Christian Ethics and Homosexuality: Theology and Church Practice

This entry is part 5 of 5 in the series Christian Ethics and Homosexuality

In the last three entries in this series, I examined what Scripture has to say about homosexual behavior, and concluded that: 1) the Old Testament forbids all homosexual behavior among God’s people, 2) we have no reason at all to think that Jesus would have been in favor of modifying this Old Testament teaching, and … Read more

Christian Ethics and Homosexuality: The Teachings of Paul

This entry is part 4 of 5 in the series Christian Ethics and Homosexuality

The majority of Christians who believe that the Church should approve of homosexual behavior acknowledge that the apostle Paul teaches the homosexual behavior is wrong; they argue that, for other biblical and theological reasons, the Church should now approve of homosexual behavior in spite of this.[1]See, for example “Homosexuality and the Bible” by William Loader, … Read more

Christian Ethics and Homosexuality: Clarifying the Issue

This entry is part 1 of 5 in the series Christian Ethics and Homosexuality

In recent years, the ethical status of homosexuality has become one of the most controversial theological issues in the Western Church.  In spite of the Church’s longstanding traditional teaching that homosexual behavior[1]Some advocates of traditional Christian sexual ethics prefer to use the terminology of saying that “homogenital acts” are sinful.  This is because “sexuality” encompasses … Read more

In Christ Alone: A Christian Understanding of Personal Identity

In my last post, I critiqued the common American cultural phenomenon of people defining their personal identity in terms of the feelings and desires that they happen to have inside of them.  Unfortunately, this phenomenon is not restricted to non-Christians in our culture.  Many American Christians have to a significant extent absorbed the idea that … Read more

The Value of Singleness

I once had the following conversation at church.  A fellow church member walked up to me and asked, “So, are you still single?”  I responded yes.  Then he walked away. This conversation exemplifies the attitude of most contemporary American Protestant churches to singleness.  Singleness is a problem to be solved.  If someone remains single for … Read more

Gluttony, Envy, Consumerism, and Contentment

This entry is part 5 of 6 in the series The Seven Deadly Sins

Gluttony When most people hear the word “gluttony,” they define it as overeating.  Very often, this is associated in people’s minds with a person’s weight, such that we may assume that people who are overweight are guilty of gluttony, while people who are not overweight are not guilty of it.  However, this is an overly … Read more

The Sin of Anger and the Virtue of Righteous Indignation

This entry is part 3 of 6 in the series The Seven Deadly Sins

As recent events have shown, American society is full of anger.  Election seasons have been full of angry rants, diatribes, and protests.  Anger over racial injustice and election results have led to angry, violent protests.  Many Americans on either side of the “culture wars” display extreme rage over the fact that anyone disagrees with them … Read more

Greed, American Affluence, and Christian Simplicity

This entry is part 2 of 6 in the series The Seven Deadly Sins

I would venture to say that greed has become the most socially accepted sin among modern Western Christians.  American Christians committed to the Authority of Scripture spend a lot of time pointing out how American culture (and theologically liberal Christians) teaches a radically different sexual ethic than biblical sexual ethics, but spend relatively little time … Read more

Pride, “Self-Esteem”, and Christian Humility

This entry is part 1 of 6 in the series The Seven Deadly Sins

Pride and Self-Esteem When I was in grade school, we sang a song in music class with the lyrics, “I am proud of who I am, proud of what I am, proud of where I’m going, proud of what I’m doing.  My life is my life; I have the power to be.”  The purpose of … Read more

Why War is Incompatible with Christian Ethics

This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series Christian Ethics and Violence

Previously, I have briefly made the case for Christian pacifism.  I have also responded to some of the most common theological objections to Christian pacifism.  Here, I will examine the logic of Christian just war theory and show why it is deeply problematic. Just War and Christian Love According to Christian just war theory, it … Read more