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WilT
Guest
I agree and well said commenter:aok:From the OP cited article:
“Bill Leonard, a specialist in American religious history at Wake Forest Divinity School, said church leaders should be especially concerned about parents. He noted that many evangelicals began to shift on divorce when the marriages of the sons and daughters of pastors and “rock-ribbed” local church members such as deacons started crumbling. While conservative Christians generally reject comparisons between the church’s response to divorce and to sexual orientation, Leonard argues the comparison is apt.”
I think the comparison is apt. Churches that surrendered and adopted the secular position on the divorce issue find it easier to adopt the secular position on homosexuality. In both cases, the surrender is justified by calling it “compassion”. But in both cases this false compassion causes people to get hurt. I have read other stories of Christian spouses and children who suffered, partly because their churches were accommodating to the secular view of “compassion”, rather than Scripture, on divorce. Those stories don’t get picked up by the mainstream media.
Homosexuality has some similarities to alcoholism. Both may have some genetic and social causes. Christians have sometimes been cruel or unfair to both. There have always been some who were formerly acting out their homosexuality or alcoholism, who later reduced this activity, or stopped it totally. For alcoholics and homosexuals, the churches have sometimes been a help for those who wished to stop that activity, just as the churches have historically advocated for the spouse and children, in families where divorce is threatened. It sounds like evangelicals are not only walking away from conversion therapy, but perhaps from conversion itself.