Barefoot in the wilderness
in search of understanding

Does 'Christian' mean 'homophobe'?

I’m getting concerned about labels again. And this time it’s a big problem. What with the arguments within the Anglican church over gay priests and the rights of gay people in general, and protests from Christians in the UK against the new Sexual Orientation Regulations (which forbid discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation), what face are we showing to the world? Is it really getting as bad as Ruth Gledhill is saying?

The whole SOR debate concerns me for a number of reasons.Tell anyone outside the Church that you’re a Christian these days, and they make one assumption about you. It is not that you are spiritual, or ascetically-minded, or dedicated to helping others, or opposed to the culture of consumerism. It is that you are a homophobe.

This worries me because I fear that she may be right. Does this incessant ranting from within the Church against gay people mean that the main impression the rest of the world has of us is simply that we’re “anti-gay”? It’s all too likely, because this stuff makes up such a huge proportion of what churches choose to campaign publically about. And yet there are so many more important things that we should be shouting about. Ruth Gledhill continues:

This year we are celebrating the bi-centenary of the abolition of the slave trade, a campaign led by evangelicals such as Clapham’s William Wilberforce. Would Wilberforce today be campaigning against the gays who go cruising for custom on Clapham Common? I suspect not. He would be campaigning still on behalf of the persecuted and oppressed – such as women forced into prostitution, or women stoned to death for adultery…
[Some] would take the line that in Christian doctrine, the practice of homosexuality is sinful. So is adultery by a heterosexual, gluttony, greed, envy, sloth. But there aren’t many Christians demanding that Christian restaurant owners be entitled to exemption from the principle that fat people be allowed to consume as many chips as they want with their dinner. Or that City workers who benefit from the annual bonus bonanza be forced to tithe. Further, not all Christians support traditional Christian doctrine on this matter, just as not all Catholics follow their Church’s teaching on birth control…
it is certainly the case that the regulations, when introduced to Britain as expected in April, should be framed in a way that they do not conflict with religious liberty. There is no harm in the churches campaigning on these grounds. But the regulations should not be opposed outright…“just as the followers of different faiths should be protected against unfair discrimination in the provision of goods and services, so too should people on account of their sexual orientation. It seems to be an unanswerable argument.”

I know that Christians genuinely disagree over whether homosexual practices are sinful or not. But I know of no theological reason (I have never heard a single one) to suggest that gay people per se are objectionable. That is, we have no justification at all as Christians to distinguish between people based purely on their sexual orientation. We have no mandate from God to single out gay people and treat them differently as a result – and every reason not to do so.

We, as Christians, must stop this objection to “gay rights” – we cannot with good conscience claim that gay people ought not to receive the same services from the Government and all other companies and organisations as straight people. And that’s all that the SORs are doing. Christians have always maintained that all human beings are created equal, and that “in Christ there is neither Jew nor Gentile, slave nor free, male nor female”. Today, we must surely add “neither gay nor straight”.

pax et bonum