Archives For homosexuality

  • FREE eBook Deals of the Day: Unfriend Yourself: Three Days to Detox, Discern, and Decide About Social Media (Kyle Tennant) – regularly $3.99; Love Works: Seven Timeless Principles for Effective Leaders (Joel Manby) – regularly $19.99.
  • CHEAP eBook Deal of the Day: The Purpose of Man: Designed to Worship (A. W. Tozer) – $3.99 (73% off).
  • Andy Sochor writes, “Whether we like it or not, professional athletes, like other celebrities, can have a big influence on the thinking of people in society. This announcement will only further the efforts to normalize the practice of homosexuality in people’s minds. In light of this news, it is important that Christians remember a few things.”
  • Gary Henry warns, “Just as agitation gets in the way of carefulness, pride gets in the way of worship. Nothing in the spiritual life is more important than awe and utter respect before God, and so if pride hinders us from being reverent, it’s a deadly danger to our souls.”
  • Scientific American reports, “You and I can access billions of Web pages, post blogs, write code for our own killer apps—in short, do anything we want on the Web—all for free! And we’ve enjoyed free reign because 20 years ago, today, Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee and his employer, the CERN physics lab in Geneva, published a statement that made the nascent ‘World Wide Web’ technology available to every person, company and institution with no royalty or restriction.”

Our culture and its dialogue are absolutely immersed in two enormous lies.

  1. If you disagree with someone’s lifestyle, you must either hate them, fear them, or be intolerantly and irrationally prejudiced against them.
  2. If you love someone, you must agree with or silently tolerate everything they believe and do.

These are lies that disciples of Christ simply cannot afford to believe. Why?

  1. These lies fail to acknowledge the objective standard given by our Creator.
  2. These lies elevate our definition of happiness above God’s prescription for holiness.
  3. These lies distort the nature of God’s written revelation to mankind.

This sermon seeks to hold these increasingly common lies under the microscope of divine revelation.

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Around the Web (1/16)

January 16, 2013 — Leave a comment

Around the Web

CHEAP eBook ALERT: How Successful People Think, by John Maxwell ($3.79, 62% off)

Around the Web (1/3)

January 3, 2013 — Leave a comment

Around the Web

Kindle Deal of the Day: Read the Bible for Life: Your Guide to Understanding and Living God’s Word, by George Guthrie ($2.99 – 80% off)

Joel Osteen made a CNN appearance yesterday morning on “Starting Point with Soledad O’Brien.” After briefly discussing Osteen’s newest book, O’Brien shifted the conversation to homosexuality.

Much could be said, but the most defining point in my mind is the idea of “staying in” one’s “lane.” God has not granted me a “lane,” Osteen a “lane,” or any other person on the planet a “lane.” God is the definer of reality and truth, including marriage and sexual ethics. Our responsibility as the created is to hear, believe, respond to, and spread the message of the Creator’s will. The positive and the negative. The uplifting and the crushing. The affirming and the condemning. Real love tells the truth. The whole truth. The truth breathed-out by God and preserved in his Word.

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On July 16, 2012 in Columbus Ohio, Patrick Donahue debated Margaret Hawk on this question: “Homosexual Marriage: Is it Compatible with the Scriptures?” Donahue denied and Hawk affirmed.

In Acts 17:11, Jews in the city of Berea were commended by Luke as being “more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.” In 1 John 4:1, John warns, “Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God, for many false prophets have gone out into the world.”

This debate provided a good opportunity to examine the Scriptures and test the spirits.

Video of the 2-hour debate is available below:

Patrick Donahue’s charts used throughout the debate are also available for download.

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From the nationally-syndicated DEAR ABBY Column (5/1/12)

Dear Abby: My son came out of the closet last year. My first reaction was to tell him it was OK. (I had already suspected that he was gay).

My husband and I are now struggling because we’re not sure how God views gays.

I tried reading the Bible, but the wording is hard to understand. I don’t want to talk to my pastor about it, because, even though I have accepted my son for who he is, I still have trouble talking to people about it, as I’m not sure how they’ll react.

Do you think a gay person can go to heaven?

- Somewhere in the USA

Dear Somewhere: I think that entrance to heaven is based upon a person’s character, not his or her sexual orientation.

Today, because of modern scientific studies, we know more about homosexuality than was known when the Bible was written—and that sexual orientation is not a “choice.”

- Abby

J. I. Packer has described “the all-too-familiar mind-set” of our modern age which holds that, “the newer is the truer, only what is recent is decent, every shift of ground is a step forward, and every latest word must be hailed as the last word on its subject” (Doing Theology in Today’s World, 21).

C. S. Lewis referred to such a perspective as “chronological snobbery,” defining it as “the uncritical acceptance of the intellectual climate common to our own age and the assumption that whatever has gone out of date is on that account discredited” (Surprised by Joy, 207-208).

Most importantly, our Creator, on two different occasions (1 Pet 1:24-25; Isa 40:6-8) has provided God-breathed commentary on the enduring nature of his revealed will.

All flesh is like grass and all its glory like the flower of grass. The grass withers, and the flower falls, but the word of the Lord remains forever.

The opinions of presidents, preachers and popular culture—including Dear Abby—may “evolve,” but Biblical truth does not.

  • Does Facebook wreck marriages? ”Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg changed his status to ‘married’ Saturday and received over one million ‘likes’ from his followers. But the site he founded isn’t always so marriage-friendly.”
  • Gary Henry on confession: “Every time we’re faced with the need to make a confession, we find out two things: how much we value truth and how much courage we have.”
  • “One of the greatest, most common, and most bloodthirsty contemporary competitions is motherhood.”
  • Al Mohler is asked by CNN: “Are Christians hypocritical and selective when it comes to the Bible’s condemnation of homosexuality? With all that the Bible condemns, why the focus on gay sex and same-sex marriage?”
  • The Big Picture features photos from around the world of the rare annular eclipse. Or check out this timelapse of 700 still images through a Coronado Solar Max 60 Double Stack telescope.

J. Gresham Machen once wrote of the force of seeing this total solar eclipse:

When I viewed the spectacle of the total eclipse of the sun at New Haven on the twenty-fourth of January 1925, I was confirmed in my theism. Such phenomena make us conscious of the wonderful mechanism of the universe, as we ought to be conscious of it every day; at such moments anything like materialism seems to be but a very pitiful and very unreasonable thing. I am no astronomer, but of one thing I was certain: when the strange, slow-moving shadow was gone, and the world was bathed again in the wholesome light of day, I knew that the sun, despite its vastness, was made for us personal beings and not we for the sun, and that it was made for us personal beings by the living God.

Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people. (Prov 14:34)

You’ve heard the phrase before: “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” Solomon verbalized the same principle this way:

What has been is what will be, and what has been done is what will be done, and there is nothing new under the sun. Is there a thing of which it is said, “See, this is new”? It has been already in the ages before us. (Eccl 1:9-10)
This sermon evaluates four “nothing new” pitfalls from Jeremiah 6:9-15 that continue to afflict the United States of America and nations around the world.

  • Outward expressions of religion with little or no delight in God’s word (Jer 6:10).
  • People who are relentlessly driven by greed (Jer 6:13).
  • Empty assurances from the comfort and soothing of false teachers (Jer 6:14).
  • A failure to be ashamed of sin (Jer 6:15).

But our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. (Phil 3:20).

Are we living like we believe it?

Good thoughts from Tyler Kenney below:

As Bible-believing Christians, we are known for our convictions against sexual immorality.   But are we known equally as well for our contempt for religious arrogance?

Scripture clearly states that sexual immorality is sin (Matthew 15:19; Romans 13:13; 1 Corinthians 6:18; Galatians 5:19;   1 Thessalonians 4:3, etc.).   We must also remember, however, that this is only one bad fruit of our rebellion against God, one among a list of many others, including idolatry, theft, greed, drunkenness, reviling and swindling (1 Corinthians 6:9-10).   And all of these, God says, are just spin-offs of a more deep-seated trouble.

Speaking to a disobedient Israel, the prophet Ezekiel declares,

Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy.   They were haughty and did an abomination before me.   So I removed them, when I saw it. (Ezekiel 16:49-50)

In the context surrounding this passage, Ezekiel is charging Israel for having done worse than Sodom.   And what does he say was Sodom’s sin?   The prophet doesn’t focus on any single outward behavior.   Sexual immorality was an issue, as we know from Genesis, and so was her lack of concern for the poor and needy, as we see mentioned here.   But Ezekiel doesn’t target either of those primarily.   Rather, he says that the real issue with Sodom was her haughty heart—she was proud.

There’s a warning in this for us: We must beware in our opposition to sexual immorality that we do not merely take on a different expression of the same sin.   We must beware lest we think that the issue is simply an external one and that we are “good with God” just because we maintain a high moral code.

Any outcry among Christians against sexual immorality should be outdone by our protests against pride.   We should be most aggressively opposed to arrogance—especially as we find it in ourselves and in our churches.   Only then will we be in a right position to speak humbly, wisely and brokenheartedly about the evils of sexual immorality and the greater love of Jesus Christ.