An attitude in
the Church toward homosexuality generally bothers me, and should concern us
all. While most Christians would agree that Scripture speaks against it,
Scripture censures us all for other sexual acts many churchgoers practice with
little objection from the pulpit.
As we follow
the leading of the Spirit we find freedom and life, but our sinful nature
continually tries to draw us back into bondage and death. Bondage to drugs,
sex, pornography and other pursuits is only a symptom of our major addiction
that encompasses them all: opposition to God, and it’s called sin.
We were
sinners before conversion, but afterwards we still fight the war that rages
between the sinful nature and the indwelling Spirit. Paul experienced it,
Romans 7:21–23, 8:12–14, Galatians 5:16–18, and we must acknowledge it.
The created ideal
of marriage is an extension of the truth about God Himself—the love and unity
in the Trinity. All that breaks marriage or opposes it is a lie. We cannot live
with a lie: it will increasingly torment us, and eventually collapse in on
itself.
We are all
aware of adultery in the Church. High profile cases make the news, and
congregations acknowledge the occasional “moral failure” of one of its leaders.
That is only the tip of the iceberg. For every known event, many go unreported
and both perpetrator and victim suffer in silence.
Adultery—whether
with the same or opposite sex—includes sexual liaisons before marriage. The sex
act alters the brain chemistry attaching the partners together. The idea “they
will become one flesh,” Genesis 2:24, is more than a picturesque idea; it’s a
physical response. In this sense, adultery against a future marriage partner
has already occurred.
Pornography,
pernicious and addictive, is included in adultery, by Jesus’ use of the Greek
word porneia (sexual uncleanness) from which “pornography” comes. He
uses it for “marital unfaithfulness” in Matthew 5:32 and 19:9, and those
watching pornography commit “adultery with her in his heart,” Matthew 5:28.
All of us
struggle with some area of life opposed to the Spirit, different but always equal
deviations from God’s ideal. The Spirit is the “paraclete,” One who comes
alongside to bring conviction and change, John 16:8–11. As Spirit-filled
believers it is also our mandate: to come alongside those who struggle with sin
as we ourselves did, not with smug judgment, but with sympathetic love.
If we hide and
refuse to stare down these enemies within—both personally and corporately—we engage
in the Pharisaical hypocrisy Jesus regularly scorned, placing burdens on others
we still carry ourselves. Let’s remove the plank in our own eye before we
criticize the splinter in the eye of another.
Let him who is without sin cast the first stone!
Let him who is without sin cast the first stone!