Why Are LGBT People So Hacked With Christians?
By Allan
Erickson
[From the book, The Cross & the Constitution in the Age of Incoherence,
2012, Tate Publishing]
Perhaps secular ears will hear …
Not long ago a gay couple in West Hollywood hung
Sarah Palin in effigy. That image will loom large in the minds of the Palin
children for many years, perhaps for a lifetime.
In recent days at demonstrations in Palm Springs we’ve seen gay protestors knock a cross out of the hands of a grandmother, stomp all over it, and scream in her face. She is filing charges. We’ve seen homosexual protestors invade church services Sunday morning and rail against people, shouting threats. We’ve seen what appears to be Anthrax mailed to LDS churches. We have seen protests throughout southern California and threats of more violence and demonstrations. And we have heard LGBT leaders call blacks ignorant bigots for voting in favor of Proposition Eight in California.
All
this is no way to build consensus, invite understanding, or forward the cause
of mutual respect. It appears
we are incapable of engaging a rational discussion when it comes to the topic
of homosexuality.
Many of us in the traditional faith
community want to challenge those in the LGBT community to consider: perhaps
Christians are not hate-filled homophobes but instead rational people with a
legitimate point of view. Why are
you so intolerant of our point of view? Why do you give yourselves permission to do violence against us?
Maybe gay marriage is unhealthy for everyone?
Regardless, don’t people have a right
to an opinion? Do they not have the right to vote their conscience on
issues central to the organization of society?
The
answer is no if we listen to contemporary gay activists. For those more moderate in approach and
sensibility, please try to understand where Christians are coming from. Quell the emotion for a time and try to come
at this with hardcore objectivity and rational inquiry.
Our
belief is God is very clear in his Word.
People have the freedom to accept his Word or not. Neither God nor man is forcing anyone to do,
or not do, something or other. Is that plausible to you? We are simply
following the dictates of our conscience. Do we have the freedom to do so? Do
we have the right to do so? What does God’s Word say about homosexual behaviors
and gay marriage?
Here are the most often cited passages from both Old
and New Testaments. Please read carefully.
Do not lie with a man as one lies with a woman; that is
detestable. – Leviticus 18:22
If a man lies with a man as one lies
with a woman, both of them have done what is detestable. They must be put to
death; their blood will be on their own heads. – Leviticus 20:13
Keep in mind laws in Leviticus were laid down for
the Jews at a specific time for specific reasons. Obviously as Christians we do
not believe people should be put to death today. We live under an entirely new
covenant and dispensation, one governed by grace and mercy and love, not the
law. However, God does not change his
mind about the nature of sin or move from calling something detestable to
calling it blessed or sanctioned. This should be obvious.
Because of this, God gave them over to
shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural relations for unnatural
ones. In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and
were inflamed with lust for one another. Men committed indecent acts with other
men, and received in themselves the due penalty for their perversion. – Romans
1:26–27
Do you not know that the wicked will
not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually
immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual
offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers
will inherit the kingdom of God. – 1 Corinthians 6:9–10
… knowing this: that the law is not made for a righteous person,
but for the lawless and insubordinate, for the ungodly and for sinners, for the
unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for
manslayers, for fornicators, for sodomites, for kidnappers, for liars, for
perjurers, and if there is any other thing that is contrary to sound doctrine –
1 Timothy 1:9–10
[The Word is convicting on purpose. The Gospel
is an offense. It is supposed to be, for only by conviction of sin are we
led to repentance and salvation.]
Let’s remember the Word says all
have fallen short of the Glory of God, all are sinners, and no one does good,
not one. As
Christians, we simply believe Christ and his Word, and the Word is obviously
very clear. Demanding we act in ways
contrary to what we believe is to attempt to force us to deny our Lord and deny
conscience. Is that so hard to understand? Does our devotion make us
homophobes by default? Of course not.
Nor is it appropriate for members of the LGBT community to attack us, as we’ve
seen in recent days in the wake of the passage of Proposition Eight in
California.
No doubt gays will come back, saying, “You are
asking us to deny our conscience telling us homosexuality is sin.” Well, somebody is wrong, and somebody is
right. Logic alone disallows
both parties claiming truth. Perhaps the following will help explain
our point of view further. I’ve had gay friends as far back as 1972. One old
friend, who is long gone, once told me gay activism was entirely misguided. He
said there was no point declaring war on the larger society. (Gays comprise 3–4
percent of the population.) He said it would only cause endless turmoil for no
good reason. I think he was right. It is understood that flying under the radar
is anathema to many people in the homosexual world, but this is where my friend
concluded the matter for himself. The fact he was a college professor may carry
weight with some people.
It pains me to think homosexual friends are headed
for judgment.
What is the most loving thing I can
do? Accommodate their sin as they
stumble into hell or try to dissuade them from following a destructive and
unhealthy lifestyle that ultimately leads to eternal separation from God? The answer is obvious. If I ignore
the sin of a brother and let him fall, die, and go to hell, one of two things
must be true: either I do not love
that brother, or I do not believe sin will visit these consequences.
If my brother’s house is on fire, do I stand on the
sidewalk and wish him well and walk away, or do I rush in to save him? It is
not an act of love to silently standby and pat people on the back while they
destroy themselves.
And
it is not discrimination to speak the truth in love.
We have always held to the idea of
community standards of morality as defined by the majority. Several states voted against gay marriage this last
go around. Is there any respect for voters out there?
So far, all states have voted against gay marriage
except one. If the people in that state want to codify gay marriage, so be it.
Why must the LGBT community insist
the majority submit to their vision of marriage? There is a distinct tyrannical
flavor to it.
Otherwise,
it is astounding to hear so-called pastors ignore God’s Word, accommodate
sin—which is killing people—and bow to tyrants. Lord, help us.
As always, the Lord of love shows the way.
When the religious hypocrites threw
the adulterous woman at Jesus’ feet, challenging him to give the order to stone
her to death, the Master waited for a teachable moment, challenged the sinners
to cast the first stone, loved the woman, and told her to “sin no more.” He
restored her, not by accommodating her sin, not by looking the other way, but
by protecting her and leading her into the light, by his grace.
With Christ as our example we must “go and do
likewise.”
We should neither condemn sinners nor
codify sin into law, all the while recognizing we too are all sinners, saved
only by grace, and that, “not of ourselves, lest anyone should boast” (Eph.
2:9).
Pastors who prefer accommodation to
salvation lean to their own understanding, lead people to destruction, and
dishonor the Lord, all in the same breath.
Trust in the Lord with all your heart
and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and
he will make your paths straight. – Proverbs 3: 5,6
We can no sooner force gay people to
be straight than we can force Christians to be atheists. God never forces anyone to do anything. He simply
invites people to enter his rest and enjoy a loving relationship with him,
thereby allowing the Holy Spirit to conform us to Christ, the personification
of Truth. Entering this loving relationship allows a person to enjoy the
essence of true freedom.
Christians
should be able to take a stand for our beliefs, and we should be able to do so
in this country without being assaulted. Any objective examination of the
record shows Christians do not assault members of the LGBT community.
Hopefully members of the LGBT
community will try to understand Christian beliefs and confront this ludicrous
idea Christians are somehow filled with hate and out to get them. It’s a lie
from the pit of hell, and, somehow people know this, but they let the lie goad
them to violence nonetheless.
We continue to pray for peaceful resolution, asking
for an end to hostilities and an embrace of understanding, even an
understanding unto salvation. Most
Christians I know are willing to live and let live but cannot, as a matter of
conscience, sanction gay marriage. It appears more and more LGBT people are not
willing to live and let live but are pleased to fight and fight some more.
If
that is the case, we are in for a long fight.
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