- April 7th, 2013, 2:48 pm
#426666
I think the reason people get up in arms about this is that it deals with the acceptance of sin without repentance.
I'll give you an example, if I had sinful behavior in my life, recognized that behavior as sin, and asked God for forgiveness and worked to remove that sin from my life, that is one thing.
If I had sinful behavior in my life, but chose to say that there is nothing wrong with my behavior, thus, never asking for forgiveness and never trying to remove it from my life, that is another.
The issue is whether people believe it is in fact a sin or not, not what weight the sin may have.
If I were to tell lies each and every day, or developed a drinking problem, I would expect my Christian brother to come up alongside me and say, "Yacht Rock, get yourself together man."
I think that many of us, recognize when we sin, and with that sin comes guilt and repentance. I can tell you, before I was believer, I didn't feel the need to repent for many things because I didn't feel there was an issue with my behavior. Through a relationship with Christ, I can hear the Holy Spirit convict me many times.
But when we sin, and feel no need to repent, where does that leave us? For those who believe homosexuality is a sin, basically they are seeing fellow men who are refusing to repent.
I think at the end of the day, the common ground we need to reach is in the definition of sin. What is sin? What does God call out as unclean? If we don't know what to repent for, where does that leave us? While Jesus died for our sins and transgressions, what does it mean to be sanctified?
I think these are the questions to answer. At the end of the day, if someone doesn't believe what they are doing is wrong, they are never going to ask for forgiveness and is bound to keep on sinning.
When specific sin becomes pervasive in someone's life, I think we have the authority of Christ to help each other out. I have never read any scripture that says we should never recognize sin amongst each other. The Word does speak to doing it from a place of humbleness and not from a more pious place. In the end, we all sin and have to ask for God's forgiveness. No one is above that. That is the key when dealing with sin.
Personally, when it comes to marriage and romantic, sexual relationships, God lays out his perfect plan for us in Genesis with man and woman becoming one flesh. I don't believe that relationships outside of that context are part of God's plan. I believe they are more a result of Man's nature and occurred after the fall. Since they fall outside the perfect holiness of God, I believe it is a sin. Do I know? No. I don't know for a fact. But, I suppose as Christians we have to make those calls everyday. What do I endorse? What don't I endorse?