What
Do You Believe?
Paul
writes, “The wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God…. Neither the sexually
immoral nor idolators nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual
offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers
will inherit the kingdom.” Fifteen (or less?) years ago, Christians would read
this verse and almost universally agree that there was but one meaning;
however, today a larger number of Christians would argue that not only can
homosexuals be Christians but that God actually approves of it. We are all
sinners, born and bred, they argue, so what’s the difference between being a
homosexual Christian or a Christian who lies, steals, lusts, and commits any
other sin?
Before
I approached this study, I already had my mind made up (that’s the definition
of close-minded btw) and thought, “They are wrong, I am right, there’s nothing
to learn here.” A FB friend directed me to a website—gaychristian.net—and
encouraged me to read up on the beliefs of gay men and women who proclaim to
know Christ. After reading Justin Lee’s (the Executive Director) treatise on
his beliefs—written with more Scriptures than most Christian articles—I
discovered some great points and insightful, respectful rebuffs of many
traditional Christian views. I encourage anyone who is on either side of the
fence (there really is no middle ground) to read what “they” (the opposite side
you espouse) believe with a desire to learn and study to see if what they teach
is true or not (rather than have our minds predetermined).
Mr.
Lee believes “homosexual behavior is appropriate within the
confines of a committed, loving, monogamous, lifelong, Christ-centered
relationship” because he sees no difference between male and female or gay and
straight as long as they are children of God (1Cor 10.31). He believes that
love is the fulfillment of the law and therefore restrictive commands are void
when trumped by love. Among his many other beliefs, he also claims that
condemning gays is a cultural fallacy similar to how Christians used to restrict
women from speaking in church gatherings or supported the practice of slavery.
What will follow is my unqualified attempt to answer the major
points of Justin Lee’s argument as I try to determine if what I believe is
actually what the Bible teaches.
Defining the Christian Self: We are New Creations
Paul writes that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God
and includes in that definition of “wicked” those who are “fornicators…
adulterers… homosexuals… thieves… the covetous… [etc]” (1Cor 6.9-10). We would
not call someone a “thief” or “drunkard” for stealing something once or being
tempted by beer, but rather when their lifestyle habitually includes activities
that become their definition of “self.” (An “accountant” is one who accounts
and a “doctor” one who practices medicine, not just people who are good at math
or like to “prescribe” drugs on the street corner). Additionally, the Bible
doesn’t say that God creates “idolaters” nor “fornicators” nor “adulterers,” so
why would we assume He creates “homosexuals” when all are listed with the same
condemning label, “wicked?”
Context and cross-referencing with the rest of Scripture will
help us understand God’s position concerning the Christian definition of self:
“Such were some of you; but you were washed… sanctified… justified in the name
of the Lord Jesus… and the Spirit of our God.” Notice the past tense “were” as Paul
reminds us here, as he does elsewhere, that whatever we were before is “old”
and “dead,” but in Jesus, through the indwelling of God’s Spirit, we are “new”
and “alive” (2Cor 5.17; Col 2.13). We are no longer defined by the “sinful
desires of [our] hearts” and “given over to shameful lusts” (Rom 1.24-27), for
when we become children of God, we are “controlled not by the sinful nature but
by the Spirit, if… we belong to Christ” (Rom 8.9). In essence, Christians are
not both a child of God and any of the labels listed in 1Cor 6.9, 10.
Justin Lee argues, “God designed our ears and mouths… But some
people are deaf, maybe because they were born that way…. They can’t communicate
the way the rest of us do, so they… use sign language to communicate, even
though that’s not what our hands were designed for…. None of us would call that
‘sinful.’” He doesn’t notice that he’s aligning homosexuality with an
abnormality or handicap with the expectation that we rearrange our definitions
of “normal” based on the minority who are not homogenous to the majority (it is
normal for people to see, abnormal for them to not; therefore, we don’t
redefine the rules of the road so blind people can drive). Though it is true
that some Christians will struggle with sins with more frequency than others
(i.e. drunkenness, pride, sloth, lust, or homosexuality), it doesn’t change the
definition of sin in regards to the Christian self. We don’t call people
“Christian Drunkards” or “Believing Rapists” because they struggle with alcohol
or lust, so neither should we, the Church, consider “Christian Homosexual” a
biblically accurate term.
All Christians struggle with sin, but being a child of God means
that we are no longer slaves to them (Romans 6).
God and Me and He and She
Justin Lee (gaychristian.net) quotes Galatians 3.28, “There is
neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in
Christ Jesus,” arguing that there are individuals who struggle with gender
identity and since, in Christ, male and female are indistinguishable to the
indwelling Spirit, we should allow people to “fall in love with someone who
loves them just as they are,” no matter the gender with which they identify
themselves. He condemningly writes to those who do not agree: “Yet somehow we’d
have to go on believing that gender is crucial to God—so crucial that marrying
someone of the wrong gender can keep you out of the kingdom of God.”
There are two problems with Lee’s arguments, both of which he
ignores throughout his article. First, Paul was quoting Joel 2.29 and making a
point to his Jewish readers that Gentiles (and slaves and women) were not
inferior to them because they were not physically the “seed of Abraham.” Nowhere
does Paul argue that Gentiles, nor slaves, nor men and women, cease to physically
be Gentiles, slaves, men or women, because they now belong to Jesus. In the
Bible, a spiritual transformation nowhere requires a physical alteration.
Second is the very important question that many “non-traditionalists” either
ignore or take an illogical opposing stance towards: “Why does God identify
Himself with masculine nouns like Father, Husband, and the ubiquitously
capitalized pronoun, “He?”
Paul writes to men, “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ
also loved the Church…. For we are members of His body, of His flesh and of His
bones. ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined
to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.’ This is a great mystery, but
I speak concerning Christ and the Church” (Ep 5.25-32). God relates to us, the
Church of God—male and female, Jew and Gentile, slave and free—as His Bride and
not as a fellow husband. We understand how we, the Church, should relate to God
because we understand how a female wife should relate to her male husband, and
vice versa. When the two genders and positions obfuscate (get distorted) and we
have two heads—two husbands—or two bodies—two wives—we can no longer use the
example of God, and thereby His commands, to understand either our relationship
with Him nor our love for those with whom we wed. In answer to Lee’s
accusation: Gender identity, especially as it relates to whom we marry, is so
crucial to God that He uses it explain how He relates to His people!
I cannot understand the relationship between God and me if I
will not accept the differences between he and she.
Traditions Usurping Commands
Another salient argument Justin Lee (gaychristian.net) imposes
is regarding the “traditionalist” view of “women speaking in church” and men
donning long hair, wherein he demands: “We're going to have to find a clear,
consistent way of determining which passages in Scripture we're still obligated
to follow, and which ones we're not. And it has to be a standard that we can
apply in every culture and in every context, not something that lets us
reinterpret things every few years to suit our desires.” His poignant preaching
against our common practice of interpreting Scripture based on cultural
perceptions presents a loophole wherein he asserts this point: “The only reason
we’re having this debate now about same-sex relationships instead of about
women speaking in church is that our culture’s standards have changed.” Therefore,
he argues, “Any honest Christian has to admit that there are at least some passages that either
a) don't apply today; b) still apply but don't mean what they seem to mean on
the surface; or c) are overruled by other passages or biblical themes.”
Obviously, “homosexuality prooftexts,” as he calls them, are among those verses
requiring reinterpreting.
Honestly, I completely and wholeheartedly agree with him concerning
those who interpret Scripture to match their cultural and traditional beliefs.
Jesus said of such people, “You nullify the word of God by your traditions that
you have handed down” (Mk 7.13). Unfortunately, Lee—along with the majority of
modern Christians—falls under the chastisement of Jesus’ words because of their
cultural definition of “the church.” When Lee reads that women should not
“speak in church” I assume he envisions a congregational gathering where dozens
of men and women literally sit under the tutelage of an “ordained” (seminary
trained) pastor, elder, bishop, or professional minister, rather than a
biblically-based definition of “ekklesia” that derives from Jesus’ proclamation
concerning His discipleship relationship with Peter, the rock upon which “the
church” was built (https://mikewarren4gzus.wordpress.com/2015/02/09/how-to-define-the-local-church/). We should define “church”
as “two or three [people]” (Mt. 18-15-20) gathering together to teach one
another to obey the commands of God (Mt. 28.19,20) through discipleship since
this is what Jesus demonstrated and what Paul instructs in Titus wherein he
tells older women, “admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love
their children, to be… obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God may
not be blasphemed” (2.3-5). If we define “church” in this manner, we can then
understand that the reason a woman should not instruct a man has very little to
do with the culture of their day (or ours), but rather with understanding how God
relates to us and we to others.
Paul writes, “Let your women keep silent in church… they are to
be submissive as the law also says” (1Cor 14.34). The Law Paul is referring to
is found in God’s chastisement of Eve wherein He states, “Your desire shall be
for your husband, and he shall rule over you” (Gen 3.16). Paul explains this in
more detail as he discusses head coverings, “The head of every man is Christ,
the head of woman is man, and the head of Christ is God…. For this reason the
woman ought to have a symbol of authority on her head, because of the angels”
(1Cor 11.3-10). Like Lee, I have no idea how the angels play a part, but what
is obvious is that this passage only further illustrates the roles God expects
husbands and wives to play in marriage in order to enhance our understanding of
His relationship with us. To confuse the command that a male is to be the head
of a female in a marriage relationship, which cannot occur with two males or
two females, is to blaspheme the Word of God by altering His commands to
coincide with the cultural definitions of the day: an act Mr. Lee commits while
simultaneously condemning those who have done the same.
Cultural traditions should enhance the commands of God, not
change them.
Sinning against God’s Image
In regards to passages which directly condemn homosexuality, Lee
says, “The prohibition of male-male sex is pretty straightforward. And at the
beginning of the [Leviticus] passage, God tells us why He's giving these rules
— because He wants to keep the Israelites pure and separate from the
polytheistic cultures surrounding them (Lev. 18:1-4). This helps explain why
the Israelites are forbidden to shave (Lev. 19:27), get tattoos (Lev. 19:28),
wear clothing made of mixed fabrics (Lev. 19:19), or have sex during a woman's
period (Lev. 18:19).” Though he acknowledges that God forbids homosexuality, he
also claims, “God seems to change His mind so much in the Bible…. God gives a
command for a particular purpose…. Once the command is no longer necessary to
accomplish that purpose, it becomes obsolete. Then other considerations (such
as compassion) take over.” To Lee, those verses that specifically identify
homosexual behavior as contrary to God’s design are among those which modern
Christian culture has deemed obsolete.
However, does God change His mind about what He considers sin,
like getting tattoos, eating pork, working on the Sabbath, or having sex with a
person of the same gender? “God is not a man that He should lie, nor… change
His mind” (Num 23.19). God doesn’t change, but people, relationships, cultures,
and the world itself does, which means applications change through time, but
principles never do. In order to understand why God prohibits certain things,
we must recognize that sin is not simply activities one should avoid. Consider
the first sin of Adam and Eve eating from the “tree of knowledge of good and
evil.” Was the act of eating fruit, sinful? Is sex, or work, or tattoos, or
music, or dancing, or killing, sinful? If those acts make one a sinner, then do
righteous acts like reading the Bible, praying, serving, loving, and caring
make one a saint? Of course not! The first woman ate because she was tempted to
“become like god, knowing good and evil [by her own definition and volition]. The
motivation for the action is what pushed her into sin, not the fruit itself.
God’s commands illuminate Truth so that we might know how to
live in accordance with His guidance, but the words themselves are not “Truth.”
Paul writes, “the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life” (2Cor 3.6) because
words are merely signifiers of otherwise immutable ideas. (The word “love” can
never encapsulate all that is meant by the expression). When God presents
commands, like “have no idols,” we understand that He doesn’t just mean that
wooden or metal images should not be worshipped but that ideologies, people, or
objects that come between us and Him are “sin.” When we who are created in the
image of God attempt to re-imagine ourselves into someone other than the person
He commands us to be, then that is sin.
Has God changed His mind about what He considers sin or have we
merely redefined sin to be only those things we despise? Sin is more than what
we do or do not do: It’s when we allow what we do to redefine who we are in a
way that God does not (Gen 4.7; Rom 6.16-19).
Love Covers Sin
Lee teaches that “God… in His infinite wisdom, [knows] that mere
rules and regulations are not always sufficient to define what is sinful…. Even
we humans can recognize this. Killing another human being, for example, is both
a sin and a terrible crime. But there are situations in which we would not hold
someone accountable for killing, such as if it was in self-defense. There might
even be times we would approve of their actions.” If “sin” is simply defined as
“disobeying God’s commands” then sometimes we don’t sin when we don’t obey for
“good” reasons. If this is the case with some commands, like killing or lying,
then it’s probably the same for all, like men sleeping with men or women ruling
over their husbands. Basically, Lee is saying that the commands of God can be
overruled by rewritten traditions of people as long as one simple rule is
maintained: it must be done in love.
“He who loves his fellowman has
fulfilled the law. The commandments, 'Do not commit adultery,' 'Do not murder,'
'Do not steal,' 'Do not covet,' and whatever
other commandment there may be, are summed up in this one rule:
'Love your neighbor as yourself.' Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore
love is the fulfillment of the law (Rom 13.8-10). Lee adds his epiphany
regarding “love” usurping God’s commands as commentary to Romans 13: “Paul is saying that if
we lived our lives with a truly loving spirit, acting in truly loving ways, we
would automatically fulfill every one of God's laws. We wouldn't have any need
for specific rules.” Rules like, do not have sex with someone of the same
gender, an animal, or another person’s spouse, all dissipate if we just “love
each other.” But how does Lee define “love?” “’Love’ here of course doesn't
mean romantic love; it means the deep, abiding, unconditional love that comes
from God.” As long as we love each other the same exact way God loves us, then
rules become obsolete. Lee chastises those who do not understand that love
frees us from obedience to rules by adding, ”The very definition of the
Traditional View says that even
when two relationships are equally loving — even when they're
motivated by the exact same selfless desires and the exact same servant hearts
— that one of them can be ruled sinful just because of a person's gender.
Traditionalists say that this command is from God. But if it's from God, then
why does it contradict the rule Paul gives us here — a rule that applies to every other commandment?”
John tells us that “This is love: NOT THAT WE LOVE GOD (my
emphasis) but that He loves us” (4.10). In simple words: we cannot love as God
does because we are not Him (He never sins and is never selfish while we are
habitually both). Therefore, He provides us His commands, laws, “rules,” so
that we might show Him our love through obedience to those commands, laws, and
“rules” (John 14.15,21). John even tells us that “We know that we love the
children of God… by loving God and carrying out His commands: This is love for
God: to obey His commands” (1John 5.2, 3). If love for God is obedience to His
commands then it’s only logical that the best way to show love to those who
claim to know God is by “teaching them to obey everything” God has commanded
(Mt 28.19, 20). Love is the fulfillment of the Law because love is the reason
it was written, but love only fulfills the law when it is done in obedience to
it.
“God is love” doesn’t mean that “love” is always of God. Just
because I emotionally, physically, or philosophically love somebody doesn’t
mean that God automatically approves of me (I’m sure Hitler loved his mom). We
love God and those He’s told us to love when we do it as He commands.
Defining Words By their Extremes
Another argument Justin Lee succinctly makes (likely because it is
quite illogical) was regarding the meaning of the Greek word for “homosexual.”
He writes,
“The word arsenokoitai
is a compound word in Greek, and the parts of the word make reference to
"male" and "bed," which indicates that this word probably
referred to some kind of male homosexual behavior…..we must be careful not to
assume too much; Greek compound words don't always mean what they might appear
to mean… Still, I think that it's fairly safe to assume that the arsenokoitai of Paul's day
were men engaging in some kind of homosexual behavior. But what kind of
behavior?... The most likely explanation is that Paul is referring to a practice
that was fairly common in the Greek culture of his day — married men who had
sex with male youths on the side.” Can anyone see a danger in defining words
only by their extremes?
If
“arsenokoitai” only refers to the heinous act of married men sleeping with boys—nowhere
hinted at in Scripture but inferred by those who insert assumptions about
culture into their interpretations—then maybe the commands to not “phoneuo”
(murder) only applies to beheadings and to not “pseudomai” (lie) only to those
lies that lead to death. Maybe “poneros” (evil) should only be imputed on those
who commit genocide or a holocaust like Hitler and not as Jesus uses with those
who speak ill of their parents (Mt 15.4), ask God for signs (Mt 12.39), or are
too lazy to do as they are commanded (Mt 24.48). Maybe “agape” (love) should
only be used when we die to save a life or “hagios” (holy) only when we exactly
mimic God’s character. Defining words only by their extremes is like only driving
a car at its top speed, eating only entire animals and not just parts, and
having sex with whomever and whatever we want no matter the consequences.
Words
are like containers that can only hold what their creators intended. Attempting
to fill them with more meaning than they can contain or to use them for
purposes their creators did not intend is not only unwise, but can lead to
misunderstanding and confusion. “But we have this treasure [light of the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ] in jars of clay to show
that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us” (2Cor 4.6,7). Like
words, we Christians contain the knowledge of God and should be careful—increasingly
so as we mature—to understand the purpose for which God created and fill to
capacity the “cup” that is presented us.
This study began for me as a challenge from a Facebook friend
who asked me to read Justin Lee’s magnum opus on his beliefs regarding
homosexuality and the Bible’s stance on the subject. It’s shameful for me to
say that I already had my mind made up on the topic and would’ve simply replied,
“God says it is wrong, so it’s wrong,” as I had many times before. Instead, I
am glad I read Mr. Lee’s well written, thought provoking, and scripturally
filled treatise as he’s given me a lot to consider as I examined to see if what
I believed was true according to God’s Word.
The Bible teaches that a Christian should not believe that they
can be both a “new creature” and anything God lists as “wicked,” like a thief,
murderer, idolater, or homosexual, and that just as God is different than us,
so men are different than women, and that love is not simply accepting people
as they want to be, but teaching them to obey all that God commands. The
problem is that most Christians—those with truth faith, love for God and His
Church, and filled with the Spirit of God—are not as familiar with God’s word
as they should be. They are like “infants… blown here and there by every
teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming”
(Ep 4.14). Or they make up their minds and instead of cracking open the Bible
to see if their beliefs match Scriptures, instead, “to suit their own desires,
they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their
itching ears want to hear” (2Tim 4.3). Most Christians won’t study but will
just assume that God’s Word matches their faith. I encourage us all not to be
among the “most.”
Those Christians who do not know the Word of God or who are
deceived by others or just are not mature enough yet to understand the “mind of
Christ” (1Cor 2-11-16) can believe they are gay and yet still a Christian. Just
as there are Christians who believe that God demands one to be baptized by
water or speak in tongues or attend church on Sundays (or Saturdays) or listen
to a pope, priest, prophet, or pastor, or that Christians can’t dance, watch
movies, drink alcohol, serve in the military, or wear pants. However, once we
know the truth of God’s Word we have a choice to make. Either we can base our
interpretations upon “truths” that best fit our lifestyles and traditions or we
can “show ourselves approved to God… by accurately handling the word of truth”
(2Tim 2.15).
Obviously, when we disagree with the teaching of Scripture, we typically assume that our interpretations are more “accurate” than those who oppose us! Therefore, I encourage any who would read what Lee and I have written to study the Word for themselves, pray to God, listen to the Spirit, and take their time to learn what God might teach, no matter if it agrees with Lee or me. As Mr. Lee rightly says, “If this is an issue that matters to you, please don't base your views on something like ‘Justin says this’ or ‘Justin believes that.’ Take your time to study the Bible for yourself. Read the passages I mentioned, in their context, to understand them better. Read arguments on both sides of the issue, and don't be afraid to ask difficult questions. Most of all, pray. Pray every day for God's guidance in your life and for the wisdom and humility to admit when you're wrong. If you find that you disagree with fellow Christians, remember that they are still your brothers and sisters in Christ. And they may yet have something to teach you. Follow Christ at all costs. Nothing matters more than that.”





