Bryan Fischer
A homosexual in the White House must be unthinkable
FacebookTwitter
By Bryan Fischer
May 22, 2019

Follow me on Twitter: @BryanJFischer, on Facebook at "Focal Point"
Host of "Focal Point" on American Family Radio, 1:05 pm CT, M-F www.afr.net

Americans who love America cannot afford to put an unapologetic and unrepentant homosexual in the White House.

The stakes are far too high to make a mistake of this magnitude. Christians who express this point of view must be prepared to endure a withering blast of hatred and Christo-phobia. But endure it we must. We will need to hold firm against the onslaught in conversations with our families, our friends, our neighbors, the folks in our churches, and the editors of our local newspapers.

To fold on this issue, and support such a candidate out of misguided notions of tolerance and kindness, would be suicidal for our culture. We certainly can and should love homosexuals, of course. But there are plenty of people I know and love who should never become president of the United States. You can love someone without thinking that he ought to be the leader of the free world.

So how do we make a reasoned case for our view in conversation?

First, ask your friend if a president should be a role model for the nation. Should he be, if possible, someone whose life and character is worthy of imitation? Most people will say "Yes."

Our regressive friends on the left are consumed with outrage that an adulterer now sits in the White House. But we should point out kindly but firmly that if somebody makes that point, they have made our argument for us. By their own admission, they are agreeing with us that what a would-be president does in his private life does matter and is a valid concern for voters.

We're at an odd place in our culture right now in which the very same people who are blasting the president for sordid sexual conduct 12 years ago are lionizing and swooning over someone who is engaging in sordid sexual conduct repeatedly and proudly today.

And while adultery is sexually deviant – because it deviates from the Creator's design for human sexuality – homosexuality is just as if not more deviant, since it puts body parts to sexual uses never intended by nature or Nature's God.

We also should gently but firmly point out that homosexual sex is far riskier to human health than heterosexual sex. According to the CDC – not a part of the vast, right-wing conspiracy – 65% of all the males who have ever contracted HIV/AIDS in the history of the epidemic contracted it through having sex with other males. Another 25% got it through injection drug abuse. Thus it is clear that homosexuality is a greater and more manifest threat to human health even than injection drug abuse, which everyone admits is a huge public health problem.

It would be a relevant question to ask my neighbor, if he is pushing back on this, whether he thinks it would be something to celebrate if we had a candidate for president who was repeatedly, unapologetically, and proudly injecting himself with heroin, cocaine, or methamphetamine. Would he have any reservations about this kind of a role model in the White House?

In his compelling article in The Stream, Robert Oscar Lopez – who came out of the homosexual lifestyle and is now happily and heterosexually married – says our stand against the the tyranny of the Gay Gestapo is "our last stand." If we lose this battle, it will "be the end of freedom for Christians in America."

Lopez says that when he came out of darkness into light and began speaking out on the issue, his main problem was that he was "too scared to speak the truth." And he discovered that the church was too. To keep people from thinking they were mean, even Christian leaders kept trying to nuance the issue and talk about everything but what actually happens when two males engage in the act of sodomy.

The ugly truth Lopez says no one wanted to talk about is the "brutally physical" truth that "gay sex is horrible,... unseemly and unfulfilling." In gay sex, "you get all the disease, shame, misery, alienation, embarrassment, pain, filth...and self-doubt; but you get no spontaneity."

He adds this powerful paragraph:
    We should never tell people that it is normal. We should respond to any homosexual propaganda with our free speech making clear that it is wrong. And we should support laws that discourage homosexuality even if we do not impose penalties on people who engage in it. We should not expose children to it. In fact, we should teach children that it is bad for them. We should help anyone [who] falls into homosexual thought or conduct to get away from it. Because nobody is homosexual and homosexuality is not natural. Heterosexuality is a good thing that everyone should pursue.
Society has for thousands and thousands of years forbidden homosexual intercourse, says Lopez, "precisely because gay sex requires at least one party to be damaged and humiliated by sodomy in real time."

Is that what we want in the White House? I don't think so.

© Bryan Fischer

 

The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
(See RenewAmerica's publishing standards.)

 

Stephen Stone
HAPPY EASTER: A message to all who love our country and want to help save it

Stephen Stone
The most egregious lies Evan McMullin and the media have told about Sen. Mike Lee

Siena Hoefling
Protect the Children: Update with VIDEO

Stephen Stone
FLASHBACK to 2020: Dems' fake claim that Trump and Utah congressional hopeful Burgess Owens want 'renewed nuclear testing' blows up when examined

Pete Riehm
Our fallen fought not just for freedom but truth

Linda Kimball
Christendom and Protestant America’s apostasy into paganism: A timeline

Jim Wagner
Why the Left loves Allah

Randy Engel
A Documentary: Opus Dei and the Knights of Columbus – The anatomy of a takeover bid, Part V

Peter Lemiska
For Democrats, justice is a one-way street

Rev. Mark H. Creech
Billy Graham’s statue in the Capitol: What does it mean for the country?

Linda Goudsmit
CHAPTER 19: From sex education to sexuality education

Cliff Kincaid
Press Conference on America's 'Reefer Madness'

Jerry Newcombe
Throwing Israel under the bus

Pete Riehm
Leftist accusations are latent confessions

Tom DeWeese
City of 'yes, I want to be a slave'

Curtis Dahlgren
The year the tree trimmer gave the commencement address at Yale
  More columns

Cartoons


Click for full cartoon
More cartoons

Columnists

Matt C. Abbott
Chris Adamo
Russ J. Alan
Bonnie Alba
Chuck Baldwin
Kevin J. Banet
J. Matt Barber
Fr. Tom Bartolomeo
. . .
[See more]

Sister sites