Sunday, 29 June 2014

A Critique of Eric Reitan's Article:


‘Anti-Gay Bigotry, Sincere Belief, and Christianity’

Of recently I was asked by a friend to give a response to Mr. Reitan’s article: “Anti-Gay Bigotry, Sincere Belief, and Christianity” written on Sunday April, 6, 2014 on his blogsite.[1] The article opens up with a popular meme going around the social media. Here below, I have recopied it so my readers can see the meme for themselves.


On the most part, as a Bible believing Christian I agree with the meme above, but of course my opponents will disagree with it. Since the meme above was the focus of Mr. Reitan’s article, my focus will be on examining his comments to see if it lines up with the facts and with what God says about the matter in the Holy Scriptures.

After carefully considering Eric Reitan’s article and what it has to say about the subject of homosexuality. It had raised a few concerns that I will be addressing in my thoughts below. So let us consider the matter before us.

First, I want to open by stating that I will not be dealing with the Huffington Post article that Mr. Reitan alludes to. That’s an article best left for another time to respond to. My primary focus will be on Eric’s article.

Second, It is good to see that Mr. Reitan acknowledges to a degree the love Christians desire to show to their gay and lesbian neighbors. He writes, “Let me start with the grain of truth. There are Christians out there--I've known many of them--who are sincerely committed to the love command of Christianity, who sincerely wish to show love for their gay and lesbian neighbors,…” However, he then goes on to reiterate one of the common phrases used by homosexual advocates to bully them into silence with such terms as “phobic”[2]

I think it is important to mention here the meaning behind the word homophobia. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary says the following:

“An irrational fear of, aversion to, or discrimination against homosexuality or homosexuals—homophobe/ homophobic.”[3]

However, not all agree with the term homophobia, as one online article mentions:

“Perhaps the leading researcher and writer on homophobia from a gay perspective is Greg Herek, and he clearly expresses his reservations about homophobia, preferring the term sexual prejudice:

Sexual prejudice refers to negative attitudes toward an individual because of her or his sexual orientation. In this article, it is used to characterize heterosexuals’ negative attitudes toward (a) homosexual behavior; (b) people with a homosexual or bisexual orientation; and (c) communities of gay, lesbian, and bisexual people. Sexual prejudice is a preferable term to homophobia because it conveys no assumptions about the motivations underlying negative attitudes, locates the study of attitudes concerning sexual orientation within the broader context of social psychological research on prejudice, and avoids value judgments about such attitudes.”[4]

As you can see from the quote above, the term homophobia is not favored by Mr. Herek, who prefers the term “sexual prejudice.” Though I disagree with Mr. Herek, I believe his term is the better one. Sexual prejudice better explains how a homosexual feels in the face of those who disagree with him or her. However, the term is still wrong in light of God’s Word that clearly condemns homosexuality (more about that later).

What is even more interesting, the same online article I quoted from above gives its own criticism of the term homophobia in this comment below:

“For different reasons homophobia has been condemned, as inaccurate and not always appropriate for the purpose by gay writers and activists, and as a deliberately misleading and sinister smear by those opposed to the gay agenda. Thoughtful writers on both sides agree that the word rarely if ever means a debilitating irrational fearfulness of homosexuals or homosexuality, a meaning strictly required by psychiatric nomenclature. Probably for those very reasons, its broadness and its guilt-inducing and mental illness connotations, the word has served, and continues to serve, a most useful political purpose and despite its limitations is not likely to be abandoned any time soon.”[5]

I wholeheartedly agree with the quote above. My personal experience on online forums such as Youtube, Facebook, and even my personal email has people using the term homophobia as a political tool, often use it to silence those who oppose homosexuality and its agenda. Both myself and many other devote Christians who love our homosexual neighbors and want to reach out in love to them, do not suffer from a so-called ‘overwhelming irrational fear’ of homosexuals. We do not scream, “Eeeek! Look! A homosexual! Run!” No, in faithfulness to God and love to our homosexual neighbors we seek to share the TRUTH of God’s Word and what it says about homosexuality. Dr. James Dobson gives this insight on how Christians should treat their homosexual neighbor:

“As Christians, we must never do anything to cause hurt and rejection, especially to those with whom we disagree emphatically. We certainly cannot introduce homosexuals to Jesus Christ if we are calling them names and driving them away. Believers are called to show compassion and love to those who would be our enemies. These people, some of whom seem hateful themselves, need to be welcomed into the church and made to feel accepted and appreciated. At the same time, we must oppose their agenda, which is harmful to society, to families, and ultimately to homosexuals themselves.”[6]

Third, before I get into the three main points Mr. Reitan talks about, I believe it is worth while quoting his last paragraph in his introduction and make a few comments in what I have observed in it. It is as follows:

“In some cases, the Christians I've know who fit this description seem to wish quite sincerely that the Bible didn't say what they take it to say--because they are uncomfortable with the implications. They have gay friends and, while trying to avoid the subject when they can, feel that their allegiance to their faith demands that they call all gay/lesbian sex wrong when asked. They say, almost apologetically, "I'm just saying what I believe. It's nothing personal against you."” I don’t doubt there are those Christians who do feel “uncomfortable” with what the Bible says about homosexuality, since it is clearly condemned in the Scriptures. Such saints need to ask themselves this question, “Does a “loving monogamous” homosexual relationship justify it as being “Right” in light of the Holy Scriptures, or is it better to compromise on this issue so not to offend my homosexual neighbor, or is it better to just tell the TRUTH?” If we truly LOVE our homosexual neighbor (see Matt. 22:39), we will tell him or her the truth. That is the right thing to do. Love does not rejoice in wrongdoing [homosexuality], but rejoices in the truth [heterosexuality] (1 Cor. 13:6).

Fourth, now let us consider the three main points in the body of his argument and come to the conclusion of what the truth really is.

  1. First and foremost, it is Personal.

Under this first heading by Mr. Reitan, the author fallaciously argues the issue of homosexuality is personal. Often, gay people like to equate homosexuality to their identity. Some of them like to argue that being gay is innate, they were born that way. I can accept the fact that some people have more of an inclination towards homosexuality than other people do. However, a homosexual is NOT who he/she really is, it’s what they choose to do. Since we all possess a sinful nature, we all have desires and temptations we can fall prey to if we are not careful in making the right choice.

Next, we see Mr. Reitan appealing to his reader’s emotions through the illustration he uses to try to persuade us on how terrible it would be if some person was committed to breaking our marriage apart from the person we dearly love. He argues, because they love each other that makes their relationship before God alright. The author here is trying to equate same-sex marriage with heterosexual marriage. This of course is an erroneous argument. He is appealing to our emotions, instead of appealing to the TRUTH. The truth is the Holy Scripture does not recognize same-sex marriage. Actually, it is in opposition against the true order and purpose of marriage, which God ordained to be between a man and a woman. Also, it is a picture of Christ and the Church. The fact is same-sex marriage is a perversion of the true model of marriage between a man and a woman who are a picture of Christ [the man] and the Church [the woman] (see 1 Cor. 7:2; Eph. 5:22-33).

Then Mr. Reitan concludes his first point with these words: “And the personal effects would be devastating,…” Here, Mr. Reitan argues about “the personal effects would be devastating,” while at the same time ignoring the “devastating effects” that homosexuality has already had on our society. Funny how he conveniently did not consider addressing that issue.

  1. Beliefs can be Unloving.

Wow! There is so much I take issue with here in this second point. So for brevity’s sake, I will only address some of his key points that caught my attention.

First, Mr. Reitan argues, “Standing by certain beliefs can affect people’s lives. And this means that standing by a belief can be loving or unloving towards your gay and lesbian neighbors. To stand by the belief that all gay/lesbian sex is wrong is to be committed to the systematic social marginalization of gays and lesbians, and to be committed to ending their meaningful, loving intimate life-partnerships. In the face of that, an assurance of love and friendship and a promise not to “bully” can sound pretty darned hollow.” To begin with, standing by certain beliefs can affect people’s lives. Of course it does, it is supposed to. Now as for the Biblical “stand” or “belief” that Christians like myself hold to on the issue of homosexuality is the LOVING position to hold to, because it is based on God’s Word. But of course, you are going to cry foul, when I quote such Scriptures that condemns homosexuality as sin. You, like many other advocates for homosexuality will accuse me of being "unloving" and a hateful, bigoted, homophobe. All because I stand on the truth of what God's Word says about homosexuality. 

(To be Continued...)



[1] http://thepietythatliesbetween.blogspot.ca
[2] This phrase “phobic” is a shortened form of the term “homophobic,” which is another form of the word “homophobia.”
[3] The Merriam-Webster Dictionary, Sixth Ed., (Merriam-Webster Inc., Springfield, Massachusetts, USA; 2004), pg. 344.
[6] Dr. James Dobson, Marriage Under Fire: Why We Must Win This Battle, (Multnomah Publishers, Sisters, OR, 2004), pg. 73.

Saturday, 28 June 2014

The Truth Behind the "Lemon Tree."

 


Even though these lyrics are written from a secular band. I find these words are quite relevant to the present state of Western Women and the personal experiences of what many Western Men have gone through. Though I am sure it is not true of all women. However, no one can deny the damage that Feminism has done in Western Society. It has turned women into men, and men into women. It has left quite a mess in its wake over the past 40 sum years. It has made relationships between men and women ten times harder. Anyway, the lyrics are as follows:

 

Lemon Tree Lyrics

By Peter, Paul, & Mary
 
When I was just a lad of ten, my father said to me,
"Come here and take a lesson from the lovely lemon tree."
"Don't put your faith in love, my boy", my father said to me,
"I fear you'll find that love is like the lovely lemon tree."

Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.
Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.

One day beneath the lemon tree, my love and I did lie
A girl so sweet that when she smiled the stars rose in the sky.
We passed that summer lost in love beneath the lemon tree
The music of her laughter hid my father's words from me:

Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.
Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.

One day she left without a word. She took away the sun.
And in the dark she left behind, I knew what she had done.
She'd left me for another, it's a common tale but true.
A sadder man but wiser now I sing these words to you:

Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.
Lemon tree very pretty and the lemon flower is sweet
But the fruit of the poor lemon is impossible to eat.