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That Which Is Unnatural:
Homosexuality in Society, the Church, and Scripture (Part Two in a
Two-Part Series on Homosexuality)
by Joseph P. Gudel
Summary
The gay rights movement does not just want the
right to privacy and to be left alone. Attempting to promote their
cause as a civil rights instead of as a moral issue, they want special
legal protection for, and cultural acceptance of, their lifestyle.
Even many Christian churches have condoned or are sympathetic to
homosexuality, ignoring the Bible's teachings concerning our
sexuality. In the Old Testament we find heterosexuality to be
proclaimed as God's natural order of creation, a teaching Jesus upheld
in the New Testament. Biblically, homosexuality is described as both
an "abomination" and "unnatural." God calls us to
reject sin, but to love and value all people.
How can anyone dare to speak out against another
person's lifestyle? Especially within the church, are not Christians
called to be loving and inclusive? Does not the Bible itself tell us
that we are to reach out to people instead of being judgmental and
self-righteous?
Questions like these come up whenever the
Christian or the church takes a stand on a moral issue, especially
homosexuality. I realize that it is not "politically
correct" to speak critically concerning any person or group.
Nonetheless, true Christian love does not ignore immorality and the
lives ruined by it, but speaks out in the hope of helping those
individuals.
This is particularly true when militant
pro-homosexual groups, both within society and the church, have
attacked the traditional Judeo-Christian understanding of this
important issue. Thus this article is written, not as an attack on
homosexuals, but in defense of the biblical teaching on this topic and
to help those ensnared in this lifestyle.
THE GAY RIGHTS MOVEMENT'S POLITICAL AGENDA
In Part One of this series (Summer 1992) I went
into some detail showing that even from a secular perspective the
unbiased reader is forced to admit that homosexuality is neither a
healthy nor a natural lifestyle. However, over the past 20 years or so
there has been a growing gay rights movement within America. This
movement has been militantly demanding not just the homosexuals' right
to do whatever they wish to do behind closed doors, but, more
importantly, that society fully accept their lifestyle as both healthy
and normal, even demanding special rights and legislation as an
"oppressed minority."
Concerning the demands of the gay rights
movement, gay spokesperson Jeff Levi in a 1987 speech to the National
Press Club in Washington stated: "We are no longer seeking just a
right to privacy and a protection from wrong. We also have a right —
as heterosexual Americans already have — to see government and
society affirm our lives."1
As far back as 1975, in an article entitled
"Gays on the March," Time magazine quotes gay activist
Barbara Gittings: "What the homosexual wants, and here he is
neither willing to compromise nor morally required to compromise —
is acceptance of homosexuality as a way of life fully on a par with
heterosexuality."2 In response to this, Time wisely reflected:
"It is one thing to remove legal discrimination against
homosexuals. It is another to mandate approval....It is this goal of
full acceptance, which no known society past or present has granted to
homosexuals, that makes many Americans apprehensive" (emphasis
added).3
In view of their stated goals, it is extremely
significant that today there is legislation pending in the United
States Congress which proposes to do just what the gay rights movement
has demanded: fully legitimize homosexuality as an acceptable and
sanctioned alternative lifestyle. The Senate version, sponsored by
Senator Edward Kennedy, is bill S. B. 574. The House version,
sponsored by Representative Barney Frank (an openly avowed
homosexual), is measure H. R. 1430.
For most Americans it is shocking simply to have
a bill like this being considered in the halls of Congress.4 What is
even more amazing is that already it has approximately 140
congressional sponsors, as well as the full support of President Bill
Clinton.5
If passed this bill would make it illegal for
any organization, including Christian businesses and churches, to
refuse employment to practicing homosexuals. It would legalize same-
sex "marriages," something not now recognized in any U.S.
jurisdiction. Homosexual "couples" would have the right to
adopt children. And every school system would have to include
homosexuality as a positive alternative lifestyle in any sex education
course offered.
Concerning the radical gay rights agenda now
being advanced, Fr. John F. Harvey — a nationally known professor of
moral theology at De Sales School of Theology and someone actively
involved in counseling homosexual persons for over thirty years —
writes:
Homosexual activists...are not requesting merely
the right to live their lifestyle in private, to be left alone; to use
their own words, they want to convince all elements of society —
even children — that "gay is as acceptable as
straight."....I think that gay-rights legislation would harm
children at an impressionable, malleable, and gullible age. There is
plenty of evidence for the position that homosexual propaganda can
sway young people into homosexual activity and, perhaps, permanent
orientation in that direction.6
As evidence that influencing children at a very
early age is part of the gay rights agenda one need look no further
than New York City's public school curriculum. Included in the
curriculum materials are four pro-homosexual books aimed at very young
children.
One, Heather Has Two Mommies, is a children's
book about a lesbian couple having a child through artificial
insemination. Another book, Daddy's Roommate, describes a boy with
divorced parents who visits his father and his father's new male
roommate (obviously his lover). In a third book, Gloria Goes to Gay
Pride, part of the text reads: "Some women love women, some men
love men, some women and men love each other. That's why we march in
the parade, so everyone can have a choice."7
The rationale for these books is found on page
145 of the city's "Children of the Rainbow" first-grade
curriculum which states that teachers must "be aware of varied
family structures, including...gay or lesbian parents," and
"children must be taught to acknowledge the positive aspects of
each type of household."8
In an article describing this, John Leo writes
in U.S. News and World Report: "A line is being crossed here; in
fact, a brand new ethic is descending upon the city's public school
system. The traditional civic virtue of tolerance (if gays want to
live together, it's their own business) has been replaced with a new
ethic requiring approval and endorsement (if gays want to live
together, we must 'acknowledge the positive aspects' of their way of
life)."9
It is clear that the gay community wants much
more than simply the right to privacy. But what about their civil
rights? Are new laws really essential to protect those in the gay
community? In answer to this Roger J. Magnuson, a nationally renowned
trial lawyer, states: "Homosexuals have all of the same rights
heterosexuals do. They are protected by the Bill of Rights, by federal
and state statutes, and by common-law decisions. They have the same
status before the law as do other citizens....The issue is not whether
rights have been infringed. The issue is whether new rights, not
previously recognized, should be created."10
There is no question about the homosexual's
right to practice whatever deviations he or she wants to in the
privacy of his or her own home. There are many questions, however,
about their attempt to codify their behavior as acceptable and good,
to force their lifestyle on the rest of society, and to influence
those too young to understand the moral implications of this issue.
It is simply an emotional ploy to attempt to
portray this issue as involving civil rights for an oppressed
minority. No one would ever say it is a sin to be black or Hispanic,
just as no one would say it is a sin to be female or to be physically
handicapped. But God's Word does say it is a sin to engage in
homosexual behavior, as we shall see below.
HOMOSEXUALITY AND THE CHURCH
Very few churches today come right out and
affirm homosexuality as official church teaching. There are a few,
though, which do. Foremost among these is the Metropolitan Community
Church, founded by Troy Perry in 1968, largely for practicing
homosexuals.
The only mainline denomination that has actually
called for affirming and fully accepting homosexuals is the United
Church of Christ (UCC). As far back as 1975 they voted to end any
"discrimination" based on sexual preference and left it to
individual UCC congregations to decide for themselves what they
believed on this matter. In 1983 the UCC General Synod passed a
resolution stating that "a person's sexual orientation is not a
moral issue."11 Finally, in 1991 the UCC General Synod approved
the call for its congregations to "boldly affirm, celebrate, and
embrace the gifts for ministry of lesbians, gays, and bisexual
persons."12
Many other denominations are close to this view.
Some, such as the Episcopal Church, have openly practicing homosexual
clergy, with the full knowledge of their church's governing bodies.
Others, such as the United Methodist Church (UMC), have officially
rejected homosexual practice as incompatible with the Christian faith.
However, at least 44 UMC congregations "have formally opened
their doors to homosexuals" and called on their bishops to bless
"same-sex union ceremonies."13 Similarly, the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America's 1991 study guide on sexuality affirms
that "no absolutistic judgments can be drawn" concerning
homosexuality.14 However, the guide then goes on to promote
"committed" homosexual relationships.15 A new gay magazine
which describes itself as a "journal for gay and lesbian
Christians" has a 10-page listing of "Christian"
churches and organizations that "welcome gays and lesbians into
full membership and participation."16
Very few Christian denominations today have
remained faithful to the Bible's clear affirmation that homosexuality
is a sin. Among these would be the Roman Catholic Church, the Southern
Baptist Convention, the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, the Wisconsin
Evangelical Lutheran Synod, and the Greek Orthodox Church.
THE BIBLE AND HOMOSEXUALITY
The Authority of Scripture
It is extremely revealing to note that almost
every pro-gay group within the church shares one thing in common: they
reject the Bible as being fully the Word of God. Of the above
mentioned denominations which have accepted homosexuality or are
sympathetic to it, none of them believe that we have God's inerrant
Word in the Old and New Testaments. Likewise, the many pro-homosexual
books that have come out almost all reject — or even ridicule —
the church's historic stance on the inspiration and authority of
Scripture.
Three different lines of attack on Scripture are
found in the various pro-homosexual literature. The first is simply to
ignore the biblical writers on the grounds that they were men who
oftentimes made mistakes, and thus to reject what Scripture says as
being morally authoritative. Thus John Barton states that "the
Bible is not a code at all; it is a big baggy compendium of a book,
full of variety and inconsistency, sometimes mistaken on matters of
fact and theology alike."17 And elsewhere, in John Boswell's
widely cited work, we find: "In considering the supposed
influence of certain biblical passages...one must first relinquish the
concept of a single book containing a uniform corpus of writings
accepted as morally authoritative."18
A second attack relates to the first — that
is, the biblical writers were ignorant about homosexuality. They did
not know all that we do today, it is argued, and so we must judge and
interpret the Bible with our modern understanding of biology,
psychology, sociology, and so forth. "With the quantum leaps that
have been achieved in biology, psychology, and sociology, minds in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries must subject traditional
religious arguments about nature to more thorough and critical
analyses."19
It is not within the purview of this article to
give a detailed defense of the inspiration and reliability of the
Bible.20 However, the simple response to these attacks is that both
Judaism and Christianity have always held to the full authority of
Scripture, as did Jesus Himself. In speaking of the Old Testament, for
example, our Lord succinctly declared: "Scripture cannot be
broken" (John 10:35). Parts of Scripture cannot be accepted while
other parts are rejected. And in speaking of the guidance His apostles
would receive, including guidance on their future writings (i.e., the
New Testament), Jesus told them: "But the Helper, the Holy
Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name, He will teach you all
things, and bring to your remembrance all things that I said to
you" (John 14:26; cf. 2 Tim. 3:16).
It is ludicrous to believe that the Creator of
the universe, in guiding the biblical authors, was ignorant concerning
the things we now know about homosexuality through modern biology,
psychology, sociology, and so forth. To deny scriptural statements
about homosexuality on these grounds is to completely deny God's
superintendence in the authorship of Scripture.
A third type of attack is to state that it
really does not matter what heterosexuals think the Bible says about
homosexuality, because homosexuals must interpret Scripture in view of
their own experiences. Hence, in the book Building Bridges we find the
statement that "the scriptures contain some insights that can be
made known to the Christian community only through the testimony of
lesbian and gay people." Thus homosexuals must "interpret
the scriptures in the light of their own experiences."21
The problem with this is that a person could
justify any type of behavior by saying that Scriptures pertaining to a
particular behavior can only be understood by those who engage in such
behavior (e.g., incest, adultery, fornication, and even bestiality).
Those who believe this should remember the words of our Lord:
"Therefore take heed that the light which is in you is not
darkness" (Luke 11:35).
Human Sexuality
Genesis 1-2
For those who believe that statements of the
Bible are normative for our daily lives, the most important question
to consider regarding homosexuality is: What was God's purpose in
creating human sexuality? The answer to this question is more
important than any other area of discussion.
From the very beginning of His revelation to
humankind, God has revealed His order of creation, especially as it
relates to sexuality. In Genesis 1 we are told that one purpose in
creating the two sexes was procreative — through the sexual union of
male and female we could reproduce the race: "Male and female He
created them. Then God blessed them, and God said to them, Be fruitful
and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it" (Gen. 1:27b-28).
More detail is provided in Genesis 2, however,
where we are told that in addition to procreation, there is a unitive
function of sexuality that has to do with fulfilling our need for
companionship: "And the Lord God said, 'It is not good that man
should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him'"
(Gen. 2:18). Then, after God created Eve and presented her to Adam,
Adam rejoiced in his God-given companion. The chapter concludes:
"Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined
to his wife, and they shall become one flesh" (Gen. 2:24-25).
In this second chapter several items emerge.
First, man has need for companionship: "It is not good that man
should be alone" (Gen. 2:18); second, God makes provision to meet
this need: the creation of woman (2:19-23). Concerning this, Samuel
Dresner, Visiting Professor at Jewish Theological Seminary, states:
"Woman is formed and becomes his partner. In her, man finds
completion."22 And third, God ordains the institution of
marriage. We are told that the man would (1) "leave his father
and mother," (2) "cleave to his wife," and (3)
"they shall become one flesh." Thus we find that
heterosexuality is proclaimed to be God's natural order of creation.
In the New Testament, whenever the subject of
sexuality comes up, the heterosexual norm of marriage is always
upheld. For example, Jesus, in answer to a question, quoted Genesis 1
and 2: "Have you not read, that He who made them at the beginning
'made them male and female,' and said, 'For this reason a man shall
leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two
shall become one flesh'? So then, they are no longer two but one
flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let not man
separate" (Matt. 19:4-6).
In addition, the apostle Paul reaffirms the norm
of heterosexuality in several of his letters, also quoting the Genesis
passages (e.g., Eph. 5:25-33; cf. 1 Cor. 7:2-3, 10-16; 1 Tim. 3:2,
12). And while some protest that we cannot take Genesis 1 and 2 as
modern scientific treatises,23 these chapters nonetheless teach us
spiritual truths concerning God's intended order for His creation.
It is only in the heterosexual union of marriage
that we find the fulfillment of God's intended order, both procreative
and unitive. However, pro-homosexual writers argue that while
homosexual activity in and of itself cannot be procreative it can
still fulfill the unitive role of Genesis 2. In response to this
Harvey writes:
Consider the three common forms of sexual
activity between homosexual persons. Mutual masturbation in no way
constitutes a physical union.... Among female homosexuals some form of
genital massage is used to bring the partner to orgasm, but this is
not a physical union. In anal or oral intercourse between males the
intromission of the penis in an opening of the body not meant to be
used for the genital expression of sexuality cannot be called a true
physical union....By way of contrast, the heterosexual union aptly
symbolizes the psychological and spiritual union that ought to exist
between a man and a woman.24
One does not need a Ph.D. to realize that
homosexuality is anatomically aberrant; that is, there is a created
biological order intended in our sexuality. As an editorialist at
Harvard's Peninsula journal writes: "How can (homosexual) people
be happy when they're persistently deceiving themselves, believing
that it is just as natural for sperm to swim into feces as it is to
swim into eggs?"25
"The true religious goal of human sexuality
can be seen, not as satisfaction, but as completeness."26 This
fulfillment is unattainable in homosexuality.
Now that we have considered God's positive
purpose in creating human sexuality, we are ready to look at biblical
texts which explicitly address homosexuality. Space precludes a
detailed response to pro-homosexual interpretations of these passages.
The interested reader can check the resources listed in the endnotes
for further reading.
Leviticus 18 and 20
You shall not lie with a male as with a woman.
It is an abomination. (Lev. 18:22)
If a man lies with a male as he lies with a
woman, both of them have committed an abomination. They shall surely
be put to death. (Lev. 20:13)
Although these prohibitions explicitly condemn
homosexuality as an abomination before God, we are told that they are
not relevant today. Why? First, the pro-homosexual interpretation is
that since these condemnations are contained in the "Holiness
Code" of Israel, they were only applicable to ancient Israelites,
to keep them separate from the pagan practices of their neighboring
tribes.27
Second, parts of this code are not kept today.
Letha Scanzoni and Virginia Ramey Mollenkott assert that
"consistency and fairness would seem to dictate that if the
Israelite Holiness Code is to be invoked against twentieth-century
homosexuals, it should likewise be invoked against such common
practices as eating rare steak, wearing mixed fabrics, and having
marital intercourse during the menstrual period."28
Much effort need not be expended answering these
objections. First, God did not condemn certain behavior for the
Israelites only because Israel was to be kept separate from Canaanite
practice. Otherwise, if the Canaanites did not practice child
sacrifice and bestiality, would these then have been all right for the
Israelites? Of course not! Having sexual relations with an animal and
killing one's child are inherently wrong and evil, even when they are
not related to pagan worship; they are abominations before God. And
yet, these specific prohibitions also are listed in this passage, both
immediately before and after the condemnation of homosexuality (Lev.
18:21-23).
Other prohibitions listed in Leviticus include
incest and adultery (Lev. 18:6ff; 20:10). Were these too only
condemned because of the Canaanites? To argue in this fashion is
dishonest and denies that there are eternal moral absolutes.
What of the fact that other parts of the
Holiness Code in Leviticus are not kept today? Again, the answer is
simple. The Holiness Code contained different types of commands. Some
were related to dietary regulations or to ceremonial cleanliness, and
these have been done away with in the New Testament (Col. 2:16-17;
Rom. 14:1-3). Others, though, were moral codes, and as such are
timeless. Thus incest, child sacrifice, homosexuality, bestiality,
adultery, and the like, are still abominations before God.
Romans 1:18-27
For this reason God gave them over to degrading
passions; for their women exchanged the natural function for that
which is unnatural, and in the same way also the men abandoned the
natural function of the woman and burned in their desire toward one
another, men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their
own persons the due penalty of their error. (Rom. 1:26-27)
If there were no other passage than this which
condemns homosexuality, those engaged in this lifestyle would still
be, in Paul's own words, "without excuse" (Rom. 1:20).
Paul's intent in Romans 1 - 3 is to show that all have sinned, Jew and
Gentile alike, and turned from God. It is not an accident that the
apostle begins his argument with a reference to the Creator and His
creation (1:16-20). His Jewish/Christian audience would immediately
have connected this with Genesis 1 - 2, which, as we have seen, tells
us not only about God's created order, but also about the
complementary design of male and female within that order.
In his catalogue of sins (Rom. 1:18-32) Paul
lists homosexuality and lesbianism first after idolatry
not because they are the most serious sins, but
because they are warning signs that a violation of reason and nature
has occurred. Men have inverted God's order by worshipping the
creature rather than the Creator, and as a signal of this error, like
the blinking red light on the dashboard of a car which is functioning
improperly, God has given them up to "dishonorable desires"
in the inversion of their sexual roles.29
Two main arguments are raised against the
historic understanding of this passage. The first is that Paul was not
referring to true homosexuality here because he stated that they
exchanged "the natural function for that which is
unnatural." It is argued that for those with a true homosexual
orientation, that is their "natural" sexual expression.
Hence he could only mean heterosexuals who were leaving their
heterosexual relations for what was against their natures.30
This argument involves an amazing anachronism.
That is, those saying this are attempting to place a very recent
twentieth century understanding of homosexuality back into the first
century mindset of Paul. People in the first century did not think in
terms of "sexual orientation." It is inconceivable for Paul
to have even attempted to make a psychological differentiation such as
this. Concerning this, Richard Hays writes: "The idea that some
individuals have an inherent disposition towards same-sex erotic
attraction and are therefore constitutionally 'gay' is a modern idea
of which there is no trace either in the NT or in any other Jewish or
Christian writings in the ancient world."31
The second attempt to refute Paul's clear
condemnation of homosexuality argues that his words
"unnatural" or "against nature" do not refer to a
certain created order, but rather use "nature" in the sense
of "current convention" or "current custom."32
While "nature" is sometimes used in this fashion (e.g., 1
Cor. 11:14), the context of Paul's argument in Romans 1 clearly is
that of creation and the natural order established by the Creator
Himself (Rom. 1:20, 25). Thus Paul is asserting that homosexuality is
a gross violation of God's natural design for His creation. In
addition, it should be noted that the phrase "against
nature" was used in connection with homosexual intercourse by
both Philo and Josephus, contemporaries of Paul.33
1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10
Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit
the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral
nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual
offenders... (1 Cor. 6:9, NIV)
In both 1 Corinthians 6:9 and 1 Timothy 1:10,
the apostle Paul states that those guilty of sexual immorality will
not inherit the kingdom of God. At the time Paul wrote his letters
there was no word in classical, biblical, or patristic Greek which
corresponded with our English term "homosexual." Instead,
homosexual behavior was described (e.g., Rom. 1:26-27). The words Paul
uses here — malakoi ("male prostitute") and arsenokoitai
("homosexual offenders") — have been translated in
different ways. Because of this those condoning homosexuality have
tried to lessen the impact of these verses, saying that all Paul was
condemning was either homosexual prostitution or pederasty (i.e., men
having sexual relations with boys).34
Virtually every Greek lexicon, however,
including all of the standard English ones, has understood these words
(especially arsenokoitai) to be referring to homosexuality.35 Arndt
and Gingrich's lexicon says malakoi refers to persons who are
"soft, effeminate, especially of catamites, men and boys who
allow themselves to be misused homosexually."36 Likewise,
arsenokoites means "a male homosexual, pederast,
sodomite."37
We also find these terms in classical Greek
literature (e.g., Lucian and Aristotle) "sometimes applied to
obviously gay persons."38 As well, if Paul were only condemning
certain types of homosexuality he would certainly have specified this.
Instead, he used a term directly based on the Greek Septuagint
translation of the prohibitions against homosexuality in Leviticus:
meta arsenos ou koimethese koiten gynaikos (Lev.
18:22) koimethe meta arsenos koiten gynaikos (Lev. 20:13)39
Paul, a rabbi thoroughly trained in the Torah,
was certainly mindful of these Levitical condemnations and the
Septuagint translation of them when he chose his wording in 1
Corinthians and 1 Timothy.
Law and Gospel
Is homosexuality natural and healthy, as the gay
rights movement wants us to believe? The answer from Scripture is no,
and as Christians we must not be involved in homosexuality nor be
among those who, as Paul warns, "approve of those" who are
engaged in it (Rom. 1:32). The Roman Catholic church is correct in
stating that homosexuality is "an intrinsic moral evil."40
At the same time, though, we must reach out to
all people with the love of Jesus Christ and His gospel, which alone
has the power to change lives. And we must speak out against hatred
and violence directed toward any group, remembering that we are all
sinners, worthy only of God's judgment. We all have sin in our lives,
and we are all tempted in different ways (whether it be toward
homosexuality, adultery, incest, greed, violence, pridefulness, or
whatever else).
Paul used the Law to show us, his readers, our
sin and the fearful judgment awaiting us. But then, to those who truly
desired to follow after God, he announced the good news of the Gospel:
"For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal
life, through Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom. 6:23).
For all who accept this gift, including
homosexuals, there is reconciliation to God, regeneration as His
children, and "grace to help in time of need" (Heb. 4:16).
Joseph P. Gudel is a Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod pastor and a long-time JOURNAL contributor.
NOTES
1 Jeff Levi, in William Dannemeyer, Shadow in
the Land (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1989), 86. 2 "Gays on
the March," Time, 8 Sept. 1975, 43. 3 Ibid. 4 In a 1991 Gallup
Poll 61% of Americans believed that "tolerance of the gay
lifestyle has been bad for society." Nightline, ABC News, 8
September 1992. 5 Gregory Bray, "Where Are Dems on Family
Values?" The Augusta Chronicle (Georgia), printed in the Oshkosh
Northwestern, 22 Aug. 1992, 6. 6 John F. Harvey, The Homosexual Person
(San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1987), 114- 15. 7 Nightline. 8 John
Leo, "Heather Has a Message," U.S. News & World Report,
17 Aug. 1992, 16. 9 Ibid. 10 Roger J. Magnuson, Are Gay Rights Right?
updated edition (Portland: Multnomah Press, 1990), 78. 11 "UCC
Admits Gay Church," The Christian Century, 30 May-6 June 1990,
563. 12 "Bar Homosexual Clergy, Conservative Disciples Say,"
Religious News Service, in The Christian News, 30 Sept. 1991, 11. 13
"UMC and Gay Unions," The Christian Century, 27 June-4 July
1990, 626. 14 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Human Sexuality
and the Christian Faith (Minneapolis: ELCA, 1991), 44. 15 Ibid.,
41-46. 16 Christus Omnibus, premier issue, front cover and 18. 17 John
Barton, "The Place of the Bible in Moral Debate," Theology
88 (May 1985), 206. 18 John Boswell, Christianity, Social Tolerance,
and Homosexuality (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1980),
92. 19 Jeannine Gramick, "What Is Natural?" in Building
Bridges, ed. Robert Nugent and Jeannine Gramick (Mystic, CT:
Twenty-Third Publications, 1992), 46. Cf. Letha Scanzoni and Virginia
Ramey Mollenkott, Is the Homosexual My Neighbor? (New York: Harper
& Row Publishers, 1978), 71. 20 See Norman L. Geisler and William
E. Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press,
1968). 21 Jeanine Gramick, "Lesbian/Gay Theology and
Spirituality," Building Bridges, 190-91. 22 Samuel H. Dresner,
"Homosexuality and the Order of Creation," Judaism 40: 3
(Summer 1991), 309; cf. Richard F. Lovelace, Homosexuality and the
Church (Old Tappan, NJ: Fleming H. Revell, 1978), 102 ff. 23 Ralph
Blair, Homosexualities (New York: Ralph Blair, 1991), 13. 24 Harvey,
101. 25 R. Wasinger, "If You're Gonna Call Me Names..., "
Peninsula 3:2 (October/November 1991), 25. 26 R. T. Barnhouse,
Homosexuality: A Symbolic Confusion (New York: Seabury Press, 1977),
in Natalie Shainess, "Homosexuality — Today," Judaism 32:
4 (Fall 1983), 414. 27 Boswell. 100-106. 28 Scanzoni and Mollenkott,
60-61. 29 Lovelace, 92. 30 Boswell, 109ff. 31 Richard B. Hays,
"Relations Natural and Unnatural: A Response to John Boswell's
Exegesis of Romans l," The Journal of Religious Ethics 14:1
(Spring 1986), 200; cf. David F. Wright, "Homosexuality: The
Relevance of the Bible," Evangelical Quarterly 61:4 (1989),
291-300. 32 Boswell, 110ff. 33 Philo, Spec. Leg. 3.39; Josephus,
Against Apion, 2.273. 34 Boswell, 106-7. 35 Ibid., 341-42. 36 Walter
Bauer, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early
Christian Literature, ed. William F. Arndt, trans. F. Wilbur Gingrich
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1957), 489. 37 Ibid., 109. 38
P. Michael Ukleja, "Homosexuality in the New Testament,"
Bibliotheca Sacra 140: 560 (Oct.-Dec. 1983), 351. 39 Wright, 297ff. 40
Joseph Ratzinger, On the Pastoral Care of Homosexual Persons (Boston:
Daughters of St. Paul, 1986), 2.
This article first appeared in the Winter 1993
issue of the Christian Research Journal.
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