Can you agree that when one abandons God's truth, one's thinking becomes decadent?
 
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Sunday, April 3, 2005
 
TESTING THE FAITH
Rev. Gene Robinson:
Jesus 'might be 'gay''
 
Posted: April 3, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern
 
� 2005 WorldNetDaily.com
Episcopal Bishop Gene Robinson, the first openly homosexual bishop of his
denomination, has angered traditionalist Anglicans by suggesting that
Jesus Christ might have been homosexual.
Robinson, who left his wife � and mother of his two daughters � to
cohabit with his male lover, Mark, made his inflammatory remarks during
an address titled, "Homosexuality and the Body of Christ: Is There a New
Way?" at Christ Church of Hamilton and Wenham, Massachusetts. The bishop
was asked by a congregant how Christians could both accept homosexuality
and the Bible's emphasis on redemption for sins.
"Interestingly enough, in this day of traditional family values,"
answered Robinson, "this man that we follow was single, as far as we
know, traveled with a bunch of men, had a disciple who was known as 'the
one whom Jesus loved' and said my family is not my mother and father, my
family is those who do the will of God. None of us likes those harsh
words. That's who Jesus is, that's who he was at heart, in his earthly
life.
"Those who would posit the nuclear family as the be all and end all of
God's creation probably don't find that much in the gospels to support
it," he concluded.
"Rubbish," responds David Virtue who operates VirtueOnline, a website
that bills itself as "the voice for global orthodox Anglicanism."
"It is appalling deconstructionism from the liberal lobby which will spin
even the remotest thing to turn it into a hint that Biblical figures are
gay," says Virtue. "It is so utterly preposterous to imply that Jesus'
relationship with John was homo-erotic, but twisting the truth is the
only way these people can get scriptural justification for their
lifestyles. Can you imagine Calvin, Luther or Erasmus saying something
like this? It is a wonder that thunder and lightning bolts don't strike
Bishop Robinson down."
Canon Chris Sugden, spokesman for the traditionalist organization,
Anglican Mainstream, also disputes Robinson's use of scripture and the
implications he draws from them.
"He's really selective in what he's addressing," says Sugden. "He makes
no mention of Jesus' teaching on marriage, for instance. And he does not
acknowledge that nowhere in the text or in ancient literature is there
any suggestion of any form of sexual impropriety among Jesus or the
disciples. Jesus broke the cultural traditions of the time and has women
mixing with men in public and having them teaching. Those of us who put
scripture as a priority are called on to obey the scripture even when
that is in conflict with our culture. Bishop Robinson is saying that the
culture has moved in his direction and that it's all becoming accepted,
so he's looking for ways to interpret scripture to support that instead
of realizing that scripture asks us to do the unpopular thing and stand
against the prevailing culture."
Robinson's 2003 consecration created a schism in the Anglican church
between liberals and traditionalists, causing some to suggest he should
be "struck down by thunder and lightning bolts." In some cases,
traditional congregations have sought to shift their affiliation with the
worldwide Anglican communion from liberal American bishops to bishops in
Africa where a conservative understanding of Biblical morality still
dominates.
Robinson, however remains undaunted by the criticism, saying he has
reconciled his homosexuality and his faith. "God's light and God's life
ooze over me like warm butter," he declares.
 

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