Mega DL Continuing Response to Matthew Vines

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I was only going to discuss Matthew Vine's "Gay Christian" presentation for the first hour, but since we were in the middle of the biblical discussion, I went ahead and continued, so we did a full two hours on the subject, covering Genesis 19, Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13, and starting into Romans 1. I am hearing from a lot of folks that these programs are helping them in the discussions that are inevitably arising due to the discussion of homosexuality, the redefinition of marriage, etc., in Western culture. Speaking of which, I am sure everyone is noticing that "he who frames the debate wins the debate" being fulfilled this very morning in the media in the US. The passing of Amendment 1 in North Carolina (don't worry, the Federal government will over-turn all these silly, backwards states over time), which affirms and defines marriage in the only logical, rational, historical, moral, ethical, biological, and, of course, Christian way, as the union of one man and one woman, is almost universally being identified as a "banning of gay marriage." Instead of the positive affirmation of serious and thoughtful morality and ethics that is rooted deeply in our history and culture, the main stream media in general has identified the amendment as anti-gay bigotry, etc., never, ever considering the deep bigotry and bias that is inherent in the homosexual movement. The issue is almost always framed in such a way as to paint the moral stance as negative and bigoted, and to put those who would resist the redefinition of marriage on the defensive. It is so obvious and yet the majority of our fellow citizens seem to ignore the reality. Speaking of which, I am sure everyone is noticing that

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Webcasting around the world from the desert metropolis of Phoenix, Arizona, this is The Dividing Line.
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The Apostle Peter commanded Christians to be ready to give a defense for the hope that is within us, yet to give that answer with gentleness and reverence.
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Our host is Dr. James White, director of Alpha Omega Ministries and an elder at the Phoenix Reformed Baptist Church.
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This is a live program and we invite your participation. If you'd like to talk with Dr. White, call now at 602 -973 -4602 or toll free across the
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United States, it's 1 -877 -753 -3341. And now with today's topic, here is
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James White. And welcome to The Dividing Line. We continue in the first hour of the program today.
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The response we began last week, which evidently has gained a great deal of listenership.
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It is somewhat ironic that we do this on the same day that at least one state in the union is voting on, well, just maintaining a logical, rational, historical, moral, ethical definition of marriage rather than allowing for the complete redefinition of marriage in such a way as to make marriage nothing more than a relationship between two living creatures.
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That's not what marriage has ever been. That's not what marriage will ever be. But that is what is going on in our society.
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We began a response to a man who describes himself as a gay Christian on The Dividing Line of last week.
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We will spend the first hour of the program responding, continuing to respond to his presentation made, as I recall, in Wichita, Kansas.
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And then after that first hour, we will move on to, once again, try to finish up the
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J. Smith -Adnan Rashid debate and maybe get back into the Wallace -Urman discussion.
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We'll see what time allows as the opportunity is presented to us.
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So I'm just going to dive right back into where we were in the presentation. For those of you who have downloaded the presentation from YouTube, maybe have the
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MP3 or something like that, we are 13 minutes and 22 seconds into the opening, well, just into the statement itself and the presentation.
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We'll pick up right there. And it's caused them incalculable pain and suffering.
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If we're taking Jesus seriously, that bad fruit cannot come from a good tree, then that should cause us to question whether the traditional teaching is correct.
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Now, we already addressed this, but if you might just be joining us for the first time, Mr. Vines is presenting biblical arguments against what he calls the traditional interpretation of the
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Bible on the matter of homosexuality and gay marriage, which I insist is an oxymoron and is not a meaningful phrase because it fundamentally alters the very meaning of the term marriage.
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It's like a married bachelor. These are not terms that can be put together in a logical or rational fashion.
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But be that as it may, he is trying to argue that there are overarching principles in Scripture that the traditional interpretation overthrows, and that in this instance, you have bad fruit.
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The bad fruit is the suffering of homosexuals. And of course, as I pointed out last time, this makes as much sense as a thief who is punished for his thievery blaming the law for his punishment.
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What's wrong is he broke the law, and the law brings punishment upon those who break it.
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And so to blame the law for the results of that is, again, just, it is assuming what you have yet to prove.
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And Mr. Vines wants to lay out certain definitions without defending them and then insist that we all must follow them.
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It is easy to see the irrationality of this simply by substituting other deviations of behavior from God's law and see what happens.
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And so God's law prohibits bestiality. It prohibits sexual relations with animals.
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Well, there are people who claim, and there are people who claim in its documented fact that God made them that way, that that's what they want to do.
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And so they suffer because society says that's the wrong thing to do.
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They suffer because they cannot openly celebrate what they think God has made them to be.
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Does that mean that the law against bestiality comes from a bad tree, that it's not good fruit?
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Well, of course not. And any immoral act, a person who commits it can blame the tree for their suffering.
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But that's what people who break the law always do, isn't it? You always blame the law.
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You don't blame yourself. That's just how it works. The second problem that has already presented itself with the traditional interpretation comes from the opening chapters of Genesis, from the account of the creation of Adam and Eve.
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This story is often cited to argue against the blessing of same -sex unions. In the beginning,
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God created a man and a woman, and two men or two women would be a deviation from that design.
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But this biblical story deserves closer attention. In the first two chapters of Genesis, God creates the heavens and the earth, plants, animals, man, and everything in the earth, and he declares everything in creation to be either good or very good, except for one thing.
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In Genesis 2, verse 18, God says, It is not good for the man to be alone.
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I will make a helper suitable for him. Now let me stop right here, because I think this is going to be an excellent example of the kind of handling of the
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Scripture that is absolutely necessary for those who would turn the moral system of the
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Scripture upon its head. And that's exactly what someone who calls himself a gay Christian, that's exactly what they're doing.
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That's like calling yourself an adulterous Christian, or a murderous Christian, or an angry
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Christian, or a thieving Christian, or a gluttonous Christian, or any other violation of God's law attached to a
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Christian insisting, well, God made me like this. This is the fact that you must accept, is that God just made me in this fashion.
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I have no control over it. I, as a human being, cannot control my desires. It is mechanically determined for me that this is what
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I must do. What you're going to hear is how to turn a text on its head, because when we look at Genesis chapter 2, when we look at the creation story, what has happened and what takes place here is a recognition that while the animals had mates, and that means a male and a female, the man did not.
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And so when it says, then the Lord God said, it is not good that the man should be alone. I will make a helper fit for him.
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That's an etzer, a helper, and the term that is translated as fit for him, it speaks of correspondence to, and in the context, it's clearly a correspondence that is parallel to that which has been found in the created order amongst the animals.
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The animals came in pairs, male and female, but there was no female for Adam.
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And so what is missing, and what needs to be a part of the positive presentation that Christians make in our society as we seek to be salt and light, and to oppose the degradation of marriage, the degradation of society, the redefinition of these things, the overthrow of God's law, is we need to positively state that there is something that is absolutely definitional to the term marriage that refers to the male -female relationship.
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And that the woman is a helpmate to the male, not a mirror image to the male.
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None of the animals that have been brought before Adam had been a male -male or female -female pair.
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And the correspondence that is referred to here is a correspondence that is not a mirror image correspondence, but a fulfillment completion correspondence, which no two men and no two women can ever fulfill.
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There is no way you can even seriously suggest that the author of Genesis had that in mind.
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It is not possible. You are abusing the text. You are twisting the text.
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It is much more honest to just reject the authority of the text than it is to twist the meaning of the text.
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But what's interesting is Mr. Vines likewise will not make any mention.
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I could be wrong about this. I'll be corrected here in a second when I play this. But as I was riding along listening to this last week,
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I caught this. There is a rather full interpretation of this concept provided to us in the
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New Testament. And it is on the lips of none other than Jesus Christ himself.
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Because in Matthew chapter 19, beginning at verse 3, some Pharisees came to Jesus testing him and asking, is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any reason at all?
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And notice what Jesus' answer is. Have you not read that he who created them from the beginning made them male and female?
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Stop right there. Immediately you have in Jesus' own interpretation of the creation story, a creation mandate, a creation decree.
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It is part, the concept of maleness and femaleness is a part of God's creative action.
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And said, for this reason, a man shall leave his father and mother, not his father and his father or his mother and his mother, and be joined to his wife.
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There's only one meaning for that. It's not male who acts like a female. It's not female who acts like a male.
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Leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife and the two shall become one flesh.
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Now not to put a too fine a point on it, but a male and a male and a female and a female cannot become one flesh.
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That is not physically possible. The design does not point to that.
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So they are no longer two but one flesh, but therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.
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What needs to be said clearly and forcefully is that the Christian teaching on marriage found in the
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Christian scriptures, in the words of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, is one man and one woman together becoming one flesh.
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And that is the only relationship that God has ordained and it's the only relationship that God will bless.
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You may complain about that. You may wish to change God's views. Don't call that Christianity.
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Call it whatever you want to call it. Just don't call it reflective of Jesus' teaching because it isn't.
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And so Jesus interprets those words as a blessing solely upon what we would call, sadly, have to call today because of the perversions of these things, heterosexual marriage of one man and one woman.
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That's how he interpreted it. That's how he applied it. Now listen to what happens when your intention is not actually to deal with what the text says.
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You have an external authority. In this case, for Matthew Vines, it is his own personal experience.
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His own personal desires, his lusts, his desires becomes the matrix through which the text of Scripture must be interpreted.
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And the result is the complete and utter overthrow of the actual meaning of the text.
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And yes, the suitable helper or partner that God makes for Adam is Eve, a woman.
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And a woman is a suitable partner for the vast majority of men, for straight men.
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But for gay men, that isn't the case. Now see, there you have, as we pointed out, the utter capitulation to the lust that then defines the person and it becomes the fundamental epistemological assertion.
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I am a gay man. I have been made this way. I cannot control it. I did not choose it.
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God made me this way and therefore I must place that priority upon anything else.
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And if you say to me that I am twisting the Scripture, well, so be it.
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It does not matter. There are gay men. There are lesbian women. And even though none of that's found in the text, and even though it would overthrow
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Jesus's use of the text in Matthew chapter 19, that doesn't matter.
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For them, a woman is not a suitable partner. And in all the ways that a woman is a suitable partner for straight men, for gay men, it's another gay man who's a suitable partner.
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That's not true. That is not correspondence. That's a mirror image. It cannot be the correspondence of Scripture.
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Fact. That's it. That is the end of attempting to come up with a gay
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Christian defense, because if that's not the case, if you cannot demonstrate, if Mr.
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Vines cannot demonstrate that the correspondence here is, in fact, that which could allow for a mirror image, that's not the case.
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That's not what was in Genesis 2. That's not what's in Matthew chapter 19. That's not what any of the authors believed.
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It is a perversion and twisting of the intention of the text to interpret it in this way.
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And the same is true for lesbian women. For them, it is another lesbian woman who's a suitable partner.
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But the necessary consequence of the traditional teaching on homosexuality. The necessary consequence of the teaching of the
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Scriptures as they were written, the intention of the authors, the language, the context, not just the traditional interpretation, but the actual meaning of the text of Scripture, even as interpreted by Jesus Christ himself, would be the accurate way of saying it.
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Is that even though gay people have suitable partners, they must reject them.
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And they must live alone for their whole lives, without a spouse or family of their own.
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Now, you can see just the massive loading of emotion based upon really, really bad logical argumentation.
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So you reject God's purpose for yourself. You adopt the opposite of God's purpose for yourself.
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And then you blame the traditional interpretation for your not getting to have a family, which of course, a family is a man and a woman having children, which you cannot have with another man, and which a woman cannot have with another woman.
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And yet somehow that's due to the traditional interpretation? No, it's due to your rejection of the decree of God and the created order itself.
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We are now declaring good, the very first thing in Scripture that God declared not good.
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Now, catch that. God said it was not good that man be alone. So you have a man who becomes embroiled in his lust for other men, and therefore cannot have a family because two men together can't have a family.
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But now if that means that we are somehow saying something that was bad, that he's alone, is a good thing.
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If you can even follow this, you're starting to understand just there is a, as Paul will say in Romans 1, and he's going to try to get around Romans 1, we're going to deal with it, we're going to get there.
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None of this is any new, none of this is new, this has been around for a long time, but we all need to understand how these folks are reasoning.
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But there is a fundamental twistedness in homosexuality that impacts all of a person's thoughts.
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And here you're seeing it. This is obviously an intelligent young man, this is a young man who is well -spoken, and yet he can take a text and turn it on its head and actually blame the original meaning of the text for his own inability to satisfy his lusts and desires when it's nature itself that precludes him from having a family or having children.
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It doesn't work. We weren't designed that way. To men, having sex does not result in children.
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That's the way it is. That's creation. If you're an atheist, that's just the way it is. I mean, it depends on, you can look at it from the atheist viewpoint, that does not produce life.
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In fact, it produces death. And so to blame the reality of the created order on some traditional interpretation, that's what you have here.
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And given that the majority of people in our society do not think logically, they do not think based upon factuality, they do not think on a historical basis, when it comes to ethics and morality anymore, it's all just whatever feels good, you can see why the emotional aspect here is so very, very important.
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For the man to be forced to be alone, and the fruit that this teaching has borne has been deeply wounding and destructive.
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This is a major problem. By holding to the traditional interpretation, we are now contradicting the
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Bible's own teachings. Now, there you have it. By holding to what the
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Bible teaches, you're contradicting the Bible. That's really what's being said. We have not seen any overthrow of what these texts actually say in their original context.
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Instead, you have an external idea being brought in, being made the standard, and say, well, if the application of God's teaching, it results in my unhappiness and my being alone.
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And again, we can point to so many intergenerational love advocates will say the exact same thing.
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Those promoting bestiality will say the exact same thing. How is it different? It's not different.
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They will make the exact same form of argumentation. The Bible teaches that it is not good for the man to be forced to be alone.
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It doesn't say forced to be alone. It's not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper corresponding to him, and that is a woman, period.
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No one is keeping Matthew Vines from marrying. It is his lusts that keep him from obeying
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God's commands. And it all goes back to his acceptance of his assertion that this is how
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God has made me. I have these lusts. I have these desires. I cannot help it.
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I will not fight it. And therefore, I am going to overthrow the entirety of the testimony, the positive testimony of Scripture regarding men and women as interpreted by Jesus himself.
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Matthew 19, 6, So they are no longer two, but one flesh, who? Male and female.
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That's Jesus's teaching. If you don't like Jesus's teaching, then
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I suggest you stop trying to twist it to fit your desires. A person who follows
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Christ follows his Lordship. The very concept of following Christ involves confession and repentance.
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What's confession? Hamalageo. To say the same thing. You are confessing that what Jesus says about truth and error, sin and righteousness is true, even in your own life.
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You do not change Jesus's demands to meet your own. That's not following Christ.
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That's denying Christ. And yet now we are teaching that it is. Scripture says that good teachings will bear good fruit.
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But now the reverse is occurring, and we say it's not a problem. Something here is off.
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Something is out of place. Yeah, something is off and something is out of place. But that which is off and out of place is found in the interpreter, not in the text.
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And that's frighteningly clear. At least to those who recognize the authority of Scripture, it is not frighteningly clear to a large portion of those in our society whose moral compass and moral grounding has been thoroughly eroded by secularism and other forces.
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And it's because of these problems and these contradictions that more and more Christians have been going back to Scripture and re -examining the six verses that have formed the basis for an absolute condemnation of same -sex relationships.
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Can we go back? Can we take a closer look at these verses and see what we can learn from further study of them?
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What are these six verses? There are three in the Old Testament and three in the
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New Testament. Now let me just remind you once again, even though I made this statement in the first hour of my review, that while these are the key texts that will be examined on a negative side, it is the positive teaching we have just already seen, the positive teaching of Matthew 19, the positive teaching of the relationship of male and female that is the foundation of these texts.
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And it is inappropriate for people to communicate to others the idea that, well, this isn't a major issue for the
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Scriptures. Because by separating out the positive commands regarding the nature of human sexuality, gender, maleness, femaleness, etc.,
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etc., by separating these out, it makes it look like, well, there's just these six texts. I mean, there's all these verses in the
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Bible. It's got to be a minor issue. That is not how you faithfully or accurately handle the
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Word of God. So I'll go in order of their appearance in Scripture. In the Old Testament, we have the story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19, as well as two prohibitions in Leviticus 18 and 20.
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And in the New Testament, we have a passage by Paul in Romans 1, as well as two Greek terms in 1
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Corinthians 6 and 1 Timothy 1. To begin, let's look at Genesis 19, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.
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In Genesis 18, God and two angels come in the form of men to visit
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Abraham and Sarah at their tent alongside the Dead Sea. Abraham and Sarah do not yet realize who they are, but they show them lavish hospitality nonetheless.
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Halfway through the chapter, God, now beginning to be recognized by Abraham, tells him,
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The outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is so great, and their sin so grievous, that I will go down and see if what they have done is as bad as the outcry that has reached me.
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Abraham's nephew, Lot, and Lot's family live in Sodom. And so Abraham bargains with God and gets him to agree not to destroy the city if he finds even ten righteous people there.
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At the start of the next chapter, in Genesis 19, the two angels arrive in Sodom, still in the form of men.
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Lot invites them to spend the night in his home, and he prepares a meal for them. But beginning in verse 4, we read the following.
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Before they had gone to bed... Now, let me just stop for just a moment. I, not very long ago, preached a sermon on Genesis chapter 19 at the
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Phoenix Reformed Baptist Church. You can find that sermon at sermonaudio .com. If you want to have a fuller discussion, then
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I'll be able to provide here. And, of course, the specific chapter on Genesis 18 and 19
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I wrote in The Same -Sex Controversy as well. The book that we have published on that subject has been out for a decade now.
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But let me just mention that, though I'm sure he had to pick and choose how much detail he was going to provide, that before we get to verses 3 and 4, the reality is that it says,
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The two angels came to Sodom in the evening, and Lot was sitting in the gate of Sodom. When Lot saw them, he rose to meet them, and bowed himself with his face to the earth, and said,
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My lords, please turn aside your servants' houses, spend the night, and wash your feet, that you may rise up early and go on your way.
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They said, No, we will spend the night in the town square. But he pressed them strongly, so they turned aside to him and entered his house, and he made them a feast and baked unleavened bread, and they ate.
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So notice that even before we get to the text where he begins in verse 4, there is clear evidence of the fact that Lot is well aware of the nature of the city, and he is well aware of the fact that it would be unsafe for men to stay in the city square, and he is likewise seeking to bring them to his home unnoticed, and he wants them to leave early.
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Evidently, those in Sodom did not get up early in the morning. And so there is a background there, and once again, what should be our concern?
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Our concern first and foremost should be, what did the author of this text want to communicate?
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What did it mean in the original language, in the original context? And then we make application from that point to the modern situation.
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So we pick up with it from that particular point. All the men from every part of the city of Sodom, both young and old, surrounded the house.
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They called to Lot, where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out to us so that we can have sex with them.
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Now that's actually a rather bold translation. The ESV says that we may know them.
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The term Yedah certainly does refer to sexual relations, and that is clearly what they desire to do.
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They desire to involve these men in sexual relations. Now what
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Mr. Vines is going to assume is that since there are all these men, that this is going to be an instance of gang rape, and that that's all that is wrong here.
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It's not that these are men seeking to have sex with men, but that there are too many of them.
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Evidently, if there had just been two, it would have been okay. If there were only two people that came to Lot's house and said, we'd like to have sex with your guests, would they like to do that?
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Then that would have been fine, evidently. But it is the large number that suggests to him the concept of gang rape.
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And once again, I just point out for those of you who have read The Same -Sex Controversy, these are issues that we have addressed over and over and over again.
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In fact, I just happened to open the book. Page 50, objections stated, the story of Sodom and Gomorrah is irrelevant to homosexuality because it does not address loving monogamous relationships.
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It is only decrying gang rape and violence, nothing else. Response, surely there is everything wrong with violence, whether sexual or not.
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There is everything wrong with gang rape as well, but to note that these things are wrong does not explain many of the issues in the narrative of Genesis 19, as well as the rest of the
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Bible's references to Sodom and Gomorrah. There was no violence on the part of the crowd until Lot identified their desires as wicked.
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Was Lot wrong to identify homosexual desires for these men as wicked? And was Peter wrong to interpret the story from Genesis as involving daily ungodliness on the part of the
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Sodomites? Are we to assume the Sodomites engaged in daily gang rapes, or is it apparent that it was their lifestyle that tormented his soul?
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The insertion of the concept of monogamous loving homosexual relationships into the biblical discussion begs a number of issues.
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First, very few homosexual relationships are in fact monogamous. Second, to call a relationship loving in a biblical sense means it is in accordance with God's will and is fulfilling
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His purpose, resulting in His glory. And finally, it assumes that a homosexual relationship thusly described is part of the biblical concept to begin with.
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And such is an unfounded assertion refuted by the fair and careful examination of Scripture. Indeed, it is directly contrary to God's law, and to that truth we now turn.
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And then we went into the book of Leviticus. So this is, again, nothing new here.
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These things have been responded to over and over and over again, but it is good to hear them and to respond again because, well, it seems our culture has a very short memory.
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Lot went outside to meet them and shut the door behind him and said, No, my friends, don't do this wicked thing.
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Look, I have two daughters who've never slept with a man. Let me bring them out to you and you can do what you like with them.
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But don't do anything to these men, for they have come under the protection of my roof. But the men keep threatening, so the angels strike them with blindness.
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Now, it is interesting to me that Mr. Vines does not continue reading the text because the text actually says,
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But they said, Stand back. And they said, This fellow came to sojourn and he has become the judge.
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Now we will deal worse with you than with them. Then they pressed hard against the man,
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Lot, and drew near to break the door down. But the men reached out their hands and brought Lot into the house with them and shut the door.
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Evidently, the section about judgment. The section about moral judgment and the fact that these men are rejecting the moral judgment that Lot has pronounced upon their desire to engage in sexual relations with these men.
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That doesn't really quite fit the paradigm, and so it didn't get included in the reading.
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Lot and his family then flee from the city and God destroys Sodom and Gomorrah with fire and brimstone.
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The destruction of Sodom and now we've also skipped some more very, very important element of the text here.
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And that is the men reached out their hands and brought Lot into the house with them and shut the door. And they struck with blindness the men who are at the entrance of the house, both small and great, so that they wore themselves out, groping for the door.
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Now, here's one of the problems with Mr. Vine's attempted interpretation of this text.
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He's going to limit this to gang rape. Have you thought in light of the verse he skipped how absurd that is?
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How could blind guys engage in gang rape? But they didn't stop trying to get to the door, even when they were blinded.
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They were so filled with lust and desire that even when blinded, they didn't repent.
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They didn't stop. They didn't give consideration to Lot's words. How long did it take them before they figured out everybody else had been blinded?
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I mean, if all of a sudden the lights went out to you, the first thought across your mind is going to be, this has happened to me.
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I can't see. But the first thought across your mind is not going to be, all of us can't see, but it's not going to be too long until you figure that out.
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You're going to hear other people crying, I can't see. I can't see. And then it's going to strike you, we've all lost our sight.
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Now, what is the immediate reaction of a rationally thinking person at this point?
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You are going to be reeling with fear. You're going to be reeling with the recognition that something extremely unusual has just happened.
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And you're going to stop what you're doing. They don't stop. They don't stop.
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They weary themselves. They wore themselves out, groping for the door.
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Now, if you can't see anybody else, how can you engage in gang rape? But you can still engage in sexual activity.
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Why? I can't even begin to imagine, but very clearly, this was a group of people who were far beyond rationality at this point.
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This morning, I was in California and flew home, haven't even been home yet.
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I just came to the airport, came here straight from the airport to do the program. And for some reason,
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I forget exactly how it was, I was following my RSS feeds at the airport gate.
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I got there, I flew through security this morning. That was really nice. But and I happened to run across the story of what had taken place at a
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Baptist church in San Francisco a number of years ago, when a speaker on this subject, they had not advertised it publicly.
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They knew they couldn't, but it had still gotten out. And the 75 to 100 homosexuals that attacked this church, what they did to people, what they did to the property, what they did to the people who tried to get into the church for the services, breaking down doors, there being and nobody was ever arrested.
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Nobody was ever arrested because as the cops said, well, you got to understand this is San Francisco. The behavior of these people, their abuse of older people, their abuse of children, the abject hatred that these people were enveloped in,
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I could not help but think of this biblical story, narrating events from thousands of years ago, there is something about homosexuality and the twistedness, the fact that you are twisting the creator creation relationship and fundamentally denying
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God's right to define you at your most basic level, that produces a kind of irrationality on the part of its adherence, especially when the sinfulness of your behavior is brought to your attention.
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That's what these people in San Francisco could not stand, was that someone might in a context, they don't have to go and listen, they don't have to hear it, but the very fact that they know what's going to be said drove them to extremes of behavior that are absolutely amazing, just amazing.
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And here we see it as well. And they struck with blindness, the men who are at the entrance of the house, both small and great, so that they wore themselves out, groping for the door.
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I think that's one of the most amazing statements of the inveterate sinfulness of man, even in the presence of God's direct judgment that I've ever read.
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And Matthew Vines doesn't even tell his audience about it. I mean, Gomorrah was not originally thought to have anything to do with sexuality at all, even if there is a sexual component to the passage we just Now, what we're going to hear here is clear evidence of one of two things.
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Either Matthew Vines is a very dishonest man, or Matthew Vines is a young man who has been thoroughly deceived by only reading
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John Boswell and books like that. Because, you see, when reading homosexual, pro -homosexual works in preparation for the writing of the same -sex controversy,
40:23
I came across a Roman Catholic priest who was promoting homosexuality, and he was the first one
40:33
I'd ever encountered who used, well, the argument you're about to hear from Matthew Vines.
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And so as soon as I heard him saying this, I just shook my head.
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Here it comes. I want you to hear this because you need to be ready to respond to this kind of thing.
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Listen. But starting in the Middle Ages, it began to be widely believed that the sin of Sodom, the reason that Sodom was destroyed, was homosexuality in particular.
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Now, by the way, we provide, in the same -sex controversy, an entire chapter.
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Actually, it's Appendix B. I apologize. It's Appendix B. Jeff Neal provided this.
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John Chrysostom, on Romans chapter 1. Now, John Chrysostom is before the medieval period. He is one of the patristic writers.
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And we give his interpretation of Romans 1, and of course, he makes direct reference to homosexuality as being a part of, and even interpreting
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Genesis and Sodom and Gomorrah as homosexuality as being part of this. So here you've got Matthew Vine saying, uh -uh, this is a medieval thing.
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We provide in our book, evidently he doesn't read Christian books on the subject, just non -Christian books on the subject, or liberal
41:49
Christian books, which aren't really Christian. It's just untrue. John Chrysostom, entire chapter, demonstrating that statement, that this was not interpreted in the early church as having anything to do with sex, is a falsehood.
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It's wrong. It's been documented to be wrong, but it'll be repeated over and over again.
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And by the way, it just so happens that in my writing right now, I'm writing a section in the upcoming book, looking at parallels, parallel references in the
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Quran, and how these parallel references phrase things differently, and how this causes questions in regards to the orthodox
42:29
Islamic understanding of the interpretation of the Quran and how the Quran was given. But one thing's clear, all you have to do is look at Surah 7, and Surah 26, and Surah 29, and you will discover,
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Surah 11, you'll discover that the Quran likewise interprets the story of Sodom and Gomorrah as having to do with homosexuality.
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And the Quran is 632, as far as, at least from the Islamic perspective, its earliest possible genesis.
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At the death of Muhammad. And so even in Saudi Arabia, it was interpreted that way.
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So the statement just simply isn't true. And yet again, I wonder how many people in this,
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I believe it was United Methodist Church, would ever even check the accuracy of these statements.
43:21
This later interpretation held sway for centuries, giving rise to the English term sodomy, which technically refers to any form of non -procreative sexual behavior, but at various points in history has referred primarily to male same -sex relations.
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But this is no longer the prevailing interpretation of this passage, and simply because later societies associated it with homosexuality.
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Prevailing amongst whom, is the question. Homosexuality doesn't mean that that's what the
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Bible itself teaches. In the passage, the men of Sodom threatened to gang -rape
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Lot's angel visitors. That's reading into it, and reading against the very text that he skipped.
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We've come in the form of men, and so this behavior would at least ostensibly be same -sex. But that is the only connection that can be drawn between this passage and homosexuality in general.
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The only connection. That's it. Really? He's actually going to provide a refutation of himself here in just a moment.
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And there is a world of difference between violent and coercive practices like gang -rape, and consensual, monogamous, and loving relationships.
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No one in the church, or anywhere else, is arguing for the acceptance of gang -rape. That is vastly different from what we're talking about.
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But the men of Sodom wanted to rape other men, so that must mean that they were gay, some will argue.
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And it was their same -sex desires, and not just their threatened rape, that God was punishing. But gang -rape of men by men was used as a common tactic of humiliation and aggression in warfare and other hostile contexts in ancient times.
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It had nothing to do with sexual orientation or attraction. The point was to shame and to conquer.
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That is the appropriate background for reading this passage in Genesis 19. Now, I don't know where he gets that.
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Two men? This has something to do with shaming and conquering? Where'd that come from? Completely foreign to the text whatsoever.
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And the ironic thing is you'll find so many different ways of getting around this story, and they're all contradictory to one another.
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I mean, there are homosexuals that say there's no sexuality involved at all. They'll say that this is just simply about not extending hospitality.
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I mean, there's so many, and they're all contradictory to one another. But we haven't gotten to the key thing yet.
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Which notably is contrasted with two accounts of generous welcome and hospitality, that of Abraham and Sarah in Genesis 18, and Lot's own display of hospitality in Genesis 19.
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The actions of the men of Sodom are intended to underscore their cruel treatment of outsiders, not to somehow tell us that they were gay.
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And indeed, Sodom and Gomorrah are referred to 20 times throughout the subsequent books of the Bible, sometimes with detailed commentary on what their sins were, but homosexuality is never mentioned or connected to them.
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Watch this. In Ezekiel 16, verse 49, the prophet quotes God as saying, Now this was the sin of your sister
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Sodom. She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed, and unconcerned. They did not help the poor and needy.
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So God himself in Ezekiel declares the sin of Sodom to be arrogance. Okay. There you go.
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Sounds good, doesn't it? That is what Ezekiel 16, 49 says. It says, Behold, this was the guilt of your sister
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Sodom. She and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy.
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That's exactly what it reads. And the very next verse says,
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They were haughty and did an abomination, toevah, before me.
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So I removed them when I saw it. Toevah. The very same term used in the holiness code of homosexuality.
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And homosexual relationships. Daniel Helminiak was the
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Roman Catholic priest that I was referring to. And that's exactly what he did. All he did was quote Ezekiel 16, 49.
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Never quoted Ezekiel 16, 50. What must you assume about your audience when the refutation of your point is in the very next sentence of a text and you don't bother to quote it, does
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Matthew Vines know that Ezekiel 16, 50 is there? I don't know. I don't know.
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Did Daniel Helminiak know that? I think he probably did. Is Matthew Vines just following Helminiak and others that have made the same error?
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Just repeating secondhand these texts? See, 16, 49 says this, and they've never been forced to look at 16, 50.
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I don't know. I don't know. Sin is almost never alone.
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No one has ever said that the only sin of Sodom, other than being gay, they were just the most righteous people on the planet.
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No one's ever made that argument, obviously. But it's right there.
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Talk about twisting scripture. When you stop, and remember, verse divisions, you know, they come much later in time, when you stop right before that kind of language, they were haughty and did an abomination before me.
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And I'm looking at the Hebrew right there. Toeva, you know, there's the text right there.
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Abomination, very same word used in the holiness code, which he's about to define as, well, he's about to define it away.
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So I remove them when I saw it. When I saw what? Their Toeva.
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That's what it says when you actually read the entire thing.
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Does he know that? I don't know, but I hope now he'll at least maybe not tell people what he just told people because it's untrue.
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And apathy toward the poor. In Matthew 10 and Luke 10, Jesus associates the sin of Sodom with inhospitable treatment of his disciples.
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Of all the 20 references to Sodom and Gomorrah throughout the Bible, Now, is that really what
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Jesus was doing, or was Jesus pointing out that the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah brought judgment, and yet they had so little light in comparison to the gospel message that Jesus and his disciples were bringing to the very
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Jewish people who possess the scriptures? You cannot make the argument that the only sin of Sodom, and by the way, have you caught something here?
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The only sin of Sodom was inhospitability. Is that the same thing as gang rape? I don't think so.
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So which one is it? Well, it's both. You see, as long as it's an excuse, it's okay.
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As long as it's an excuse, that's all right. Don't have to, you know, we can pile on the excuses, even if they're not consistent with one another, because it makes it sound better.
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That's what you have to do when you're perverting the scriptures. When you're twisting their meaning and you're trying to turn them into the exact opposite of what their authors intend, that's what you've got to do.
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And that's what we are hearing. Throughout the rest of scripture, only one connects their sins to sexual transgressions in general.
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The New Testament book of Jude, verse seven, states that Sodom and Gomorrah gave themselves up to sexual immorality and perversion.
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But there are many forms of sexual immorality and perversion. And even if Jude 7 is taken as specifically referring to the threatened gang rape from Genesis 19, 5, that still has nothing to do with the kinds of relationships that we're talking about.
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Now, it's really, again, it's really, really it's almost painful to listen to someone trying to get around what
51:55
Jude and 2 Peter say at this point. It really, really is. Because it's just so plain that they are talking about defiling of the flesh.
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They're talking about going after strange flesh. It is utterly unfair to even begin to try to deal with the text.
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It really shows, in essence, that there isn't really any desire here to really hear what is being said.
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Because when you look at the parallels, you have to ask the question, well, where do you think
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Jude got his interpretation? Just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they, in the same way as these, indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh.
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Now, what does strange flesh mean? Sarkos, Heteros.
53:00
They are exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire. Where did
53:08
Jude get this? Did this just pop up someplace as far as an interpretation goes?
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And was Jude written during the medieval period? So Jude interprets
53:19
Sodom and Gomorrah in the way that he had earlier claimed no one had interpreted until the medieval period, which we already saw
53:26
John Chrysostom did, and even the Koran did. And so you really start wondering about his facts after a while, you know?
53:32
Maybe there's an agenda here. Yeah, yeah, there really is an agenda here.
53:39
And it's a clear agenda, a very obvious agenda. And we're demonstrating that.
53:47
It's now widely conceded by scholars on both sides of this debate that Sodom and Gomorrah do not offer biblical evidence to support the belief that homosexuality is a sin.
53:57
I think we've demonstrated that anybody who would say that obviously doesn't have any concern about actually interpreting what the text itself says.
54:07
But our next two verses from Leviticus. And now we're going to leave. I think we can honestly say, verse number one examined,
54:17
Matthew Vines fails completely to deal with it contextually, biblically, canonically, honestly, etc.
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etc. Do not lie with a man as one does with a woman. It is an abomination. Continue to be commonly cited to uphold that belief.
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And they certainly can be claimed to be of greater relevance to this issue than the matter of gang rape. So they deserve our careful study and attention.
54:43
To back out for a moment and provide some context, Leviticus is the third book of the Bible. We have
54:48
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Beginning in Exodus and continuing through Deuteronomy, God delivers the law to the
54:58
Israelites, which contains 613 rules in total. The book of Leviticus deals primarily with ceremonial issues related to appropriate worship practices at the tabernacle, the various offerings and how to make them, clean versus unclean foods, diseases, and bodily discharges.
55:17
Partially true, but only partially true. In my response video that I posted just a while back, not to Matthew Vines, but to Dan Savage, I pointed out that there is so much more in Leviticus than pro -homosexual advocates want to admit is actually there.
55:45
In fact, Jesus quoted from Leviticus, I think, I could be wrong about this, I haven't checked it in a while,
55:50
I think he quoted from Leviticus more than any place else because he kept saying, you shall love your neighbor as yourself, and that comes directly from this very section of Leviticus.
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But the other things that are also found, I went through 12 things in my video, there's 12 things I just grabbed really quickly that were found in that video.
56:10
Prohibitions against bestiality, child sacrifice, adultery, thievery, the abuse of the poor, unjust scales, commandments to honor your father and your mother, commandments to honor the elderly in a society, all these incredibly positive things are part of the warp and woof of the fabric of the
56:32
Mosaic law found in the book of Leviticus. And so to, in essence, identify
56:41
Leviticus as something that is really just not relevant today, and that's going to be his argument, is that no
56:48
Christians believe these things are relevant to us today, is to grossly misrepresent the reality of Leviticus.
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As I've said many, many times before, the Holiness Code, Leviticus 18, 19, 20, we have to examine it carefully, we have to examine it contextually, we have to examine it in the context in which it was written, the context of the entire
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Bible. There are things in there that were specifically for the people of Israel. There are things in there we think we know what they apply to today but don't necessarily, and then there are things that are really, really clear.
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And Leviticus 18, 22 is one of those very, very clear things.
57:38
And I think what I need to do is, we're gonna take our top -of -the -hour break,
57:45
I was gonna switch over, I think I need to press on. I need to press on because we're sort of right in the middle of this, and as hard as it is to do it, as difficult as it is to deal with the subject for that long,
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I would beg your indulgence, and let's press on. Our culture needs to hear these things, and you need to be prepared.
58:11
So let's press on after this break. Under the guise of tolerance, modern culture grants alternative lifestyle status to homosexuality.
58:31
Even more disturbing, some within the church attempt to revise and distort Christian teaching on this behavior.
58:38
In their book, The Same -Sex Controversy, James White and Jeff Neal write for all who want to better understand the
58:44
Bible's teaching on the subject, explaining and defending the foundational Bible passages that deal with homosexuality, including
58:51
Genesis, Leviticus, and Romans. Expanding on these scriptures, they refute the revisionist arguments, including the claim that Christians today need not adhere to the law.
59:01
In a straightforward and loving manner, they appeal to those caught up in a homosexual lifestyle to repent and to return to God's plan for His people.
59:11
The Same -Sex Controversy, defending and clarifying the Bible's message about homosexuality. Get your copy in the bookstore at aomin .org.
59:20
Pulpit crimes, the criminal mishandling of God's Word, may be James White's most provocative book yet.
59:27
White sets out to examine numerous crimes being committed in pulpits throughout our land every week, as he seeks to leave no stone unturned.
59:34
Based firmly upon the bedrock of Scripture, one crime after another is laid bare for all to see.
59:40
The pulpit is to be a place where God speaks from His Word. What has happened to this sacred duty in our day?
59:46
The charges are as follows. Prostitution using the gospel for financial gain, pandering to pluralism, cowardice under fire, felonious eisegesis, entertainment without a license, and cross -dressing, ignoring
01:00:00
God's ordinance regarding the roles of men and women. Is a pulpit crime occurring in your town? Get Pulpit Crimes in the bookstore at aomin .org.
01:00:18
What is Dr. Norman Geisler warning the Christian community about in his book, Chosen but Free, A New Cult, Secularism, False Prophecy Scenarios?
01:00:25
No, Dr. Geisler is sounding the alarm about a system of beliefs commonly called Calvinism. He insists that this belief system is theologically inconsistent, philosophically insufficient, and morally repugnant.
01:00:38
In his book, The Potter's Freedom, James White replies to Dr. Geisler, but The Potter's Freedom is much more than just a reply.
01:00:45
It is a defense of the very principles upon which the Protestant Reformation was founded. Indeed, it is a defense of the very gospel itself.
01:00:52
In a style that both scholars and laymen alike can appreciate, James White masterfully counters the evidence against so -called extreme
01:00:59
Calvinism, defines what the Reformed faith actually is, and concludes that the gospel preached by the
01:01:04
Reformers is the very one taught in the pages of Scripture. The Potter's Freedom, a defense of the
01:01:10
Reformation and a rebuttal to Norman Geisler's Chosen but Free. You'll find it in the Reformed Theology section of our bookstore at aomin .org.
01:01:27
Christ is the end of the law. Whoops, I wasn't supposed to do that. Sorry about that.
01:01:33
I'm not even sure that I was at the right point there. I may have clicked on it. Let me double -check that I'm at the right place here.
01:01:42
Hmm. Well, we're going to continue on, and I'm going to hit play, and if it sounds like it's the wrong spot,
01:01:48
I'm going to have to look around for it because it may have... I was closing the other files and just opening this one up, and I don't want to skip anything.
01:01:55
This says we're at 24 minutes in. That sounds about right, so we will continue on.
01:02:00
We are responding to Matthew Vine's presentation. We're now going to Leviticus, and I'm actually going to back it up just a little bit because the statement he just made,
01:02:09
I think, is somewhat important, so we'll probably re -hear something. "...describes himself as the fulfillment of the law."
01:02:15
Yeah, that's... I haven't heard that, so let's back it up here. "...forgave us all our sins."
01:02:20
Yeah, I skipped ahead. I apologize. Now we're going to have to... This is live radio, folks.
01:02:26
This is how it works. We're going to have to find where we were here. "...much of the New Testament deals with the issue of the place of the old law in the..."
01:02:33
Boy, we've... I've really skipped ahead. "...now this was the sin of your sister Sodom."
01:02:38
Ah, that's close. We heard that one. That's the Ezekiel 16 misrepresentation. "...one, connects their sins to sexual transgressions in general."
01:02:46
Yeah, we're getting close. We're getting close. Sorry about that, folks, but sometimes you just click in the wrong place. "...it's now widely conceded by scholars on both sides of this debate that Sodom and Gomorrah do not offer biblical evidence to support the belief that homosexuality is a sin."
01:03:00
But our next two verses from Leviticus, "...do not lie with a man as one does with a woman, it is an abomination, continue to be commonly cited to uphold that belief.
01:03:10
And they certainly can be claimed to be of greater relevance to this issue than the matter of gang rape. So they deserve our careful study and attention."
01:03:19
To back out for a moment and provide some context, Leviticus is the third book of the Bible. We have
01:03:25
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. Beginning in Exodus and continuing through Deuteronomy, God delivers the law to the
01:03:35
Israelites, which contains 613 rules in total. The book of Leviticus deals primarily with ceremonial issues related to appropriate worship practices at the tabernacle.
01:03:46
The various offerings and how to make them, clean versus unclean foods, diseases and bodily discharges, sexual taboos, and rules for the priests.
01:03:57
Chapter 18 of Leviticus contains a list of sexual prohibitions and chapter 20 follows this up with a list of punishments.
01:04:04
In these chapters, male same -sex intercourse is prohibited and the punishment for violators is death.
01:04:12
These specific verses are Leviticus 18, 22, and 20, 13. They read, "...you
01:04:18
shall not lie with a male as with a woman. It is an abomination." Now, I want to stop right there because I want to give you some background information that will be important not only as we interpret this text, but will be especially important as we interpret the texts in Corinthians and in the pastoral epistles in 1st
01:04:42
Timothy. That means it's going to be a little bit down the road, so you might want to take note of this or something like that, but it is important.
01:04:49
Leviticus 18, 22. In the Greek Septuagint, the
01:04:56
Greek translation of the Old Testament, and most scholars will admit that especially in the
01:05:03
Pentateuch, the Greek Septuagint is an excellent translation. The Septuagint, there really isn't a single
01:05:09
Septuagint. I mean, we have Ralphs and we have the the Gertrude version and stuff like that today, but that's really a compilation over time.
01:05:21
The Pentateuch obviously was done by very, very skilled translators first, most probably anyways.
01:05:29
And then some of the rest of the Old Testament is done very well, some of it isn't.
01:05:36
And that's something to keep in mind. Secondly, remember that the
01:05:42
Bible of the New Testament Church is the Greek Septuagint. Very few of the converts of Paul in Ephesus or any place else would have direct access to what we would call today the
01:05:57
Masoretic Hebrew text. That's obviously somewhat, even at that point, anachronistic because the
01:06:02
Masoretes didn't flourish until the 9th century, but to the stream of textual tradition that underlies the
01:06:09
Masoretic text, put that way. They weren't reading Hebrew, or Aramaic for that matter, the
01:06:15
Targums or whatever else might be. They were using the Greek Septuagint. And the
01:06:20
Greek Septuagint says kaimata arsenos, write that down, A -R -S -E -N -O -S.
01:06:28
OO, OO is the negative, you shall not. koimei theisei, koitein gunaikos.
01:06:41
Delugma, bedelugma, gar estin. It is an abomination. Now, arsenos, koimei theisei, refers to the bed, in essence, to sleep, but then koitein is the very
01:07:09
Greek word that I believe is mediated to us through Latin, but it's basically a transliteration of coitus.
01:07:20
Coitus, sexual relationship, the marital relationship, intercourse. So you have in Leviticus 18 .22,
01:07:31
the word for man is not anthropos here. It is arsenos because arsenos refers more forcefully and directly to male than anthropos, which is more general.
01:07:47
Now, why do I emphasize this? Because when we get to the
01:07:53
New Testament, one of the words that we need to deal with is arsenokoites, arsenokoites.
01:08:00
And modern writers will seek to find ways of redefining this term.
01:08:11
I found it fascinating that Matthew Vines, we're gonna get to it later on, but I'm just giving you a heads up so you can make the connection when we get there.
01:08:19
I'll repeat this when we get there, we certainly aren't gonna get there today. At least I doubt we will, even though we've got still got an hour to go. I sort of doubt we'll get there.
01:08:25
We might. I don't know. I don't know. This is this is live webcasting. This is how it's done. This is just the way that we do it.
01:08:33
But when we get to the use of arsenokoites in the New Testament, Matthew Vines fascinatingly is going to admit that the first use of arsenokoites is found in Paul.
01:08:47
Now, I provide a discussion in the same -sex controversy of another patristic reference.
01:08:54
You know, I'm often attacked by people who can't deal with my arguments because I went to Columbia Evangelical Seminary for my
01:09:03
THD work. One of the things I did when I went to Columbia is
01:09:09
I obtained the Thesaurus Lingua Grecae CD -ROM, which is no longer available, unfortunately.
01:09:14
Now you have to subscribe to an online service and all the rest of that stuff, and I can't even find the original disc anymore.
01:09:20
The poor thing. But anyway. And you had to subscribe to this. You had to buy it. If I recall correctly, it was $500 for three years at first.
01:09:28
Then it went down to $300, etc., etc. When it was originally made available to higher institutions, it was like $60 ,000 to have it available in your library.
01:09:42
I obtained the TLG for my doctoral work. It was not available anywhere around here in any of the quote -unquote accredited schools.
01:09:51
But I used it for my doctoral work. And so one of the things that I did in writing the same -sex controversy, this is something that scholars do when they do scholarship, is
01:10:05
I asked myself the question, what is the history of the usage of this term?
01:10:12
And I found one possible historical source that precedes
01:10:19
Paul's. But the dating on that particular source is very uncertain.
01:10:27
And it may be post -Pauline. But I discussed it, and if I recall correctly, a fairly lengthy footnote.
01:10:39
I'm looking, just happened to pop this open here.
01:10:45
Yeah, there it is. Now this is interesting.
01:10:51
I'm just going to read this for the fun of it. This is just the kind of notes that we included in our book. This is the note that I was referring to.
01:11:00
It's note number one on page 159. A scan of the relevant material found the Thessalian Greek CD -ROM reveals a single use of the term prior to Paul, the infinitival use in the
01:11:10
Sibylline Oracles at 2 .73. This work is dated by the TLG canon data as early as the 2nd century
01:11:17
BC. However, the more common dating is AD 1st century. If material is contemporaneous with Paul, the origin of the term could have come from Abinic sources, from which
01:11:27
Paul could have derived the word as well. And if the material is post -Pauline, its use could have come from Paul or from a common
01:11:34
Jewish source. Now he doesn't mention the Sibylline Oracles or anything like that.
01:11:41
And it's interesting, I then had this note, this is note number three, which
01:11:46
I'll just throw in here just because I know there are people taking notes on this because, let's face it, not too many people are talking about this kind of stuff in our society today.
01:11:56
And while we've got the opportunity to do so, we better do it. So in other words, may I suggest maybe grabbing the recordings of these programs and keeping them for yourself?
01:12:08
You know, that might be a good idea. Footnote number three, page 159, some scholarly sources limit the meaning in just this way, speaking of Ars Inquietes, the impact of political pressures appear even in the realm of Christian scholarship and publishing.
01:12:23
For example, the second edition of a Greek -English lexicon in the New Testament and other early Christian literature by Bauer, Arndt, Gingrich, and Donker, University of Chicago, 1979.
01:12:31
For those of you as old as I am, that was the big green monster. That was what I used when I learned Greek. It defines
01:12:38
Ars Inquietes as a male who practices homosexuality, pederast, sodomite, page 109.
01:12:44
The listed sources were fairly small at this point, but included Bailey's work. With the advent of the third edition, now known as BDAG, in 2000, the entry more than tripled in size, with the main definition dropping the term homosexual.
01:13:01
The definition given is a male who engages in sexual activity with a person of his own sex, pederast.
01:13:08
The first part of the definition, however, defines a homosexual, not a pederast. The largest portion of added sources are revisionist in nature and have already been addressed, that is, in our book.
01:13:21
However, BDAG does note the formation of the word based upon the the septuagint usage at Leviticus 2013, even though this very fact militates strongly against the dropping of the term homosexual from the definition while retaining the description of homosexuality.
01:13:37
I think if you've not gotten it before, if it's not something you've wanted to think about before, you might want to pick up the same -sex controversy.
01:13:45
And one thing I've said to a lot of folks, whenever you're reading any of my books, don't skip the endnotes.
01:13:53
Don't skip the endnotes. I put a lot of the most important material in the endnotes.
01:14:00
I expect them to be read. But anyways, the whole reason I stopped there is to give you this information, that the term in the
01:14:09
New Testament, arsenokoites, is in all probability derived by Paul from the conjunction of the terms arsenos and koitain in Leviticus 18 .22.
01:14:25
This is vitally important to understand, because it bridges, it demonstrates the
01:14:32
New Testament authors did not think that what was found in the Holiness Code in Leviticus was irrelevant to them.
01:14:40
It bridges the gap between the two, and it explains to us exactly what Paul has in mind when he says, you were homosexuals, but you are no longer.
01:14:53
And it is fatal to the case of the person who wants to create the oxymoron of gay
01:15:02
Christian. And 2013 goes on to say, if a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination.
01:15:12
They shall surely be put to death. Their blood is upon them. Well, there we have it.
01:15:20
For many, the biblical debate is now over. It's surprising that so many people continue to believe that these verses in Leviticus somehow form the heart of the theological debate about homosexuality.
01:15:33
They are in fact of secondary significance to the later passage by Paul in Romans 1. Now that right there shows a fundamentally flawed understanding of the
01:15:43
Apostle Paul and of the Apostle Paul's relationship in his theology, in his teaching, to the
01:15:50
Old Testament law. Fundamentally flawed. The Apostle Paul was the one who, even in asserting that it was never the law's intention or purpose to bring about justification, said that by faith in Jesus Christ, we established the law.
01:16:08
Because we are saying the law was right to bring condemnation of our sin, that the law is our schoolmaster to bring us unto
01:16:14
Christ. We establish the law.
01:16:21
We just recognize its purpose is to expose sin, not to bring about justification. Keep that in mind.
01:16:29
And the reason for that isn't that their meaning is unclear, but that their context within the Old Testament law makes them inapplicable to Christians.
01:16:38
Much of the New Testament deals with the issue of the place of the Old Law in the emerging Christian Church. As Gentiles were being included for the very first time in what was formerly an exclusively
01:16:48
Jewish faith, there arose ferocious debates and divisions among the early Jewish Christians about whether Gentile converts should have to follow the law, with its more than 600 rules.
01:16:59
And in Acts chapter 15... Now notice, he's not making the proper differentiations in regards to ceremonial law, the law fulfilled in Christ, the fact that Jesus himself talked about making all meats clean.
01:17:14
None of that. Those distinctions which are absolutely necessary for any meaningful discussion of the law just are not going to be part of his understanding.
01:17:24
We read how this debate was resolved. In the year 49 AD, early church leaders gathered at what came to be called the
01:17:30
Council of Jerusalem, and they decided that the Old Law would not be binding on Gentile believers.
01:17:37
The most culturally distinctive aspects of the Old Law were the Israelites' complex system,
01:17:43
Israelites' complex dietary code for keeping kosher, and the practice of male circumcision. But after the
01:17:50
Council of Jerusalem's ruling, even those central parts of Israelite identity and culture no longer applied to Christians.
01:17:58
Although it's a common argument today, there's no reason to think that these two verses from the Old Law in Leviticus would somehow have remained applicable to Christians.
01:18:07
There's no reason to believe that. Despite the fact that this same section says you shall love your neighbors as yourself,
01:18:12
Jesus repeated that over and over again. This is the same section talking about bestiality and adultery and theft and honoring father and mother and taking care of the poor.
01:18:21
Just no reason! Really? If you actually allow these texts to stand and then read the
01:18:29
New Testament in light of them and don't engage in revisionism to try to change the meanings of the terms in Romans 1 and 1
01:18:35
Corinthians 6 and 1 then there's lots of reason. But you see, what you have to do is you have to atomize.
01:18:42
You have to break up the text, look at each one, try to provide a hopefully plausible excuse for each one, and that way you can make your argument.
01:18:54
If you allow them to stand together, well, you will not succeed. Even when other, much more central parts of the
01:19:01
Law did not. In Galatians 6, Paul goes so far as to say that in Christ neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything.
01:19:12
He speaks of the old law as, quote, a yoke of slavery, but he warns Christians not to be burdened by.
01:19:18
In Colossians 2, Paul writes that through Christ, God, quote, forgave us all our sins, having canceled the written code with its regulations.
01:19:28
It was against us and that stood opposed to us. He took it away, nailing it to the cross.
01:19:35
In the Gospels, Jesus describes himself as the fulfillment of the law, and in Romans 10 verse 4,
01:19:42
Paul writes, Christ is the end of the law. Hebrews 8 verse 13 states that the old covenant is now, quote, obsolete because Christ is the basis of the new covenant, freeing
01:19:55
Christians from the system of the old law, most of which was specific to the ancient Israelites, to their community, and their unique worship practices.
01:20:04
Christians have always regarded the book of Leviticus in particular as being inapplicable to them in light of Christ's fulfillment of the law.
01:20:10
That's just not true. That is just simply not true. That is a simplistic statement that is utterly erroneous.
01:20:19
No one has ever interpreted Christ's fulfillment of the law as meaning we should not love neighbor's self.
01:20:27
No Christian has ever interpreted the fulfillment of the law in Jesus Christ as to mean that we are no longer to honor father and mother, that we are no longer to take care of the poor, that we are no longer to use just scales.
01:20:42
None of that. That's just simply utterly untrue. Now, issues about shaving your beard, different issue.
01:20:56
You know, we've gone through this and in fact just last week we replayed the program where I went through the objections to the
01:21:10
Holiness Code and we talked about the things you need to do to examine the Holiness Code and to do so in a meaningful fashion.
01:21:19
But that's just being all washed away. It's just like, ah, doesn't matter. No Christians actually believe this is applicable to us.
01:21:26
That is just not even close to being an accurate statement. So while it is true that Leviticus prohibits male same -sex relations, it also prohibits a vast array of other behaviors, activities, and foods that Christians have never regarded as being prohibited for them.
01:21:43
That's exactly right and it's exactly irrelevant. For example, chapter 11 of Leviticus forbids the eating of pork, shrimp, and lobster, which the
01:21:54
Church does not consider to be a sin. Chapter 19 forbids planting two kinds of seed in the same field, wearing clothing woven of two types of material.
01:22:04
Now, again, Ben here done this, got the t -shirt, but ask what you need to be prepared to do is to have counterexamples.
01:22:18
Say, you know, sounds like you're sort of going off a script there. Have you actually read
01:22:23
Leviticus 18, 19, and 20? And the vast majority of them will have to go say, uh, no.
01:22:31
And you say, those are also the same chapters that say you shall love your neighbor as yourself. There shall be no child sacrifice.
01:22:38
There shall be no bestiality. That you shall honor your father and mother. You shall have equal scales.
01:22:44
You shall not unjustly treat the sojourner amongst you, the alien amongst you.
01:22:51
These are all in the same section. Did you know that? Well, no.
01:22:57
Are these still valid moral principles today? And since they're mixed in with laws about not trimming the corners of your beard, and about not doing things out of fear, either honor of or fear of the dead, which would have something to do with prohibiting religious practices that either honor the dead or fear the curses of the dead.
01:23:27
I mean, that's just common pagan religion. Isn't it obvious, just given
01:23:35
Jesus's use of these texts, that we need to have some mechanism whereby we recognize what is valid and what is not.
01:23:49
And what is applicable and what is not. And what's that based on? Well, it has to be based upon God as our
01:23:55
Creator. And that's when we go back to the positive statements of Scripture.
01:24:01
Male and female. That's what marriage is. This is what sexuality is about. It's a gift from God, but it's to be used in this way.
01:24:11
And this is, again, absolutely fatal to the attempt of individuals to twist the meaning of the text so that you can have such a thing as a gay
01:24:21
Christian, or gay marriage, or anything like it. And that's why they don't go there.
01:24:27
They have to do these simplistic type of argumentation. They have to atomize the text, isolate things.
01:24:32
You can't look at the text as a whole. And people, I think, like Dan Savage, know that. That's why they just say the whole thing is a bunch of bulk.
01:24:40
I think that's a little more of an honest approach, to be perfectly honest with you, than this kind of desperate attempt to maintain some type of religiosity while rejecting the very essence of the commandments of Scripture.
01:24:57
"...and cutting the hair at the sides of one's head. Christians have never regarded any of these things to be sinful behaviors, because Christ's death on the cross liberated
01:25:07
Christians from what Paul called the yoke of slavery." That is not what the yoke of slavery was.
01:25:16
It is a gross misrepresentation of Paul's understanding the law, to read it in that way.
01:25:26
The law is good, and holy, and just, but the law was never intended to be the mechanism that makes us right before God.
01:25:36
We cannot fulfill it in the perfection that it demands. And what the death of Christ frees those who believe in him and repent and turn from their sin—not those who redefine their sin so they can continue to practice it, no—those who repent and turn from their sin and trust in Christ find that that condemnation, that just and righteous condemnation of the law against their sin, has fallen upon the sin -bearer in their place.
01:26:09
It is a perversion of the Scriptures to look to the cross of Christ and to say the cross of Christ changes
01:26:18
God's moral law. The cross of Christ demonstrates how seriously
01:26:23
God takes his moral law. That's what the cross of Christ demonstrates.
01:26:31
We are not subject to the old law, but the old law does contain some rules that Christians have continued to observe.
01:26:41
The Ten Commandments, for example. And so some argue that Leviticus 18 .22 and 20 .13,
01:26:48
the prohibitions of male same -sex relations, should be an exception to the rule. No, no, not an exception to the rule, unless you can present a meaningful argument from the text that they do not represent
01:27:01
God's moral law, then they are to be taken as normative, not an exception.
01:27:10
You've already had to turn Genesis 2 on its head, ignored the interpretation of that by Jesus in Matthew chapter 19, so you've already had to reject the very—you've turned the very matrix that makes these passages understandable and gives us the guidance to understand what is still binding and what was not on its head.
01:27:31
That's the problem. And that they should continue to have force for Christians today. There are three main arguments that are made for this position.
01:27:39
The first is the verse's immediate context. Leviticus 18 and 20 also prohibit adultery, incest, and bestiality, all of which continue to be regarded as sinful, and so homosexuality should be as well.
01:27:52
But just three verses away from the prohibition of male same -sex relations, in chapter 18, verse 19, sexual relations during a woman's menstrual period are also prohibited, and this too is called an abomination at the chapter's close.
01:28:06
But this is not regarded as sinful behavior by Christians. So what is considered sinful behavior, quote -unquote, by Christians, which
01:28:16
Christians were not told, somehow becomes the standard, the matrix by which we are to examine what the
01:28:23
Holiness Code is actually talking about. So we've already thrown out the shellfish, and the shaving of the beard, and now menstruation, and well it's just a few verses away.
01:28:38
Well look, the Holiness Code is not organized like a printer manual. And there are things in close proximity that some of which will be directly and only relevant to the people of Israel because it's specifically talks about maybe the nations around them, or the religious practices of the peoples around them that may or may not have a continued application today.
01:29:02
I mean, the specific prohibition of offering your children and sacrifice to Moloch is probably not relevant to too many people today.
01:29:13
I've run into a lot of odd religious people, but I have not run into any worshipers of Moloch recently.
01:29:23
There was a guy outside the grocery store once I was a little concerned about, but other than that, just haven't run into him.
01:29:30
But, as we've pointed out many times before, even those laws can continue to have a principal application.
01:29:42
And I already gave the example, I'll expand upon it here. You have the Old Testament law that tells us that you are to have the guardrails, the barriers around the roof, because people were up on their roof.
01:29:56
And that was where you'd be in the cool of the day. And so God commands his people to put railings on their roofs.
01:30:06
Why? To save life. Now, almost none of us go up on our roofs anymore, given here in Arizona that would fry you badly.
01:30:19
And there is no cool of the day in Phoenix. What's that? In August, the cool of the day is, well, the cool of the day is when it finally dips below 100 at about 3 o 'clock in the morning.
01:30:29
That's the cool of the day. And it's even worse on your roof, because it's still radiating all that heat from the attic, and so it's always hotter up there than it is someplace else.
01:30:38
So we're not up there. So I do not, I confess, I do not have a railing on my roof.
01:30:45
Now, there are some people who say, see, you don't really believe that homosexuality is wrong. Talk about a leap, isn't it?
01:30:50
But believe me, there are people that do it. But, but,
01:30:57
I do think it's perfectly appropriate to have a fence around a pool.
01:31:04
Why? Because the element of the commandment is saving life, protecting human life.
01:31:13
So it's a principle. You apply the principle. You have those sections that talk about cutting yourself for the dead.
01:31:27
Well, there aren't too many of us that are engaged in religions anymore that worry about dead relatives.
01:31:36
There are down in South Sea Islands, ancestor worship, the Hawaiian Islands, stuff like that.
01:31:43
These would be, these would be directly relevant statements. But the principle is, do not follow after religious teachings and practices of the people around you, especially as they relate to doing things out of either fear of the curses of the dead or to honor the dead.
01:32:04
So again, it takes some thought. It takes some contemplation.
01:32:10
It takes the light of the New Testament. But we can make application.
01:32:18
They are relevant. Rather, it's seen as a limited matter of ceremonial cleanliness for the
01:32:24
Israelites. And all of the other categories of prohibitions in these chapters on adultery, incest, and bestiality are repeated multiple times throughout the rest of the
01:32:34
Old Testament. Really? The commandment against bestiality is repeated more often than the commandment against homosexuality?
01:32:42
Seriously? Where? I'd be interested in knowing that. Both within the law and outside of it.
01:32:48
In Exodus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, and Ezekiel. But the prohibitions on male same -sex relations only appear in Leviticus, among many dozens of other prohibitions that Christians have never viewed as being applicable to them.
01:33:01
So since it's among those, and some Christians, maybe some who hadn't thought through the principal application or things like that, whatever, since it's among those, then even though it goes directly against the positive teaching of Matthew chapter 19, and even though it goes directly against the teaching of Romans 1, and 1st
01:33:23
Corinthians 6, and 1st Timothy 1, and if we looked at all things together and didn't cut them apart like he's doing, it would make perfect sense, well, then we can go ahead and dismiss these things.
01:33:36
Well, Leviticus calls it an abomination. And if it was an abomination then, then it certainly can't be a good thing now.
01:33:45
The term abomination is applied to a very broad range of things in the old law. And it is. It is.
01:33:51
And in fact, Toei Vah is applied specifically to things that are related to violating one's
01:34:00
Jewish identity, to things that we would not consider today to be moral evils.
01:34:06
He is exactly right. But what he's exactly wrong about was already illustrated.
01:34:14
Remember his citation of Ezekiel 1649, skipping Ezekiel 1650?
01:34:22
And what God saw was their commission of a Toei Vah, and he took them away?
01:34:30
What was the Toei Vah? What was the abomination? It certainly wasn't something relevant to the identification of the people of Israel.
01:34:40
It wasn't a covenant sign. It was their sexual perversion.
01:34:49
And so, once again, you need to be quick to catch when someone makes a half -argument and then provides a whole conclusion.
01:35:08
This will not only ruin a lot of sermons that otherwise sound good, but really haven't been thought through, but I don't know how anybody survives in listening to modern political speech when they don't even bother with half -arguments.
01:35:24
They give you one -tenth arguments and then full conclusions based upon the one -tenth. But that's what you're getting here.
01:35:32
Eating shellfish in Leviticus 11, eating rabbit or pork in Deuteronomy 14. These are all called abominations.
01:35:39
As I just said, sex during a woman's menstrual period is also called an abomination. The term abomination is primarily used in the
01:35:46
Old Testament. But notice, he won't take the time to look at other uses of Toei Vah about things that continue to be abiding moral principles.
01:35:58
Why not? Because you're only getting half the story instead of the whole story. To distinguish practices that are common to foreign nations from those that are distinctly
01:36:07
Israelite. This is why Genesis 43, 32 says that for the Egyptians to eat with the
01:36:13
Hebrews would be an abomination to the Egyptians. And why Exodus 8, 26 says that for the
01:36:19
Israelites to make sacrifices near the Pharaoh's palace would be an abomination to the Egyptians. And by the way, that was due to religious considerations on the part of the
01:36:30
Egyptians. There's nothing wrong with the Israelites sacrifices, of course. The problem with both of these things is that they would blur the lines between practices that are specifically
01:36:40
Israelite and those that are foreign. The nature of the term abomination in the
01:36:45
Old Testament is intentionally culturally specific. It defines religious and cultural boundaries between Israel and other nations.
01:36:53
Now he's just made it's only culturally specific. It could never be anything else. Again, get half the story, half the argument, you know, stop your citation of Ezekiel 16 at the convenient point and that's what happens.
01:37:13
But it's not a statement about what is intrinsically good or bad, right or wrong. And that's why numerous things that it's applied to in the
01:37:20
Old Testament have long been accepted parts of Christian life and practice. Okay, but the penalty is death.
01:37:29
Certainly that indicates that the behavior in question is particularly bad and we should still regard it as sinful.
01:37:36
But this overlooks the severity of all of the other punishments in the old law. Given the threats posed to the
01:37:42
Israelites. Let me just stop just for a moment. Leviticus 18 .26
01:37:52
But you shall keep my statutes and my rules and do none of these abominations either the native or the stranger who sojourns among you.
01:38:00
For the people of the land who were before you did all of these abominations so that the land became unclean.
01:38:08
Hmm, seems like there's something more than just simply the difference between the Israelites and the other people.
01:38:14
Something about uncleanness. For everyone who does any of these abominations, the person to them shall be cut off from among their people.
01:38:23
There are abominable customs that were practiced before you but they make people unclean.
01:38:30
So keep my charge ever to practice any of these abominable customs. Leviticus 18 .30 So abomination has something to do with uncleanness and sometimes that just has to do with, again,
01:38:42
Israelite, non -Israelite, but a lot of them have to do with, well, morality and what is truly moral.
01:38:52
And in Deuteronomy chapter 12, well, Deuteronomy chapter 7, the carved images of their gods you shall burn with fire.
01:39:01
You shall not covet the silver or the gold that is on them or take it for yourselves lest you be ensnared by it. For it is an abomination to the
01:39:07
Lord your God. Is that just a cultural thing or now we're getting to worship? In fact, idols themselves are called toevah.
01:39:18
They themselves are an abomination because they involve a person in idolatry.
01:39:25
And the Lord hates every abominable thing. Deuteronomy 12 .31
01:39:30
You shall not eat any abomination.
01:39:37
Deuteronomy 14 .3 There's one that specifically is dietary in context.
01:39:43
There are so many of these. You shall not wear a man's garment.
01:39:49
A woman shall not wear a man's garment. Nor shall a man put on a woman's cloak. For whoever does these things is an abomination to the
01:39:55
Lord your God. Cross -dressing has something to do with sexuality. It has something to do with changing, well, well, it's just custom.
01:40:07
That's all it is. Just changing custom. And yet what they,
01:40:15
Deuteronomy 20 .18, what they may not teach you to do according to all their abominable practices that they have done for their gods and so you sin against the
01:40:24
Lord God. There is something about idolatry and changing the natural order of things.
01:40:33
Cursed be the man who makes a carved or cast metal image. An abomination to the Lord. A thing made by the hands of a craftsman and sets it up in secret.
01:40:42
And all the people shall answer and say amen. There's a lot about abomination in the
01:40:50
Old Testament and a lot of it is directly related to idolatry which, interestingly enough, is the primary thrust of Romans 1 and the excellent example of the result of idolatry and the twistedness the
01:41:02
Creator created relationship is homosexuality and lesbianism is exactly how
01:41:09
Paul puts it. By starvation, disease, internal discord, and attacks from other tribes, maintaining order and cohesiveness was a paramount importance for them.
01:41:19
And so almost all of the punishments in the Old Testament will strike us as being quite harsh. A couple that has sex during a woman's menstrual period is to be permanently exiled from the community.
01:41:30
If a priest's daughter falls into prostitution, she's to be burned at the stake. Anyone who uses the
01:41:36
Lord's name in vain is not only to be reprimanded but to be stoned. And anyone who disobeys their parents...
01:41:42
And by the way, it is perfectly appropriate to point out that most of us probably have been misled as to the actual application of taking the
01:41:54
Lord's name in vain. Its primary application was to swear by the name of Yahweh and thus overthrow the justice system.
01:42:04
Now I don't think there's any excuse for coarse jesting and coarse language and profanity and all the rest of that stuff, but its first and foremost application clearly was to overthrow justice by swearing by the name of Yahweh that something was true when it was not.
01:42:20
Not fulfilling one's vows that one makes would fall in the same category. ...is to be stoned as well.
01:42:28
Even some things that we don't see as moral issues at all received the death penalty in the Old Testament. According to Exodus 35 verse 2, working on the
01:42:37
Sabbath was a capital offense. Why wasn't that a moral issue? Maybe not in the churches he was raised in,
01:42:45
I don't know, but why would it not be a moral issue? I mean, the man who was stoned for gathering sticks was specifically rebelling against Moses's authority and God's authority in the establishment of the law.
01:42:56
So why would that not be a moral issue is what I wonder. And in Ezekiel 18, the death penalty is applied to anyone who charges interest on a loan.
01:43:04
And this, too, is called an abomination at the chapter's close. Simply because something received the death penalty in the
01:43:11
Old Testament doesn't mean that Christians should view it as sinful. Now notice the argument. He's really responding to an argument that isn't an argument, and that is that, well, because that death penalty, then it needs to be valid today.
01:43:23
What it meant, initially, was the gravity of it. And the question is, is that concept continued on into the
01:43:35
New Testament? And very clearly, it is. It is. But notice the, this is the atomization approach.
01:43:43
Cut all these texts apart. Don't let them stand side by side. Don't let them stand in one canon.
01:43:50
Don't let there be a continuous theme. Knock each one down. I'm reminded, very honestly,
01:43:55
I mean, for those of you who listen, who are apologetically minded, what this reminds me of is the way that Mormons get around all the evidence against the first vision of Joseph Smith.
01:44:07
You come up with a plausible excuse for this, a plausible excuse for that, but you can never answer the tsunami of facts that demonstrate the first vision as taught by Mormonism.
01:44:21
They did not happen. But by taking each single fact separately, separating it out, then you can try to come up with a plausibility argument.
01:44:30
That's what's being done here, is you isolate each one of these texts, treat it separately, try to come up with a plausible argument, but you never allow them to stand together, because that would overthrow your entire position.
01:44:43
There's too much variance for that to be a consistent and effective approach. The default Christian approach for nearly two millennia now has been to view the particular hundreds of rules and prohibitions in the old law as having been fulfilled by Christ's death.
01:44:57
Simplicity alert! Simplicity alert! Wrong. Wrong. And there is no good reason why
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Leviticus 18 .22 and 20 .13 should be exceptions to that rule.
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Because they're not exceptions, because that's not a rule. And we've already seen that Arson Acoites shows us that in Paul's mind, the
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Apostle Paul, author of 13 letters of the New Testament, the very prohibition of Leviticus 18 .22
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is smacked out of the middle of what he says some of you were, but you're not anymore, because you're a
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Christian. So if our three Old Testament passages do not, upon closer examination, furnish persuasive arguments against loving relationships...
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That wasn't closer examination, that was fallacious examination. We've actually found all of them to stand the test quite well, and Mr.
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Vine's review to be inappropriate. For gay Christians. Then what about our three
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New Testament passages? And indeed, for those who spent some time studying this theological debate, they will know that the most significant of the six passages is not in the
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Old Testament. Instead, it appears in the opening chapter of Paul's letter to the Church in Rome, specifically
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Romans chapter 1 verses 26 and 27. This passage is the most significant for three reasons.
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First, it's in the New Testament, and so it doesn't encounter the same problems of context and applicability that Leviticus does.
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Secondly, unlike Leviticus, it speaks of both men and women. And thirdly, even though it's not very long, at two consecutive verses, it's still the longest discussion of any form of same -sex behavior anywhere in Scripture.
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Now, that is an argument unto itself, one we've already exposed, doesn't have to be long, but again, that's isolating the negative from the positive teaching.
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And this also is going to involve him in isolating these particular texts from the flow of Romans chapter 1, which is, of course, where the primary element of the truth will be discovered.
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And because these two verses are embedded within a broader theological argument about idolatry that's somewhat complex,
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I want to spend more time on this passage than any other. Paul begins his letter in Romans chapters 1 through 3 by describing the unrighteousness of all humanity,
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Jew and Gentile alike, and the universal need for a Savior. Romans chapter 3 nears its close with a famous verse, all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
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In Romans 3 10, Paul says, there is no one righteous, not even one.
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To build his case to that effect, Paul argues in chapter 2 that even though the Jews have the law, they still don't follow it well enough to earn their salvation on their own.
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But he starts in chapter 1 by describing the unrighteousness of humanity more broadly. And in Romans chapter 1, verses 18 through 32,
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Paul writes of the descent of Gentiles into idolatry and the consequences for them of their rejection of God.
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He says that they knew the truth of God, but they rejected it. They exchanged the truth for a lie and worshipped and served created things rather than the
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Creator—birds, animals, reptiles.
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And so because they had given up God. Let me just stop just for a moment, because I don't have anything to disagree with the summary statement being given.
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But I did want to interact with a tweet. Someone tweeted to me, listening to your program, think you've missed something.
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Abortion is modern incarnation of offering children to Moloch. Where'd I say anything other than that? I was rather obvious in what
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I said. I said that there aren't any people running around worshiping Moloch today, but there is a principle of saving life that is relevant, and that of course would be relevant to abortion.
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So my whole point was that just because you don't have Molochites running around, there are principles—that was the whole point—principial applications to be made.
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And yes, I would say that the murder of unborn children partakes of the exact same disregard for human life that is prohibited in that kind of thing.
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Of course there was a religious aspect to it, but there's a religious aspect to abortion today as well.
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Secularism is just as religious as anything else in the sense that it is an ultimate value generator.
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And so I just wanted to point out, yeah, I know that that's the whole point of what I was making there, and so since somebody didn't get it, maybe other people didn't either, so I needed to make the application.
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God in turn let them go. He let them live without him, and he gave them over, it says, to a wide array of vices and passions.
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Included among these passions were some forms of lustful same -sex behavior. In verses 26 and 27 we read the following, because of this—referring to their idol worship—God gave them over to shameful lusts.
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Even their women exchanged natural sexual relations for unnatural ones. Now again, he jumped in too early here, or too late,
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I guess, because if we listen to what is actually said, the
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Apostle is talking about the twisting of the creator -creation relationship.
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And he's saying that since the creation of the world, God's invisible attributes, his eternal power, divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that those who refuse to honor and worship
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God as God are unapologia, they do not have an excuse, they do not have an apologetic.
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For even though they knew God, there is a knowledge of God that has been mediated by the created order, it is internal and external, it's all around us and it's within us.
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Even though they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks, that's the extent of what General Revelation holds us accountable to doing.
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The Gospel is not part of General Revelation, the Trinity is not a part of General Revelation, but the General Revelation tells us that there is a
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God that we should honor him as God and give him thanks. But instead of doing what they were supposed to do, they became futile in their speculations and their foolish heart was darkened.
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And so there is a darkening of the human heart and a futility that's introduced into the very thinking process of mankind.
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They profess themselves to be wise, but in reality they have become foolish.
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Foolish, the term that is used there, verse 22, is moronos, foolishness.
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Elsewhere the term is frequently used is lacking in understanding, but there is a foolishness that comes to those who profess themselves to be wise but are rejecting the knowledge of God.
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And they exchange, very important, they exchange the glory of the incorruptible
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God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four -footed animals and crawling creatures.
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They engage in idolatry, they exchange that which was in their possession for a lie.
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In fact, that is the very terminology he's going to use. Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity.
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And so this spiritual and mental rebellion results in a fundamental moral degradation of those who engage in it.
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Therefore God gave them over in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, so that their bodies would be dishonored among them.
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So it impacts all of man, his mind, his spirit, and his body.
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For they exchanged, the same term, verse 23, they exchanged the truth of God for a lie and worshipped and served the creature rather than the
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Creator who is blessed forever, amen. So the Apostle is talking about the nature of idolatry as an exchanging, a perversion of the
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Creator -created relationship, okay?
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So that's the context. There is a rejection of God as Creator and an exchange of that truth for a lie.
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That then becomes the context for Romans 1, 26 and 27.
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And the sin that is described here is then descriptive of the result of twisting the
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Creator -creation relationship. If anything should be clear to Mr.
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Vines, it's that when you are reconciled to God, when your sins are forgiven, when you're made a new creature in Christ, when you submit to the
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Lordship of Christ, that that rebellion and that twisting of the
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Creator -creation relationship should end. It doesn't get a blessing.
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It doesn't continue. And so the prime illustration provided by the
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Apostle of how fully this twistedness impacts man is found in the discussion, which he admits is about homosexuality.
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For this reason, God gave them over to degrading passions. For their women exchanged the natural function for that which is unnatural.
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In the same way also men abandoned the natural function of the woman and burned their desire toward one another. Men with men committing indecent acts and receiving in their own persons the due penalty of their error.
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This is an illustration of the twistedness of rebellion against God.
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These people are suppressing the knowledge of God. Now, we're about out of time, but let me just summarize for you because we'll pick this up the next time we do this.
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We're over halfway through now. We're 35 minutes in and it's only one hour and seven minutes long.
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So we're over halfway. We made good progress today. At this rate, it'll take us about four and a half hours of airtime.
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A little bit more. Five hours. It'll take a little over five hours to cover all this, but we try to be thorough.
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The argument that you can think about between now and the next time we're together, and I'm not gonna be able to do this on the next program because I'm gonna be doing the next program via Skype, and I don't think the sound quality would be good enough over Skype because we want to be able to put these together probably in one response.
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So next week when we continue with this, the argument, and you can think about between now and then, the argument is gonna be very simple.
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The argument is that this is about heterosexuals who engage in homosexual behavior, but it's not about people who by nature are homosexuals.
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See? See how easy it is? I mean, just because you're introducing an entire category that is nowhere found in Romans 1, doesn't mean anything.
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This is, and again, this is one of many, many, I mean I forget in Romans 1, how many objections.
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Because what we did is after we gave the exegesis, here on page 123, a note concerning the plethora of objections.
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The number of objections and attempts to redefine the words the Apostle Romans 1 is large indeed. A few comments are necessary before examining these attempts.
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First, many books utilize the PhD method of obfuscation at this point, piled higher and deeper. Seemingly the authors of such revisions believe it is best to multiply possible scenarios as to Paul's meaning in this passage, perhaps hopeful of presenting the idea that there are many possible ways to answer the traditional objections to homosexuality.
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Many of the less scholarly revisionist works, those that do not present a single focused attempt to redefine
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Paul's meaning, will multiply possible understandings, seemingly in the hope of so muddling the thinking of the readers that they will throw up their hands in despair and assume that no one can really know as Paul was talking about, since so many scholars are confused as to the real meaning of the passage.
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At times the views cited within a single work can seem to be self -contradictory, but this passes without even a notation.
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This only adds the confusion. At other times when a scholar presents a specific interpretation, that view may well be directly contradictory to the conclusions of another pro -homosexual author or scholar.
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The pro -homosexual revisionist literature hardly presents a single coherent whole when it comes to its methods of exegesis and the conclusions it comes to, and there is one consistency in all the revisionist literature, an absolute refusal to allow for the possibility that the historical
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Christian viewpoint on the matter is correct. No matter what other conclusions are reached, the one that cannot be true is the one
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Christians have proclaimed from the beginning. This consideration alone is very telling. And then
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I started into the objections, and I forget how many there were, but we've covered a bunch of them.
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And again, if you can't wait to next week, you can always order The Same -Sex Controversy and get into that material as well.
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Available in the bookstore at alemin .org. So, Thursday we're gonna get back together again, and we're gonna be doing this via Skype, but we'll do it on a different topic at that time.
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In fact, probably take your phone calls and things like that, because that's easier to do when I'm on Skype. So we'll see you then.
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Thanks for listening. God bless. Thank you for standing at the crossroads.
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Let this moment of self away. We must contend for the faith above us fought for.
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We need a new Reformation day. It's a sign of the times.
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The truth is being trampled in, and won't you lift up your voice?
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Are you tired of plain religion? It's time to make some noise. Pounding on Wittenberg's door.
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Pounding on Wittenberg's door. Pounding on Wittenberg's door. I stand up for the truth, and won't you lift for the
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Lord? Cause we're pounding, pounding on Wittenberg's door. The Dividing Line has been brought to you by Alpha and Omega Ministries.
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If you'd like to contact us, call us at 602 -973 -4602, or write us at P .O.
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Box 37106, Phoenix, Arizona, 85069. You can also find us on the
02:00:26
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