Hi and welcome.
mile:
I really hesitated answering your thread but the pull was just too great. I apologize ahead of time and say up front that I'm a non-Christian here to give you my 2 cents. I also apologize for my tone, I tried to edit it, I really did. I hope I don't offend you in any way. It's just I have a real problem with organized religions that claim to promote peace but instead make war.
First, those rules and laws that Xans love to run their mouths about to condemn homosexuality are part of Josiah's Holiness Code. And, they are taking them out of context. King Josiah was instilling religious reform. Jews were constantly battling the influence of Canaanite influences on their culture. The Assyrian fertility practices had made their way into Judaism. He wanted the Assyrian Temple prostitutes banned from the Jewish Temple (they actually had a special room, see 11 Kings 23:7). Men would go and masturbate in front of a statue of Baal or make a “deposit”
into the male or female priests/priestesses of Ishtar (or Asharah). It's no coincidence that the Assyrian word for “holy one” is
qadesh yet in ancient Hebrew the words
qadesh (m.)/
qdeshahu (f.) mean male/female temple prostitute/whore. So, yeah, the laws have nothing to do with homosexuality, but with temple prostitution. Why was this such a big deal? At that time, sex was needed to produce Hebrews; that small tribe needed to grow.
Also, the Hebrew words
to’ebhah or
to’ebah mean unholy, ritually unclean, not abomination. They are always used in the Tanakh, the Jewish Bible, to refer to IDOLATRY never morals. So, in context, they are being used to condemn idolatry, not a particular sex act. If Jews were referring to morals violation/something deemed sinful, they would use the word,
zimah. So, abomination is an incorrect translation in the King James and various Xan Bibles. But, it sounds better.
Secondly, I respect that you have your faith, but Catholicism/Christianity as you experience in Church is very far removed from the teachings of the man, Jesus. It's based more on the writings of Paul and early Church theologians and all the resulting dogma as they tried to take a Jewish guy and turn him into a universal “savior.” Paul was a self-loathing Hellenistic Jew who invented “Christ.” The book, Acts of the Apostles, is full of the first political struggles within your Church.
Jesus was a Jew and he wasn't a particularly good one. He really got on the nerves of the Pharisees because he was a kind of hippie/rebel. He was preaching love, Confucius's Golden Rule and not following the rules/traditions. Things like not keeping the Sabbath free from work/harvesting, encouraging people to pray in secret rather than in groups of 10 men and ignoring ritual hand washing before meals were some of the causes of the arguments he had with the Pharisees because he wasn't respecting the traditions. Tradition is a very big deal in Judaism. But, to some of the people of his day, he was charismatic and enticing. Encouraging people to have a personal relationship with God was pretty radical. You have a religion where the sacred name cannot be uttered, and this man is saying call God, Daddy. lol.
If you read your book, and really want to focus on the few things that scholars believe are attributable to the historical Jesus, then study the Lord's Prayer, the Sermon on the Mount, the parables and things like that. I think those are at the heart of the message of the itinerant preacher, Jesus.
I personally don't think Jesus was trying to start any new religion. He probably went into the desert (maybe smoked something funny :tongue: ) and had “a moment” of enlightenment where he wanted to get people to stop focusing so much on the letter of the law but instead, the heart of it. I don't think he was a bad guy, but I don't think he was in any way divine. I think he was wondering where God was in his religion, maybe all he saw were rules. He was just calling the Pharisees out. He was trying to make them use their hearts, instead of blindly following things the way they always were.
Think about the parable of the Good Samaritan. The Pharisee leaves the guy for dead so that he doesn't break the rule and become unclean. When laws and rules take precedent over the value of someone's life, something is wrong. Sound familiar???
So, what are you doing? Well, I think you are following in the tradition of this person you admire: Jesus. You are questioning laws and rules that don't make sense to you. What's wrong with using your head? What's wrong with using your heart? Maybe you are outgrowing your childhood religion and growing into something more meaningful. Maybe some gay guy or lesbian overheard you voicing your support and they felt a little stronger that day.
Thanks for being an ally. I sincerely appreciate it. I really want to get married one day.