Sorry, but We Won't Rewrite the Bible for Gays and  Lesbians 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/sorry-but-we-wont-rewrite-the-bible-for-gays-lesbians-16
5720/email.html) 








 
By _Michael Brown_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/michael-brown/)   , 
Christian Post  Op-Ed Contributor
June 28, 2016
In response to my open letter to Isaac Archuleta, who describes himself  as 
a bisexual Christian, Richard S. posted a lengthy comment on my personal  
Facebook page, including this statement: "The logical conclusion to your  
theology (gays can change and if they don't it must be because they don't have  
faith or are deceived) is extremely damaging to the souls of gay people. 
That  was the point of Isaac's letter. No amount of nice words will erase the 
damage.  Only honest reconsideration of your theology will bring healing. 
Please don't  discount/deny the faith of your gay brothers and sisters. They 
have much to  contribute to the church." 
Of course, Richard has completely misstated what conservative Christians  
believe (we don't say or believe that if gays don't change "it must be 
because  they don't have faith or are deceived"), just as other parts of his 
comment (not  quoted here) were also based on serious misunderstandings. 
But that is secondary to the bigger issue, and Richard is one of many who 
are  telling serious Bible believers that, "Only honest reconsideration of 
your  theology will bring healing." 
He could not be more wrong. 
First, what Scripture says on homosexual practice is not negotiable, and no 
 amount of new books or videos or personal stories will change that. 
As I explained in my book Can You Be Gay and Christian?, " no new  textual, 
archeological, sociological, anthropological, or philological  discoveries 
have been made in the last fifty years that would cause us to read  any of 
these biblical texts differently. Put another way, it is not that we have  
gained some new insights into what the biblical text means based on the study 
of  the Hebrew and Greek texts. Instead, people's interaction with the LGBT  
community has caused them to understand the biblical text differently." 
Simply stated, if not for the sexual revolution, no one would be 
reexamining  what the Scriptures state about God's intention for His creation. 
No one would be wondering if two men or two women could "marry" or if a  
husband could also be a wife. 
No one would be doubting that the Lord made men for women and women for men 
 and that any deviation from that pattern was contrary to His design and  
intent. 
As one New Testament scholar was candid enough to admit, it was clear to 
him  that the Bible forbade homosexual practice, but when his own daughter 
came out  as a lesbian, he changed his opinion on the subject. 
That's why I've often stated that there is not a single argument that can 
be  brought from God's Word to defend homosexual practice, but there are 
powerful  emotional arguments that can be brought. In that context, I'm often 
reminded of  Jesus' words that, "Whoever loves father or mother more than me 
is not worthy of  me, and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not 
worthy of me" (Matt.  10:37). 
The father of a "gay Christian" activist changed churches when his home  
congregation rejected his son's views on homosexuality. When asked about these 
 words of Jesus, he commented that there were other churches he could go 
to, but  he had only one son. 
I could only wince when I heard his words, so loving in one way but so  
destructive in another. 
Second, if there was something to reconsider in our theology we would 
gladly  do it. The truth be told, as impossible as the "gay Christian" 
arguments 
struck  me, I went to the Lord about them, buying the books that defended 
this new way  of reading Scripture, reading the stories (and listening to the 
stories) of  professing gay Christians, allowing my heart to be torn and my 
mind to be  challenged. 
At the end of the day, as a biblical scholar, a lover of Jesus, and a lover 
 of people, it was impossible for me to accept their arguments. The Word is 
just  too clear on this, and without some kind of emotional or social or 
other  pressure to reconsider what Scripture states, no one would deny this. 
 
 



Third, those who argue that Christians agree to disagree on lots of things  
without denying each other's faith fail to realize that they do not agree 
to  disagree on behaviors that Scripture strongly condemns — unless they 
themselves  are living in some kind of moral compromise. 
We're not dealing here with a question of whether speaking in tongues is 
for  today or whether Christians are required to tithe or whether Jesus is 
coming  before the tribulation. 
We're dealing with redefining the very meaning of marriage and claiming 
that  a behavior that is plainly condemned in the Old and New Testaments — I'm 
talking  about same-sex cohabitation — is now blessed by God. 
And while God alone is the judge of every professing Christian, be that  
person gay or straight, we cannot embrace as fellow brothers and sisters those 
 who are affirming, practicing, and even celebrating homosexuality. 
We will put our arms around everyone who struggles with same-sex 
attraction,  loving them and embracing them and encouraging them in their walk 
with 
the Lord,  whether their walk entails transformation from homosexual to 
heterosexual or  whether it entails celibacy. 
But we will not and cannot affirm and bless what the Lord Himself opposes. 
To  do so is to do a disservice to those in the LGBT community. 
Fourth, God's message of grace and truth brings healing and wholeness and  
deliverance and freedom, as millions of people from every walk of life can  
attest, including large numbers of people who once identified as LGBT. 
I'm quite aware that there are genuine homo-haters in the Church (I plan to 
 address this yet again in the coming days; God is their judge as well), 
and I'm  quite aware that Christians have often failed to demonstrate 
Christ-like love  and compassion to the LGBT community (to put it mildly). 
But I'm also quite aware that when we speak the truth in love and people  
actually hear what we're saying (not the interpretation they put on our words 
 but the real message of our words), if that message is received it will 
bring  life not death. 
To all of you reading this article who say, "I'm gay, I'm Christian, I'm  
involved in a same-sex relationship, and we're thriving in the Lord," I 
invite  you to call my radio show or to send me your story or, if you live in 
my 
city,  to get together with me and some of your friends — not for the 
purpose of debate  but for the purpose of honest, loving, heartfelt 
interaction. 
And if you have time, would you watch my video, "Can You Be Gay and  
Christian?" and tell me what I don't understand and where I don't display  
genuine 
empathy? 
And if you'd like to read my book by the same title and you genuinely can't 
 afford it, email me your story, include your address, and I'll send you a 
copy  for free. You will not find a hateful word in the book, but you will 
find  someone who cares. 
In the end, though, your issue is with the Lord not with me. 
I can assure you that He understands and He will provide everything you 
need  if you truly entrust your life to  Him.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to