Would You Go to Prison For Your Stance on Homosexuality?

What would you do if you received a letter from the authorities that said:

“If you continue preaching the gospel and attempting to convert people to Jesus Christ, you will be sentenced to prison for an indeterminate period of time”?

I know my response (or what I hope) my response would be. I would continue preaching until they followed through on their promise—and then I’d keep proclaiming Christ in prison. But what if I received a letter that said this:

“If you continue preaching that homosexuality is a sin and attempting to counsel those with a homosexual orientation to pursue celibacy and/or healing in Jesus Christ, you will be sentenced to prison for an indeterminate period of time”?

Could I never again preach what God says about homosexuality and still be faithful in preaching the gospel of Christ? I mean is it really something worth going to prison for—sacrificing my cherished freedom, life with my family, further gospel ministry? I see nothing about a stance on homosexuality in 1 Corinthians 15. I know that I could never say, “Homosexuality is not a sin” but could I simply say nothing?

Help from John Bunyan and Martin Luther

John Bunyan had only been married two years when he was carried off to prison. He left his wife with four children (none of them her own) and the grief of having just lost a newborn baby. He was in prison for twelve years. He could have left any moment if he would have promised not to preach. This was Bunyan’s response:

If nothing will do unless I make of my conscience a continual butchery and slaughtershop, unless putting out my own eyes, I commit to the blind to lead me, as I doubt not is desire by some, I have determined, the Almighty God being my help and shield, yet to suffer, if frail life might continue so long, even till the moss shall grow on mine eyebrows, rather than thus to violate my faith and principles.

He believed it was more valuable for him to stay in prison and suffer (and his family to suffer) than to make a “butchery” of his conscience or to violate his “faith and principles”. I tend to agree. So did Martin Luther:

If I profess with the loudest voice and clearest exposition every portion of the truth of God except precisely that little point which the world and the devil are at that moment attacking, I am not confessing Christ, however boldly I may be professing Christ. Where the battle rages, there the loyalty of the solider is proved, and to be steady on all the battlefield besides, is mere flight and disgrace if he flinches at that point.

Luther, Bunyan, and many others were able to see that some things which at first glance may seem adiaphora are actually part of the gospel. To refuse to name sin that which God calls sin is to sacrifice the word of God on the altar of political correctness. Such a rebellion is similar to heeding the voice of the serpent who cunningly asked, “did God really say…?”

My Answer

If your ministry is only about decrying the ills of society and the sinfulness of homosexuality you’ve likely missed the gospel. The point of battling for the right to name sin is waged only so we can point to the balm for that named sin. If we win the battle of naming sin but lose the battle of proclaiming the gospel then we’ve only made the devil dance to a different tune.

Yet, I am charged with preaching the whole counsel of God. Part of that means being truthful about what God says concerning homosexuality. If it really is true that homosexuality is sin then it means that this particular sin (like all others) aims to dethrone God and ruin people. Therefore, it must be battled with all the power of the gospel.

If the battle to see sinners (of all stripes) drop their idolatries and bow a knee to Jesus happens to lead me to prison then to prison I shall go. (Lord keep me faithful!)

What say you?

4 Comments

  1. I wouldn’t worry about a temporal prison.

    What we need to worry about is if a stance on ANYTHING leads us into hatred and cruel harassment of others . . . you only have to look at Westboro to see where we can end up if we allow Satan to take us down that road.

    There is a concern that some Christian people have chosen certain sins to be MORE strident about, to the neglect of their own sins and other sins more ‘accepted’ in their faith community . . . the problem with that is that it harms the witness of the whole Church tremendously. Why? The sins chosen out are more controversial, but no greater than the sins harbored in the community but not discussed and pointed to ‘as sin’ . . . that seem hypocritical to those watching the ‘show’ of self-righteousness, and turns them away from listening to the Church.

    Preach Christ Crucified . . . that takes ALL sin into consideration and places it in true perspective in the Holy Gospel of Our Lord:

    “This thought should keep us humble:
    We are sinners, but we do not know how great. He alone knows Who died for our sins.

    (John Henry Newman )

  2. I have to agree with Christiane, We don’t have to accept homosexuality, on the other hand we are all sinners and need to teach and preach Gods word to ALL. And she is right when she says non believers are ” watching the show” it is VERY hypocritical, and no one….no one accepts the views of a self-righteousnes person. The price for sin is the same weather you tell a lie or kill another human being, the price is death …of which we are ALL guilty ! W Dean Shook wdeanshook.com

  3. Mike wrote, “Yet, I am charged with preaching the whole counsel of God. Part of that means being truthful about what God says concerning homosexuality,” thus making it very clear that this is only one part of the entire counsel of God. Praying for you to remain faithful to that charge, brother, and (although I am not a preacher) asking the same for me. 1 Peter 2:18-25

  4. Excellent post brother! A good word for us all. For those feel that we ought not focus too much on specific sins, it interesting to note that John the Baptist focussed on the fact that it was wrong for a man to have his brother’s wife (which kept him in prison and cost him his head), that Paul (while in prison) was sent for to speak about faith in Christ and that during his discourse he “reasoned about righteousness and self-control and the coming judgment” which sounds like focussing on sin and morality specifically. I think we’ve become too fearful of offending non-Christians by what we’ve deemed not the main issue (particular sins). But I also think we’ve parted company with the history of God’s spokesmen by doing so. Preachers of righteousness will preach against sin and not always as an ambiguous concept that is just something that everyone does. And if matters little if we offend or don’t offend because there will be no response of faith unless it’s given by the Holy Spirit. We’re not truly hardening or softening anyone’s heart by our words – God is.

Comments are closed.