“The Love We Dare Not Ignore”

My review of Justin Lee’s new book, Torn: Rescuing the Gospel from the Gays-vs.-Christians Debate, is up over at Christianity Today.

An excerpt:

Many of us evangelicals may believe that LGBTQ ("lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning") folks are far removed from our churches and ministries. Surely gays and lesbians are out there, somewhere else, not here in our discipleship small groups, or kneeling at the Communion rail beside us—are they? But if Lee, the God Boy of his high school who could quote John 3:16 in his sleep, is an example of what it means to be "gay," then yes, they are. They’re here in our churches, and they’re here to stay, forcing us to reconsider what it might mean to love our own spiritual siblings.

For me, this is where the real importance of Justin’s book lies. For quite a while now, evangelical Christians have been able to take for granted that "gay affirming" theology and pastoral practice is the preserve of liberal, mainline denominations. But what Justin’s book forces us to recognize is that many people inside the evangelical movement—who are otherwise very traditional in doctrine and practice—are experiencing a shift in their convictions about homosexuality. I don’t presume to know what this might mean for the future of evangelicalism, but I think it’s a significant point to observe.

I hope many people read Justin’s book. Despite my strong disagreements with it, I think it’s smart, thoughtful, charitable, and shows a remarkable commitment to take the Bible seriously.

4 thoughts on ““The Love We Dare Not Ignore”

  1. Speaking as one of those people who has experienced a shift in my convictions about homosexuality–thanks to having very many friends who are GLB–I am intrigued by this book and looking forward to reading it.

  2. Consider alone, someone can love Calvin’s Institutes and embrace penal substitutionary atonement, etc. etc. etc. and still not be truly born again. Do we really need to point to the most ‘religious’ people in the NT (Pharisees) as people who had tonnes of doctrine but still missed Christ as an example of how this can work out today? Having right theology doesn;t mean you cannot still miss Christ and rationalize sin.

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