Tag Archive for: Homosexualismo

By Josh Klein

As we enter the final section of the critique of the objections to the Orthodox view of homosexual activity as a sin, it is important to note, again, why I am spending a significant amount of time on these particular points. The rallying cry of the liberal theologian has been grace, mercy, and love, but as I set out in part one, [i] believe that true grace, mercy, and love must be grounded in the Truth set forth in God’s word. To have adequate compassion we cannot admit falsehood.

We know this to be true intrinsically. If your child believes with all his heart that he can fly and climbs to the top of your house to prove it, do you let him jump because it is unloving or unmerciful to tell him he is wrong? Or do you do whatever it takes to stop him from jumping even if it makes him cry, angry, or hate you? A good parent doesn’t even need to consider the issue. The correct response to the situation is natural.

Likewise, we must confront the sinful habits in our own lives and the falsehoods in the world. We cannot be compassionate toward the child as he allows it to plummet to its death, and we cannot be compassionate toward fellow believers as we watch them sink their lives into unrepentant sin. That would be unloving. So we must first establish what is true and then we can place true empathy and compassion on that foundation.

The following are just a sampling of other objections I have interacted with in my time of ministry. I believe we must respond to each of them with grace and truth, and any subsequent arguments should be handled in the same manner. I have attempted to do so here. I pray God has given me the power to succeed in that endeavor. I responded to one of the more technical objections in last week’s article. [ii]

Homosexuality is as much of a sin as eating shellfish in the Bible

This argument completely ignores the New Testament scriptures on the subject, is also incredibly theologically flawed, and is primarily used merely as an argument with which to denigrate those of faith as inconsistent or hypocritical.

This, of course, is an argument for Christians to continue eating shrimp and shellfish but not agree that the homosexual act is good/correct even though both come from the same book of the Bible. In Leviticus 11 we find that God prohibits the consumption of shellfish to his people, likewise, only seven chapters later in Leviticus 18 God prohibits men from sleeping with men and women from sleeping with women, going so far as to call the act an abomination.

The difference in language between these two things is paramount to understanding. While the Hebrews are to abhor shellfish, they are not commanded to abhor those who consume shellfish, but shellfish itself. Consuming shellfish is detestable, but it is not an “abomination,” but God calls sodomy (homosexuality) an abomination. We also find God removing the believer’s dietary restrictions (as well as the eternal restrictions of faith!) from Peter in Acts 10:9-16, but God does not do the same with homosexuality.

Some may try to include homosexuality in the interpretation of Acts 10, but the early church certainly did not. It seems that Peter and other apostles saw this view as a double permission for the consumption of food and for God to bring salvation to the Gentiles without forcing them to convert to Judaism first.

Furthermore, God had clearly defined rules for His chosen nation to be set apart from those around them. Quite simply, some of the Old Testament prohibitions were made simply to distinguish God’s chosen people from the Gentile nations around them. It is fair (and safe) to assume that God’s prohibition on clearly cultural differences (eating shellfish, wearing certain fabrics, circumcision, etc.) would dissolve over time as He ushered in the church age and Jesus became the fulfillment of what those laws were intended to convey, while His prohibition on moral issues (murder, theft, sex outside of marriage, homosexuality) would not change, because they are based on His character and His design for life, not simply on setting a nation apart for itself. There is, believe it or not, a hierarchical structure to God’s law.

Thus, Leviticus 18 carries a much more relevant prohibition than Leviticus 11 because one has to do with the character of God and the other with the establishment of Israel’s theocracy specifically. Much has been written on this topic and I cover it here only sparingly, but for a more comprehensive overview of the topic Jason Meyer’s book The End of the Law is a good resource. [iii]

Homosexual wasn’t even a word in the Bible until 1946

We have dealt with this argument a bit in Part 2, [iv] but here we will look at the lay argument. Homosexual was not a word in the English dictionary until the late 19th century, first appearing in the English dictionary in 1892. The term was coined by German psychologists in the 1860s in reference to the act of same-sex sexual intercourse. Bible translations tend to lag behind the common vernacular by a significant time interval, so the fact that the first use of homosexual in an English Bible was in the mid-1940s should not come as a significant surprise to anyone if they honestly follow the linguistic history of scripture translations.

Before the 1940s, the word translated homosexual would likely have been translated sodomite or sexually immoral. In fact, as we discovered last week, I think those are still better translations than homosexual in many cases, as they cover a broader range of sexual immorality rather than simply pointing to a homosexual relationship. However, to say that the word homosexual was not in the Bible until 1946 and is therefore a recent addition to the Bible is disingenuous. The intent of the passages was clear before the 1940s and helped form the decision to insert the word into the translation history after the 1940s. The interpretive history of these passages lent credibility to the use of the word initially and while it is not the best translation currently, I do not think it is a bad translation either, although, given the current cultural context of identity, I would still like to see clarity in the translation toward behavior and not simply attraction. My problem with the translation in general is that it is making an interpretive decision for the reader rather than simply translating the word, and this means that the narrowing of the meaning could leave out important sin issues such as pedophilia, rape, cohabitation, and more.

God was not wrong when he created me

In fact, God did not make a mistake in creating anyone. However, to continue the theme of Romans 1 from last week, we find that being born with a proclivity for a certain action does not necessarily make that action or desire good and right.

Being born as someone with a disposition toward addiction would not make becoming addicted to painkillers good or right. Similarly, being born as someone with a strong sexual inclination who desires to have multiple sexual partners does not make acting on those desires right and good.

In my view, homosexuality is the same kind of sin, but we have turned the discussion on its head. Turning homosexuality into a matter of identity rather than behavior did no one any good, and we are currently reaping the “rewards” of such a miscalculation.

Romans 1 indicates that homosexuality is part of the fall, for both men and women. In fact, the entire first section of Romans 1-4 is intended to help the Roman church understand the depravity of man and why we need a savior. Romans 1 is not meant to indicate personal behavior, but must be read in the context of all human history.

If we read Romans 1 correctly, we will not argue and argue about who was born which way and whether or not homosexuality is a choice. The fact is that homosexuality is a natural consequence of the original fall of man. Sin broke up God’s created order and introduced all kinds of behaviors that could be and have been considered natural, but are, in fact, evil. (I use the word “evil” in the theological sense, i.e. rebellion against God.)

No, God did not make a mistake in creating you. Scripture is clear that you are fearfully and wonderfully made ( Psalm 139:14 ), but it is also clear that you are a fallen human being with a natural inclination toward sin who needs to be rescued from yourself and your own passions and desires.  Romans 6-8 puts this struggle under the microscope. The transition from death to life is immediate and permanent, but it is also a process of understanding where we are broken and where we need to be repaired by the Holy Spirit.

And as Paul indicates at the end of chapter 7 , the only answer is through Jesus Christ, otherwise we are still under the headship of Adam and therefore in sin, and in death. This is why having a dual identity is so problematic. It means that God can remake only part of who we are, because we have removed His impact on our other identity. It is sequestered in a dark closet that His renewal team cannot touch. The exclusivity of Christ is of paramount importance in this discussion, but according to a recently conducted survey [v] of supposed “born-again” Christians, this foundational doctrine is also under attack. Ultimately, compassion without adherence to truth ends there. It is not a slippery slope fallacy if the slope is, in fact, slippery.

So no, God did not make a mistake in allowing anyone to be born, but that does not mean that we are all born perfect either. Two things can be true at once. God may have made a person in a fearfully and wonderful way, and that person may also be hopelessly damaged and beyond repair with natural inclinations toward evil and self-destruction unless God intercedes on his or her behalf. All people are worthy and deserving of love because they are image bearers of the Almighty, but all people are also image bearers broken by sin and must be repaired by their Creator.

I know, because I am. No, I am not a homosexual, but I am an evil depraved person. I need a savior, and I have that in Jesus. This same savior is available to all who will believe, and he will make them a new creation ( 2 Cor. 5:17 ) with the ability to find victory over any sinful proclivity they were born with, because in Jesus we are offered a completely new identity.

A homosexual in a consensual and committed relationship is fulfilling a marriage covenant

This is the last one we will have space for in this section, and it is both the easiest and the hardest to answer. The easiest, because I believe that understanding the real meaning of Romans 1 and the passages in 1 Corinthians and 1 Timothy will ultimately lead us to understand that marriage can only be, and has only been, ordained between one man and one woman and the marriage bed ( Heb 13:4 ) is not to include two of the same sex.

That being said, it is the hardest to answer because my heart truly aches for those who have such homosexual inclinations who desire to have a meaningful long-term relationship and have children and experience all the good things that come with those relationships. But empathy is all I can offer in that regard because the scriptures seem to be clear on the issue, and I don’t know a married couple who can (or should) abstain from sex in order to maintain a pure relationship. If my answers to the previous two sections are biblically correct, then the answer to this objection becomes obvious. And as we’ll see next week, there are many professing gay Christians who agree with this. Some resources are noted below.

So what?

I’m sure I haven’t covered all of the TikTok takes in the previous sections. I’m sure there are many more, but let’s move on. What then is the church’s responsibility? In part four I want to look at a better way to handle these things than what the church has done in recent generations. I think the church has fallen short in ministry to those who struggle in this area, and while I don’t have all the answers, I think we can begin to walk the path in a better way. One thing the book I mentioned in part 3 gets right is this: I think the church’s treatment of homosexuality has been short-sighted and graceless for many decades, and this needs to change (and is changing), but it needs to change without compromising the Truth.

Josh Klein is a pastor from Omaha, Nebraska, with 12 years of ministerial experience. He graduated with an MDiv in 2016 from Sioux Falls Seminary and spends his free time reading and engaging with current and past theological and cultural issues. He has been married to Sharalee Klein for 12 years, and they have three young children.

Footnotes

[i] https://freethinkingministries.com/confronting-homosexuality-in-a-culture-of-identity-part-1/

[ii] https://freethinkingministries.com/confronting-homosexuality-in-a-culture-of-identity-part-2/

[iii] https://www.christianbook.com/the-law-mosaic-covenant-pauline-theology/jason-meyer/9780805448429/pd/448429?event=AFF&p=1011693&

[iv] https://freethinkingministries.com/confronting-homosexuality-in-a-culture-of-identity-part-2/

[v] https://relevantmagazine.com/faith/church/survey-60-percent-of-born-again-christians-under-40-say-jesus-isnt-the-only-way-to-salvation/

Recommended resources in Spanish:

Stealing from God ( Paperback ), ( Teacher Study Guide ), and ( Student Study Guide ) by Dr. Frank Turek

Why I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist ( Complete DVD Series ), ( Teacher’s Workbook ), and ( Student’s Handbook ) by Dr. Frank Turek

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Josh Klein is a pastor from Omaha, Nebraska, with 12 years of ministerial experience. He graduated with an MDiv in 2016 from Sioux Falls Seminary and spends his free time reading and engaging with current and past theological and cultural issues. He has been married to Sharalee Klein for 12 years, and they have three young children.

Original Source: https://bit.ly/3UC2BQ2 

Translated by Jennifer Chavez

Edited by Yatniel Vega

 

Por Josh Klein

Anteriormente, examinamos la dicotomía entre lo que significa declarar la actividad homosexual como un pecado y cómo lidian con  ella los que creen en la ortodoxia cristiana.  Abordamos las raíces del movimiento cultural actual e introdujimos la idea de identidad en el argumento.

Era necesario hacer esto para que podamos tener una base sólida donde construir los siguientes argumentos.  Primero debemos saber por qué los teólogos liberales buscan glorificar la homosexualidad como identidad para entender por qué la interpretación de las Escrituras ha pasado de condenar un comportamiento pecaminoso obvio a condonar ese mismo comportamiento.

Si no has leído la primera parte puedes hacerlo aquí.

El objetivo del creyente no debe ser convencer al incrédulo de pecados individuales, como la homosexualidad, sino tratar de persuadir, con el poder del Espíritu Santo, a ese individuo de que él mismo es un pecador y necesita la gracia salvadora de Dios.

Pero una vez que esta persona se convierte en creyente, ¿cómo continúa la conversación sobre la homosexualidad?  Si se les anima a mantener esta identidad además de su nueva identidad en Cristo nos encontramos con que hemos creado creyentes esquizofrénicos que buscan cumplir con el patrón de ser definidos como homosexuales así como hijos de Dios.  Esto puede ser y es una existencia miserable.

En las partes dos y tres de esta serie, examinaremos lo que la teología liberal ha tratado de hacer para aliviar el dolor de esta transición, y en la cuarta parte, examinaré la posibilidad de ofrecer una mejor manera de tratar esta cuestión particular a los que están en línea con la ortodoxia cristiana.

La Iglesia liberal ha tratado de aliviar esta tensión redefiniendo, reinterpretando y reenganchando con las Escrituras el tema.

La nueva teología no suele ser una buena teología y, en mi opinión, así es en este caso.

Los siguientes son sólo una muestra de los argumentos que rondan en TikTok, Instagram, y en la iglesia liberal en relación con el movimiento LGBTQ + (por razones de longitud nos centraremos sólo en la actividad homosexual aquí).  Estas interpretaciones se basan en una cosmovisión de la nueva tolerancia, el amor y la empatía y no sólo son perjudiciales para la cultura, sino, y lo que es más importante, son perjudiciales para la Iglesia y para los individuos que están siendo llevados por tal enseñanza teológica de juego de manos.

Creo que este es el tipo de enseñanza al que se refería Jesús en Mateo 18:6 cuando dijo: “6 Pero al que haga tropezar a uno de estos pequeñitos que creen en mí, mejor le sería que le colgaran al cuello una piedra de molino de las que mueve un asno, y que se ahogara en lo profundo del mar”.

Al repasar estos argumentos es importante recordar que, para los fines de este artículo, estamos teniendo una discusión con supuestos miembros de la misma fe.  Hay que utilizar un criterio diferente con los que están fuera de la fe (1 Corintios 5:12).

Las excepciones a la visión histórica de la homosexualidad en la iglesia vienen bajo el nombre de amor y aceptación y la erudición comienza con esta línea de base.

Seré el primero en admitir que muchos más instruidos que yo llegarán a una comprensión más profunda de la homosexualidad en las Escrituras que no coincide con la mía.  Dicho esto, creo que su punto de partida es encontrar una excepción donde no la hay.  Y como dice el refrán: ”Si buscas algo con la suficiente intensidad, probablemente lo encontrarás”. Parece que parten de la suposición de que si Dios es amor, entonces ciertamente no permitiría que los que ama tuvieran una existencia tan miserable como para vivir con una identidad hostil a su creador.

Podrían estar en parte en lo correcto. Nuestra identidad como pecadores es sin duda ofensiva y profundamente triste para Dios.  Sin embargo, Él hizo algo al respecto: nos ofreció una nueva identidad en Cristo, en lugar de en Adán, mediante la muerte y resurrección de Jesús a favor nuestro.

Tal vez ahora entendamos por qué es tan primordial comprender nuestra identidad aparte de la sexualidad para abrazar verdaderamente el evangelio.  Jesús no promete arreglarnos completamente durante esta vida e incluso garantiza que tendremos problemas (1 Cor. 13:10-12; Juan 16:33).  En pocas palabras, esto significa que cualquier identidad que tengamos aparte de Cristo debe ser sacrificada para ser identificados con y en Cristo.

La teología liberal trata de resolver este problema trasladando los actos particulares de pecado al ámbito de lo sagrado y así, ratificar la identidad anterior como ordenada por Dios.

La nueva teología de la aceptación del pecado hace el truco de convertir una cosa definida como pecado en algo totalmente distinto.  Como veremos, reduce el alcance del pecado sexual de modo que una interpretación de las Escrituras que incluya el acto sexualmente pecaminoso de la homosexualidad o la promiscuidad se considera demasiado amplia.

También hay muchos argumentos simplemente ingenuos en contra de la idea de la homosexualidad como pecado que son fácilmente desmentidos y explicados con un simple estudio de las Escrituras.  Abordaremos primero la objeción más técnica, y en el tema de la próxima semana, pasaremos al resto para ir cerrando  esta serie de cuatro partes.

Nota: Cuando me refiero a la homosexualidad, hablo del ACTO, no de la disposición o la atracción.  Creo que la atracción no es un pecado en sí mismo, pero los pensamientos lujuriosos y las actividades sexuales asociadas con la homosexualidad y con la heterosexualidad (fuera del matrimonio) son definidos bíblicamente como actividades pecaminosas.

La palabra griega traducida como Homosexual debería ser traducida como Pedófilo, por lo tanto la Biblia no habla en contra de las relaciones entre personas del mismo sexo en los idiomas originales.

Pongámonos técnicos.

Esta afirmación hace un argumento sobre las decisiones de traducción sin tener en cuenta la doctrina del pecado históricamente.

Hay algunas palabras traducidas como homosexual en la New American Standard Bible que podrían ser traducidas para significar diferentes cosas.  Un nuevo libro que se publicará en el verano de 2021 llamado Forging a Sacred Weapon: How the Bible Became Anti-Gay[1] (Forjando un arma sagrada: Cómo la Biblia se convirtió en antigay) argumenta que una traducción errónea de 1 Corintios 6:9-10 (junto, presumiblemente, con los otros pasajes de las Escrituras que se traducen como homosexual) es lo que estimuló a toda una generación a la homofobia puritana.  Incluso hay un documental que se estrenará sobre el tema a finales de 2021.

Estos son probablemente los argumentos que mi amigo ha visto en Tik Tok.  La pregunta, entonces, debe ser formulada, ¿es la homosexualidad un pecado y por qué la palabra sería traducida de manera diferente en 1946 de lo que fue  antes?

En primer lugar, abordaremos la principal Escritura que nos ocupa en este nuevo libro.  1 Corintios 6:9 dice lo siguiente

“¿O no sabéis que los injustos no heredarán el reino de Dios? No os dejéis engañar: ni los inmorales, ni los idólatras, ni los adúlteros, ni los afeminados, ni los homosexuales

Por cierto, esta misma palabra ἀρσενοκοῖται (arsenokoitai) se utiliza también en 1 Timoteo 1:10 y parece ser una palabra acuñada por el propio Pablo para indicar una relación sexual entre dos personas del mismo sexo.

Es una palabra griega compuesta que combina ἄρρην (arrēn), que significa “varón” u “hombre” y κοίτη (koy’-tay) que significa cama y que a menudo se utiliza como eufemismo para referirse a las relaciones sexuales.  Así, la palabra significa literalmente dos “hombres” que están “en la cama”.

Comúnmente, antes de 1946, este término había sido traducido como sodomita.  Aquellos que desean glorificar las relaciones homosexuales como una actividad aceptable para que los creyentes cristianos participen, leen más profundamente la palabra y creen que Pablo está hablando del uso significativo y repugnante del amor hacia niños en el antiguo mundo griego.  No es un secreto que muchos de los griegos practicaban la pedofilia (amor hacianiños) con chicos jóvenes como procesos de preparación para hombres mayores.

Pero este argumento falla en múltiples aspectos.  En primer lugar, el argumento indica que el lenguaje en torno a la palabra es transaccional, y por lo tanto, el acto sexual es claramente transaccional también (señalando a la prostitución de hombres jóvenes en el templo), pero ese no es el caso.  Los tiempos son claramente conductuales, se trata de personas que realizan actos sexuales y/o adoración de forma voluntaria. El segundo problema es que la suposición de que arrēn significa niño es simplemente incorrecta. παῖς (pais) es la palabra para niño, y la palabra de la que obtenemos pedofilia (literalmente: amor hacia niños). Sí, en el Apocalipsis muchas traducciones insertan la palabra “niño” para aclarar el significado, pero esto no es inherente a la palabra.  Por ejemplo, Apocalipsis 12:13 podría (y posiblemente debería) traducirse igualmente como “persiguió a la mujer que había dado a luz al hijo  varón” sin la palabra niño insertada al final.

La palabra que Pablo acuñó en estos dos pasajes se entiende correctamente y se ha entendido a lo largo de la historia, como una relación sexual entre dos personas del mismo sexo sin importar la edad.

Por lo tanto, estoy a favor de que la traducción refleje la vasta amplitud de la palabra, en lugar de su limitado alcance.  ¿Condena este pasaje las relaciones sexuales homosexuales?  Sí.  ¿Condena también la pedofilia? Sí.

Dado que Pablo está acuñando el término, parece que está buscando crear un paraguas para un acto sexual que es considerado pecaminoso por Dios. Muchos defensores de la teoría de la pederastia indican que Pablo podría haber utilizado un término diferente, el problema con esta sugerencia es doble.  Ambas palabras griegas comunes para hombre son demasiado genéricas para indicar lo que Pablo estaba tratando de transmitir. Tanto Anthropos como Anēr pueden utilizarse como términos genéricos para todas las personas.  Arrēn, sin embargo, no puede serlo.

El otro problema de esta teoría radica en el contexto del Antiguo Testamento.  Hay un problema de “pérdida en la traducción” para muchos cuando estudian el Antiguo Testamento y el Nuevo.  Piensan que Pablo habría leído el Antiguo Testamento hebreo.  Y lo habría hecho, pero en sus escritos, Pablo cita casi exclusivamente la Septuaginta (la traducción griega de las Escrituras hebreas). Esto proporciona otro obstáculo para la teoría de la pederastia.  En la traducción griega de Levítico 18:22, encontramos que el término utilizado para varón es arrēn y el término utilizado para “acostarse con” es koitē. Es razonable deducir entonces, que Pablo está juntando estas dos palabras como resultado directo de su uso en la traducción de la LXX (el AT griego) de Levítico 18.  Lo que indicaría que Pablo creería que sus lectores se dirigirían a ese pasaje.  Y esto tiene sentido, ya que Pablo no explica la palabra recién acuñada, sino que creía que sus lectores simplemente entenderían a qué se refería.

Sin embargo, el problema sigue siendo cómo traducir mejor esta palabra en español.

Creo que una mejor traducción para usar en la situación es Sodomita o ir completamente a lo concreto con “los hombres tienen sexo con los hombres”.  Cuya etimología proviene de las ciudades de Sodoma y Gomorra en el Génesis.  Es probable que conozcas la historia, pero aquí tienes un resumen: Dios va a destruir Sodoma y Gomorra por su orgullo y arrogancia y su cultura degenerada y malvada.  Él envía ángeles para investigar y Lot (sobrino de Abraham) los salva de ser violados sexualmente por los lugareños, incluso ofreció sus propias hijas a los hombres de la ciudad (que, por cierto, tampoco estaba bien para Dios, pero me estoy apartando del tema principal) en Génesis 19.

Es en este punto donde muchos toman la sodomía como una violación anal, pero no es tan simple.  Aunque el pecado original de Sodoma y Gomorra no era la homosexualidad, la consecuencia de su pecado original se tradujo en la homosexualidad y la depravación sexual en general.  La sodomía, entonces, ha sido comúnmente vista a lo largo de la historia como el acto sexual realizado entre dos personas del mismo género.

Sodomía es un término mucho más amplio y duro que el de homosexual, y creo que llega mejor al corazón de lo que Pablo está hablando en sus cartas.

Sin embargo, una de las cosas que hace el autor del libro mencionado es redefinir la palabra sodomía para que signifique “sexo que no se utiliza con fines procreativos”.  Sin embargo, ese no ha sido el entendimiento general de la sodomía durante generaciones.  De hecho, actualmente, la Britannica define la sodomía de cuatro maneras: homosexualidad, coito anal, zoofilia y pedofilia[2].

Entonces, si la mejor traducción de la palabra en 1 Corintios y 1 Timoteo sería Sodomita, ¿indica eso que el comportamiento homosexual se considera bueno a los ojos de Dios?  Un observador objetivo se vería obligado a admitir, en mi opinión, que no, sino que simplemente sería uno de los múltiples comportamientos sexuales que se consideran pecaminosos según la naturaleza de la palabra de Dios.

El otro problema que tengo con este argumento es que deja completamente fuera de consideración a Levítico y Romanos.  De hecho, Romanos 1:26-27 es posiblemente una de las condenas más claras del sexo homosexual en el Nuevo Testamento.

Esto también llega al corazón de Génesis 19.  Muchos creen que el problema de Génesis 19 no era el sexo homosexual, sino la violación implícita que tendría lugar.  Sin embargo, encontramos en Romanos 1 que este no es del todo el caso.

Cuando una cultura rechaza a Dios y se niega a adorarle a él y sólo a él, él responde dándoles lo que quieren: su depravación.  Romanos 1:26-27 indica que la culminación del pecado original de rechazar a Dios y adorar lo creado en lugar del creador (nací así por lo que es santo y bueno podría verse como adorar lo creado en lugar del creador) viene con ambos, hombres y mujeres intercambiando el orden creado de la relación sexual con la pasión interna y el deseo del otro.  La palabra utilizada para los hombres en este pasaje es la misma que Pablo utilizó para combinar con una cama que se traduce como homosexual en las traducciones actuales.

En una de sus grandes obras literarias C.S. Lewis dice lo siguiente: “Al final sólo hay dos clases de personas: los que dicen a Dios: “Hágase tu voluntad”, y aquellos a los que Dios dice, al final, “Hágase tu voluntad”. Todos los que están en el infierno, lo eligen”[3] No estoy usando esta cita para plantear que aquellos que son homosexuales van a ir al infierno, sino para reforzar el punto de vista de que Romanos 1 indica claramente que la autogratificación es la línea que lleva a la rebelión y a la destrucción y el comportamiento homosexual es parte de esta concesión de Dios.

Esto nos lleva a continuación, a las objeciones más populares.  Las abordaremos la próxima semana.  La razón por la que estamos dedicando dos semanas a las objeciones es esta: Es importante establecer cuál realmente es la verdad para poder avanzar con verdadera compasión, gracia y misericordia.  Lo mismo puede decirse para entender cualquier otro comportamiento pecaminoso en nuestras vidas.  Aunque trataré estas objeciones académicamente, quiero tomarme un momento al final del artículo de esta semana para reconocer que los argumentos académicos son una cosa, y son importantes, pero el trato con las personas es algo totalmente diferente y de suma importancia.  Por ello, al final de esta serie de cuatro partes pretendo ofrecer una forma mejor.  Mi objetivo es tratar el tema con sensibilidad, respeto y amor, pero basando todo ello en el firme fundamento de la verdad. Manténgase atentos  la próxima semana para la respuesta final a lo que parecen ser las objeciones más populares para llamar a la actividad homosexual un pecado.

Referencias

[1] http://canyonwalkerconnections.com/forging-a-sacred-weapon-how-the-bible-became-anti-gay/ 

[2] https://www.britannica.com/topic/sodomy

[3] https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/16309-there-are-only-two-kinds-of-people-in-the-end

Recursos recomendados en Español: 

Robándole a Dios (tapa blanda), (Guía de estudio para el profesor) y (Guía de estudio del estudiante) por el Dr. Frank Turek

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Josh Klein es un pastor de Omaha, Nebraska, con 12 años de experiencia ministerial. Se graduó con un MDiv en 2016 del Seminario de Sioux Falls y pasa su tiempo libre leyendo y comprometiéndose con temas teológicos y culturales actuales y pasados. Está casado desde hace 12 años con Sharalee Klein y tienen tres hijos pequeños.

Blog Original: https://cutt.ly/AYPpO8i

 

By Greg Koukl

Why did God destroy Sodom and Gomorrah? Was it really because of the sin of inhospitality and not because of homosexuality, the greatest judgment found in the Bible outside of the book of Revelation?

People find what they want in the Bible. But if you look hard enough, you can find “biblical” support for reincarnation, Eastern religions, Jesus as a guru, divorce for any reason, and flying saucers. Every sect of Christianity uses the Bible to validate its claims, as do some who practice the occult.

It is not surprising, then, that a recent trend among biblical scholars holds that a careful reading of Genesis in its historical context provides no solid basis for concluding that the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah has anything to do with homosexuality.

This view may seem far-fetched to biblical conservatives, but it is taken very seriously in academic circles. It represents a significant challenge to the average Christian who finds in the Genesis account a direct condemnation of homosexual behavior.

My goal is to provide an answer to that challenge. I have no interest in defaming, insulting, offending, attacking, lashing out, denigrating, much less belittling a group of people. I just want to determine one thing: why did God destroy those two cities? Did it have anything to do with homosexuality itself? Simply put, what was the sin (or sins) of Sodom and Gomorrah?

Genesis 18:16-19:29

Although the context of the story in question begins in Genesis 18:16 during God’s conversation with Abraham by the oaks of Mamre, the details of the encounter in Sodom are found in Genesis 19:4-13:

They had not yet gone to bed, when the men of the city, the men of Sodom, surrounded the house, both young and old, all the people without exception. And they called to Lot, and said to him, “Where are the men who came to you tonight? Bring them out so that we may know them.” Then Lot went out to them at the entrance and shut the door behind him, and said, “My brothers, I beg you not to do wickedly. Behold, I have two daughters who have not known a man; let me bring them out to you and do with them as seems good to you; but do not do anything to these men, for they have come under my roof.” But they said, “Stand aside!” And they said, “This man came as a stranger, and is already acting as a judge; now we will deal worse with you than with them.” And they rushed at Lot and were about to break down the door, but the two men put out their hands and brought Lot into the house with them, and shut the door. And they struck the men who were at the entrance of the house with blindness, from the smallest to the greatest, so that they were wearied trying to find the entrance.

Then the two men said to Lot, “Who else do you have here? Your sons-in-law, your sons, your daughters, and whoever you have in the city—get them out of this place, for we are going to destroy this place, for its outcry has become so great before the Lord that the Lord has sent us to destroy it.”

What was the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah? Why did God destroy the two cities? The traditional view is that homosexuality was the primary offense (“I beg you, my brothers, do not act wickedly.”).

Yale historian John Boswell offers four possible reasons for the destruction of Sodom:

(1) The Sodomites were destroyed because of the general wickedness that prompted the Lord to send angels into the city to investigate in the first place; (2) the city was destroyed because the people of Sodom had attempted to rape the angels; (3) the city was destroyed because the men of Sodom had attempted to engage in homosexual relations with the angels…; (4) the city was destroyed because of the inhospitable treatment of the visitors sent by the Lord. [1]

John Boswell thinks that explanation (2) “is the most obvious of the four,” although it has been “widely ignored by biblical scholars” [2] . Boswell expands on explanation (4), which he seems to favor as the most consistent with “modern scholarship” since 1955:

Lot was violating the custom of Sodom… by welcoming unknown guests into the city walls at night without obtaining permission from the city elders. When the men of Sodom gathered together to demand that the strangers be brought out before them “so that they might know them,” it only meant that they wanted to “know” who they were, and consequently, the city was destroyed not because of sexual immorality, but because of the sin of inhospitality to strangers [3] .

The Englishman D. Sherwin Bailey also makes this argument in Homosexuality and the Western Christian Tradition (1955). The men of Sodom only wanted to question Lot’s guests to see if they were spies. The sin of gang rape was also in view, not homosexuality. In a broader sense, the men of Sodom were inhospitable to Lot’s guests.

Apparently it did not occur to Boswell that possibilities (2) and (4) seemed to be in conflict. If “meeting” the angels basically means questioning them, then there is not an attempt at rape, but an attempt at interrogation. If, on the other hand, the men intended to have sexual relations with the visitors (according to the traditional view) and are guilty of attempted rape, then the interrogation explanation must be abandoned (as the interpretation of Boswell’s above summary with respect to the views of modern scholarship is somewhat incoherent).

Some of these explanations, however, are not mutually exclusive and may have been influenced differently. For example, the general wickedness of Sodom and Gomorrah (1) may have included rape (2) and/or inhospitality (4).

My primary interest here is to determine whether the biblical record indicates that (4) homosexuality was a significant factor.

Text clues

Why did God destroy Sodom and Gomorrah? We can find clues not only in the Genesis account, but also in the books of the prophets and in 2 Peter and Jude in the New Testament. These give us insight into the way ancient Jewish thinkers, steeped in Jewish culture, understood these texts.

First, Sodom and Gomorrah were judged for a serious sin. Genesis 18:20 says, “The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and their sin is exceedingly grievous.” In fact, not even ten righteous people could be found in the city.

Second, it seems that the judgment of these cities was to serve as a lesson to Abraham and others that wickedness would be punished. In 2 Peter 2:6 we see that God condemned and destroyed the cities as an “example to those who would live ungodly afterward.”

Third, Jude and Peter describe the unique qualities of sin. Jude 7 portrays the activity as “they became corrupt” and went after “strange flesh” [4] . Peter wrote that Lot was “overwhelmed by the sensual conduct of unchaste men,” and “from what he saw and heard as he lived among them, he was daily tormented in his righteous soul by their unrighteous deeds.” They are “those who walk after the flesh in its corrupt desires and despise authority” (2 Peter 2:7-10).

Fourth, there are 27 references outside Genesis to the city of Sodom. It is the emblem of gross immorality, the deepest depravity, and great judgment.

Gathering the biblical evidence gives us a picture of the offense of Sodom. The sin of Sodom and Gomorrah was a grievous, continual, debauched, sensual act that Lot saw, heard, and was tormented by as he witnessed it day after day. It was an act in which the inhabitants gave themselves over to their corrupt desires, going after strange flesh, ultimately bringing upon themselves the greatest judgment found in the Bible outside of the book of Revelation.

What do we know about the behavior of the men of Sodom and Gomorrah that fits this description?

Just a couple of questions

Was the city destroyed because the men of Sodom attempted to rape the angels (option (2) above)? The answer is obviously no. God’s judgment could not have been for the rapacious attempt itself, since His decision to destroy the cities was made days before the encounter (see Genesis 18:20). Furthermore, Peter makes it clear that the evil acts were ongoing (“day after day”), not a one-time incident. The cry had already gone up before God for some time [5] .

Was it merely an interrogation? Although the Hebrew word “yada” (“to know”) [6]  has a variety of nuances, the New Living Translation appropriately translates it as “to have sex” [7] . Although the word does not always have sexual connotations, it often does, and this translation is more consistent with the context of Genesis 9:5. There is no evidence that a harmless interview was what the men of the city had in mind. Lot’s response—“I beg you, my brothers, do not act wickedly”—makes it clear that they had other intentions.

Furthermore, the same verb is used in the immediate context to describe daughters who have not “known” a man and who were offered to the crowd instead of the visitors. Are we to understand Lot here as saying, “Please do not question my guests, but rather speak to my daughters who have never been interviewed”?

Did God judge Sodom and Gomorrah because of inhospitality? Is it true that God’s judgment was not because of homosexuality per se, but because the men of the town were not courteous to the visitors, violating sacred customs by attempting to outrage them? Serious questions arise if we make a couple of observations.

First, the implication itself is strange. To say that the men of Sodom were inhospitable because of the attempted rape is like saying that a husband who has beaten his wife is an insensitive spouse. That may be true, but it is hardly an important observation given the seriousness of the crime.

Second—and this has more to do with textual evidence—it does not fit the collective biblical description of the behavior that provoked God’s wrath: perverted, lawless, sensual behavior that Lot saw and heard day after day, in which men went after strange flesh.

Third, are we to believe that God wiped out two entire cities just because they had bad manners, even granting that such manners were more important then than now? There is no textual evidence that inhospitality was a capital offense. Yet homosexuality was punishable by death in Israel (Leviticus 18:22; 20:13). Did God overlook the capital offense, and yet wipe out two entire cities for an evil that is nowhere listed as a serious offense?

The only reason that fits

The prevailing modern view of the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah is that the attempted rape of Lot’s visitors violated the high code of Middle Eastern hospitality (19:9). However, this inhospitality is an inference, not a specific point made in the text itself.

Moreover, the charge of inhospitality depends on—and is overshadowed by—the grave crime of rape, though neither of these could be the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah because God had decided to judge the cities long before they were committed. What choice is left? Only one.

We know that the men of Sodom and Gomorrah were homosexuals, “both young and old, all the people without exception” (19:4), to the point of despising available women (19:5-8). They even persisted after being struck with blindness (19:11). These men were totally given over to an overwhelming passion that did not abate despite being supernaturally blinded by angels.

Homosexuality fits the biblical details. It was the sin that represented the flagrant wickedness of Sodom and Gomorrah—the “gross,” “ungodly,” “wicked,” “sensual conduct of the profligate men” that tormented Lot as he “saw and heard” it “day after day,” the “perverse desire” of those who followed “strange flesh.”

In their defense, some might cite Ezekiel 16:49-50: “Behold, this was the iniquity of your sister Sodom: Arrogance, plenty of bread, and complete idleness were her and her daughters; yet they did not help the poor and needy, but they were haughty and committed abominations before me [8] . And when I saw it, I put them to death.” There is no mention of homosexuality here.

Clearly, the overall wickedness of Sodom and Gomorrah was great. That is not in question. Our interest here is whether homosexuality was part of that wickedness. Our analysis of Genesis reveals that homosexuality was the primary behavior in question in that passage. Ezekiel simply lists additional sins. The prophet does not contradict Moses, but rather gives more details.

Pettiness and arrogance alone did not attract God’s wrath. Ezekiel headed the list of crimes with the word “abominations.” This word brings us back to homosexuality. The behavior that Moses refers to in Genesis 18 and later describes in Leviticus as “abomination” in the eyes of God.

Levitical

The Mosaic Law has two explicit citations regarding homosexuality. Leviticus 18:22 says, “You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a woman; it is an abomination” [9] . It is an abomination [toebah] [10] . Leviticus 20:13 says, “If a man lies with a male as one lies with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination [toebah]; they shall surely be put to death; their bloodguilt is upon them.”

John Boswell offers the most common rebuttal to what appears to be the obvious biblical prohibition of homosexuality:

The Hebrew word “toebah,” here translated as “abomination,” typically does not mean something intrinsically evil, such as rape or theft… but rather something that is ritually unclean for Jews, such as eating pork or engaging in sexual relations during menstruation, both of which are prohibited in these same chapters. [11]

As implied, Leviticus is not where we generally go for moral instruction. The sections cited deal with the worship service: sacrifices, priesthood, ceremonial washings, etc. These instructions have to do with ritual purity, not moral purity. A Jew who observed these laws could not worship after ceremonial defilement until he had cleansed himself to perform the ritual.

Others have pointed out that many details of the Mosaic law are archaic. Who cares about mixing wool with linen (Deuteronomy 22:11)? The death penalty itself does not mark homosexuality as particularly abhorrent. Disobedience to parents was also a capital offense, as was gathering firewood on the Sabbath, and yet no one considers these things punishable offenses today. [12]

This answer is riddled with inconsistencies. First, even if this prohibition were restricted only to ceremonial purity and worship, then it would apply only to Jewish clerics. However, many who use this approach see no problem with homosexual rabbis and defend such “diversity” as a religious virtue. On the other hand, if the Torah’s prohibitions no longer apply at all, then the difference between the ceremonial and moral aspects of Mosaic law is moot; none of it applies anyway.

Second, it is a grave mistake to conclude that if something in the Torah no longer applies, then nothing is applicable. Jewish thinker Dennis Prager observed: “It is one thing not to carry out a Torah punishment, and quite another to declare that a Torah sin is no longer a sin.” [13]  [emphasis in original]

Third, it is true that much of the law seems to deal with religious activity rather than universal morality. However, this observation alone is not sufficient to dismiss the Torah as a source of obligatory moral instruction altogether. Ceremonial and moral purity are not always distinct from one another.

Here, context is king. Note where the verses fit in. The “toebah” of homosexuality is found between adultery (18:20), child sacrifice (18:21), and bestiality (18:23). Was Moses saying that if a priest committed adultery, had sex with an animal, or burned his son on the altar to Molech, he must make sure to wash before coming to the temple?

More to the point, these sections were not addressed to the priests, but to all the “children of Israel” (18:2, 20:2). In addition to the prohibitions regarding adultery, child sacrifice, and bestiality already mentioned, Moses also prohibited spiritism (20:6) and incest (20:12).

The conclusion of Leviticus 18 contains these words:

Speak to [the “children of Israel” (v. 2)], but as for you, you shall keep my statutes and my laws and you shall not do any of these abominations, neither the native nor the stranger residing among you; for the men of this land who were before you have done all these abominations, and the land has become defiled. (18:26-27)

Moses spoke just as clearly as in Genesis. The cities of Sodom and Gomorrah were guilty of many things, but chief among them was the sin of homosexuality.

In this section of Leviticus, God gives instructions not only regarding ceremonial purity, but also commandments that were to be observed by every Jew and even by every visitor.

Homosexuality was a sin for Jews. It was also a sin for Gentiles who visited Jews (“strangers”). It was even an abomination that defiled the land when pagan inhabitants in Canaan practiced it long before the Jews arrived.

Homosexuality is a defiling sin, no matter who practices it. It has no place before God among any people, in any age, neither before nor now.

Grades

[1] John Boswell, “Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality” (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980), p. 93.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Ibid.

[4] Some have suggested that the sin was seeking sexual union with angels (“strange flesh”). While this may be a possible interpretation, there is no indication that the men knew that Lot’s visitors were angels. Jude’s point is that the Sodomites, like the angels, “did not retain their original dominion, but abandoned their rightful dwelling” (v. 6). The “strange flesh”—the improper dominion—was not angelic flesh, but homosexual flesh.

[5] The answer that homosexual rape could still qualify as ongoing activity is unconvincing. Who would be the ongoing victims? They were not the men of the city.

Because of their sexual orientation, they were unlikely to be able to resist homosexual advances. Visitors would have to be targeted. But if those who did come were harassed “day after day,” I am sure that would put an end to the tourist business. The continuous supply of sexual candidates would quickly diminish once word got out, and many would avoid the area.

[6] Strong’s #3045.

[7] “To know” a person carnally, to have sexual relations… suj. and obj. Male (of sodomy) Gen. 19:5).” Brown, Driver and Briggs, The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and

English Lexicon (Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody ME: 1996), 394. See also Judges 19:22 ff.

[8] Curiously, this last sentence was overlooked in Boswell’s citation of the text.

[9] “Lie down” is the Hebrew word “shakab” and means “to lie down” (Strong’s #7901). In this case, it refers to sexual intercourse as in Genesis 19:32: “Come, let us make our father drink wine, and let us lie with him, that we may preserve our family through our father” (Brown, Driver, and Briggs, 1012).

[10] Strong’s #8441.

[11] Boswell, 100.

[12] It is curious that some choose to conclude that homosexuality was a lesser crime since it was no more offensive to God than gathering sticks on the Sabbath. Both were considered capital offenses. If you want to know how God really felt about this, look at the punishment He exacts.

[13] Dennis Prager, “Homosexuality, Judaism and Gay Rabbis,” The Prager Perspective, 3/1/97.

 


Greg Koukl is a Christian apologist, radio host, author, speaker, and founder of the Christian apologetics organization Stand To Reason. Greg received his M.A. in Philosophy of Religion and Ethics from Talbot School of Theology, graduating with high honors, and his M.A. in Christian Apologetics with honors from Simon Greenleaf University. He is an adjunct professor of Christian apologetics at Biola University.

Original Blog: http://bit.ly/2IplYdi

Translated by Natalia Armando

Edited by Maria Andreina Cerrada