Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The "Gay" Life

"I'd rather you tell me I can't come than bring me here and strip me of who I am," Messiah College student Isaiah Thomas told news reporters covering his tragic story.

Isaiah Thomas is an openly gay freshman. At Messiah, he's been brutally harassed, called an "abomination" by a professor, and received a death threat on Facebook.

I graduated from Messiah in 2006. I know several former classmates who've "come out." I think what happened to Isaiah Thomas is inexcusable, sinful and serious. As Jesus said in His Sermon on the Mount:
"You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, 'You shall not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.' But I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone who says to a brother or sister, Raca (an Aramamic term for contempt) is answerable to the court. And anyone who says You Fool! will be in danger of the fire of hell."
When I think about how cruelly Isaiah Thomas was treated, I am sad and even embarrassed. The few hateful students who abused him have tainted the whole school.

Thousands of already skeptical, Christ-doubting people are reading Isaiah's story and being affirmed in their distrust and dislike of "religion" (as they say). Isaiah's story is fueling rebellion against God and driving readers further and further away from repentance.

This includes Christians.

In recent weeks, I have discussed Isaiah Thomas' story with people (including former Messiah classmates) who identify themselves as Christ-followers, and yet believe the Bible's strong words about homosexuality are outdated, wrong, evil, and even anti-Christian. A common viewpoint is, "Jesus loves us. He loves homosexuals, therefore, homosexuality is acceptable in His eyes."

I could say a good many things about this... a good many. But I want to boil it down to one underlying, root concern... my generation is losing its belief in the Bible as the authoritative Word of God. Romans 1:18-32 talks about homosexuality as "God's Wrath Against Mankind":
"The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all godlessness and the wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness...
For although they knew God, they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but their thinking became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened...
Because of this, God gave them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural relations for unnatural relations. In the same way the men also abandoned natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one another..." (Romans 1:18;21; 26-27)
My generation reads this and we deny it. We say, "God wouldn't condemn homosexuals," even though Romans 1 says God is already actively condemning them (and it should break out hearts!).

Or--we say, "Paul's letter to the Romans is prejudiced and old-fashioned," which denies that God's Word stands forever and at the same time, undermines God by saying He wasn't loving, wise or omniscient enough to give us a timeless Bible.

Unfortunately, I see a dismal slippery slope looming ahead. If people of my generation cannot wholeheartedly believe the Bible, can they ultimately believe or trust in salvation?

People do believe, of course, I know. Somehow, they live with contradiction. Somehow, they think God was shortsighted enough to leave behind antiquated books, but longsighted and powerful enough to conquer Death and rule the universe.

Somehow, they believe God didn't mean it when He called homosexuals "offenders" (1 Corinthians 6:9), but they do cherish Him as "the way, the truth and the life" (John 14:6).

As you can tell, I'm troubled by the contradictions. In conversation with Jeremy, he reminds me that there's sin on both sides of the "gay issue." The actions that took place at Messiah are proof enough. Both sides are guilty of sliding the biblical standards back and forth to justify sinful thoughts and behavior, whether its practicing homosexuality or hating homosexuals.

As true Christ-followers, our heart's desire should be to adhere to the biblical standards and let Christ transform us to them. As Jeremy says, we're called to move, not the standards.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Movie Suggestion

For all you history buffs, I have a movie suggestion: The Young Victorian (2009). I borrowed a copy from Jenna and really enjoyed it.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Kyle's 26th

Today is my bro-in-law Kyle's 26th birthday. Happy Birthday Kyle Carl!Several members of his family and ours chipped in with Meredith to buy him an IPad 2. But first, just to mess with him, we gave him the Best Gift of All Time. Yes, ladies and gentleman, the snake-skin-bling.Check out how excited Kyle was when he opened his gift...






Also from Kyle's birthday party Saturday night at Mer and Kyle's place: 
Grillin' in the rain, just grillin' in the rain... 

A rainbow---special for you Kyle!


Double ice cream cakes. One mint, one Reeses.




Sunday, May 1, 2011

Preacher Powell

Jeremy had a preaching gig this morning! At 9 am, Jeremy gave the message at St. Paul's Church in Stowe, PA, which is just 30 minutes from our place.

St. Paul's is a CCCC church pastored by Pastor Lenn Zeller. Pastor Zeller is the CCCC Area Representative for Eastern Pennsylvania. He mentors and encourages young men like Jeremy preparing for ministry in the CCCC and he has supported the growth of Seven Mile Road Church, where we currently worship in northeast Philadelphia.

Pastor Zeller was traveling this week, so Jeremy preached in his place. Jeremy taught on Luke 24:13-35, a story commonly known as the Road to Emmaus (the "seven mile road"), in which Jesus appears to two disciples walking from Jerusalem to Emmaus after the Resurrection.

Jeremy worked really hard on preparing this sermon and his preparation paid off. I thought it was his best sermon yet. He was clear and engaging, as well as personable from the pulpit. This was his first experience preaching at a church we don't regularly attend, so the stress level was a little higher than usual, but Jeremy was ready to go!

The people at St. Paul's were also lovely. They were a small, older congregation and greeted us very warmly after the service. It was a great experience all around, even for me. I was invited to stand with Jeremy after the service and shake hands with everyone leaving the sanctuary. I realize that being newbies at Seven Mile Road Church last year has given us lots of confidence in meeting new people and engaging in conversation.

Jeremy and I also agree that preaching at St. Paul's has given us a much-needed glimpse of the "end goal," it provided us a taste of life post-seminary, and reminded us why and what we're both working so hard for.

If you have time, please pray for Jeremy this week. The downside to taking time to prepare a sermon and visit a new church is that Jeremy lost a few days of study time for school... and this upcoming week is going to be brutal. He has a major assignment due in all 4 classes by Friday!

Please pray that Jeremy would stay healthy (as he operates on very little sleep), that he would be productive, and that God would be glorified in his school work. For me, please pray that I would be Jeremy's source of encouragement and that I would not become discouraged when we're not able to spend time together. Thanks guys!