cabrown said:
For the first time in my life, I am personally aquainted with a number of openly gay and lesbian individuals, many of which are religious.
I find almost all of them as sincere and heartfelt in their spiritual zeal as any other Christian, but it seems to me the Bible is explicity clear that homosexuality in any form is a sin.
Can christianity embrace and accept gays and lesbians? I am not sure what my opinion is myself?
Well, first, according to Scripture and Christian doctrine, we're
all sinners -- whose sins have been redeemed, whose salvation assured, whose justification provided for, by the Atonement of Jesus Christ. From Christ's teaching, there are a lot worse sins than homosexuality -- many of them unrepentantly engaged in by many of the folks who denounce homosexuality. So my sense is that if the Church is comprised of only those without sin, then Jesus is awfully lonely there (even if the Catholics are right and His Mother is there with Him.) But if it's comprised of sinners who are saved through His grace -- then I fail to see how sexual orientation is a deciding factor in who He saves. John 3:16 does
not say "For God so loved the world that He sent His only-begotten Son, that all heterosexuals who believe in Him should not perish but have everlasting life."
Second point is what you mean by "homosexuality." There's a man in Wake Forest, about 25 miles from me, who is engaged in an "ex-gay" ministry with a difference. He believes that gay sex is sinful, like the majority of Christians -- but he himself is gay, and recognizes the difference between orientation and act. And he believes that he must remain celibate, and depend on the Lord's strength for the will power to do so. And he has found in his life in Christ something that gives him joy and more than makes up for the sexual frustration, and that's what he's sharing with those he ministers to.
The typical gay person, by openly admitting that he or she is gay, is not saying that he or she is wilfully engaging in gay sex at every possible opportunity -- he or she is saying that what he or she discovered about him/herself at some point around puberty is that he or she has an inherent orientation to be attracted to some people of the same sex, in much the same way as a typical 12/13-year-old finds the same to be true about him/herself and the opposite sex. And that this orientation is
not chosen and for all practical purposes
unchangeable.
Now, compare and contrast this to that straight 13-year-old. He or she gets sexually aroused by the opposite sex, recognizes that to act on that at the present time is a sin, feels some guilt over having that sexuality, understands the difference between having a healthy God-given sex drive and preoccupation and obsession over sex, and eventually works through those feelings to a mature Christian attitude about sex.
My own church teaches that sexuality is a gift from God, a natural part of who you are, which ideally is exercised in one of two roles: celibacy, or within a lifelong monogamous relationship covenanted before God -- i.e., a marriage. Adolescence and courtship are natural concomitants of that, and God, who created mankind such that 15-year-olds feel sexual desire and are not yet old enough to marry, does not count it a sin for a 15-year-old to feel sexual desire. And certainly an engaged couple
ought to be feeling desire for each other, and looking forward to the wedding night.
But, if you will, note that the previous definition did not specify heterosexuality. The traditional and majority opinion in Christianity would specify marriage as one man and one woman, and I would not be permitted to say otherwise in the CO areas of this board. But my own church, with a few other denominations and a minority in a number of other churches, holds that a lifelong covenanted monogamous relationship between two gay people is within the bounds of what God must have intended.
Please do not bother denouncing the above view and "proving" to me from Scripture that God thinks otherwise, if that is what you hold to be true. As a loyal member of my church and a person committed to seek and serve Christ in all persons and treat all persons with dignity and respect, I follow the teachings of my own church. You are privileged to do the same, including in disagreement with me on this issue -- but I ask the same respect for myself and my church's teachings that I would extend to you and yours.
But there's one final point that absolutely
needs to be made here. We are not called to go out and condemn sinners, but to show them Christ's love and lead them to Him, to have them enter into repentance and newness of life in Him. Jesus's commands are quite clear and explicit on this. There are any number of people who understand this to involve "speaking the truth in love" -- and if that is truly their intent, I agree with them -- in a way that points out the sins of a brother or sister, in overt love of them, to assist them in repenting of their sins. I see singularly little of this attitude expressed in the homosexual debates that plague this board. I don't care whether or not you agree with my church that homosexual sex within a gay marriage is excluded from the condemnation in scripture of gay sex for gratification of lust, or hold that gay sex and the lust for it are sinful in all times and places: what you are called to do is to love
everyone, old or young, black or white, gay or straight, Christian, pagan, or atheist, penitent or stiff-necked, as your neighbor, as your brother or sister, for the salvation of whom Jesus Christ gave up His life, and received it back from God in order that they and we might have new life in Him.
If God judged me for my sins, I'd be a smudge of brimstone right now. But He loved me enough to grant me His grace and save me, and is in the process of making me over inside into His image. If you're honest with yourself, you'll say the same about yourself. And we're told that he will count what we do towards others as done toward Him, and that we will be judged by the measure with which we judge. As I hope for mercy, compassion, love, and forgiveness, so must I extend them to all.