I was recently in Charlotte NC, went for an
afternoon walk and stumbled into an area where a gay pride rally was being
held.
It was a multi-layered experience.
City streets were blocked and police were on
hand to help manage the mostly young crowd. There was a lively, earthy and
good-natured feel to the event. People were enjoying themselves.
At every turn there were people whose dress,
chosen companion and behaviour revealed their sexual orientation. I’ve seen
this before on a smaller scale and don’t find it especially disturbing.
There were booths from some churches
proclaiming endorsement of the GLBT community. These were not just the
Metropolitan Community church, but also an Episcopalian and a Presbyterian
Church. Other Christians were there with a Cross and proclaimed repentance,
faith and forgiveness. I admire their faithfulness and courage but wonder at
the effectiveness. Yet other ‘Christians’ stood in front of this group with
banners proclaiming GLBT support and citing the text ‘nothing shall separate us
from the love of God’, presumably as an endorsement of the gay community. I
take it that the church booths reflect knowing intentionality in their apostasy.
I guess that that some of the other ‘Christian’ voices were naïve, deluded and
ignorant.
For me, the most disturbing memory from the
day was the booths set up by businesses. Companies such as the Bank of America
and Norton software indicated their support for gay pride. These are not marginal
businesses, but corporate America.
Whoa ... what is going on here?
To me it was a sign that the gay community
is now mainstream. American business sees profits to be made and perhaps stands
intimidated by the gay community. The key business principle seems to be that
business is business.
The expected corollary is that Biblical
Christianity may be increasingly marginalised and then persecuted through legal
action for refusing the gay agenda. On the same day, I read a report that a
court in New Mexico ordered a Christian photography business to pay a penalty
for refusing to photograph a gay commitment ceremony. I guess that we can
expect more of the same.
Earlier on the same day I visited the Billy
Graham Museum. The welcome was warm and the exhibits well presented with the
latest available multimedia. The crowd was much older and subdued. There was an
air of artificiality about The Barn, starting with the fake talking cow and
ending with the Graham Brothers Dairy Bar selling the Billy Frank hot dog. I
know this is America, but I found the whole scene hard to stomach!
To me there is a huge disconnect between the
two scenes that day. The gay pride rally exalts in sin, but seems to represents
the future and is on the streets. The Graham Museum exalts in righteousness,
reflects the past and in housed in a fake barn amidst manicured surrounds.
For me as a Christian the day leaves many
questions.
* How to position a protective perimeter against
the expected wave of litigation?
* How to witness effectively at such events?
* How to maintain the
rounded balance of 1 Cor 6:9-11:
9 Or do you
not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God?
Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor
adulterers, nor men who practise homosexuality, nor
thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will
inherit the kingdom of God. 11 And such were some of you.
But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.
That’s a text applicable to every human
being and certainly starting with me. However, it also applies to the gay
community and to the corporations at the gay pride event.
2 comments:
Thanks David for sharing your experiences. I found both events you described to be quite disturbing.
In keeping with your post though, I think your premise is correct that societal acceptance of the gay agenda, or any other agenda for that matter, will be determined by whether there is a dollar to be made in it.
Yes indeed re both being disturbing.
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