Who is a Christian?
These
are the people Jesus invites to be Christians
Come to
me, all you who are weary and heavy-laden.
If
anyone is thirsty, let him come to me and drink.
A
Christian is anyone who loves Jesus, and comes to him, seeking to follow him.
Who gets to decide if people are
indeed Christians?
Two
people.
The
individual herself, and Jesus Christ.
What about gay Christians?
Well,
for almost all my Christian life, I’ve thought the term gay Christian was an
oxymoron.
Why?
Because of Romans 1: 26-32 Because of this, God gave them
over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural sexual relations for
unnatural ones. 27 In the same way the men also
abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one
another. Men committed shameful acts with other men, and received in themselves
the due penalty for their error. 32 Although they know
God’s righteous decree that those who do such things deserve death, they not
only continue to do these very things but also approve of those who practice
them.
How do I
read the passage? Straight, I am afraid. Seven year of university study of
English literature and writing, and I can’t see any other way to honestly read
this passage.
Kierkegaard said ‘When you read God’s word, you
must constantly be saying to yourself “it is talking to me and about me”’
The word of
God is living and active,
sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and
spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.
When I read it
today, it convicts me of finding solace and comfort in food and work rather
than in God alone. It does not speak to me about a desire to sleep
with women, because, you see, I have none.
The Bible
is a purifying sword to excise our own cancers and gangrene.
It is
not to be used as a sword to pierce someone else’s heart.
That is the
job of the Holy Spirit, who will lead all of us who seek him, into all truth.
We will just have to allow the Spirit to speak through Romans to those he
wishes, and in the way he wishes.
If a gay
Christian sees a way to be both gay and a Christian, then that is between them
and Christ. And the Holy Spirit.
So should Gay Civil Partnerships
be blessed in Churches?
Probably
not by clergy who are adamantly opposed to homosexuality, no. That would be
asking them to act against their consciences, and would be wrong.
But not
all clergy are opposed to civil partnerships.
Besides,
an individual cannot bestow blessing or curses on another.
God
alone can.
When we
bless a marriage, or civil partnership, all we are doing is asking God to bless
the individuals involved, in whatever way he chooses.
That is
after all his very nature. He is a God of love, a waterfall of love, a river of
deep love, in which we are all out of our depths. It is God’s nature and desire
to bless, and when we ask him to bless individuals, we are asking him to do
something in line with his very nature.
If two
men or two women come to church, asking for blessing, surely we can find a way
to ask God to bless them, which does not violate our own consciences.
Partly, for our own sakes--to prevent the canker
of pride, and judgementalism and cruelty from devouring our hearts--we
have to stop placing a burden of judgment and shame on gay people which the
rest of us would find impossible to bear. We just have to allow people
to make the call as to whether they are Christians or not. And ask God to bless
those who want his blessing.
According to Jesus, blessing should not be
withheld from anyone. We are to love, do good, bless and pray for even our
enemies, even the worst people we know (Luke 6:27). Leave alone those who come
to church, asking us to ask God to bless them.
Maranatha, Come Lord Jesus. Teach us to think as
you do.
· * *
So how did a good evangelical girl come to write
this post?
A process. Read here how I
had my mind and experience broadened.
Well, I am giving a 50th birthday party
this week, which involved some jitters, and looking critically around me, and
seizing the opportunity to do some redecorating.
As I wrote, I bought a
beautiful Edwardian solid Cherry Mahogany dining table and chairs.
In the
thrill of buying this beautiful antique furniture at a good price, I quite
overlook logistics. It’s in Suffolk. Google says that’s five and a half hours
away.
11 hours
round-trip. I’d be exhausted in an hour’s driving. I’d be nervous if Roy drove
for 11 hours in an unfamiliar van.
Hearing
me anguish, our sweet Polish cleaner, who works for us a couple of days or so a
week, offered to go and fetch it for us. He suggests £100, and petrol, and we
gratefully agree.
And
then, we overhear him talk on the phone to his English partner. He volunteered
because Anita was so worried, but he’s nervous; what if the furniture gets
scratched, what if his Polish driving habits take over?
The
upshot is that Peter drives him all the way and Suffolk and back. These two
very smiley, cheerful gay people arrive on our doorstep early next morning with
a breathtakingly beautiful table and chairs—without a single scratch.
I had to
laugh. It was so much like Roy and I. My heart is bigger and my tongue quicker
than my practical abilities. I am always offering to help people—to take a meal
around, to have them over if they are going through a hard time, help with
information, contacts…—but the person who actually does the cooking or digs out
the information turns out to be Roy, since I've generally bitten off far more than
I can chew.
And I
saw the same love between Peter and Lech, in Peter driving 11 hours with Lech
to help him earn £100 and get me my table.
And if
Pete and Lech, two sweet, smiley, superlatively kind, helpful men want God to
bless them, who am I, and who are you, to refuse to welcome them to the Lord’s
Table, and to request that the Lord blesses them?
Thank you Anita ,
ReplyDeleteyou've expressed yourself beautifully on a complex topic,
I am blessed by what you've had to say.
A balanced and interesting post. Much to think about.
ReplyDeleteHi Anita,
ReplyDeleteI love your heart. Mercy always truimphs over judgement.
I agree with what you said about scripture; sadly to say, too often (I)have used scripture as a weapon against others. The word of God has many purposes, one being that it is a weapon, but this weapon is mainly to fight against principalities and powers that fight against us (in the heavenlies, which is right here!)
I love what Beth Moore says about it (she uses the reference scripture of Peter drawing his sword in the garden),
"We use the Word of God as a weapon against those we are trying to reach and cut off their ear, they don't want to hear what we have to say" (because we have tried to do the job of the Holy Spirit?)
She also says we could be the biggest obstacle to those we want to come to Christ not doing so,
"Maybe they are afraid they will turn out just like us!"
Jesus told the pharises, "I desire mercy and not sacrifice".
This tells me that no matter what sacrifice I make, if not done in love, it misses the mark.
May we all have mercy on each other,
Carol
Thanks, Jo, Jenni and Carol.
ReplyDeleteI can't help feeling that Jesus would reach out to any gay person who showed up in his church with the same love, compassion and interest as he would reach out to me, or the woman at the well, or the woman caught in adultery. And for me, and the latter two women, while being compassionate, interested, loving and protective, he gently moves us onward and upward.
Thank you for this post. I just stumbled across it and found it really encouraging. I have been thinking a lot about Christian attitudes towards homosexuality lately yet it is something I can't really discuss with anyone as the evangelical Christians I know are very dogmatic and judgemental on the issue. If anyone disagrees or even questions them they doubt whether that person is a Christian. I'm not completely sure what I think yet- still working it through- but I agree with what you say and really appreciate that you are more open-minded about it.
ReplyDeleteIf it's impossible for me to be open about how I feel without being judged I can't help thinking how much worse it would be for someone who is gay.
Whether people were right or wrong in what they did Jesus always showed love rather than judgement.
@Lisa, "If it's impossible for me to be open about how I feel without being judged I can't help thinking how much worse it would be for someone who is gay." That's a really excellent point.
ReplyDeleteSo I guess we have to hold, "Do not judge" and Jesus's command to love and compassion, in tension with respect for the inspiration of Scripture and what Scripture appears to say on the subject if one reads it "straight," as it was meant to be read. By straight, I mean reading it as if Paul etc. meant what they wrote, literally, not as an allegory for Rome, or referring to pedophilia etc.