116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Sanchez: Where the preaching against homosexuality goes too far
The Gazette Opinion Staff
Dec. 21, 2009 11:11 pm
By Mary Sanchez
Mega-minister Rick Warren has become a reluctant actor in the most instructive morality play of his highly televised ministry.
In December, Warren had to smite the creature he had nourished and come forward to denounce efforts by Christian lawmakers in Uganda to impose draconian penalties on homosexuals.
Under the influence of Ugandan evangelical preachers, the country's parliament is considering a sinister step. Leaders are mulling over imposing the death penalty or life imprisonment for “aggravated homosexuality.” Another Ugandan proposal would jail anyone found to be “aiding and abetting” a homosexual. Presumably, that could mean a doctor who dares to treat gay patients infected with HIV could be locked up. Maybe so could a pastor who counsels a gay parishioner, or a family that accepts a gay child, instead of turning him over to authorities. Pink triangles, anyone? Warren's Saddleback Church in southern California has long had ties with conservative Christian pastors in Uganda. The mega-sized, mega-monied and mega-influential Saddleback operates a much-publicized ministry to the African nation's poor. Much like Warren, the Ugandan pastors preach that marriage exists only for heterosexuals, and that any type of sex outside of straight marriage is sinful. These messages have gained influence in recent years, and, with the help of American clergymen, Uganda has begun to lean more and more toward promoting abstinence in its continuing battle with HIV and AIDS.
One of the churchmen leading the anti-gay crusade in Uganda is Pastor Martin Ssempa, a man Warren has welcomed as a speaker at Saddleback. As part of his shtick, Ssempa likes to burn condoms and organize anti-homosexual parades to rile up the masses.
Rightly hounded by critics for remaining silent for so long on Ssempa's anti-gay activism, Warren taped a YouTube declaration calling the Ugandan proposals “unjust, extreme and un-Christian.” Is it fair to blame Warren for what fanatics do to homosexuals in Uganda, legally or otherwise, simply because he promotes the same scripture-based view of homosexuality as evil?
No, but it's worth asking whether there isn't something in that view that leads to treating gays and lesbians as somewhat lesser beings than heterosexuals. We're lucky here in the United States that our Constitution trumps the Book of Leviticus.
Warren and other conservatives can bemoan the idea of hate crime statutes protecting homosexuals; they can preach it is an abomination of God's wishes for cities and states to allow gays to marry and decry Gay Pride Days as displays of immorality.
Here, those views are counterbalanced by most Americans' acceptance of gay people. Denunciations of gay love from the pulpit are not going to devolve into legalized witch-hunts.
So often lately, conservative Christians childishly claim the pushback they feel is “anti-Christian.” Some assert their freedom to believe as they wish is being trampled. The truth is, with increasing regularity, they are simply chafing against societal shifts.
Here in America, one may find Warren's view of human nature and sexuality merely idiotic and annoying. In less secular - or should I say less enlightened? - climes, those views are downright dangerous.
n Comments:
msanchez@kcstar.com
Opinion content represents the viewpoint of the author or The Gazette editorial board. You can join the conversation by submitting a letter to the editor or guest column or by suggesting a topic for an editorial to editorial@thegazette.com

Daily Newsletters