2016-09-05

I am tempted to say that this is the best podcast I have ever heard on the Unbelievable show. Do anything you have to do in order to listen to this podcast.

Details:

Prof Robert Gagnon has become a well-known voice advocating the traditional biblical view on sexuality. In a highly charged show he debates the scriptural issues on sexuality with Jayne Ozanne, the director of Accepting Evangelicals who came out as gay earlier this year.

The MP3 file is here.

If you can only listen for 15 minutes, then start at 49 minutes in and listen from there.

The following summary is rated MUP for made-up paraphrase. Reader discretion is advised.

Summary:

Intro:

Speaker introductions

Gagnon: scholars who support gay marriage agree that the Bible doesn’t support it

Gagnon: scholars who support gay marriage agree Jesus taught male-female marriage

Ozanne: I went to the hospital because I was sick from trying to suppress my gay desires

Ozanne: Doctors told me that I would die if I didn’t act on my gay desires

Ozanne: I decided to reinterpret the Bible to fit with my gay desires

Ozanne: According to my new interpretation, Jesus actually supports my gay desires

Segment 1: Genesis

Ozanne: In Genesis the Bible says that Adam needs a woman to complete him

Ozanne: I reinterpret this to mean that Adam needed a “complementarian human being”

Ozanne: Genesis doesn’t say whether Eve was complemented by Adam in that chapter

Ozanne: It’s not critical that men are complemented by women, a man could complement a man

Ozanne: Genesis 2 doesn’t talk about children, it’s all about adult needs from a relationship

Gagnon: Genesis 2 has never been interpreted that way in all of history

Gagnon: Genesis 2 language specifically implies a human being who is opposite/different

Gagnon: Genesis 2 language translates to complement or counterpart

Gagnon: Genesis as a whole teaches that the sexuality is for male and female natures

Gagnon: The extraction of something from the man that is given to the woman is complementarian

Ozanne: I think that people can be complementary outside of male-female Genesis language

Ozanne: I don’t want to discuss specific words and texts and Greek meanings

Gagnon: the text has always been read and interpreted to support male/female complementarity

Gagnon: the male-female nature argument is made because the two natures are complementary

Ozanne: the text was interpreted by patriarchal males who treated women like property, it’s biased

Ozanne: what is important to me is how Christ interprets Genesis (?? how does she know that?)

Ozanne: I am passionate about my interpretation of Scripture which supports my gay desires

Gagnon: just because a person is passionate about their interpretation it doesn’t make it right

Gagnon: I am not arguing for the male-female view based on passion, but on scholarship, evidence and history

Ozanne: both sides are equally passionate about their interpretations (?? so both are equally warranted?)

Ozanne: the real question is why God “allowed” two different interpretations of Scripture

Segment 2: Is homosexuality a sin?

Gagnon: Jesus affirmed traditional sexual morality, which forbids homosexuality

Gagnon: Jesus teaches that marriage is male-female, and limited to two people

Gagnon: No one in history has interpreted the Bible to say that homosexuality was not immoral

Ozanne: Jesus came to bring life, and that means he supports homosexuality

Ozanne: I was dying, and embracing my gay desires allowed me to live, so Jesus approves of me

Ozanne: God says “I am who I am” and that means he approves of me doing whatever I want

Ozanne: There is an imperative to be who I am, and that means embracing my gay desires

Gagnon: Jesus argued that the twoness of the sexual bond is based on the twoness of the sexes

Gagnon: Jesus did not come to gratify people’s innate desires, he called people to repent of sin

Gagnon: Jesus did reach out to sinners but he never condoned the sins they committed

Gagnon: Jesus’ outreach to tax collectors collecting too much and sexual sinners is the same: STOP SINNING

Ozanne: I don’t think that Romans 1 is talking about homosexuality

Ozanne: I think it’s talking about sexual addiction, not loving, committed gay relationships

Ozanne: Paul was condemning pederasty in Romans 1, not loving, long-term, consensual sexual relationships between gay adults

Gagnon: nothing in the passage limits the condemnation to pederasty

Gagnon: the passage was never interpreted to be limited to pederasty in history

Gagnon: rabbis and church fathers knew about committed two-adult same-sex relationships, and said they were wrong

Gagnon: the argument for marriage is based on the broad two-nature argument, with no exceptions

Gagnon: the condemnation is not limited to exploitative / coercive / lustful / uncommitted relationships

Gagnon: even pro-gay scholars agree the passage cannot be interpreted Ozanne’s way (he names two)

Segment 3: The showdown (49:00)

Ozanne: I don’t care how many pages people have written on this

Ozanne: God says that “the wisdom of the wise I will frustrate” so you can’t use scholars, even pro-gay scholars, to argue against my passionate interpretation

Ozanne: I am not interested in the text or history or scholarship or even pro-gay scholars who agree with you

Ozanne: what decides the issue for me is my mystical feelings about God’s love which makes my sexual desires moral

Ozanne: you are certain that this is wrong, but your view does not “give life” to people

Ozanne: your scholarship and historical analysis is “a message of death” that causes teenagers to commit suicide (= you are evil and a meany, Robert)

Ozanne: “I pray for you and your soul” (= opposing me will land you in Hell) and “I hope that listeners will listen with their hearts” (?? instead of their minds?)

Ozanne: you can prove anything you want with research, even two mutually exclusive conclusions, so you shouldn’t rely on scholarship and research since it could be used to prove my view as well

Ozanne: instead of relying on research, you should rely on your heart and your feelings about God’s love to decide what the Bible teaches about sexual morality

Gagnon: you are distorting the gospel in order to make your case

Gagnon: attacking my “certainty” is an ad hominem attack to cover your dismissmal of the scholarship and history

Gagnon: you distort the gospel to make it seem like Christ just wants us to get what we want, when we want it, with who we want it with

Gagnon: Christ calls us to take up our cross, to lose our lives and to deny ourselves

Gagnon: you have a notion of what “fullness of life” is, but it’s not reflective of the gospel

Gagnon: Paul’s life was much more troubling than yours, mine or anyone else around here

Gagnon: Paul was beaten, whipped, stoned, poorly sheltered, poorly clothed, poorly fed, shipwrecked, and anxious for his churches

Gagnon: on your view, he should have been miserable and angry with God all the time

Gagnon: but instead Paul was constantly thankful and rejoicing to be able to suffer with Jesus and look forward to the resurrection

Gagnon: I have suffered too, but the suffering we go through never provides us with a license to violate the commandments of God

Ozanne: “the ultimate thing is what people feel God has called them to”

Ozanne: My goal right now is to tell young people that homosexuality is fine so they don’t commit suicide

Ozanne: the view that homosexuality is wrong is “evil and misguided”

Gagnon: the greater rates of harm in the gay community are intrinsic to homosexual unions, not caused by external disapproval of homosexuality

Segment 4: Concluding statements

Gagnon: gay male relationships on average have more sex partners and more STDs

Gagnon: female relationships on average have shorter-length relationships and more mental issues

Gagnon: the greater rates of harm are because there is no complementarity / balance in the relationships

Gagnon: everyone has some disappointment or suffering in their lives that hurts them, and that they are tempted to break the rules to fix, but we should not break the rules in order to be happy

Ozanne: both sides are passionate, so no one can be right, and evidence proves nothing

Ozanne: only feelings about “what God is doing” can allow us to decide what counts as sin or not

Ozanne: the main thing that is at stake here is to make people like us, not to decide what the Bible says about sin

Ozanne: my message to people is to do whatever you want, and ignore mean people who don’t affirm you

Ozanne: we should be more opposed to mean people who make non-Christians feel unloved than about doing what the Bible says

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