Should the same sex to be allowed
Absolutely nope,
because God created first parents Adam and Eva, not Adam and John… or Eve Jenn…
Many people have forgotten about the holy bible, it is clear in the holy bible,
there was a town named Sodom and grooms, where people were getting lost, such
as gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered. They knew that the things, they
were doing were wrong and that it wasn't Gods will, but they did it anyway, so
what did GOD do destroy the town. Yes, God created Each and every one of us,
but he gave us the freedom of through, which draws us further from him and It’s
up to us to seek and get closer...
What does the holy bible say
about homosexuality?
1. Genesis 19
Sodom has become so associated with homosexual conduct that
its name was for many ears a byword for it. But is 'sodomy' really what Sodom
is about?
The account describes the men of the city attempting to
forcibly have sex with two angelic visitors to the city, who have appeared in
the form of men. Later parts of the Old Testament accuse Sodom of a range of
sins: oppression, adultery, lying, abetting criminals, arrogance, complacency
and indifference to the poor. None of these even mentions homosexual conduct.
This has led some people to wonder if we have read homosexuality into the
Genesis narrative, when in fact the real issue was social oppression and
injustice. But a close look at the text makes it clear that homosexuality was
in fact involved.
Although the Hebrew word for “know” (yada) can just mean to
“get to know” someone (rather than to “know” them sexually), it is clear from
the crowd’s aggression (and Lot’s dreadful attempt at offering them his
daughters as an alternative) that they are looking for much more than social
acquaintance. Hence what happens next: the angels warn Lot that judgment is
imminent (v.13).
In the New Testament, Jude adds an important insight:
...just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding cities,
which likewise indulged in sexual immorality and pursued unnatural desire,
serve as an example by undergoing a punishment of eternal fire. (Jude 7)
What happened at Sodom is clearly meant to be something of a
cautionary tale. Jude makes it clear that their ungodliness involved sexual
immorality. They were punished for sexual sin along with the other sins of
which they were guilty.
Jude also highlights the nature of their sexual desires:
they pursued “unnatural desire” (literally, unnatural “flesh”). Some have
suggested that this relates to the fact that the visitors to the city were
angelic; Jude references angelic sin earlier in his letter. But these angels
appeared as men, and the baying crowd outside Lot’s house showed no evidence of
knowing they were angelic. Their desire was to have sex with the men staying
with Lot. In other words, it was the homosexual nature of their desires,
and not just the violent expression of them, that is highlighted in the New
Testament.
2. Leviticus 18 & 20
Leviticus contains two well-known statements about
homosexual activity:
You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an
abomination. (Leviticus 18:22)
If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have
committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is
upon them. (Leviticus 20:13)
“An abomination” is often used to describe idolatry, and
some suggest these verses are not condemning homosexual behavior in general,
but only the cultic prostitution connected to pagan temples. It is also often
claimed that the fact that these prohibitions appear in a book full of other
laws which no Christians think they are expected to follow today suggests that
they should not be taken as having abiding moral relevance. But to take the
first objection, the language used is not that specific; it refers to lying
with a man “as with a woman,” - that is, in very general terms. Secondly, the
surrounding verses in each instance describe other forms of sexual sin (such as
incest, adultery and bestiality), none of which is anything to do with pagan
temples or idolatry, and which we would take as being applicable to Christians
today. It is moral, rather than just pagan religious behavior that’s in view.
Furthermore, Leviticus 20:13 highlights both male parties equally, again
suggesting general, consensual homosexual activity (as opposed to gay rape or a
forced relationship).
3.
Romans 1:18-32
Turning to the New Testament, Romans 1 has much to say about
the nature and character of homosexual behavior.
Paul’s aim in these early chapters is to demonstrate that
the whole world is unrighteous in God’s sight, and therefore in need of
salvation. In Romans 1:18-32 he zeroes in on the Gentile world, describing the
way it has turned away from God and embraced idolatry. The particular details
in the passage may indicate that Paul is using the Greco-Roman culture surrounding
his readers as a case in point.
Gentile society faces God’s wrath because it has suppressed
the truth that God has revealed about himself in creation (verses 18-20). In
the verses that follow, Paul illustrates how this has happened, giving three examples
of how what has been known about God has been exchanged for something else:
they exchange the glory of God for images of creatures (verse 23); the truth of
God for a lie, leading to full-blown idolatry, worshipping created things
(verse 25); and reject the knowledge of God (verse 28), exchanging “natural”
relations for “unnatural” ones:
For this reason, God gave them up to dishonorable passions.
For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to
nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were
consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men
and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error. (Romans 1:26-27)
Two important and sobering truths are apparent from these
verses:
1. Homosexual desire is not what God originally intended. This
is not to say that homosexual desire is the only thing that God did not
originally intend. All of our desires have been distorted by sin. But Paul does
describe both lesbian and male homosexual behavior as “unnatural.” Some have
argued this refers to what is natural to the people themselves, so that what is
in view is heterosexual people engaging in homosexual activity and thereby
going against their “natural” orientation. According to this view, Paul is not
condemning all homosexual behavior, but only that which goes against the
persons own sexual inclinations. But this view cannot be supported by the
passage itself. The words for “natural” and “against nature” refer not to our
subjective experience of what feels natural to us, but to the fixed way of
things in creation. The nature that Paul says homosexual behavior contradicts
is God’s purpose for us, revealed in creation and reiterated throughout
Scripture.
Paul’s reference to lesbianism as well as male homosexual
conduct also supports the idea that he is condemning all homosexual activity,
and not just the man-boy relationships that occurred in Roman culture.
The strength of Paul’s language here should not make us
think that homosexual conduct is the worst or only form of sinful behavior.
Paul may be highlighting it because it is a particularly vivid example, and may
have been especially pertinent for his readers in Rome given their cultural
context. Either way it is illustrative of something that is the case for all of
us: as we reject God we find ourselves craving what we are not naturally
designed to do. This is as true of a heterosexual person as of a homosexual
person. There are no grounds in this passage for singling out homosexual
people for any kind of special condemnation. The same passage indicts all of
us.
2. Our distorted desires are a sign that we have
turned away from God. It is important to recognize that Paul is
talking here in social rather than individual terms. He is describing what
happens to culture as a whole, rather than particular people. The presence of
same-sex desire in some of us is not an indication that we’ve turned from God
more than others, but a sign that humanity as a whole has done so. It is not the
only sign, and in everyone there is no doubt more than one sign or another -
but it is a sign nevertheless.
Paul writes that alongside the gospel, “The wrath of God is
being revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men”
(Romans 1:19). Though there will one day be a “day of wrath when God’s
righteous judgment will be revealed” (Romans 2:5), there is already a
present-day expression of God’s anger against sin. We see God’s wrath in this:
he gives us what we want.
In response to the exchanges Paul has described, we see
three instances of God giving us over to live in the outcome of our sinful
desires. This is his present-day judgment against sin. We ask for a reality
without him and he gives us a taster of it.
In each case the “giving over” results in an intensification
of the sin and the further breakdown of human behavior. God gives humanity over
to impure lusts and dishonorable bodily conduct (verse 24), and to
“dishonorable passions” (verse 26). The exchanging of natural relations for
unnatural leads to being given over to a “debased mind” and the flourishing of
“all manner of unrighteousness” which Paul unpacks in a long list of antisocial
behaviors (verse 28-31). Sin leads to judgment, but judgment also leads to
further sin.
The presence of all these sinful acts is a reminder that we
live in a world which has deliberately turned away from God in all sorts of
ways, and is therefore experiencing a foretaste of God’s anger and courting its
final outpouring on the day of judgment. Again, homosexual activity is
certainly not the only sinful act. All of us are guilty. But it listed among
them as one of the ways in which human nature as a whole has been changed from
what God originally intended.
4. 1
Corinthians 6:9-10
Paul writes:
Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the
kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor
the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom
of God. (1 Corinthians 6:9-10)
In these verses Paul is describing different kinds of people
who (unless they repent) will be excluded from the kingdom of God. Four kinds
relate to sexual sin, and two of those specifically to homosexual behavior. The
ESV takes the latter and puts them together as “men who practice
homosexuality”, while the NIV translates them as “male prostitutes and
homosexual offenders”.
The first of the two terms relating to homosexuality
is malakoi, which translated literally means “soft ones.” In classical
literature it could be used as a pejorative term for men who were effeminate;
for the younger, passive partner in a pederastic (man-boy) relationship; and to
refer to male prostitutes (hence the NIV’s translation). In 1 Corinthians
6 malakoi comes in a list describing general forms of sexual sin, and
the context suggests Paul is most likely using it in a broad way to refer to
the passive partners in homosexual intercourse, as we are about to see.
The second term he Paul uses. is arsenokoitai. This is
a compound of “male” (arsen) and “intercourse” (koites, literally “bed”). These
are the two words used in the Greek translation of Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13,
suggesting that Paul is linking back to those two passages. (Paul has already
just made a connection with Leviticus in 1 Corinthians 5, where he condemns the
church’s acceptance of a man living with his father’s wife using language that
echoes Leviticus 18:7-8. For Paul, the sexual sins which Leviticus prohibits
remain forbidden for New Testament Christians.) Arsenokoitai, then, is a
general term for male same-sex sex, and its pairing with malakoiindicates
that Paul is addressing both the active and passive partners in homosexual sex.
So what does all this mean for our understanding of
homosexuality?
1. Homosexual sin is serious. Paul says the active and
unrepentant homosexual, as with all active, unrepentant sinners, will
not enter God’s kingdom. Paul urges his readers not to be deceived on this point.
He assumes there will be those who deny this teaching, and argue that some
forms of homosexual conduct are acceptable to God. But Paul is clear:
homosexual conduct leads people to destruction. This is a serious issue.
2. Homosexual sin is not unique. Paul’s list includes other forms of
sexual sin (sexual immorality and adultery), and it includes non-sexual forms
of sin (drunkenness and theft, for example). Homosexual sin is incredibly
serious, but it is not alone in being so. It is wicked, but so is, say, greed.
We must not imply that homosexual sex is the sin of our age. If we
are to be faithful to Scripture, we must also preach against theft, greed,
drunkenness, reviling, and defrauding others, many of which are also
trivialised in our society, and all of which also characterize the
unrighteous.
3. Homosexual sin is not inescapable. Paul
continues in verse 11: “And such were some of you. But you were washed, you
were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by
the Spirit of God” (1 Corinthians 6:11).
These forms of behavior are not appropriate for the
Corinthian church precisely because it is not who they are any more. Some of
them clearly had been active homosexuals. They did once live in these ways. But
no more. They have been washed, sanctified and justified; forgiven, cleansed
from their sins, and set apart for God. They have a new standing and identity
before him.
However, ingrained it may be in someone’s behavior,
homosexual conduct is not inescapable. It is possible for someone living a
practicing gay lifestyle to be made new by God. Temptations and feelings may
well linger. That Paul is warning his readers not to revert to their former way
of life suggests there is still some desire to do so. But in Christ we are no
longer who we were. Those who have come out of an active gay lifestyle need to
understand how to see themselves. What defined us then no longer defines us
now.
5. 1
Timothy 1:8-10
Here Paul writes:
The law is not laid down for the just but for the lawless
and disobedient, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for
those who strike their fathers and mothers, for murderers, for the sexually
immoral, men who practice homosexuality, enslavers, liars, perjurers, and
whatever else is contrary to sound doctrine. (1 Timothy. 1:9-10)
He again uses the term arsenokoitai (translated by
the ESV as “men who practice homosexuality” as a catch-all term for all forms
of homosexual conduct. Also in common with 1 Corinthians, same-sex sex is
mentioned among other wide-ranging sins, non-sexual as well as sexual.
These forms of behavior characterize those who are not
“just” and for whom the law was given, in order to bring conviction of sin and
the need for mercy. All these practices contradict “sound doctrine” and the
gospel. They do not conform to the life Christians are now to lead. They go
against the grain of the new identity we have in Christ.
Conclusion
Attempts to read these texts as anything other than prohibitions
of homosexual behavior do not ultimately work. The plain reading of each
passage is the right one. It is homosexual practice in general, rather than
only certain expressions of it, which are forbidden in Scripture. To attempt to
demonstrate otherwise is to violate the passages themselves. Yet these
very same texts list homosexuality alongside many other forms of behavior that
are also against God’s will. The very passages that show us that homosexual
activity is a sin, make it very clear that it is not a unique sin. It is one
example of what is wrong with all of us.
Should the same sex to be allowed
Reviewed by Zhora aslanyan
on
April 25, 2019
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