Yesterday, to no one’s surprise, President Obama revealed in an interview
that after some “evolution” he has “concluded that for me personally it
is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same sex
couples should be able to get married.” This after the Vice-President
came out last Sunday strongly in favor of gay marriage. Not
coincidentally, the New York Times ran an article
on Tuesday (an election day with a marriage amendment on one ballot)
about how popular and not controversial gay television characters have
become. In other words, everyone else has grown up so why don’t you? It
can seem like the whole world is having a gay old time, with
conservative Christians the only ones refusing to party.
The temptation, then, is for Christians go silent and give up the
marriage fight: “It’s no use staying in this battle,” we think to
ourselves. “We don’t have to change our personal position. We’ll keep
speaking the truth and upholding the Bible in our churches, but getting
worked up over gay marriage in the public square is counter productive.
It’s a waste of time. It makes us look bad. It ruins our witness. And
we’ve already lost. Time to throw in the towel.” I understand that
temptation. It is an easier way. But I do not think it is the right way,
the God glorifying way, or the way of love.
Here are five reasons Christians should continue to publicly and
winsomely oppose bestowing the term and institution of marriage upon
same-sex couples:
1. Every time the issue of gay marriage has been put to a vote by the
people, the people have voted to uphold traditional marriage. Even in
California. In fact, the amendment passed in North Carolina on Tuesday
by a wider margin (61-39) than a similar measure passed six years ago in
Virginia (57-42). The amendment passed in North Carolina, a swing state
Obama carried in 2008, by 22 percentage points. We should not think
that gay marriage in all the land is a foregone conclusion. To date 30
states have constitutionally defined marriage as between a man and a
woman. Continue at Kevin DeYoung
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