Today I woke up to tragedy. Sometimes the only thing that sickens me more than tragedy, is people's response to it. After seeing a few 'I don't mind, they were gay,' tweets, I wrote this letter. It is addressed to people who believe the Bible to be literal and innerant (that's what a Fundamentalist is). It is specifically written to those who think this might be 'less tragic' because of sexual orientation.
Dear Fundamentalist Christian,
You
believe the Bible to be true. Literal. Relevant. I respect that. In a
postmodern world, those devoted to their core beliefs are often few
and far between. In the past year, you have become the center of much
attention. Maybe not you personally, but people who think like you.
America's worst shooting ever was recorded today (June 12, 2016), and
now eyes will swing to you again. This shooting appears to have been
the result of an anti-gay agenda.
(If you aren't familiar with what happened, catch up on CNN)
(If you aren't familiar with what happened, catch up on CNN)
Perhaps
you are not convinced this is a bad thing. Since you believe the
Bible to be literal, you believe homosexuality is wrong. You know
that 'the wages of sin is death.' Perhaps you've compared America to
Sodom and Gomorrah. After all, they were struck down.
I
want to explain to you why this tragedy is heart-breaking. Why you, a
Fundamentalist, should empathize and identify with the LGBT
community. Why you should love them. And I want to do that while
taking the Bible literally.
Homosexuality as Sin
Sometimes
being gay is singled out as a great offense. Does the Bible call
homosexuality sin? Yes. Twice by name (1 Cor 6:9, 1 Tim 1:10). But
bear in mind that both those verses come in a broader context. In
Corinthians, Paul is speaking about sexual immorality in general,
regardless of gender. In Timothy he is speaking about being 'lawless'
as a whole.
When
the Bible speaks of sexual sin, it refers to something that defaces
an image God gave us. Ephesians 5 describes sex, and marriage as a
whole, as something that represents the relationship
between Christ
and the church. This union is something so sacred it is not even to
be joked about(Eph 5:4). He details that any sexual relationship that
does not represent the Christ-church union is immoral. This includes
homosexuality, but it puts it on a level playing field with all other
sexual sin.
Some
argue that homosexuality is unique because it is described as
unnatural (Rom 1:26). But you'll be hard pressed to see it separated
as 'different than other sexual sin' in Old Testament law. You'll see
that homosexuality (Lev 20:13) is treated the same as all other
sexual immorality (Lev 20:10-23).
The
broader message of Scripture is 'all have sinned.' And this is far
more essential to the gospel than teaching 'homosexuality is sin.'
God As Judge
God
created humans and gave us dominion (Gen 1:26). This made us rulers
of the world, but according to His conditions. When sin entered the
world, we made our own rules. Mankind acted as though they were in
charge. Essentially told God that the dominion He gave them was
theirs and not His. This resulted in Cain killing Able. God, as giver
of life, determines the length of the life of His creation. But Cain
took this into his own hands.
When
God chooses to judge humanity, whether by flood (Gen 6), by fire (Gen
19) or opening the Earth to swallow people (Num 26), He does so
Himself. We don't get to be judges. We didn't give life. We aren't
qualified to take it away.
Murder
is always tragedy. It is an act of rebellion against God's dominion.
It is always sin. It is never to be celebrated. Someone has named
themself (like Cain) as a better judge than God.
In
the case of the non-Christian it means the end of their opportunity
to repent. As sign waving street-corner preachers keep reminding us,
the Bible says sinners go to hell. In fact, the only death the Bible
sees as worth celebrating is the death of the Christian (Phi 1:21).
Is Love the Answer?
The
word love is being misused. And not just by the #Loveislove people (See my post on that here).
So please understand me as I say this.
We
are to love all people equally.
Consider
Jesus and the adulterous woman (John 4). Or the other adulterous
woman (John 8). Or the other one (Luke 7). Consider the accusation
against Jesus, “The Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and
you say, 'Look at him! A glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax
collectors and sinners!'” (Luk 7:34).
He's
accused of this many times. Many, many times. He hung out with
sinners. A sinless friend of sinners. If you were the same way,
people wouldn't call you intolerant so quickly after this shooting.
Do
you see Paul express disdain or hatred toward Corinth? They were
sexually immoral in many ways (1 Cor 5-7). What we see is careful
instruction. 'Be pure.' 'Glorify God in your body.' Never, 'don't
worry so much if those temple prostitutes you stay away from get
killed.' In fact, he never even goes so far as to say 'stay away from
temple prostitutes.' And Paul says A LOT about sexual immorality.
In Closing
Ask
yourself some questions about the Orlando shooting. Would you be more
heart-broken if straight people had been targeted? Consider other
great tragedies in the U.S. Could there have been anyone in the twin
towers who had sex before marriage? Anyone in Columbine addicted to
pornography?
Are
you less saddened because the targets of today were at a gay bar? Are
you qualified to judge the length of someone's life? Do you have as
much love for these victims as Jesus did? Do you love their families?
If
the Bible is right, people are in hell today. Mourn. Weep. From today
onward make it a priority to love unconditionally. To teach about
grace to all people. You are responsible to tell them the gospel,
which includes telling them they have sinned. You are not responsible
for their condemnation.
Sincerely,
A
Fundamentalist Christian
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