Posted on 08/08/2003 9:57:59 AM PDT by Ed Straker
Posted on Fri, Aug. 08, 2003
My response to the gay bishop story: no comment
As I sit down to write this week's column, one of the biggest and most compelling stories in the news is the election of the first openly gay bishop by the Episcopal Church of the USA. Minutes after the decision became final, the airwaves were choked with "experts" praising or decrying the controversial appointment and forecasting its effect on the Episcopal Church and society in general.
It wasn't hard to predict what opinions these commentators would hold or what arguments they would present to support their caseÐyou simply needed to know which ideological camp the commentator pitched his tent in.
Conservative, traditionalist thinkers predictably railed against the decision, citing biblical passages that condemn homosexual behavior to ridicule the appointment of an openly gay man to such a lofty position of responsibility within a Christian church. They lumped this decision in with the recent Supreme Court ruling that struck down anti-sodomy laws in Texas as evidence that the homosexual agenda is gradually turning America into a latter day Sodom and Gomorrah. One could almost smell the brimstone.
Progressive, liberal types countered by making the point that there are a number of restrictions in the Bible that even most conservative Christians selectively ignore.
Most Christians don't worship on the Sabbath day specified in the Old Testament (Saturday) for example, and they don't follow the dietary and clothing restrictions laid out there either. These liberal thinkers contend that everyone interprets scripture through a certain prism, and some of those prisms allow gay people to be good Christians and, perhaps, officers in a church.
So go the arguments and counter arguments, and they will go on for some time. At least one social critic has refused to join the fray however, despite the seductiveness of this juicy topic. That would be me.
I've been writing this column for a long time and I've covered many subjects. I've learned that religion is the third rail when it comes to opinion columns. If you touch it, you should be prepared for a very uncomfortable response.
It seems like every time I express an opinion that is critical of some religious viewpoint, I find that quite a few people who read this column are armchair theologians, and the ones who disagree with me often feel the need to offer stern correction.
A few weeks ago, for example, I suggested that Pat Robertson was being a little presumptuous in expecting God to help him with his plan to remake the Supreme Court to be more to his political liking, and I got the predictable responses. A number of people had messages from God specifically for me, and God apparently wasn't in a very good mood that week. In some cases the messages were nearly incomprehensible, but I got the impression that the man upstairs was not at all pleased.
So I am bowing out of this one. I have an opinion, and I think it is a strong and well thought out one, but I'm keeping it to myself. The sad truth is that, for now, I've lost my nerve when it comes to religious topics. The Episcopalians and their many advisers can sort this one out without my help. I'm going to watch the merry-go-round spin this time, but I'm not going to get on it. I'm still a little woozy from my last ride.
Bill Ferguson lives in Centerville. He can be reached by e-mail at ferg column@hotmail.com
Too late...this article speaks volumes. Too bad he is not a Christian, and thus doesn't understand the Bible or the Church.
My copy of the 10 commandments mentions adultery, but doesn't have anything in there about eating pork.
I guess you must have gotten the new, improved, Ted Turner "suggestions" version.
So, who are we to believe? Christ or his father? One says one thing about pork, the other the opposite. Or does Christ have the power to "revoke" old laws that his dad made? Really, just curious.
2. He doesn't and hasn't changed. God gave the commandments as a mirror - in order to teach us that we can't keep them, and how much we therefore need a Savior. Other OT law was a prescription for daily living in those times and under those circumstances, and in light of the enemies of the nation Israel. Other laws (related to the sacrifice) are intended to point to the final sacrifice: the spotless Lamb who would be slain for propitiation of our sin.
3. Christ came to fulfill the law. In other words, believers in the Son are free to serve the Master in spirit and in truth. Not in own strength, because we had nothing to do with our salvation....other than to trust in His free gift of it. (See Galatians for more.)
There are no contradictions, only apparent contradictions for which you have not learned the truth. His Word is Truth.
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