What the Law and the Bible say about Homosexuality.

Jacob

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1 Timothy 1:8-10 affirms that the Law is for those who practice homosexuality, among other things.
1 Timothy 1:8-10 affirms that the Law is for those who practice homosexuality.

1 Timothy 1:8-10 NASB - But we know that the Law is good, if one uses it lawfully, realizing the fact that law is not made for a righteous person, but for those who are lawless and rebellious, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers and liars and perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching,​

those who are lawless and rebellious, for the ungodly and sinners, for the unholy and profane, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers and immoral men and homosexuals and kidnappers and liars and perjurers, and whatever else is contrary to sound teaching,
 

Lon

Well-known member
What on earth does that have to do with the right to religious liberty being infringed Lon.
Simply this: Many 'religious' ideals are yet enforced by common law. You don't see it yet, but you have expressed a dichotomy yourself, that you haven't reconciled. You are thinking there is a moral sentiment, but there is none apart from Christianity. There is no religion that has as high of moral standards. "IF" one eradicates Christianity or tries to 'separate' then they are attacking morals in principle, on the false basis that they are 'encouraging Christianity.' For a long long time, our country got this.

That's what being a democratic republic is all about, yes.
So you are okay when the majority want communism :doh: I guess it 'was' democratic....right up until the end. :plain:


The right to religious liberty is imo merely a certain form of the one inalienable right that we all possess as human beings. It's the right to life, the right to speak and write freely, the right to believe and practice however we want to religiously, and the right to self defense /bear arms. There are other formulations of it, but I see it as just one right.
No, they are intricately tied together or one or the other cannot stand. We 'were' apologetically Christian.' There can be no denying that. What MADE this country so free and so great, was that Christians didn't demand that others fall in line or convert. The problem is this: As the Christians lose representation, either by legislation or by lack of population, no other group holds to our same freedom of values nor do they insist on unharmful behavior by common law. In Muslim countries? Still legal to rape, to persecute, and indeed, sanctioned by EVERY Muslim controlled country: criminalize any religion but theirs.

Laws are made in any variety of ways, and in the US they are made by legislators who are elected in free and fair elections, and these laws are all amenable to legal challenge, and our highest court decides ultimately whether the laws are in accord with our constitution, which is the highest law in the land.
At present, yes. It used to be the Constitution and not reinterpretation of it, kept such from happening.

We are able to amend our constitution. But the interaction between laws and rights is what we're discussing here. We divide along basically religious lines, with our different opinions about LGBTQI+ conjugal behaviors, as to their morality, and as to their legality. There are some of us who take them to all be gravely immoral, but that we oughtn't make laws forbidding them, though it feels as if we are in the minority, and much more so on TOL.
It depends whether we believe God, whether the behavior is always damaging to self and others. I believe it is, from scripture. Such MUST be demonstrable to the rest of society (and I'm convinced it will all come to light, Luke 8:17

Largely it seems there are two prominent and noisy camps, they are the ones who take these behaviors to be fundamentally amoral (because it's really just about love, or some other canard), and so naturally they oppose outlawing them, and then there are those who take them to be very seriously sinful and wrong and reprehensible, and that they ought to be outlawed civilly as well.
I do agree with you, we have liberty with common law. Mostly, we need laws that protect 'from' rather imposing laws 'against,' but if it is shown our choices wound up hurting any particular group in the process of more freedom, we have to own collectively any harm done.

This latter group bases their political opinion on their religious belief. This contravenes our constitution.

I suppose there are also those who do not take LGBTQI+ conjugal behavior as immoral for whatever reason, but who insist they should be civilly outlawed anyway, based on measured deleterious effects upon the health of those who do such things, but I think they are an even tinier minority than those of us who take these behaviors to be gravely immoral, but who think that laws against them are not well founded laws /they are Unconstitutional.

And incidentally perhaps, laws forbidding adultery make spouses into slaves in a way. We would be under such laws barred from making our own choice in the matter, as slaves are barred by their masters from being free people. Part of the evolution of laws in the US over the centuries is about dismantling vestiges of slavery that existed when our nation was founded, even while it was multiple distinct colonies.
I don't believe it did that. First of all, the crime was not death and very little jail time, but it did carry consequences. On top of that, had a spouse held self-control, there was no penalty for divorce or separation. It allowed, rather, someone to carry a suit against the cheating spouse.
I believe current laws 'still' punish and adulterer, as deference is given to the grieving spouse in courts.

While laws forbidding adultery and LGBTQI+ conjugal relations were not categorized then as parallel to laws permitting human slavery and trafficking, it appears to have been a case of being overwhelmed by the institution of southern slavery that blinded them from all the other laws that resembled laws permitting slavery. Repealing /nullifying those laws are part of the dismantling of the institution of slavery. Many of our changing laws have been about repealing slavery completely.

When Patrick Henry said, "Give me liberty or give me death," he expressed what I'm talking about. The freedom from being enslaved, from being murdered, from being raped, they are all different facets of the one right we all possess inalienably. The right to religious liberty is one of those facets too, and yes, that does mean the right to commit adultery, and to practice LGBTQI+ conjugal relations; but see my Mencken quote below before responding here.
The Enlightenment period is granted by historians to have given birth to the notion of rights. This notion arose through conflict with power, power and rights being offset by one another. Power is government, police, military, basically anyone who can force, coerce, compel, etc. people to do and not do things. The right to religious liberty /of the pursuit of happiness, stands against power. We want to believe in the right to religious liberty, but sometimes we have to hold our nose when making laws, in order to hold the right of religious liberty as sacred.

(It irks me whenever I hear an elected official talk about how their branch or bureau of government has a /the "right" to do such-and-such. Government is power, government power must be limited, government does not possess rights. I worry about people who think government has rights. It makes it sound like government is in any way victims of free people---the opposite is the only actual possibility; and it's a possibility that has been and still is all too frequently realized.)
Very much agree here. All government officials, without exception, are servants of the people. The problem? Judges started this by going against the democracy of the people, that is, we just didn't count any more when it came to policy. They literally took a bunch of things doing good for our country, and outlawed them WHILE making poor things no longer against the laws. This is incredibly hard on society and begins tearing down the moral fiber of a nation and literally giving nothing to put back in its place.

But it was really the Church who should be credited with discovering human rights imo, and my evidence there is because of a brief mention of rights in a letter written by Bishop Polycarp in the early 2nd century, the era immediately following the Apostolic era. Polycarp all the way back then counselled Christians to respect the rights of everybody. He was, afaik, the first person to ever recognize that people possess inalienable rights, that did then, have since, and always will, stand up to and against power.
Your argument then is against all war. Just because, due to how it turned out, the Civil War had "one American killing another American," the South had formally seceded from the US, and they were another nation. If the South had prevailed, then it wouldn't have been "one American killing another American." The outcome of the conflict determines that it was "one American killing another American," but if the outcome had been different, it wouldn't be the story.
My point was that there are times, and will be again when what we view as murder, will be condoned and encouraged. Granted it is 'sanctioned' by somebody at that point and that is what I'm saying: It can, will, does, happen again. If all we are are the sum of our parts, then these United States can be destroyed from within. We might well become the United Socialist Americas. Democracy 'can' allow that if that is the majority vote. That's a scary thing. I believe laws under Democracy must ALWAYS protect Democracy (Republics).

The Civil War was a war for the Constitution. The South seceded because it no longer recognized the Constitution. And President Lincoln waged the war because he believed that secession was illegal under the Constitution. Although he did suspend 'habeas corpus,' so . . . . :idunno: :D
I'm leery of this. Are you saying that police were aware of who the murderers were, and deliberately chose to not prosecute them? My suspicion is that murderers in such chaos were able to avoid detection, which is obviously a different thing from "many murders went unprosecuted" deliberately.
No, I don't think that far, but I'd think that some people are forced to be quiet because of it, that normally wouldn't be involved thus there is a complicity. It always happens when masses of people go against common law. The common law is suspended. I think your slavery topic speaks to this. We had to embrace Constitutional laws for everyone, barring their unconstitution behavior of course.
Try to take assurance then in the fact that Martin Luther was condemned to the death penalty for being excommunicated by the Catholic Church. Only a friend of his stood between his murder, for exercising his inalienable right to religious liberty, and him surviving to preside over one major limb of the Protestant Reformation. The laws permitting power to murder people for practicing their religious liberty, including the laws that permitted John Calvin to authorize the murder of Michael Servetus, for practicing his own religious liberty, in denying the Trinity, were all illegal under our constitution, and all violated the inalienable right to religious liberty.
Calvin, as best as I've read and understood history, was rather the 'whistle-blower.' He (again if I read correctly) wasn't an active member in government, by choice.

Voiding /repealing /nullifying such laws are a score for the good guys, for rights against power. And vanquishing laws against LGBTQI+ conjugal behaviors and against adultery are in the same category as eliminating laws that permitted the murders of Martin Luther and of Michael Servetus.
??? The former were laws against religious liberty, the latter concerning at-risk behaviors....I'm not following.
"The trouble with fighting for human freedom is that one spends most of one's time defending scoundrels. For it is against scoundrels that oppressive laws are first aimed, and oppression must be stopped at the beginning if it is to be stopped at all." Mencken
So he recognizes he is defending the scoundrel, in opposition to losing a freedom. It cannot apply to murder, by instance. He would have you and I 'free to kill' by such a sentiment, instead of saying murder is against the law. I know that's an absurd extreme, but it does illustrate the problem with his sentiment. He didn't think it through far enough, because it cannot be even a 'general rule.' It just doesn't work like that, we use discretion and are alway, rather, looking for the higher good. Democracy is to be defended and uplifted, but not to the expense of its people's welfare.
I find it good to keep in mind the above.
To me, still not a good rule of thumb, but I think TownH agrees with you. I disagree with you both on this principle. It just can be shown to not work on its extreme, thus is not a profitable rule of thumb in my assessment.

Those are literally examples of the right to religious liberty not being recognized, affirmed, or protected. The right to not be murdered equals the right to religious liberty (among others), which is just reiteration of my contention that we all possess just the one right, variously formulated /expressed as the right to not be murdered, the right to not be enslaved, the right to not be raped, the right to religious liberty, the right to bear arms, the right to self defense, the right to free speech and to free peaceful assembly, etc.
As I said above, 'if' Democracy enables the choice of nonDemocracy (communism, Sharia law, etc.), then Democracy allowed its own demise. Such doesn't ultimately make sense. I cannot remember who quoted it, but communism could only work, if God were in charge of it.

Anybody can validly argue that LGBTQI+ conjugal behaviors should be outlawed, so long as the grounds for such arguments are in no way religious or invoke God (basically the same thing). The main way I've seen, are the ones based on confirmed negative health effects of those who practice such things. And wrt common law, recall that English common law evolved from within a period when England was establishing the Church of England, which is specifically proscribed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. It was Unconstitutional to enforce such laws back then, which is only something that we all know now, because of the Supreme Court obeying the Constitution in condemning such laws as Unconstitutional.
Our Constitution mentions our Creator. I think the 'problem' is in the secularist mind, not by necessity any government official's mind, nor any other citizen's. We should not allow 'secularists' to secularize our government. Such is an atheistic state. Our Constitution didn't outright forbid that from taking place, but it IS taking place and against the sentiments of its wording (see sig). I'm not shocked, it is the mark of the end times, but I'm against it and will effect change if I can. The Power of our Constitution clearly rests on what is 'endowed by our Creator' thus makes our nation deist, at least, by demand of those virtues and rights appealed to for their substantiation.
 

Lon

Well-known member
I know gay people who's only "crime" among some of the more zealous is for simply being "abnormal" if they act on attractions with other consenting adults. I count a couple of those as my friends . I don't conflate homosexuality with pedophilia and have nothing but contempt for the latter, rape or any other atrocity inflicted on another human being so you get that through your head, okay?
I'm not sure you can say this with any confidence. I've family too, and I've seen the hurts and problems such behavior affects. I have no confidence at all in saying "it hurts nobody." :think:
 

Clete

Truth Smacker
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None of those things are in the constitution.

In fact, they are actually unconstitutional.

"Authority does not flow from the bottom up but from the Top down (note the capital T)." - "Government of, by and for the people" and "the consent of the governed" are the foundational premises of the constition and is the entire idea of democracy, including democratic republics, both of which God hates.

"Justice by committee is unjust, by definition. The larger the committee, the more likely an unjust outcome because the majority is not righteous nor just (same thing)." - what is the world else are jury trials other than justice by committee?

Ever heard of jury nullification? That's where a jury consciously decides to find someone not guilty even though he clearly is because they don't like the law or for whatever reason.

It is jundamentally unjust.

"Blacks (slaves of any color really) are not 3/5 of a person." - The Three-Fifths Compromise is found in Article 1, Section 2, Clause 3 of the United States Constitution, which reads:

Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons.​

The fact that this was later changed is beside the point.

"A progressive income tax is theft." - Of course this is constitutional. The 16th amendment was passed and ratified for the express purpose of not only enacting a federal income tax but a progressive one so as to shift the tax burden toward the rich because the thinking at the time was that tariffs put too much of the burden on the poor.

"Abortion is murder." - The closest you've come to being right is with this one. There is no right to an abortion explicitly given by the constitution but that wasn't the point of including it in the list. The point is that if the constitution was just, as has been suggested, it would not have been possible for the Supreme Court to establish such a right via Roe v. Wade or any other decision, never mind reaffirm that right several times since.

In other words, whether you and I think it constitutional or not, there are several Supreme Court Justices, who's job it is to decide such things, that have and do disagree.

OK... those are not really problems with the constitution itself, but with people.

I agree with your general idea.
Two points here:

1. The constitution is based upon the will of the people and so the problem with people is a problem with the constitution.
2. Even if that weren't true (which it is) the constitution itself defines the process by which it can be modified. The prohibition of adult beverages was a perfectly legal process that followed the constitution perfectly and that exact same process could theoretically be used to prohibit anything that the people decided they don't like.


Agreed. But I would also point out that most of what goes on today in our government is actually quite unconstitutional and most people don't even care or understand. This is why politicians like Bernie Sanders can be so popular.
This is just another reason to understand that the foundation of our government is flawed and not the just and all but divinely inspired document that many think it to be.

And what's so unconstitutional about Bernie's proposals? It's not like he's proposing to enact policies by fiat. He intends to have his policies enacted into law by the congress. He wants to make Medicare available to everyone. You think the Supreme Court is going to strike down Medicare? I doubt it!

And once again, whether you think the text of the document could support such a law or not isn't relevant to the point. What the constitution does permit for such a law to be passed in the first place, which is flatly unjust. Whether the checks and balances placed within the constitution work to uphold justice is something of a coin toss. A lot of time they do work but often they do not.


Clete
 

Gary K

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Hey, I have never been molested and have nothing but compassion for those who have been victims of any such atrocity and the like so that's not an argument you can begin to use with me as I've had a family member be the victim of rape. You think I don't want to see the perpetrator face justice for what he did? The guy was never caught. I know gay people who's only "crime" among some of the more zealous is for simply being "abnormal" if they act on attractions with other consenting adults. I count a couple of those as my friends . I don't conflate homosexuality with pedophilia and have nothing but contempt for the latter, rape or any other atrocity inflicted on another human being so you get that through your head, okay?

I'm sorry to hear about your family member being raped. That is something that should never happen.

Homosexuality is not some harmless behavior. AIDS began in the homosexual community and spread to the heterosexual community through bi-sexuals having sex with both genders. That is not harmless behavior. Millions of people have suffered because of it. In the same way adultery in the heterosexual community also spreads stds. So adultery isn't harmless behavior either. And that leaves out the destruction of children's lives whose parents split because of adultery or who lost their parents at a young age because of AIDS. My step children's lives were badly damaged because their father is a jerk and chooses to sleep around on a regular basis. My stepdaughter is in her 40s and she is still suffering from the effects of her father's choice to indulge in harmful behavior. His choices had a major effect on the men she has chosen, and those choices have made her life one of misery. Her father, and I use that term only under protest as he was no father to his kids, has gone through 3 more wives because he wouldn't keep his pants zipped up.

Oh, something I forgot to include in my last post to you. Homosexuality is a behavior. Heterosexuality is a behavior. Adultery is a behavior. Fornication is a behavior. Stealing is a behavior. Lying is a behavior. Taking your elderly neighbor a bag of groceries is a behavior. Buying a homeless person a meal is a behavior. Me taking my dog for a walk every day is a behavior. Eating is a behavior. Surfing to TOL and reading and writing posts is a behavior. All actions we human beings take are behaviors. A behavior is simply something we do. There are good, bad, and indifferent behaviors, although I believe most things we do affect others either for good or for ill.
 
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"Authority does not flow from the bottom up but from the Top down (note the capital T)." - "Government of, by and for the people" and "the consent of the governed" are the foundational premises of the constition and is the entire idea of democracy, including democratic republics, both of which God hates.
I must have missed the scripture on that one. But I think that I get your point.

"Justice by committee is unjust, by definition. The larger the committee, the more likely an unjust outcome because the majority is not righteous nor just (same thing)." - what is the world else are jury trials other than justice by committee?

Ever heard of jury nullification? That's where a jury consciously decides to find someone not guilty even though he clearly is because they don't like the law or for whatever reason.

It is jundamentally unjust.
Without the Lord Jesus Christ here to judge justly, how else would we do it?

"Blacks (slaves of any color really) are not 3/5 of a person." - The Three-Fifths Compromise is found in Article 1, Section 2, Clause 3 of the United States Constitution, which reads:
Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons.​

The fact that this was later changed is beside the point.
Okay

"A progressive income tax is theft." - Of course this is constitutional. The 16th amendment was passed and ratified for the express purpose of not only enacting a federal income tax but a progressive one so as to shift the tax burden toward the rich because the thinking at the time was that tariffs put too much of the burden on the poor.
Any form of income tax is unjust, I agree.

"Abortion is murder." - The closest you've come to being right is with this one. There is no right to an abortion explicitly given by the constitution but that wasn't the point of including it in the list. The point is that if the constitution was just, as has been suggested, it would not have been possible for the Supreme Court to establish such a right via Roe v. Wade or any other decision, never mind reaffirm that right several times since.

In other words, whether you and I think it constitutional or not, there are several Supreme Court Justices, who's job it is to decide such things, that have and do disagree.
That the government is unjust and tyrannical we agree.

Two points here:

1. The constitution is based upon the will of the people and so the problem with people is a problem with the constitution.
2. Even if that weren't true (which it is) the constitution itself defines the process by which it can be modified. The prohibition of adult beverages was a perfectly legal process that followed the constitution perfectly and that exact same process could theoretically be used to prohibit anything that the people decided they don't like.
The world is a messed up place. Is there a better system of government anywhere on earth? BTW, I'm not a constitution worshiper, and I do not think that our system of government is anywhere near perfect. All governments suck big time.

This is just another reason to understand that the foundation of our government is flawed and not the just and all but divinely inspired document that many think it to be.
I don't think so.

And what's so unconstitutional about Bernie's proposals? It's not like he's proposing to enact policies by fiat. He intends to have his policies enacted into law by the congress. He wants to make Medicare available to everyone. You think the Supreme Court is going to strike down Medicare? I doubt it!

And once again, whether you think the text of the document could support such a law or not isn't relevant to the point. What the constitution does permit for such a law to be passed in the first place, which is flatly unjust. Whether the checks and balances placed within the constitution work to uphold justice is something of a coin toss. A lot of time they do work but often they do not.

Clete
Basically the constitution is meaningless.
 
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Oh, something I forgot to include in my last post to you. Homosexuality is a behavior. Heterosexuality is a behavior. Adultery is a behavior. Fornication is a behavior. Stealing is a behavior. Lying is a behavior. Taking your elderly neighbor a bag of groceries is a behavior. Buying a homeless person a meal is a behavior. Me taking my dog for a walk every day is a behavior. Eating is a behavior. Surfing to TOL and reading and writing posts is a behavior. All actions we human beings take are behaviors. A behavior is simply something we do. There are good, bad, and indifferent behaviors, although I believe most things we do affect others either for good or for ill.
Not to be too pedantic, but those things are actions.
A behavior is something more systemic, like repeated actions.
 

Clete

Truth Smacker
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I must have missed the scripture on that one. But I think that I get your point.
Numbers 16

Also, read this...

Against Democracy: The Biblical Argument

Without the Lord Jesus Christ here to judge justly, how else would we do it?

Well, for one thing you make the judge responsible for his decisions and you remove from him any discretion as to what the sentence will be for the convicted criminal. The punishment is determined by the crime, not the judge and is clearly taught in the bible.

Also, a just criminal justice system does not attempt to make it so that people cannot commit crime, as our current system attempts to do. Rather, it makes it so that people will not commit crime by doing to the criminal as he did (or sought to do) to his neighbor. As a result crime is dramatically diminished in a just system and there wouldn't be the months or even years long back log of cases that need investigated and tried.

The world is a messed up place. Is there a better system of government anywhere on earth? BTW, I'm not a constitution worshiper, and I do not think that our system of government is anywhere near perfect. All governments suck big time.
All governments that are in place now suck, yes but God has put a really good one in the bible. It isn't perfect either, by the way. It's just as good as it is possible.

Basically the constitution is meaningless.

No, the constitution isn't meaningless. On the contrary, as human government systems go, it's better than most in some ways and worse than most in others. In other words, we could do far worse and many nations do. But we could also do much better. As I said, the biblical system excellent. It is far more just, far simpler and for more effective, not to mention far less expensive. Indeed, in regards to criminal justice, the biblical system is very inexpensive and extremely effective while our current system is wildly expensive and almost totally ineffective.

Clete
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
I'm sorry to hear about your family member being raped. That is something that should never happen.

Thank you.

Homosexuality is not some harmless behavior. AIDS began in the homosexual community and spread to the heterosexual community through bi-sexuals having sex with both genders. That is not harmless behavior. Millions of people have suffered because of it. In the same way adultery in the heterosexual community also spreads stds. So adultery isn't harmless behavior either. And that leaves out the destruction of children's lives whose parents split because of adultery or who lost their parents at a young age because of AIDS. My step children's lives were badly damaged because their father is a jerk and chooses to sleep around on a regular basis. My stepdaughter is in her 40s and she is still suffering from the effects of her father's choice to indulge in harmful behavior. His choices had a major effect on the men she has chosen, and those choices have made her life one of misery. Her father, and I use that term only under protest as he was no father to his kids, has gone through 3 more wives because he wouldn't keep his pants zipped up.

The common consensus on AIDS is that originated in Africa among non human primates and the cross transference of it in humans wasn't a result of homosexuals. You're going as far back as the early twentieth century, it was never a "gay" disease as some still seem to like to think. The spread of it wasn't just unprotected sex although a main cause sure but that applied to everybody.

Oh, something I forgot to include in my last post to you. Homosexuality is a behavior. Heterosexuality is a behavior. Adultery is a behavior. Fornication is a behavior. Stealing is a behavior. Lying is a behavior. Taking your elderly neighbor a bag of groceries is a behavior. Buying a homeless person a meal is a behavior. Me taking my dog for a walk every day is a behavior. Eating is a behavior. Surfing to TOL and reading and writing posts is a behavior. All actions we human beings take are behaviors. A behavior is simply something we do. There are good, bad, and indifferent behaviors, although I believe most things we do affect others either for good or for ill.

No, the first two aren't and the rest are actions. It is not a behaviour either to be attracted to the opposite, the same or both sexes just as much as being attracted to someone isn't. How you may act on that attraction is another thing altogether but if you're straight and are solely attracted to women then there is no behaviour in that, it's simply your orientation.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
I'm not sure you can say this with any confidence. I've family too, and I've seen the hurts and problems such behavior affects. I have no confidence at all in saying "it hurts nobody." :think:

Well that would depend on what problems you're referring to, else homosexuality isn't one just as heterosexuality isn't a problem if someone acts irresponsibly or hurtful to their family.
 

ok doser

lifeguard at the cement pond
Well that would depend on what problems you're referring to, else homosexuality isn't one just as heterosexuality isn't a problem if someone acts irresponsibly or hurtful to their family.

the expression of heterosexual sex "isn't a problem" in a Christian marriage

it is a problem outside that marriage


the expression of homosexual sex is always a problem
 

ok doser

lifeguard at the cement pond
The common consensus on AIDS is that originated in Africa among non human primates and the cross transference of it in humans wasn't a result of homosexuals. You're going as far back as the early twentieth century, it was never a "gay" disease as some still seem to like to think. The spread of it wasn't just unprotected sex although a main cause sure but that applied to everybody.


what an incredibly retarded thing to claim


hiv-us-ataglance-2017-new-diagnoses-subpopulations.png



those are raw numbers of new HIV diagnoses, which do not take into account that the overwhelming number of them occur in a proportionally minuscule segment of the general population


a quick crunch of those numbers tells me that 2% of the population is responsible for more than 75% of all new HIV cases in the US
 

Jacob

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Banned
Heterosexuality is a behavior.
People say straight or heterosexual while a man who is celibate not because of the sin of homosexuality might not choose either of these and may be unwilling to say he is single because one day that may change if it is something that can be said (like it is a choice, when it is the default position before a person becomes married).
 

Jacob

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Banned
The punishment is determined by the crime, not the judge and is clearly taught in the bible.
Good point. Thanks.
Indeed, in regards to criminal justice, the biblical system is very inexpensive and extremely effective while our current system is wildly expensive and almost totally ineffective.
 

Lon

Well-known member
Well that would depend on what problems you're referring to, else homosexuality isn't one just as heterosexuality isn't a problem if someone acts irresponsibly or hurtful to their family.

Not quite the same equivocation. There are inherent problems, by example, for interracial marriages: The kids have a very hard time in school, they get looks, yet. In my area, I smiled as a mixed couple crossed the street. I don't know why such a thing would bring a huge smile to the girl's face except that she must still feel the stigmas. Here is the point: Our actions, even if right, carry consequences. Counseling a young couple I simple told them not to 'allow' those problems to become theirs or their childrens'. With homosexuality, because of the way it was thrust upon society, there are much starker problems. Worse? statistics don't go away overnight. I've posted many times on TOL, statistics that reveal serious problems with homosexuality by Canada and the U.S. The consensus of both of those reports was "harmful." Just statistics, no interpretation of them. Ask them. Most of them are very aware of them. For me, I feel bad. I pretty much know why my relatives are this way and it is always related to some sort of abuse. To date? I know of no exceptions. My nieces friend, she thought had not been, but I've since learned she was incorrect. I do have sympathy for people whose lives are ruined this way. -Lon
 

Jacob

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Not quite the same equivocation. There are inherent problems, by example, for interracial marriages: The kids have a very hard time in school, they get looks, yet. In my area, I smiled as a mixed couple crossed the street. I don't know why such a thing would bring a huge smile to the girl's face except that she must still feel the stigmas. Here is the point: Our actions, even if right, carry consequences. Counseling a young couple I simple told them not to 'allow' those problems to become theirs or their childrens'. With homosexuality, because of the way it was thrust upon society, there are much starker problems. Worse? statistics don't go away overnight. I've posted many times on TOL, statistics that reveal serious problems with homosexuality by Canada and the U.S. The consensus of both of those reports was "harmful." Just statistics, no interpretation of them. Ask them. Most of them are very aware of them. For me, I feel bad. I pretty much know why my relatives are this way and it is always related to some sort of abuse. To date? I know of no exceptions. My nieces friend, she thought had not been, but I've since learned she was incorrect. I do have sympathy for people whose lives are ruined this way. -Lon
Sin and abuse are different from interracial marriage and family.
 
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glorydaz

Well-known member
I am somewhat amazed that someone who is a Christian will make statements like this. Here is why.

Who has an intelligence that makes human intelligence look absolutely puny in comparison? Who knows human nature inside and out, perfectly? Who has more foresight, God or humans? Who understands the consequences of sin better, God or humans? The answers to these questions leads me to understand that God had good reasons for associating the punishments and behaviors that He did.

I look at these behaviors and understand that each of them has unleashed a torrent of pain, misery and suffering upon the world. Lying introduced sin and untold misery upon the human race. It is a terrible behavior with horrific consequences. All we have to do to understand this is look at human history. How about adultery? How much pain and suffering has it unleashed upon humanity? How many broken homes, heartbroken adults and children has it produced? How many times has it introduced an std into the marriage relationship? Now how about strictly fornication? How many unwanted children has it produced? How many children have grown up in grinding poverty because of it? How many children have been robbed of the needed influence of one or both their parents that would result in a stable individual instead of one who grows up to be a drain on society? How many people have suffered for a lifetime from the effects of stds? How many men and women have had their hearts broken because they were used by another individual to satisfy their own lusts? How much misery, pain and suffering has homosexuality introduced into the world? How much pain and suffering has AIDS alone caused? How many children have been confused as to their God-given identities and died because of it?

These are only a very few of the consequences of these behaviors, and yet the punishments that God invoked for limiting all the resulting pain and suffering are seen as cruel and unjust. I simply do not understand the reasoning. I simply do not understand how humans can think they know more than God about all of this. God set the punishments He did to limit the evils all these sins create.

Think what our world would be like if no one lied. Think what it would be like if no one cheated on their spouse. Think what our world would be like if we didn't have sexual predators. The examples are numerous. If our world actually followed God's instructions and His 10 commandments the amount of suffering in this world would be reduced to a very small percentage of what it is now. And yet even Christians are conflating license and liberty and in so doing think themselves loving and caring. It's really sad.

Yeah, a DREAM WORLD.

You've quit simply misunderstood my point. We do not live in a perfect world where Jesus Christ sits on the throne....nor where godly judges dispense justice. We live in a world where Judges and witnesses can be bribed, where officers of the court do the lying, and where the innocent are often "proven" guilty.

It's all well and good to preach godly justice, and it's quite another to see it taking place while satan is the god of this world. I'm not so naive as to pretend that man can adequately carry out justice as intended by God. Nor am I so naive as to believe that those who count themselves as godly men should be given the power to enforce the same penalties as the Law of Moses enforced.

I've heard it being preached that children who disobey their parents should be put to death. :rolleyes: People who have sex outside of marriage should be put to death. At that rate, few would live long enough to be saved by the Gospel of Grace.
 

glorydaz

Well-known member
Death for lying?


The only time such a punishment for lying would be appropriate is if someone commits perjury in a capital case...

Deuteronomy 19:18 And the judges shall make careful inquiry, and indeed, if the witness is a false witness, who has testified falsely against his brother, 19 then you shall do to him as he thought to have done to his brother; so you shall put away the evil from among you. 20 And those who remain shall hear and fear, and hereafter they shall not again commit such evil among you. 21 Your eye shall not pity: life shall be for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.​

That's justice right? If someone testifies in court trying to convict an innocent man (or acquit a guilty man) then it should be done to the false witness as he sought to have done to the defendant (or be punished as an accomplice).

That's all criminal justice is by the way. It is doing undo the criminal as he has done (or sought to do) to his neighbor. It is the golden rule applied by the governing official to the criminal.

Clete

Which would be fine, of course, if the court system could be trusted. Death for perjury in a capital case would be very serious to someone who told the truth and then three people were bribed to testify he was not telling the truth. No lie detector is infallible, and death penalty cases should only exist for cases proven beyond all shadow of a doubt...not just one witness' sworn testimony.

That's why these calls for the death penalty for moral crimes are so beyond the pale.

There are those who are too quick to call for vengeance for offences that have no business being decided by the criminal justice system.
 
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