Does the Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look at What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions of Sexuality Book 1), by Grant Andrews, Malan van der Walt
Does The Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look At What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions Of Sexuality Book 1), By Grant Andrews, Malan Van Der Walt Actually, publication is truly a window to the world. Even lots of people might not like reading publications; guides will consistently give the exact info concerning truth, fiction, experience, adventure, politic, religion, and also much more. We are right here a web site that offers collections of publications more than the book shop. Why? We provide you bunches of numbers of link to get the book Does The Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look At What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions Of Sexuality Book 1), By Grant Andrews, Malan Van Der Walt On is as you need this Does The Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look At What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions Of Sexuality Book 1), By Grant Andrews, Malan Van Der Walt You can locate this publication quickly here.
Does the Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look at What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions of Sexuality Book 1), by Grant Andrews, Malan van der Walt
Read and Download Does the Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look at What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions of Sexuality Book 1), by Grant Andrews, Malan van der Walt
What does the Bible really say about homosexuality?
Is it a sin to be gay or to be in a same-sex relationship?
Many people struggle with reconciling religion and homosexuality. You might have a gay friend or family member, or be gay yourself, and not know what God would say about your sexuality. You might have been told that being gay is a terrible sin, and some verses from the Bible might even have been used to justify this claim.Find out which passages are said to refer to being gay and gay relationships
Being raised in Christian households, we were often told that the Bible condemns homosexuality. We struggled with these issues ourselves for a long time, and eventually decided to research the Bible ourselves and find out exactly what it says about homosexuality. All of the passages that are often used against homosexuality in the Bible are discussed in this book.Find ways to reconcile being gay and Christian
This short book is packed with information about how Biblical scholars and religious leaders have reconciled homosexuality and religion, including: - What Jesus had to say about homosexuality - Same-sex relationships in the Bible - How many churches are changing their stances and teachings about homosexualityAbout the authors
Grant Andrews is currently completing his PhD at the University of the Western Cape, with a focus on fatherhood and masculinities. He lectures in the English Department and has written extensively on self-actualization and self-exploration. Malan van der Walt is a student program coordinator at the University of Stellenbosch, working with young lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in order to promote HIV prevention and to advocate for equality. He is continuing his postgraduate studies in psychology with a focus on gender and sexuality. He conducts counselling sessions and runs support groups with young gay people.If you need a fresh perspective on your faith and sexuality, this book is for you.
Does the Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look at What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions of Sexuality Book 1), by Grant Andrews, Malan van der Walt- Published on: 2015-03-08
- Released on: 2015-03-08
- Format: Kindle eBook
Where to Download Does the Bible Condemn Gay People?: A Close Look at What Scripture Says About Homosexuality (Questions of Sexuality Book 1), by Grant Andrews, Malan van der Walt
Most helpful customer reviews
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful. I recommend this for all Christians By Joseph A. Washburn This is a very well written book. The authors did their research. I've been researching the same subject for several years. They reveal all the same things I've discovered in my research. The only problem is they mainly focus on gay men. Very little mention of lesbianism. This is probably due to the fact that this book is a shorter version of another book they wrote on how parents can accept their gay sons. I assume the authors were writing from their own experience, thus the focus on gay men. Of course the Bible only mentions lesbianism one time itself. What the authors have to say about gay men will apply equally to lesbians. I recommend this for all Christians. Hopefully more Christians will come to accept homosexuals in the love that Jesus intended as a result of reading this book.
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful. One-sided research with a one-sided conclusion By Nick Peters What do I think of Van Der Walt and Andrews's book published by Inspired Living? Let's plunge into the Deeper Waters and find out.To be fair, this is a very short book. So short you could read it in an hour in fact. While it's not meant to be exhaustive and I understand that, the work is highly insufficient for its claims and does not show much research on the part of its writers. You get the impression they came to the text wanting to find what they wanted to find and chose sources to make sure that that happened.With a look at the title, even a strong conservative can say no, it doesn't. What we can say is that it condemns homosexual activity. Once again, for the sake of argument, the Bible could be wrong in its condemnation of homosexual activity, but let us not be wrong in the fact that it does condemn it. At the start, you find the emotional heartstrings pulled with a quote like "We believe that a loving God would want a loving interpretation of His words which does not exclude anyone from any His message simply based on one aspect of their identity."That sounds good, but how far does it go? The use of simply there implies that sexual activity is a small thing. Should we say the same if someone considered adultery part of their identity? Would we say "A loving God would not want to exclude me based on one aspect of my identity. What if we found the same for sexual attraction to children, or relatives, or animals? Could I say it's part of my sexual identity to be attracted to multiple women so I should be allowed? Why would a loving God want to exclude this?Also, the writers say that they are not experts on religion, but have read widely and are presenting the work of experts. If you're not an expert though, then don't present an opinion on it in that way. A non-expert can have a hard time even knowing how to evaluate the material at times and their material is hardly representative. What do they use?They use the documentary "For The Bible Tells Me So." The description of this goes as follows:"Winner of the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Seattle Interntional Film Festival, Dan Karslake's provocative, entertaining documentary brilliantly reconciles homosexuality and Biblical scripture, and in the process reveals that Church-sanctioned anti-gay bias is based solely upon a significant (and often malicious) misinterpretation of the Bible. As the film notes, most Christians live their lives today without feeling obliged to kill anyone who works on the Sabbath or eats shrimp.Through the experience of five very normal, very Christian , very American families - including those of former House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt and Episcopalian Bishop Gene Robinson - we discover how insightful people of faith handle the realization of having a gay child. With commentary by such respected voices as Bishop Desmond Tutu, Harvard's Peter Gomes, Orthodox Rabbi Steve Greenberg and Reverend Jimmy Creech, For The Bible Tells Me So offers healing, clarity and understanding to anyone caught in the crosshairs of scripture and sexual identity.Next we have God and the Gay Christian written by Matthew Vines which is a leading popular work arguing that homosexuality and Christianity are perfectly compatible. The video is also included."The next work is "What The Bible Really Says About Homosexuality. It's description is"Helminiak, a Roman Catholic priest, has done careful reading in current biblical scholarship about homosexuality. While cautioning against viewing biblical teaching as "the last word on sexual ethics," he stresses the need for accurate understanding of what the biblical "facts" are and concludes that "the Bible supplies no real basis for the condemnation of homosexuality." Using the studies of Yale historian John Boswell (Same-Sex Unions in Premodern Europe, LJ 7/94), New Testament seminary professor L. William Countryman, and others, Helminiak examines the story of Sodom (where the sin was inhospitality), Jude's decrying sex with angels, and five texts-Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13, Romans 1:27, I Corinthians 6:9, and I Timothy 1:10-all of which, he concludes, "are concerned with something other than homogenital activity itself." Highly recommended for all libraries."We have next "The Bible's Yes to Same-Sex marriage: An Evangelical's Change of Heart, followed by The Bible and Homosexuality article on Wikipedia. Yes. Wikipedia. The obvious place we all go to for excellent research. Following that is the GayChristian 101 web site and Religious Tolerance.Now am I saying exclude these sources because they all argue for homosexuality? No, but let's consider this.Let's suppose you wanted to write and say you were not an expert on the age of the Earth, but you were reading the experts, and the only books and videos and such you cited were young-earth creationists. What if you were going to write a critique of evolution and you included only people who argued against evolution in your source? What if you were going to do a look at the question of theism and the only people you cited were Christian apologists specializing in theism vs. atheism? Not only that, not one person in this list is really a scholar in the field. There are in fact pro-homosexual NT scholars that could have been cited, but these authors do not do so and yet they expect us to think they have interviewed the experts.The authors also want us to keep in mind that the Bible was written thousands of years ago without the understanding that homosexuality was a legitimate widespread sexuality. Unfortunately, they do not demonstrate this. Is there any interaction with the Symposium of Plato where it is said some people's missing halves were of the same sex? Is there any interaction with Hubbard's work on homosexuality in ancient Greece and Rome? Not a peep of it. It had its defenders and detractors back then and even theories as to what causes homosexuality.When looking at Bible passages, completely ignored are passages like the creation narrative in Genesis 1 and 2 and the main thrust of Jesus's teachings in Matthew 19 is ignored. In fact, other passages are gone to, such as Jonathan and David supposedly having a gay relationship. Another one suggested is that Ruth and Naomi had one. (Apparently, incest isn't really a problem.) In fact, in looking at Matthew 19:9-12, we're told that the passage speaking about eunuchs is widely considered to refer to homosexuality. Who widely considers this? We're not told.Looking at the Levitical passages, we're told that most were only applicable to Jewish priests or Levites. We would be quite interested to find out that commands against bestiality and child sacrifice only applied to the Levites but were okay for everyone else. This also does not explain why the text specifically says the nations before were being driven out because they engaged in these practices, which were apparently only wrong for Levites. The writers then say there are many other aspects we don't follow. True enough, because these are not seen as part of the moral law, but that these other nations got excluded from the land for these practices tells us that these are different, as well as the fact that these passages prescribe the death penalty.For the Sodom and Gomorrah narrative, I could actually agree that the sin of Sodom is an inhospitality, but at the same time, their homosexual behavior is condemned and shown as a sign of how far they have fallen. When this is cited in Ezekiel 16, one can see that Ezekiel is citing the holiness code which includes the prohibitions of Leviticus and would include same-sex behavior.For 1 Cor. 6:9-11, we're told the words do not refer to homosexuals, but if they did not, then Paul had much better words to use. In fact, the latter word Arsenokoitai, comes from the Levitical passage on homosexuality and is combination of two words found there. One struggles to find a way that Paul could have been clearer.Romans 1 is of course the key passage and here we're told that unnatural could mean uncustomary, but the text does not permit that interpretation. Paul uses several terms such as creation, creator, male and female, etc. These are referring to the Genesis 1 and 2 narrative. If Paul wants to say idolatry is a horribly wrong twisting of reality on the vertical level to think that God can be reduced to animals and idols, then homosexuality is such an event on the horizontal level to take the natural usages of the male and female body and use them in ways they were not designed to be used. The writers tell us that Paul was not referring to loving gay relationships, but Paul would have known about such and we could just as well ask what Paul would say about loving incestual relationships or loving bestial relationships or loving polygamous relationships.In the end, this is a hideously weak look at an important topic and the sound of one hand clapping by ignoring the best scholarship on both sides in the field. Don't waste your time and while the book has been free on Kindle and could still be now, don't waste your storage space.In Christ,Nick Peters
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful. Breaking down verses By Alayna This book analyzes the five verses most used in defense of homophobia in churches. Several times, the authors actually look at the original wording to show that it's unlikely that the Bible even really mentions homosexuality, let alone condemns it. The authors also show a verse that may be Jesus understanding and accepting gay people.One draw back: the book focuses exclusively (and unnecessarily) on men, only mentioning gay women one time on the last page, despite the fact that all of these arguments stand for that group.
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