Posted on 01/28/2015 2:48:24 PM PST by Graybeard58
WASHINGTON (BP) -- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will support civil rights for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people if religious freedom protections also are ensured, its leaders announced Tuesday (Jan. 27).
Southern Baptist leaders, however, said the Mormons' approach to the conflict between sexual rights and religious liberty is naive and unhelpful, as well as unacceptable to proponents of LGBT rights.
In a Salt Lake City news conference, Mormon leaders described their stance as "fairness for all" -- or a "balanced approach between religious and gay rights" that endorses protections in housing, employment and public transportation for LGBT people and, at the same time, safeguards the rights of religious institutions and people.
The Mormons' newly announced support for LGBT rights legislation throughout the country followed its endorsement of a similar Salt Lake City ordinance in 2009. Mormon leaders said they were able to support the city measure because it adequately protected religious freedom.
This approach does not represent a change in doctrine but a desire "to encourage mutually respectful dialogue in what has become a highly polarized national debate," Mormon leaders said. They included no mention of same-sex marriage in their comments, an apparent indication the Latter-day Saints will maintain their view of marriage as only between a man and a woman.
"I think the Latter-day Saints are well-intentioned but naive on where the reality stands today," said Russell Moore, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission. "I do not think, in most instances, sexual orientation ought to matter in housing or employment, but of course the proposals to address these concerns inevitably lead to targeted assaults on religious liberty."
As he thought, the Mormons' announcement of a revised position "was greeted with hostility from gay rights organizations and disappointment from social conservatives," Moore said.
R. Albert Mohler Jr., president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, said on his Wednesday (Jan. 28) podcast, "[A]lmost anyone who understands the scope and scale of today's moral revolution will understand why such a proposal might be made. But if you're looking at the landscape of America today, this appears to be a proposal that comes rather too late to be genuinely helpful. And perhaps the response to the proposal yesterday helps to make that point more than anything else."
Mohler said, "[A]lmost immediately, it was clear that the leadership of the LGBT movement isn't going to buy this kind of bargain."
"[W]hat we're looking at," Mohler said, "is the LDS church basically asking for what almost anyone in the gay-rights movement would have been ready to grant as recently as two to three years ago -- certainly five to 10 years ago.
"What we are now witnessing is a radical acceleration of the movement to redefine religious liberty so that [it] means almost nothing," Mohler said, according to a transcript of the podcast.
Reaction demonstrated how unacceptable the religious freedom protections called for by the Mormons are to LGBT advocacy groups.
"The so-called religious exemption is the size of five Mack trucks. It entirely neuters their proposal," said Fred Sainz, vice president of communications and marketing at the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), according to The Washington Post. HRC is the country's leading LGBT organization.
The Mormons are "demanding broad and unnecessary religious exemptions that hurt LGBT people and families," said Sarah Kate Ellis, president of GLAAD (formerly the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation), in a written statement. "The 'compromise' is that the Mormon Church will support non-discrimination only if it won't have to follow laws that require equal treatment of LGBT people. This is not a 'compromise,' it's a compromising of fairness and basic respect for LGBT people."
The Mormons' announcement came as cities, and even smaller municipalities, increasingly are enacting ordinances expanding anti-discrimination protections to LGBT people in employment, housing and public accommodation, which covers hotels, restaurants and other businesses. The city councils of Houston and Plano, Texas, are among those that approved LGBT ordinances in 2014. At one point, the Houston government even subpoenaed the sermons of pastors who opposed the ordinance as part of a lawsuit before backing down.
Some Southern Baptists and other Christians who ascribe to a biblical sexual ethic have opposed the laws, contending they often infringe upon freedom of religion and conscience for individuals, churches and businesses.
In a written statement, Moore said, "As Southern Baptists, we believe gay and lesbian persons are created in the image of God and ought to be respected. We also believe that any sexual expression outside of marriage between one man and one woman is morally wrong. And we believe that freedom of conscience for those of us who dissent from the Sexual Revolution ought to be maintained."
Mormons have been strong allies with evangelical Christians and other social conservatives on such issues as marriage and religious freedom. Both Moore and Mohler have met with Mormon leaders on these matters.
Mohler has spoken at Brigham Young University -- a Mormon school in Provo, Utah -- on two occasions, making clear both times "there is a great theological chasm between biblical Christianity and the LDS church," he said on his podcast. "As I said in both of those lectures, I don't believe we are going to heaven together, but I do believe we're at risk of going to jail together. It's that second concern in some sense that drove the announcement coming from the LDS church yesterday."
The Mormons' announcement could be an attempt to aid Mitt Romney in a 2016 presidential campaign, said R. Philip Roberts, former director of the North American Mission Board's interfaith witness department. Romney lost as the Republican nominee for the White House in 2012 and has sent signals he may run again.
Citing sources he is familiar with, Roberts said the Mormon approach could be intended "to defuse the center and some of the left against criticizing him for his moral views and soften his approach and increase his appeal to those elements in the political spectrum. ... [T]here's no other reason for them to be doing this at this point in time, unless it is to help Romney."
Roberts is director for international theological education with Global Ministries Foundation in suburban Memphis.
Though he questions the Latter-day Saints' approach, Moore said he looks forward "to working with Mormons and others on protecting religious liberty for everyone in the years ahead."
In the Jan. 27 news conference, Jeffrey Holland cited several examples of the kinds of institutional and individual religious rights for which Mormons are seeking protection. Among these were the freedom of churches and other religious groups to teach, express their views publicly, choose their leaders, hire employees and use their property according to their beliefs. Individuals should have the right to live out their religious convictions, he said. For instance, a Mormon doctor should have the right to refuse to conduct an abortion or perform artificial insemination for a lesbian couple and a Catholic pharmacist should not be coerced into providing the "morning-after" pill, said Holland, one of three members of the governing Twelve Apostles who spoke alongside a female leader to reporters.
While Mormons are known for their pro-family and socially conservative views, their beliefs contradict Christian teaching on such doctrines as the person and work of God the Son, salvation and the sufficiency and authority of the Bible.
The spread of same-sex marriage also has imperiled the religious liberty of Christians and others with conscientious objections. Florists, photographers, bakers and others who provide services for weddings have been especially vulnerable to efforts to force them to contradict their beliefs.
Gay marriage is now legal in 36 states - nearly tripling the 13 states where it was legal just 18 months ago - and the District of Columbia. The U.S. Supreme Court announced Jan. 16 it would review a lower-court decision on same-sex marriage, signaling it likely will determine by late June whether states can define marriage as only between a man and a woman.
his face buried in his hat, with the stone in it
______________________________________
Oh Joey had rocks behind his face alright...
I just can’t, wardaddy. I can’t bring myself to visualize the act - the actual physical act - or being unhelpful to LGBT rights. It’s just not how I was brought up I guess. It just seems disgusting and unnatural to me.
Out of a list of 41 different denominations, there were only 12 which said no to all of the following.
Allow gay membership, ordains, blesses unions, marries
Adventist
Assemblies of God
Christian Reformed Church in North America
Church of the Nazarene
Evangelical Presbyterian Church
Lutheran Church Missouri Synod
Orthodox Presbyterian Church
Traditionalist Catholic
Presbyterian Church in America
Southern Baptist Convention
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons)
United Pentecostal Church International
All of the others varied, so maybe there are more Churches with a big problem than with out one.
Out of all those denominations you listed, there’s only one where tithing is mandatory to attain the “highest degree” of Heaven, that is L.D.S. and I’m sure they are salivating at the thought of making all those high earning homosexuals full members of their churches.
I believe it was “Elsie” who postulated this. Makes sense to me.
You see, O Infidels, as one advances up the rungs of LDS worthiness, one may become a God on another planet, or in another world. Just because the Scientologists promulgate a similar doctrine doesn't mean it ain't true. It's just that great theological minds like Joe Smith, and L. Ron Hubbard* tend to think alike.
Use your Logic, peeps. How do we know that Mitt has not been granted godhood on our planet? I mean, just in case, shouldn't we all vote for him? The thought of possibly pissing off a god possibly appointed to rule my planet kind of makes me itchy, in a theological way, of course. Just thank Allah The All-Wise that in order to avoid confusion, L. Ron Hubbard, to the best of my knowledge, is not running for office at this time.
And Golux, Oleg Cassini had nothing to do with the design of Ummim and Thurim, the spectacles Joe Smith used to read and translate the golden plates. They are much more Dolce and Gabbana, possibly Ralph Lauren, as is the spiffy waistcoat he is wearing in the photograph posted above.
*Golux, drop the sarcasm. You should appreciate L. Ron Hubbard more than most of us landlubbers. Scientology is the only world-class religion with the same rules as a yacht club, including a dress code for the Flag Officers.
Nana and Elsie, as potential distaff members of the LDS, you should appreciate the Mormon choice of marriages offered. You could have both married Joe Smith in Time, in Eternity, or in Time AND Eternity. Ditto Mitt!
It appears that the NEXT generation (of voters) will be 'brought up' a wee bit differently.
And yet...
And yet...
Where's the 'list'?
I'd like to see if MY denomination was on it; or is being tarred with a big brush by accident.
http://www.wesleyan.org/235/a-wesleyan-view-of-homosexuality
There IS a solution!
How do you post jpgs here? i know it’s prob html, but what is the html please? :)
“We just needed a Peep Stone Prophet with a Pecker Problem, who banged anything that bent over, to fable up us a new testament, so we can all ignore the True Gospel, and ride our way to hell with celestial babies popping out like a pez dispenser...”
—
LOL
This is the list I was looking
at.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Christian_denominational_positions_on_homosexuality
Should be easier after Mitt sweeps to victory in 2016.
Apparently, tho, the Mormon jesus made lds leaders Gordon Hinckley & Bruce McConkie (see quotes below) such "judges" as to who acceptably worships the Mormon god, eh???
Lds Source | Lds Leaders Say: 'Different Christ' | Bible indicates: 'Different Christ' |
Lds official publication Ensign; BYU Press; Lds curricula - Melchizedek Priesthood Study Guide | It is true that many of the Christian churches worship a different Jesus Christ than is worshipped by the Mormons. LDS publication, Ensign Magazine, May 1977, p. 26; "True and saving worship is found ONLY among those who know the truth about God and the Godhead, and who understand the true relationship men should have with each member of that Eternal Presidency." ("Our Relationship with the Lord," in Fireside and Devotional Speeches, 1981-82 (Provo: BYU Press, 1982), p. 97 -- this quote republished in official Lds curricula publication in 1983, 1986, Come unto Christ: Melchizedek Priesthood Personal Study Guide, 1984/1988, p. 45) | Christians worship a Christ who can receive direct prayer (Acts 7:59; Mormons even militate vs. their own "scripture" on this -- see 3 Nephi 19:18, 24-26) |
Lds "apostle" Bruce R. McConkie | "And virtually all the millions of apostate Christendom have abased themselves before the mythical throne of a mythical Christ whom they vainly suppose to be a spirit essence who is incorporeal uncreated, immaterial and three-in-one with the Father and Holy Spirit" (Lds "apostle" Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, pg.269). | The Christ of Christianity is 'mythical' per an Lds "apostle"? And Mormons imagine that they haven't somehow wielded a direct attack upon Christians worldwide? May I remind Mormons that Lds continued to publish McConkie's "Mormon Doctrine" book? (The Mormon church got ahold of the direct copyright, acquiring it from Bookcraft, and then publishing it under its direct ownership umbrella -- Deseret Book Publishing -- in 1993) McConkie's book was published/republished under 7, count 'em 7, Mormon "prophets" (McKay, Lee, Kimball, Benson, Hunter, Hinckley, Monson). Only McKay conveyed strongly that alterations needs to be forthcoming after the initial edition, and revisions were made...but not enough to keep from embarrassing the Mormon faithful ever since! |
All of that makes their recent actions less surprising.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.