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gardenswithkids
Guest
The specifics of what Hardaway said aside, this situation does *not *show that homosexuality is universally accepted, otherwise he wouldn’t have made any anti-gay comments in the first place. Rather I think it shows that at some guteral level, most people find homosexual activity unacceptable. That is why we don’t hear words like “sodomy” used in the discussion by the other side because they don’t want to draw attention to the actual acts that they say are okay. Down deep, most other members of our society still know sodomy is wrong, even if the comentators on CNN are to afraid to say it.I am watching CNN and basketball player Tim Hardaway made some anti-gay comments about the a gay player. …I don’t think the way he responded was loving, but I am amazed by how it seems univerally accepted that homosexuality is normal, and anyone who suggests otherwise is a bigotted fool…
No, we haven’t lost the culture war. I see you brought up Peter Kreeft in a later post. Have you read Kreeft’s book How to Win the Culture War ? Good book. First he advices us to recognize that there is a culture war–this isn’t just a “cultural debate” as the thread title called it. It is a war, and we don’t fight *against *homosexuals–we fight *for *them, because it is their very souls at stake, (to say nothing about their physical health, as sodomy harms the GI tract.)Have we lost the culture war? What are we to do?
What are we to do? The point I like best that Kreeft makes is simply stated, we should be saints. Not mousy, little, “nice” people–but saints. You know, the kind of people who speak the truth in love, even under threat of being called “intollerant” or “bigoted”. We must speaks and *live *in such a way that even the spiritually blind might see and the spiritually deaf might hear.