Shane Roach said:
Speaks volumes. Outright mockery: "i like your approach to unreasonable people." Presenting the truth of scripture with patience but resolve: "By the way, Where I disagree with your teaching is in the lack of love it portrays, which is the central theme to the whole book."
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I am now quite firmly convinced that you do not represent someone who is concerned with love and tone, razz. The tone of his post is far, far beyond anything either I or Outspoken have done, and bears no resemblance to the effort both of us have made to keep our posts on topic and draw from related texts and related ideas. And yet you praise him.
Yet another thread on homosexuality dies in a flame of personal attacks from so called "liberals", lacking any substantive arguments to add to the discussion.
Fundamentalists pick out
one section of the Genesis 19 story regarding Sodom and Gomorrah, make the assumption that the story
must be about "homosexuality" -- without taking into account the culture of the area, why hospitality is more than just "having nice manners" and it is actually about life and death in a desert environment, without bothering to look at the original meanings of the Scriptures -- but since a homosexual interpretation fits into fundamentalists' virulently conservative social agendas, why not go with that interpretation - even if it is the wrong interpretation, even if that interpretation completely misses the entire point of the story?
And how is it that fundamentalists manage to quote Leviticus 18:22 and Leviticus 20:13 as part of their favorite set of proof-texts against gays (of course, taking the passages out of context) without thinking that in condemning a group of people using two verses of the Law, fundamentalists have made the entire Law binding on themselves? You don't believe me? Galatians 2:21: " I don't make void the grace of God. For if righteousness is through the law, then Christ died for nothing!" Are we receiving the Spirit by works of the Law, or by hearing of faith? Far too many fundamentalists preach justification by faith, but in actuality practice justification by law. (Galatians 3:2).
So then: are we redeemed by works of the Law, or are we redeemed by faith in Christ? "As many as are of the works of the law are under a curse. For it is written, "Cursed is everyone who doesn't continue in all things that are written in the book of the law, to do them." Now that no man is justified by the law before God is evident, for, "The righteous will live by faith." The law is not of faith, but, "The man who does them will live by them."
Jesus Christ emphatically did NOT say, "Come to me, all you who are righteous enough, rich enough, who go to the right church in the right denomination, observe the right doctrines, pay the right tithes, hold the right social and political views, belong to the right political party and vote for the right candidates." Given that -- and the fact that we are justified by grace, through faith (and absolutely NOT by observing "the right doctrines" or following the "right social agenda"), we can toss out this Pharisaiacal (and completely un-Christian) notion of "God loves us more than He loves those AWFUL [fill in the groups you best love to hate] because under the Law which convicts every single one of us, the most "righteous Christian" is every bit as much a sinner as Saddam Hussein.
Speaking of taking things out of context: fundamentalists take Romans 1:26-32 completely and absolutely and utterly out of context as an indictment against "homosexuals" -- neatly forgetting that the very first verse of the very next chapter is pointing the finger at fundamentalists for doing the very same thing they're judging others for doing!
Taken in a larger context: Romans 1-3 is NOT about homosexuality AT ALL. Romans 1 deals with Jewish attitudes towards Gentiles -- who, perceiving nature, should realize there is a God but don't -- and so they continue on with various pagan fertility rites designed to get their crops to grow, or the rains to come (which include ritualized sex with young male prostitutes).
The Jews (having the Law) feel righteous -- but Paul correctly points out in Romans 2 that the Jews don't follow all of the Law, and since righteousness before God, in terms of the Law, means that you follow ALL of the Law, the Jews aren't righteous either.
Going later into chapter 2: even those Jews who somehow manage to follow the ENTIRE Law, to the letter -- aren't righteous before God because they are so obsessed with following the Law that they've made it a god unto itself.
Paul nails it when, in chapter 3, he correctly concludes that
none of us are righteous before God, in and of anything we do on our own behalf. How are we justified before God?
By grace, through faith in Jesus Christ. Not by what denomination we belong to. Not by what church we belong to. Not by what political party we belong to, or what social agenda we're following, or by how many Scriptures we think other people should be following (when we're not willing to follow the same Scriptures ourselves).
If ANY of us really believe that "we're better than those awful homosexuals who don't deserve a place in Heaven", then I challenge us to determine which part of "doing those things which are not fitting; being filled with all unrighteousness, sexual immorality, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, evil habits, secret slanderers, backbiters, hateful to God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, without understanding, covenant-breakers, without natural affection, unforgiving, unmerciful; who, knowing the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, not only do the same, but also consent with those who practice them" really does not apply to US.
A postscript: if any of us are bold enough (and arrogant enough) to say, "Well, we're
saved, so we don't sin" -- Scripture has something to say about that, too: "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us the sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we haven't sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us." 1 John 1:8-10
Sola fide.