|
October 2002 Issue
Become a fan on FaceBook Follow us on Twitter
How Then
Should We Respond?
Developing An Effective
Answer To The Gay Rights Movement
by Joe Dallas
Editor's Note:
This article is the fourth and final in the Love Won Out
series first presented as lectures at Southern Seminary in spring
of this year.
The first time I was asked to address
a congregation on the subject of homosexuality, the hosting Pastor
ushered me into his study before the service began, to offer a
warning:
"Some of my people will think you're too liberal, because
you say we need more compassion for homosexuals, but some will
also think you're too conservative, because you think homosexuality's
a sin. Some of the teenagers here can't stand homosexuals, but
some of the parents here have homosexual teenagers, so be aware
of both groups. And by the way, we just got word that some AIDS
activists are going to show up and heckle you."
He paused for emphasis, then admonished me:
"So when you speak, be sure you don't offend anyone!"
That says it all. Taking a position on this issue guarantees
tension and immeasurable controversy; avoiding offense is hardly
an option. As short as life is, then, it's tempting to avoid controversy
by refusing to take on stand on "hot-topics." Yet as
the late apologist Walter Martin reminds us:
"Controversy for its own sake is a sin. But controversy
for the sake of the truth is a divine mandate."
Like it or not, at times the Church has a mandate to be controversial,
whatever the discomfort or sacrifice involved. The question, then,
is not whether we should respond to the homosexual issue. We should,
we must. The question now raised is, "How then should
we respond?"
Paul gives us a cue in Ephesians 2:10 when he refers to the
Church as Christ's "workmanship," the Greek word for
workmanship being "poema," from which we derive the
English term "poem." Just as a poet would seek to express
himself through his work, so God seeks to express His heart and
mind through His visible poem, the Church. Ideally, then, should
a non-believer wanting to know what the God of the Bible thinks
about homosexuality, he need look no further than God's poema
to get a clear picture of God's mind on the subject. Likewise,
should the same non-believer want to know God's heart towards
the homosexual, he need only ascertain how Christians God's
poema seem to feel about homosexual people, and
thereby know God's heart towards homosexuals.
We know, from both Testaments, how God hates being misrepresented.
So if we, God's workmanship, should fail to accurately represent
Him, He will surely call us to repentance. In this vein, I'm convinced
that as we seek to respond effectively to homosexual people, God
would call us to repentance in three crucial ways.
First, the Church must repent of whatever immorality
exists within her own ranks.
Samson was a powerful, authoritative figure. Remember, though,
that his strength lay not in muscularity alone, but in obedience
to his vow of separation to God. So long as his vows were intact,
his strength remained. When his vows were compromised, i.e. through
Delilah's haircut, his strength was compromised as well. Compromised
obedience generates compromised strength, whether the compromise
exists in a man, or a church, or the Church at large.
Signs of widespread moral compromise have distorted the message
and image of God's poema for decades now. If George Barna's assessment
of a 50 percent divorce rate among Christians is correct, and
if New Man magazine and Christianity Today are correct
in their assertions that 10 percent of Christian men surveyed
evidenced symptoms of sexual addiction, while three out of ten
pastor's surveyed used Internet pornography, and if the scandals
we've seen among evangelical leadership over the past two decades
are an indication of what's going on in the broader Christian
community, then where lies our moral authority to speak to the
homosexual?
Imagine a severely overweight man dressed in spandex shorts,
shirtless in his pot-bellied glory, selling workout equipment
on a televised infomercial. "This stuff works!", he
enthuses while he jiggles about. "You gotta try it!"
Of course nobody's buying the equipment he promotes may
be great, but because of his own condition, you'd never know it.
"It is always easier to fight for our principles," Alfred
Adler observed, "than it is to live up to them." (Christian
activists take note.) No wonder columnist Cal Thomas posed the
question:
"Why should the majority accept something they have not
seen fully lived out by those who profess to believe?"
Jesus warned us to remove the log from our own eye before addressing
someone else's speck. Not only does it prevent hypocrisy; it enhances
credibility. To this end, the Church must admit her own moral
shortcomings, take remedial action to correct them, and then,
with appropriate humility, address immorality in the culture.
Second, the Church must repent of hostility towards homosexual
people.
When Christians are angry over the celebration of sinful behavior,
they do well. Anger, properly used, sees a problem and attempts
to correct it. But hostility, expressed through contempt or disrespect,
corrects nothing and sullies everything. Too often, the Church's
anger over homosexual sin has been accompanied by a tone of hostility
towards homosexuals themselves. And it is the hostility of the
anti-homosexual message that is remembered long after the message
itself has been disregarded.
The prophet Jonah's extraordinary mission comes to mind. You'll
remember that Jonah was commissioned to preach to a group of people
he loathed. So loathed, in fact, he took great pains to get out
of his commission. God's intervention via a whale is the most
well known aspect of the story, but Jonah's message and apparent
attitude afterwards are noteworthy. After arriving on Nineveh's
shores, he preached what must go on record as being the world's
worst evangelistic sermon. "Destruction's coming," he
proclaimed. And that was all he proclaimed. No invitation to repentance
was offered; no concern for his listeners was expressed. In fact,
having predicted that judgment would soon fall, we find Jonah
grabbing a front row seat to watch Nineveh's doom!
Yet from that one-note sermon sprang national revival, as all
of Nineveh feared and repented after hearing it. Far from pleased,
Jonah complained bitterly to God, disappointed that the objects
of his own contempt were being spared as a result of his preaching.
In short, he was more interested in seeing Ninevites destroyed
than he was in seeing them redeemed.
A similar attitude, which I call "The Jonah Syndrome,"
seems to have infected too many believers. To hear some of us
talk, you'd think it's more important to politically defeat homosexuals
than it is to see them won into the Kingdom. To be sure, good
stewardship requires involvement in the political system, and
my wife and I are unapologetically a part of that "vast right-wing
conspiracy" Mrs. Clinton bemoaned years ago. But there are
more important issues than defeating pro-gay legislation. There
are the souls of gays and lesbians themselves. And when our desire
to block their agenda is greater than our desire to see them reconciled
to God in Christ, then our priorities are clearly skewed, and
the Jonah Syndrome has taken hold.
It is possible necessary, actually to condemn
homosexuality without needlessly alienating homosexual people.
Pastor Ed Dobson, a former member of the Moral Majority in the
1980's, realized this when he began ministering to AIDS patients,
many of whom were openly gay. After visiting several of them at
the local hospital, word got out that this conservative pastor
had a heart for all people, homosexuals included. This led several
openly gay people to attend his church, not necessarily to abandon
their behavior, but to at least hear what this man had to say.
He welcomed them from the pulpit, and from the same pulpit, when
teaching on sexual mores, condemned all forms of sexual sin, homosexuality
included. In so doing he compromised neither his compassion nor
his convictions, and his acts of charity towards AIDS patients
gave him added credibility when he upheld biblical standards of
morality.
Mother Teresa modeled this credibility when she roundly condemned
abortion at a Washington D.C. function in the presence of President
Clinton, a staunch defender of abortion rights. While Clinton
may have disagreed with her pro-life position, he could hardly
argue against her proven love for humanity, a love which, over
years of verifiable service, lent her a mantle of authority when
she spoke on ethics and standards.
We do well to resist and even denounce the acceptance of sexual
perversion in our culture. We do better, though, when our pronouncements
are companied by tangible and practical acts of love and service,
and when they are free of hostility or sarcasm. Robert Dugan,
former President of the National Association of Evangelicals,
put it well:
"I have watched too many Christians display anger, animosity,
and even outright hatred toward their political 'enemies.' How
could they be unaware of Jesus' command to love their enemies?
Not only is it right to treat people with love, but pragmatically,
it works in the long run."
Finally, the Church must repent of being intimidated
by the gay rights movement, and reassert her prophetic role.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. declared that the Church must be
reminded that it is neither the master of the state nor the servant
of the state. Rather, it is the conscience of the state. That
being the case, God's poema dare not abandon her prophetic
responsibility to speak truth in a time of error.
A man without a conscience becomes that most frightening of
all horror movie characters: a sociopath. The sociopath, will
do whatever is expedient, feeling no remorse or compunction over
his behavior. Perhaps the only thing more frightening than a sociopathic
man is the prospect of a sociopathic state. Yet, if Christians
abandon their role to speak as the conscience of the state, what
other possibility is there for the culture's future?
Here we meet with formidable intimidation. A casual glance
at any country or nation that has embraced the gay ideology will
show that where gay rights go, a rigid enforcement of political
correctness follows. Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family
radio broadcast, for example, has to be censored when it plays
in gay-friendly Canada. (References to homosexuality are deleted
to avoid stiff fines for making statements about sexuality that
are deemed offensive.) In Sweden, where gay rights advancement
is significant, lawmakers have given initial approval to a "hate
speech" law restricting any criticism of homosexuality in
public, and Christianity Today reports that prominent Swedish
homosexuals have publicly committed themselves to report preachers
who "speak disparagingly" about gays. And while similar
outrages are brewing in our own nation, they tend to be under-reported
or disbelieved.
The understandable tendency is to cower in the face of lawsuits
and coercion. But if the conscience of the state allows itself
to be silenced on this issue, on what other subjects will we also
be muzzled? The fear of offending has a paralyzing effect on our
ability to speak truth, but Christians dare not yield to such
fear. The gospel message is, at its core, a tremendous offense.
It confronts false notions of essential goodness and autonomy,
it rebukes natural wisdom, and its description of the human condition
is anything but flattering. If we are intimidated out of speaking
the truth about human sexuality, how can we hope to speak the
truth about human sin in general? And if preaching against sin
is disallowed because it's deemed "disparaging," how
can the message of redemption survive? Clearly, there's more at
stake here than the right to publicly discuss morality. Our very
ability to fulfill the Great Commission will likely be nullified
if we are unwilling to resist the more radical, oppressive aspects
of the gay rights movement in America.
Our willingness to repent of our own sin, love without rancor,
and stand for truth in the face of danger, will indicate our broader
commitment to Christ-like living in a fallen world. God grant
that now, more than ever, that commitment remains intact.
Joe Dallas is an author, counselor and public
speaker. He has written three books on the subject of homosexuality,
and frequently addresses conferences and churches across the country.
He can be reached at jdallas@socal.rr.com.
Become a fan on FaceBook Follow us on Twitter
Back to Top
Printer Friendly Version
Email this article to a friend
Copyright
© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
901 Commerce Street,
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: sbclife@sbc.net
|