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Derek Flood

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What Does Jesus Think About Homosexuality?

Posted: 04/25/2012 6:47 pm

Is homosexuality a sin? It's an age-old question, and there are people on both sides of the debate, each quoting their Bibles. How do we know who's right? What would Jesus do if he were here with us today? Jesus never said anything about homosexuality, so can we really say?

I'd like to propose that we can. Perhaps we wont be able to settle the debate over what the Bible says about homosexuality (least of all from one little blog post!) but I think there is one thing we can be sure of -- Jesus loves every one of us. In fact Jesus was especially known for loving the very people that the religious people of his time had condemned and cast out. Let's consider some facts:

There has been story after story in the news of LGBT teens committing suicide because of bullying. We have also seen a surge of news stories of kids being harassed, threatened, and even physicality assaulted. No one's child should have to endure that. No one should feel afraid, hated and rejected like that. These are not just a few shocking exceptional cases either. As their voices have begun to be heard, we have seen story after story of how gay and transgender kids have felt hated, at times even hating themselves. We have heard how life for them can be a living hell, so bad that it makes some of them want to end their lives.

That really should be a wakeup call for us as Christians. Regardless of where we stand on the rightness or the wrongness of being gay, none of that matters much when people are dying. We can argue over what the Bible says about homosexuality, but one thing is utterly clear: Jesus clearly teaches us to love people, not to hate them, not to make them feel hated, and not to stand by while that is happening. From the perspective of the New Testament there simply is no room for doubt on this. We know exactly where Jesus stands. He stands on the side of the least, the condemned, the vulnerable.

John's Gospel tells the story of a women caught in adultery who was brought before Jesus. The religious leaders say to him, "The law commands that she should be stoned to death, what do you say?" Jesus bends down and draws with his finger in the dirt, and then says to them "Let the one who is without sin throw the first stone." One by one they all leave until he is there alone with the woman. Jesus says to her "Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?" "No one, sir," she answered. "Then neither do I condemn you," Jesus declared.

Now, many preachers are quick to point out that Jesus next says to her: "Go and leave your life of sin." But the real point here is that even though Jesus did consider adultery sinful, he still was the one who defended her. In fact, he was the only one there who was "without sin" and yet he did not cast a stone and did not condemn. So again, even if we think homosexuality is wrong, we know what Jesus would do in our shoes. He has drawn a line in the sand, and we need to decide what side of that line we will be on. Will we be on the side of Jesus and the one who is being condemned and threatened? Or will we stand with the religious accusers on the other side of that line? Maybe we were not the ones actually throwing those stones, but did we stand on the side of the accused and condemned and actively defend them like Jesus did? Did we actively defend and love "the least of these"? Because Jesus says that the way we treat them is the way we treat him.

Jesus never says a word about homosexuality, but there was one kind of sin that he spoke out against all the time. There was one kind of sin that got Jesus really mad. This was the sin of religious people who shut out those in need of mercy. This was the sin of people who used the Bible as a weapon. You hear Jesus saying this on page after page of the gospels. Why? Because this type of sin has the potential to damage people like few other things do. It is particularly damaging because they claim to be speaking for God. So if we really want to speak out against sin, we as Christians need to speak out against the kind of sin that Jesus did, and side with the kinds of folks he did.

What this all comes down to is we, as Christians, acting like Jesus. It's about discerning what Jesus would want us to do right now, and the answer is clear: We need to change our priorities and focus on the critical issue of communicating love and acceptance to people -- especially the very people our society so often ostracizes, condemns and rejects. Because that is exactly what Jesus did. Jesus was known for hanging out with "sinners" and was frequently accused of being a sinner himself because of it. But that did not stop him because he cared more about those people than he cared about being judged.

If we want to follow Jesus, then we need to have that same reputation of loving to a fault. We need to be so radically accepting that we are misunderstood and judged like Jesus. If we really do love Jesus, then we need to love like he did, so much so that it seems "scandalous" in the eyes the religious folks of our day, just like it did in his day.

We have spent so much time being "balanced" in the other direction, so much time worrying about "giving the wrong impression" that it is time to shift our lopsided boat the other way. Because as long as our priority is in looking moral rather than in showing compassion and grace to those on the outside, we simply do not have the priorities of Jesus. And when we do not reflect Christ, we are giving the wrong impression.

Now you may have noticed that I didn't ever say what I thought about whether homosexuality was wrong or right. I didn't say because this is not about me and what I think. It's about us as Christians learning to care about what Jesus cares about. This is not about gay rights. It is about about human rights, and that starts with the least. It is about us having the courage to stand with those who are vulnerable. It is about us saying "no" to hate, even when it is done in the name of God -- no, especially when it is done in the name of God. It's about having the guts to draw that line in the sand like Jesus did. Even when that means facing that mob ourselves.

So let's stand alongside of LGBT individuals. Let's let them know they are loved, they are welcomed, they are not alone. I think when we do, we will find that Jesus has been there with them for a long time now. It's time we joined him.

Derek Flood is the author of 'Healing the Gospel: A Radical Vision for Grace, Justice and the Cross.' Follow Derek on Twitter @theRebelGod.

 
 
 

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06:14 PM on 05/01/2012
Religion is the original hate group. The myth of original sin is simply not true. To promote any group which devalues humanity is immoral. Humanity's search for knowledge is not the downfall of humankind but humanity's greatest assest. For anyone to promote any Bronze Age religious mythology in the Scientific Age is truely a sad state of affairs.
04:17 PM on 05/01/2012
The most damaging part of this article, is that it had to be written. If Christianity was real, all Christians would get it. Either Christians (or any believer of any god or gods) are in two-way communication with a "God" or not? Which is it. Is "God" so weak that "He" can't communicate this message via "God-Man" communication in a clear concise way? Either "God" made man, or many men, made many gods. It's time to leave Bronze Age religious mythology and enter into the Scientific Age.
02:10 PM on 05/10/2012
"Is 'God' so weak that 'He' can't communicate this message...in a clear concise way?"

No. He gave us instructions through Jesus Himself, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind’ ; and, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ ” (Luke 10:27)

*neighbor meaning everyone around us.

We're often too stubborn or proud to follow through.
10:00 AM on 05/11/2012
So in other words, since God has communicated this clearly, christians often give him the bird and worry about themselves? Glad I stopped believing in this God crap, it's a lot easier to be compassionate when not trying to be resentful of an omnipresent being.
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Stephen Freese
Wisdom of world foolishness to God
08:19 AM on 05/01/2012
The scriptures are very clear on the teaching of sexual sin period. All of the fancy deconstruction here will not change that. Jesus himself, who was God the Son, spoke on it... "For out of the heart come forth evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, railings:" Matt 15
Fornications (porneia) is the term and its meaning is very clear. All types of sexual activities that are not bond to a man and woman in marriage is sin period. The real problem though is that it is just one sin among others and unless we find redemption from our "sin nature" which we were all born with, there is no salvation for any of us. God is holy and cannot be in the presence of sin and therefore we need a covering and that is the substitutionary death of Christ that provides that. We may not intellectually understand it, but it is the word of God.
12:18 AM on 05/11/2012
The scripture is also very clear that disobedient children should be stoned. Do you do that? It is also very clear about mixing fabrics. How any cotton/poly blends do you have? These are hell worthy trespasses. You cannot pick and choose which scripture to follow. If you believe in every single word, that much, I expect to see your face on the news the next time your child smarts off to you, since, surely, you have murdered him. Just like a good Christian should do. You cannot hide behind a "book" that was written thousands of years ago. Jesus taught love and tolerance. Not hate, not bullying, and certainly not pretending that YOU know what God wants. Pretty arrogant , if you think about it. Oh wait. Isn't arrogance a sin, too?
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Stephen Freese
Wisdom of world foolishness to God
06:48 AM on 05/11/2012
Your ignorant of the scriptures. First of all, the Old Testament is interpreted in light of the new New Testament. We do not stone our children today as that was abrogated. But God's view on sin has never changed. Secondly, the statement "hiding behind a book" is another incoherent unintelligible statement. Jesus said not one jot ot title will pass away from the scriptures. Third, Jesus warned is all about hell over sixty percent of His teaching ministry. You view that Jesus only taught love and tolerance in non-sense and has been rebuked for the last 1900 years over and over. Finally, Anyone can know what God thinks on every topic He has spoken on. Your deconstructing Christ into a Savior who tolerates sin and does not warn of it's consequences simply shows your ignorance of Biblical Theology.With your type of logic, I guess we should "tolerate" law breakers in our culture as well, child molesters, murderers, rapist i.e. and leave our girls and families unprotected, allowing anyone to not be responsible and pay for their crimes here? Stop with the nonsense and get a Biblical education before you look foolishly here and say things that are inconsistent with the historical narrative,instead of the same reciting of a few old Old Testament laws that the scriptures read in context reveal are not Biblically applicable in the present age of grace.
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KDMac
It's called sarcasm, Genius.
01:53 PM on 05/21/2012
So let's outlaw adultery and divorce.
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ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
07:05 AM on 04/30/2012
in your re-telling of the adulterous woman and Jesus, you forgot the last line, "Go, and sin NO MORE." your omission makes you just like everyone else who sites passages in the Bible as a way to confirm whatever they believe. if you're going to tell it, tell it all.

i don't know whether or not Jesus would condemn homosexuals, and neither should i speculate. i am sure, though, that he loves us all, no matter what titles/adjectives our fellow humans place on us.
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Derek Flood
11:21 PM on 04/30/2012
Actually I didn't. Look again.
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Stephen Freese
Wisdom of world foolishness to God
08:33 AM on 05/01/2012
Derek the real problem is where are we going when we die. Not the hurt feeling and emotions that tend to lead us away from know or seeking the truth. That is why our family and real friends matter so much as they are willing to "hurt" or feelings when they believe that we have possibly missed the truth. Sin does matter as that is our problem, not a lack of tolerance from others. Sin is taking us all to death and accountability to the architect sustainer of creation. Sin is not determined by consensus.It is revealed in the scripture and we all need to take heed my friend. Our souls are at stake! "

For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"

The soul as an essence which differs from the body and is not dissolved by death (distinguished from other parts of the body) Etymology Strong's G5590
10:06 AM on 05/15/2012
Derek Flood shares how Jesus reacted to sinful people,but he never answered his own question... What Does Jesus Think About Homosexuality?. We know what Jesus thought about the topic of this question. He thought like God thinks and we can find that in scripture. God said that Homosexuality is an abomination. That is pretty strong language. So, how do we react? Just as Flood says, but in other words..."Love the sinner, but hate the sin". Don't think that Jesus does not hate. In Revelation, He says that He hates the Nicolations and approved the church at Ephesus hating them also. There is more to consider than just humanitarianism. Does this give us license to mistreat homosexuals? NO it does not. We do have license to try to help and love them, but not by furthering their cause in any way, especially by legalizing their agenda. Since God considers it "sin", then we should too. But we are not the Judge, so let's love them into the Kingdom of God, leaving behind their sin just as other Christians have to do with their sin. Even so, sinless perfection will not be accomplished until we are with Jesus. Fortunately, Jesus forgives the repentant sinner, at least 70 times 70 times. Keep in mind, "No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God's seed abides in him, and he cannot keep on sinning because he has been born of God" (1 John 3:9)
12:10 PM on 05/02/2012
last time i checked, go and no were not capitalized in scripture. Also it is not our job to convict people of their sin, that is the role of the Holy Spirit.
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ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
07:55 PM on 05/02/2012
the capitalization is my emphasis nit.wit. also, i'm not convicting people, so your comment is not only nonsensical, but completely shows your lack of reading comprehension skills. repeat 1st grade!
10:09 AM on 05/15/2012
Capitalized??? So what!!!
06:17 PM on 04/27/2012
JUDE 1:7" Likewise, Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities near them, which like them committed sexual sins and engaged in homosexual activities, serve as an example of the punishment of eternal fire." The bible is GOD's word. Sodom and Gomorrah, as it is written, serves as an example of how God feels about homosexuality. Yes we are to love the people but that does not mean we have to agree with their lifestyle. We as Christians tolerate too much.
Sodom & Gomorrah refused to change, the people tolerated things so much that it over took the cities. Actions have consequences. Why can't we learn from history instead of having history repeat itself?
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ez duz it
οὐκ ἔστιν θεός
10:47 AM on 04/28/2012
Tanya Lake: It's one thing to have an opinion. It's quite another thing to imply that one's opinion is actually endorsed by "God" by appealing to Scripture - especially when Scripture is distorted to impugn and malign Gay people.

The problem I have with your quote from the ISV is that the phrase "engaged in homosexual activities" has absolutely no grounding in the earliest recorded Christian Scriptures which were penned in Greek . The NIV does only a slightly better job: "gave themselves up to sexual immorality and perversion."

The KJV, reads: "going after strange flesh" translating from the Greek: "ἀπελθοῦσαι ὀπίσω σαρκὸς ἑτέρας ."

"Strange," or "ἑτέρας" (heteras), can also be translated, "other," or "different" and is the word from which English developed the term, "heterosexual." If Jude1v7 were actually a condemnation of homosexuality - which it isn't - it would have used the expression, "same flesh," or “σαρκὸς ὁμοίας,” (sarkos homoias). Of course... it doesn't.
12:19 PM on 04/28/2012
"Why can't we learn from history instead of having history repeat itself?"

Great question to ask yourself. The bible has been used to justify attacks on all kinds of people. It was used to justify slavery and segregation. It was used to justify women as property. It was used to justify pogroms and persecution of the Jews. It was used to justify anti-Islamic crusades. It has been used over and over again to justify attacks on other Christians, as in the Spanish Inquistion, Protestant Reformation, etc etc., because somebody didn't line up with my personal beliefs about the bible. Now here you are eager to turn the bible against gay people. Why can't YOU learn from history instead of having history repeat itself?
02:16 PM on 04/27/2012
Why is it automatically assumed that we must follow the Bible in the first place?
12:35 PM on 04/28/2012
It's because the people who want to tell you how to run your life use the bible as justification.
01:34 PM on 04/27/2012
I love how he chooses to ignore the second part of Jesus conversation. This isolating the biblical text to make it what you want it to say at it's best. Christ didn't address this in Judea, because it not practiced in Judea. Paul addressed it a number of times in the letters of the New Testament because it was practiced and accepted widely in the Greek world he was ministering to, and because it lines up with the rest of the Bible. Arguing Jesus stance out of silence is terrible argument. I agree in love and defending, my concern is that you change Biblical truth for cultural norms.
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Tom Berndt
04:24 PM on 04/27/2012
Good points, thanks.
12:48 PM on 04/29/2012
Jesus =/= Paul. Paul's words in Greek =/= modern English translations.

Jesus never spoke of homosexuality. Paul didn't either.
01:23 PM on 04/27/2012
I'm a Christian. And all the comments about me being a "hateful, intolerant bigot" b/c I believe homosexuality is a sin are unfair. The Bible says, and I believe, that many things are sin--all sexual deviancies, greed, pride, anger, murder, etc. As a person who has been guilty of most of these things at one point or another (and yet is saved undeservedly by the grace of a loving God), I certainly do not hate anyone else who is also guilty of them. Hate and intolerance include a lot more than believing something is wrong. Keep in mind, people, that most Christians do not hate you. They are doing what they've been conditioned to--to attempt to bring you to Christ, who will save you from your sin, so that you will have eternal life. This happens to all people, gay or straight. I know you may not like this, and you may not think you need it. I'm guessing that most of the time you wish we would just go away. But we CAN'T. We are driven to see all people (gay or straight) saved. This is what we’ve been taught love is.
01:08 PM on 04/28/2012
Don't say that you can't change. I have seen people change. Too often, it occurs when a gay loved one commits suicide after years of religious intolerance on the part of parents, siblings, friends, etc. Then the Christian who is left behind may experience a transformation upon realizing that all of the things that they called love really have nothing to do with love and are extremely destructive of other people. Of the gay people who don't kill themselves, most probably can identify on some level with the painful experiences of rejection that sometimes drive others to do so. That may be one reason that you find little sympathy for your views.
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07:23 PM on 04/28/2012
You are driven to see all people saved? Quite frankly, I find it offensive that people who think that way also think they have the right to interfere in people's lives.

Many people don't want your brand of "saving." You and others who are driven to save should respect that.
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Grada3784
Dogmatic Dictators, believers or not, not welcome
01:18 PM on 04/27/2012
In the book Advise and Consent, Senator Anderson, who is being blackmailed for having a boyfriend while he was in the military fantasizes before he commits suicide. The righteous and the wrathful will make a ring dancing around my bier. You stood in our way, the one will say. The other: You broke our rules.

Unlike the movie, Senator Anderson dies with a loving thoughtof his boyfriend.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:15 PM on 04/27/2012
This brings to mind that the only time Jesus wept for someone it was for hi "friend" Lazarous.
John 11:
3. So the sisters sent word to Jesus, “Lord, the one you love is sick.”

35. Jesus wept.

36. Then the Jews said, “See how he loved him!”
Then he resuscitated Lazarous.
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Tom Berndt
04:31 PM on 04/27/2012
I'm not so sure about your choice of the word, "resuscitated." Did Jesus resuscitate Lazarus, or resurrect him? Wasn't there a smell of death already? So, Lazarus was dying, and died some time before Jesus arrived. Then, Jesus raised Lazarus to life again, from death. Does resurrection mean that one is raised from death, never to die again, as Jesus was resurrected? While with resuscitation, one is raised to life, only to die again sometime later. True?
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Itsbeenalongday
Eliminating poverty is smart business
02:58 AM on 04/27/2012
What does Jesus think? He is dead and has been for a couple of thousand years, he doesn't give a rat's patootie.
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Tom Berndt
04:34 PM on 04/27/2012
Examine resurrection again. Jesus rose from the dead, never to die again. It's a matter of faith. You may want to consider it for yourself. One day, you will face the prospect for yourself.
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Itsbeenalongday
Eliminating poverty is smart business
11:49 PM on 04/27/2012
We all will. The difference between you and me is that I am not expecting an escape clause from death where I can go and live on a mythical cloud for ever and ever after.

If Jesus rose, where is he now? Why doesn't he stop the atrocities man is capable of doing to other men?

Where is the other guy with the horns, he must be having a field day since he seems to be winning in the race for soul collection.
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12:08 AM on 04/27/2012
as a christian, I feel we are becoming like the modern day pharisee's. we are so sure in our rightiousness and piety. I think we are in for a BIG shock when the messiah comes back and we will be shown just how far we've gone off the rails regarding our fellow humans.

I mean,caring about others sexual tastes in the bedroom? or who they prefer to love?
scripture talks about God having a chosen people. and when the chosen people didnt act according to how God wanted.....he went outside them and found others...gentiles... people who were thought to be essencially heathens.

it will seem inconcieveable as we are so sure we are in the right...but we ...might be the next to be cast aside with the messiah saying, "I never knew you."
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
01:16 PM on 04/27/2012
That too is written that shall pass.
10:53 PM on 04/26/2012
Would any of you change you view of homosexuality either way if Jesus explicitly talked about it? Probably not. We don't revere Jesus half as much as we tend to think we do.
10:21 AM on 04/27/2012
People have a funny way of rationalizing. They'd just take his words, and perform some mental gymnastics to explain away why they don't apply. e.g., "Well, Jesus said that in a different context two thousand years ago... there really was no concept of 'gay' in first century Judea..." and so forth.
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Jason N
Proud Firebagger Lefty
12:39 PM on 04/27/2012
You mean the way most Christians do when it comes to those uncomfortable verses where Jesus DOES condone slavery. "Oh that was a different kind of slavery, you have to look at it in the context of first century Judea" as if a supposedly all-knowing being wouldn't know what slavery would become (and as if it wasn't bad enough than as well).

Would those be the mental gymnastics you refer to?
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DianaLynn1967
It's a great life if you don't weaken!
02:57 PM on 05/21/2012
Maybe. I know that I take the words Jesus is quoted as saying in the Gospels a lot more seriously than I do the epistles or the Hebrew Scriptures (aka Old Testament.)

I wish we'd quit trying to feel better about ourselves and our viewpoints by judging one another. Ultimately, only God has the right to judge because only God knows the truth of our hearts. But I guess we can't help judging anymore than we can help breathing.
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LeftyHeinz
God is love
09:49 PM on 04/26/2012
Christians are advised to offer Jesus to people unconvinced of their sin. It is our duty to judge rightly because we are God's representatives. We must remember to be careful to remain true to God's Word, for we are not judging according to our own personal convictions, but according to the Truth. If believers do not judge, they are partly responsible for the unbeliever's damnation. It is a Christian's obligation to judge.
10:47 AM on 04/27/2012
1 Corinthians 5:12 What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside? 13 God will judge those outside.
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Jason N
Proud Firebagger Lefty
12:41 PM on 04/27/2012
Hope you aren't citing the OT verses to condemn homosexuality. You're right, you can judge. But Christ made clear you'd be judged by the same measure with which you judge. In other words, leave the judgement to HIM since he's not fallible to the emotional pulls of man and will never judge wrongly. YOU on the other hand may, and for that, you will be judged the same.