Gay Marriage 'Graver Threat' Than Divorce,  Cohabitation, Rick Warren, 
Other Evangelicals, Catholics  Declare

 


By _Samuel Smith_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/samuel-smith/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
January 30, 2015

 
Influential  megachurch Pastor Rick Warren and 49 other Catholic and 
Evangelical scholars and  intellectuals have signed their names to an 
eight-page 
declaration that opposes  society's growing acceptance of same-sex marriages 
and labels homosexual unions  as a "graver threat" to marriage than 
widespread divorce and cohabitation  because it is a parody of marriage. 
The  declaration entitled "The Two Shall Become One Flesh: Reclaiming 
Marriage" was  written by the alliance called Evangelicals and Catholics 
Together 
and is set to  be published in the March edition of the religion journal 
First  Things. 
Although the Catholics and Evangelicals involved in the writing of this  
overarching declaration against sexual sin still hold differences when it 
comes  to the legitimacy of divorce and use of contraception, their differences 
were  set aside as they focused on tackling what they consider to be the 
biggest  problem facing marriage in society today.
 
Although divorce rates are increasing and society has grown more accustomed 
 to loose sexual behavior before and outside of marriage, the declaration, 
which  The Christian Post obtained a copy of, declares that it is the 
acceptance of  same-sex marriages that ultimately "degrades humanity." 
"An easy acceptance of divorce damages marriage; widespread cohabitation  
devalues marriage," the declaration explains. "But so-called same-sex 
marriage  is a graver threat, because what is now given the name of marriage in 
law 
is a  parody of marriage." 
With most states now accepting gay marriages, the American political 
climate  is continually growing more accommodating toward same-sex unions, 
while 
becoming  less accommodating to those who defend to the traditional Christian 
view of  marriage as being between just a man and a woman. 
The alliance's statement declares that society's push in the last decade to 
 legalize gay marriage and make it more widespread could easily lead down a 
 slippery slope, ultimately causing the destruction of the traditional  
family. 
"The law no longer recognizes the primordial, complementary natural roles 
of  mother and father. The natural family as the fundamental context defining 
where  we have come from and who we are is set aside," the declarations 
states. "The  family becomes a creation of the state, and where the family is a 
creation of  the state, children become, in important legal respects, the 
property of the  state." 
"Instead of freely accepting God's gift, we seek to dominate (and even 
alter)  nature, constructing our own moral truths," the document added. "The 
result is a  deceptive pseudo-freedom that degrades our humanity." 
Notable signers supporting the alliance's declaration include Warren, 
founder  of the California megachurch Saddleback Church; Robert George, 
professor 
at  Princeton University and vice-chair of the U.S. Commission on 
International  Religious Freedoms; Maggie Gallagher, conservative commentator 
and 
former  president of the National Organization for Marriage; and Robert Gagnon, 
 associate professor of New Testament at the Pittsburgh Theological 
Seminary. 
Russell Moore, president of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious  
Liberty Commission, did not sign the agreement because of scheduling conflicts. 
 
ERLC spokeswoman Elizabeth Bristow told CP that Moore has read the 
declaration  and "has no objections to anything in it." 
Although the statement goes out of its way to label the same-sex marriage 
as  a "graver threat" to marriage than either divorce or cohabitation, 
President of  the Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, Daniel Akin, who 
also 
signed his  name to the document, told CP that he does not think that 
"homosexual sin" is  any worse than "heterosexual sin." 
"Do I think this statement is trying to isolate specifically one particular 
 manifestation over another? No," Akin said. "What this statement is trying 
to do  is address the political legalization of same-sex marriage, which is 
a real  concern for both Catholics and Evangelicals. We do not believe that 
it would be  wise for our government to legalize same-sex marriage." 
One such secular reason for objecting to same-sex marriage is how such  
marriages will alter the dynamic of the parent-child relationship. 
"This proposed change has happened with great rapidity, in about a decade 
or  so, and it is hard to predict how damaging it may be, especially for 
children  who will no longer have a mother or father, but as new marriage 
documents read,  parent 1 or parent 2, (or in California, parent 3 and parent 
4)," 
Dean of the  Beeson Divinity School at Samford University, Timothy George, 
who also signed  the document, told CP. "Pope Francis spoke to this issue 
recently when he said  that every child deserves to have a mother and a 
father." 
Gagnon told CP that this document does not serve just a political purpose 
but  also is designed to debunk analogies used by gay supporters who reason 
that  since divorce and cohabitation is increasingly accepted in many 
churches,  churches can accept homosexual marriages, as well. 
"This is a faulty use of analogical reasoning," Gagnon asserted. "One can't 
 logically and reasonably move from limited accommodation in lesser 
offenses to  full accommodation in greater offenses." 
The declaration also calls on all Christians to defend the Biblical  
definition of marriage and to not affirm same-sex marriages politically. 
"As Christians, we must state, unambiguously, that same-sex marriage  
contradicts the Gospel," the declaration reads. "Christians who wish to remain  
faithful to the Scripture and Christian tradition cannot embrace this  
falsification of reality, irrespective of its status in law." 
Akin explained that Christians who affirm same-sex marriages do not hold an 
 authentically Christian points of view. 
"I don't think a consistent follower of Jesus can ever willingly knowingly  
accommodate what the Bible calls sinful behavior, whatever that happens to 
be,"  Akin said. "I think that is what the intent of the [declaration] was. 
It's not  questioning in the sense that if you affirm same-sex marriage you 
are not a  Christian, I don't think it is saying that. I think it is saying 
that to affirm  same-sex marriage is a non-Christian affirmation." 
Gagnon agrees that affirming same-sex marriages is not a faithful Christian 
 view. 
"Christians can hold unfaithful positions. In my view this is a 
significantly  unfaithful position, comparable to, or worse than, promoting 
adult-consensual  incest," Gagnon writes. "It promotes egregious immorality, 
behavior 
that God  finds particularly abhorrent."

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