
This argument assumes that Christians can maintain and safeguard
their own definition of marriage by refusing to impose a particular
viewpoint in the public square. Often with good intentions, some
Christians wish to privatize marriage into a strictly ecclesial
practice, treating it like we would the Lord's Supper or baptism.
But
therein lays the problem: The church's theology on marriage, while certainly ecclesial, isn't sectarian. Marriage leads one outside the
walls of the church and into the public square because marriage, by
design, reveals a certain cosmology about our essence as being made male
and female. Marriage has an innately public purpose by bringing
together the two halves of humanity. If you embrace man as man and woman
as woman, you might be on the losing end of a culture war over
marriage, but you'll be on the side of truth when the dust settles about
human nature. Continue at Andrew Walker
No comments:
Post a Comment