Thank you for sharing your research concerning a topic about which you obviously care very deeply, all the while knowing that unnecessary personal insult and disdain would result for doing so. It is sad that the church has too often responded out of hate to these issues instead of with love. So, in love, I ask you to consider the following carefully.
In post #21 of this thread, you quote Lev 18:22: “Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination.” It is true that this is a law of the old covenant, and, as you rightly state, “Leviticus chapter 18 must be seen in its full context.”
While you list some other verses in the chapter, vv. 24-25 weren’t mentioned. Here they are in the ERV: “Defile not ye yourselves in any of these things: for
in all these the nations are defiled which I cast out from before you: And the land is defiled: therefore I do visit the iniquity thereof upon it, and the land vomiteth out her inhabitants.”
I first heard the following point, based on the above verses, made by Mike Winger at the beginning of the video at the end of this post. As he correctly conveys, the “nations” in v. 24 were not under the Law of Moses, yet their actions, committed before the Law of Moses was given, defiled the land. God therefore caused the land to vomit them out.
The behavior addressed in v. 22, of course, is one of those ways the nations defiled the land and incurred God’s wrath. As is clear from vv. 27-28, if Israel committed those same sins that are being listed in Leviticus 18, they, too, would defile the land and be vomited out of it.
In short, it is no different today concerning these sins than it was before the Law of Moses was given. It is clear, for instance, that Leviticus 18 factored into the Acts 15 decision reached by the Holy Spirit and the elders in Jerusalem for the Gentile converts to abstain from sexual immorality. James’s statement in v. 21 of Acts 15 regarding Moses being read in the synagogues is why Leviticus 18 is in view, as Leviticus is one of the five books of Moses, and therefore indicates how sexual immorality is to be defined.
It is also no surprise that Leviticus 18:6-8 is Paul’s basis for determining that a man who had his father’s wife was guilty of sexual immorality. He therefore judges in 1 Corinthians 5 that the man be handed over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh and reprimands the church for associating with someone who is called a brother while being sexually immoral.
As for the reasoning that God outlawed the behaviors of Lev. 18:22-23 because of idolatrous practices as you have also proposed in post #21, this, too, is problematic. Can one then say, for example, that sex with goats is permissible outside of a religious context? The imposition of idolatry on vv. 22-23 because they follow immediately after a verse that mentions a false god is simply an attempt to limit the text to religious rituals and disregard the plain understanding of what is written.
I want you to know that I have prayed for you. I hope you take up Jesus’ offer in Luke 9:23: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.” He is our only hope to have peace with God (Romans 5:1).
Mike Winger has an abundance of material to help people engaging in sexual behavior with members of the same sex. I encourage you to devote yourself to those resources and perhaps contact him with subsequent questions. Here’s a link for you to begin exploring more of his content.
https://biblethinker.org/homosexuality/
Hello Eternal Fire, I'll reply to several of your points by using the Scriptures themselves as best I can, and then demonstrate that this is NOT some LGBTQ modern theology.
You wrote:
"As he correctly conveys, the “nations” in v. 24 were not under the Law of Moses, yet their actions, committed before the Law of Moses was given, defiled the land. God therefore caused the land to vomit them out."
My answer is that God's law existed prior to Moses and most of the Ten Commandments can be seen or alluded to prior to the Law of Moses.
You wrote:
"It is clear, for instance, that Leviticus 18 factored into the Acts 15 decision reached by the Holy Spirit and the elders in Jerusalem for the Gentile converts to abstain from sexual immorality. James’s statement in v. 21 of Acts 15 regarding Moses being read in the synagogues is why Leviticus 18 is in view, as Leviticus is one of the five books of Moses, and therefore indicates how sexual immorality is to be defined."
But the passage reads in full:
"but that we write unto them, that they abstain from the pollutions of idols, and from fornication, and from what is strangled, and from blood. For Moses from generations of old hath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogues every sabbath." (Acts 15:20-21, ERV)
First, I note your use of the phrase "sexual immorality", which is totally meaningless as to God's word even if it is found in many modern translations! Once you make a general statement like that, "sexual immorality" is whatever anyone wishes to say it is. Maybe "sexual immorality" to some is any sexual action between man and wife other than the union of female genitalia to male genitalia for procreation; and any other sex between man and wife is "sexual immorality". I'll stay with the older translations, "fornication", and when used in the Bible about sexual sin it refers to male to female sin outside of biblical marriage.
Second, the phrase "what is strangled, and from blood" refers back to the ceremonial law: "And whatsoever man there be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among them, which taketh in hunting any beast or fowl that may be eaten; he shall pour out the blood thereof, and cover it with dust." (Lev 17:13, ERV) Gentile believers were NEVER under the Law of Moses, and specifically NOT put under that law because the law on unclean foods, etc. are done away with, as with ALL the Law of Moses annulled and abolished at the cross.
This instruction to the Gentile believers is in the same frame of thought as written: "It is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby thy brother stumbleth." (Rom 14:21, ERV) When Paul mentions that Moses is preached in the synagogues every Sabbath; he is telling the Judaizers, that if they wish to continue in salvation by works of law, there it is in the synagogues, go to it.
You wrote:
"It is also no surprise that Leviticus 18:6-8 is Paul’s basis for determining that a man who had his father’s wife was guilty of sexual immorality."
My reply is that you have again used the useless and indefinite meaning phrase "sexual immorality". The passage reads properly:
"It is actually reported that there is fornication among you, and such fornication as is not even among the Gentiles, that one of you hath his father's wife." (1Cor 5:1, ERV)
Paul states that not even the Gentiles take their father's wife to commit fornication, so he is not referring back to Leviticus.
You have written:
"As for the reasoning that God outlawed the behaviors of Lev. 18:22-23 because of idolatrous practices as you have also proposed in post #21, this, too, is problematic. Can one then say, for example, that sex with goats is permissible outside of a religious context? The imposition of idolatry on vv. 22-23 because they follow immediately after a verse that mentions a false god is simply an attempt to limit the text to religious rituals and disregard the plain understanding of what is written."
My answer is that you must compare Scripture to Scripture and notice the Hebrew words used, as follows:
"Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination"(H8441 תּוֹעֵבַה tow`ebah). (Lev 18:22, ERV)
*
The Hebrew word associated with religious ritual is used here, tow ebah.
"And thou shalt not lie with any beast to defile thyself therewith: neither shall any woman stand before a beast, to lie down thereto: it is confusion(H8397 תֶּבֶל tebel)." (Lev 18:23, ERV)
*
A completely different word Hebrew and English is used here: tebel, rendered confusion.
Also, sex with beasts is condemned elsewhere outside of a religious ritual context:
"Cursed(H779 אָרַר 'arar) be he that lieth with any manner of beast. And all the people shall say, Amen." (Deut 27:21, ERV)
This is NOT some LGBTQ revisionist theology because in the Tyndale Old Testament Commentary series, Leviticus, by Professor R. K. Harrison, the commentary on v22 reads:
"The regulations of Leviticus condemn certain aberrations found among the Egyptians and Canaanites, who went far towards deifying sexual activity, and assigned the title 'holy ones' to cultic prostitutes. Sacro-homosexual practices and female prostitution within the context of the cultus was probably well established throughout the ancient Near East long before the Israelites occupied Canaan. Homosexuality of a non-religious variety is poorly documented in Mesopotamian texts..." page 191
Dr. Harrison is surely NOT LGBTQ friendly for on the last page of the commentary he states: "
On the last page of the commentary, page 252 he states: "For a person to think of himself or herself as a 'Christian homosexual' or a 'Christian lesbian' is a complete contradiction in terms..."