Logo

How do so-called Religious/Christian people really think homosexuality is even a sin? That would be nonsense. In fact, LGBT people need love instead of contempt/hatred. The word Homosexual didn't appear until the 1850s.

Last Updated: 25.06.2025 03:23

How do so-called Religious/Christian people really think homosexuality is even a sin? That would be nonsense. In fact, LGBT people need love instead of contempt/hatred. The word Homosexual didn't appear until the 1850s.

And scripture does mention sexual acts that are “abominable” both in the Hebrew scripture and the new covenant.

Scripture calls it perversion. An abomination.

But lots of fleshy acts are the outworking of sin that dwells in people. You don't need to have a tick box list of “sins”.

“We’re Trapped in a Black Hole”: James Webb’s Latest Discovery Sparks Existential Panic Across the Global Scientific Community - Rude Baguette

Mankind is steeped in rebellion. Absolutely up to their necks in it.

Every opportunity the flesh gets it rebels against God. Every moment of every day. The flesh wars against the spirit because it's sold under sin.

Sin is the outworking of a spiritual disease that yields death.

Salmonella outbreak linked to California egg distributor sickens 79 people - NPR

Even to the point of justifying sin in front of a righteous and Holy God.

That which is not of faith is sin.

The scripture condemns sin in the flesh. All of it.

Why should the US public listen to Lauren Boebert, the queen of hypocrisy tell us, "We need morals back in our nation" when her real-time video is the heartbeat of immoral? Why does her audio not match her video?

Do you think God approves of bestiality? Sex with a dog? Do you think God applauds that?

The act is just the symptom of that spiritual disease.

If you think the Spirit of God approves of two men having sexual contact then you simply do not know the Spirit of God.

What is vibe coding? A computer scientist explains what it means to have AI write computer code − and what risks that can entail - The Conversation