In the paper Saturday was
quite an interesting article by Sarah Boesveld[i]. It points out that the CRA is being
campaigned on to revoke the charitable status of a number of Christian
charities. Why? Because they specifically work with gays and
lesbians in efforts to curb such behavior.
According to NDP Randall Garrison, the work of Living Waters Canada,
Exodus Global Alliance, Courage and other like minded, “Christ-centered
discipleship ministry that deals specifically with relational and sexual
brokenness” is nothing more than ‘conversion therapy’. The NDP is greatly encouraged by the fact
that this practice has just been outlawed by California. According to California’s governor Jerry
Brown, conversion therapy (practiced by people that claim homosexuality can be
overcome by the grace of God), “[have] no basis in science or medicine and they
will now be relegated to the dustbin of quackery”.
I must agree that it is
certainly true that such therapy has no basis in science or medicine. It is a spiritual work against a spiritual
problem, and will probably never be understood by any secular
practitioner. Nor will it be successful
if the person so engaged in such “therapy” is unwilling to admit and face the
spiritual aspect of such behavior.
Indeed, Sarah quotes Kevin Schultz, who sought help 10 years earlier and
only attended 3 “therapy sessions” as saying, “You keep being told, ‘You’re
broken, you’re broken, you’re broken’…like how long can you hear that and feel
like a normal human being?” Kevin
subsequently divorced his wife and married another man. How
does the church feel about that? HDM
Spence (Dean Of Gloucester at the time)
wrote, “Men have been found to sacrifice their best and dearest
interests for the sake of some low lust, some evil propensity, or some sinful
habit.” Course - that was in 1909 when
it was still OK to call it sin.
I expect that the popular
media will not make much of this story, and the pressure on the CRA to delist
Christian ministry focused on helping people escape what the Scripture calls “besetting
sin” (behavior that God speaks against that you have a very difficult time
escaping) will only increase in the background.
How long will it be till they recognize that the Church (not just
evangelical, but all protestant and all Catholic too) actively encourages
people to repent from a host of things that our society believes are perfectly
fine? Will a church loose its charitable
status if they speak against porn, or gambling?
Both are culturally acceptable (indeed - even culturally encouraged)
behaviors that the Scripture denounces.
Will it soon be a crime to discern between greed and ambition?
What we are witnessing is
what I would call, “culture creep”. Not
just the seeping of a mainstream worldview into the culture of the whole
society, but the mandated enforcement of that culture to all. What used to be attacks on Christian identity
and practice by fringe elements of society became attacks on Christian identity
and practice by the leftist media and is now becoming attacks on Christian
identity and practice by members of parliament and the courts.
Jerry Brown might take some
satisfaction that his government has just criminalized conversion therapy, but
I think the only crime committed here was calling a spiritual effort a therapy
to start with. Therapy is a secular
work, not a spiritual work. The church,
and all Christian charity, ought to be clearly engaged in spiritual work and
ought to rightly call it that. Then the
error of engaging those who do not want to be so confronted can be avoided
altogether. Of course, that would mean
that only a few will sign up. Besetting
sin being such a friend of secularism, after all.
[i]
“You keep being told you’re broke’ – article by Sarah Boesveld in the National
Post, Sat Oct 6th, page A5
ReplyDeleteAt the Recalibrate conference last month in Chicago, Patrick Johnston pointed out that there will soon be only three dominate cultures in our world – Islam, Secularism and Christianity. All the other cultures of the world are on the decline. In North America and most of Europe, secularism is on a significant rise and Christianity is on the decline (but soaring in Asia and Africa). Secularism here in Canada already mandates that you cannot protest against abortion, that you cannot call homosexuality deviant behavior and that you cannot call alcoholism anything except a disease. What does that look like in the end? Just look at how Islamic countries deal with even the smallest perceived offense to their culture.