed, called upon to make judgements. Our task is to  become
really good at judging. The task, at least as I see it, is not to love  
everyone and 
everything indiscriminately, like the Jains or followers of Tolstoy or  
orthodox Quakers
and still other well-meaning folks who also happen to be simpletons, the  
task is
to judge well.

[Lennart]  I don't think strong compassion and  clear moral perception are 
opposites. The more a follower of Jesus has of the  latter the more of the 
former is probably required.

//  Lennart

Billy




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