1way:
Thanks for your post;
I asked if you would agree then to amend Cletes statement to the following:
Needs to be qualified and amended so that it reads. “All I can do is post on this web site and shun as many homosexuals (who claim to be believers) that I can."
You did not agree.
No. If a pro-homo, like perhaps the several here in this thread, is actively seeking God’s views on the matter of homosexuality and how Christians should respond to it, I would say that it is ok to stop shunning long enough to teach the truth because at that point, the issue is not one of promotion, but one of learning.
Stop shunning? Where do we have the biblical mandate to
start shunning anyone outside the church? Let me refresh your memory as to how this conversation arose. I disagreed with Cletes statement. You responded and pointed to 1 Corinthians 5:11. I pointed out this applied uniquely to believers, you agreed. That leaves you with no biblical precedent as of yet to make the claim that we should start shunning unbelieving homosexuals.
Next you claim:
Also part of the mix is that we are sharing our faith at the same time with many who are uncertain or who are not pro-homo, so we are not being hypocritical by addressing these issues and to some extent have been allowing pro-homo type arguments against our views. So it’s not simply an issue of pure personal rejection, otherwise discussions like this could never happen.
Pro-homo. If your applying this label to me, you have created yet another straw man argument.
Regarding Romans 12:9 you said:
So you say peace, and I think we may not agree as to what that idea means. The peace of God causes all kinds of unrest and even violent opposition from the wicked. We are responsible for not creating an unjustifiable offense, but if the righteous judgment against something wrong or bad creates a non-peaceful response, then the responder is the guilty party, not the righteous judge. It is he who is wise who will love you if you rebuke him. The impetus is more upon the proper response, not the delivery. A righteous rebuke has no need to be given in a non harsh or kind way. Yet along the scale of various way to expose an offense, nicer and kinder is a good preference, but is optional with rebuke. I hope that explains things.
It does explain things, it is also unbiblical.
Peter said that our apologetics are not to be without
gentleness and respect (1 Peter 3:15) and Galatians likewise reminds us to restore one another
gently (Galatians 6:1). When it comes to rebuke, kindness isn’t optional.
Now you said:
You quoted a question that brought me and Turbo into comparison and asked me if I understood the question. That was not the question I was answering, this is the first time I’ve seen that question.
Right, I hadn’t expected you to answer it before it was presented.
Much of your previous posts have been so filled with problems of misunderstanding that I stopped answering your post before I got to your similar question because I am getting sick and tired of working against so many misunderstandings.
Well, its possible that I am entirely culpable for
all of those misunderstandings. If you need to blame someone for the misunderstandings generated in our conversation, I’ll take the blame.
So, now that this is cleared up, let’s continue with the conversation, ok?
Now you start answer some of the questions I posted. BTW, thank you for answering these.
The Christian’s yet future judgment (that will happen come judgment day when the world and the angles will be judged) is to be proceeded “so much more so” with judgment of things in “this life”.
Now we are finally to substantive argument.
The verse you are alluding to is:
Do you not know that we will judge angels? How much more matters of this life? (1 Cor. 6:3).
Now this particular verse does not extend the scope of judgement outside of the church is simply makes a contrast between heavenly matters (Angels) and matters of this life. This verse is couched within the context of judging legal matters inside the church as apposed to going before a Roman magistrate for the arbitration of disputes. In going to Roman authority, the church was letting their petty disputes be settled according to the worlds unrighteous standards. If you are gong to appropriate this verse you should at least keep in the same scope that Paul did, judgment within the church.
So, we are still left with no mandate to judge those outside the church.
You argue this point in your following statement:
Also we have the correspondence of subjects on both halves of the immediate comparison. We should now live in accordance to the righteous judgment that the world is unworthy to judge us because of their ungodliness, but we should judge ourselves to be fully fit to judge amongst our selves. So 1Co 5-6 does not restrict judgment to only being within the brethren, it promotes righteous judgment for all.
Well, this passage, in and of itself, does not explicitly
restrict judgment to only being within the brethren, but it certainly does not go so far as to mandate or even permit that judgment be outside the brethren. Taken on its own,
its purpose was solely to promote judgment among the brethren instead of taking matters to the Roman courts,
and was silent concerning judging anything else. To appropriate the verse to substantiate judgment outside the brethren would be to ignore the context of the verse.
Regarding 1 Co. 11:31 you cite Strong’s and conclude.
Pretty interesting deal. This demonstrates glaringly loud that judgment is good and if done righteously can preclude future judgment of doing wrong.
What is also a pretty interesting deal is that this verse tells us to judge
ourselves. The object of the verb is reflexive. That means that we are to either judge ourselves individually or to judge amongst ourselves as believers, I would go with the former given the context. What this verse doesn’t say is that we should be judging the outside world.
Now lets recap.
So far you have provided us with:
1 Cor 11:31, which I have dealt with above.
1 Cor 5:11: I have shown that this verse applies to judging within the brethren only.
Proverbs 6:16: This has nothing to do with judging but rather was used as a billy-club to attack me for disagreeing with Clete.
Heb 12:23 Which describes God as Judge not us.
John 5:22 Which describes Christ as Judge not us.
1 Cor 6:2 which you side with Turbo as being at the consummation of all things. And verse 3 which I have shown applies to judgment within the church not outside.
1 Cor 2:15 which carries the word Judge in the connotation of appraisal (as the NAU translates it), not executing sentencing or punishments such as shunning.
John 7:24 Which I showed you carried the connotation of rightly holding an opinion in accordance with righteousness and not according to appearance and that this verse has nothing to do with executing punishment (shunning) on those in the outside world.
Finally the only other verse you have alluded to is
Romans 12:9 which doesn’t deal with judgment at all but rather is an admonition to abhor evil and cling to what is good.
So while you and Clete keep tag teaming this issue and patting each other on the back when you post, I don’t see
a single scripture that confirms Clete’s determination to:
shun as many homos as I come in contact with.
or your refusal to agree to my amendment of that statement, or your continued argument that his doing so is godly while the rest of us are ungodly pro-homos.
If you’ve got a scripture that confirms Clete’s statement and your defense of it, by all means post it, but contrary to your assertion that you “judge the world by the rest of the bible (which I do believe you desire to do),” you are nonetheless, as of this post, derelict in providing even one scripture that supports your conclusion.
I'll address the rest of your points in a subsequent post.
Grace and Peace