READERS RESPOND
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AT ISSUE: Readers disagree with Dr. Gary Barmore’s letter regarding gay
clubs on campus (“Acceptance of others is a Christian way,” Dec. 18).
There is much in this letter that is true to my understanding of the
Gospels: Jesus’ love for the outcast, his challenge to the sinful nature
of all hearts.
However, the writer’s interpretation of what the Apostle Paul said about
homosexuality is just not correct. It is important to take what is said
about the Bible and compare it with the words of the Bible. I’d invite us
all to study I Corinthians, Chapter 6 and Romans 1:8-32 and ponder what
Paul wrote. We should also study these scriptures in the context of the
whole Bible (a lifetime effort).
Gay activists have pushed the issue of homosexuality into the public
forum and thoughtful Christians now need to address the subject in order
to arrive at a biblically true response. I don’t agree that this is
“homophobic.” It is exercising Christian responsibility in the world.
LINDA MAGSTADT
Newport Beach
I have some serious problems with Dr. Gary Barmore’s letter. Our
Christian belief is not based on tolerance or accepting others -- it’s
based on loving others, and encouraging them into a relationship with
Jesus Christ as savior. Has Dr. Barmore read from I Corinthians 6, or
Romans 1 lately?
Those who joined Jesus in community repented of their sins and their
hearts were changed. God created Adam and Eve as man and wife. That
sounds like a heterosexual union to me. How does Dr. Barmore know that
“others were created naturally homosexual?”
There are some absolutes in the Christian faith.
JEFF MUMMA
Huntington Beach
At the risk of being labeled an “intolerant Christian fundamentalist,” I
feel I need to provide a different Christian perspective than that of Dr.
Gary Barmore.
Some people seem to feel that if you do not accept others’ behavior, you
are not modeling Jesus’ example of love. In contrast, however, I look at
Jesus’ handling of the situation with the adulterous woman about to be
stoned by the crowd (John 8:3-11). First he shows her love and kindness
by protecting her from the crowd, but he then tells her to “Go now and
leave your life of sin.” Is he simply being intolerant of a lifestyle
choice different than his own?
Dr. Barmore states that “The Apostle Paul simply asks that people not
exercise sexuality other than what is ‘natural’ for them.”
Unfortunately, Dr. Barmore does not provide us a specific reference, but
that would be a most unusual interpretation of Paul’s letters to the
churches in Rome and Corinth (Romans 1:26-27 and I Corinthians 6:9). The
Apostle Paul clearly speaks against homosexuality in both cases.
Like Dr. Barmore, I realize that many issues arising from intolerance
become flash points for hatred. No one should condone violence or acts of
hatred against another. But I also feel that it is a Christian’s
responsibility to take a stand against wrong, and not to try to interpret
scripture through the filter of today’s society. When a group is trying
to promote an agenda clearly contradictory to that stated in scripture,
Christians are being obedient, not intolerant, in standing up for what is
right.
ROBERT SNYDER
Costa Mesa
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