The American public believes that twenty-three percent of Americans are gay or lesbian,
according to Gallup. In fact, only 3.8 percent of the adult population identifies as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.
Why would the public be so wrong with regard to the size of the LGBT
population? Our perception has been shaped by a decades-long strategy to
normalize and then legalize same-sex relations and the LGBT agenda.
Today it's hard to find a movie or television show in which a homosexual
couple does not appear or the LGBT agenda is not lauded.
Now that this movement has been both normalized and legalized, we're in the third phase: criminalizing opposition.
In Sweden,
pastors can be fined for preaching sermons or even citing biblical texts deemed to be "anti-gay." A Christian preacher in the U.K.
was recently fined
for delivering "homophobic" sermons. Recent legislation in Canada
forbids statements deemed to incite "abhorrence" of gay people, even if
the speaker states demonstrable facts.
Commentators noted
that this legislation will stifle "strict religious conservatives" and
deny them "the same free-speech rights enjoyed by secular Canadians."
Now Canadian authorities are
preparing legislation
that would make anti-transgender "hate propaganda" punishable by up to
two years in prison. The ban would include any public speech or
communication that "promotes hatred" on the basis of "gender identity"
or "gender expression."
Could such criminalization come to the U.S.?
The mayor of Houston, Texas, made headlines in 2014 when her office
demanded that area pastors turn over all sermons dealing with
homosexuality or gender identity. She backed down after her actions
provoked a national public uproar.
Last year, the New York City Commission on Human Rights
issued a legal enforcement guideline.
It states that "failing to use an individual's preferred name or
pronoun" is a violation of the law. Businesses must call transgender
employees or customers by preferred newly created pronouns such as
"ze/hir" and must use whatever gender pronoun the person chooses.
Violations are punishable by fines up to $250,000.
I do not know if such efforts to criminalize "anti-gay" or
"anti-transgender" speech will escalate in this country. I do know that
pastors and all Christians should treat others with respect, even (and
especially) when we disagree with their actions.
But I also know that speaking the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15) often
comes at a price. Today it may be backlash against biblical truth on
marriage and gender. Tomorrow it may be prosecution on behalf of
polygamy or euthanasia.
It has always been true that "the natural person does not accept the
things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not
able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned" (1
Corinthians 2:14). The battle against truth and falsehood is ultimately a
spiritual conflict.
So stand for biblical truth with biblical grace and pray that the Spirit
who inspired God's word will use your words to change human hearts.
Richard Baxter: "Lord, whatever you want, wherever you want it, and
whenever you want it, that's what I want."
Is that what you want?
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