In a very troubling video, Theodore Shoebat, son of former
Muslim Walid Shoebat, has claimed that if "sodomites" had walked into
the temple of Jerusalem, Jesus would have killed them.
This is absolutely outrageous, totally unscriptural and downright dangerous.
Mr. Shoebat, I urge you to repent.
To be perfectly clear, I agree with Theodore that
homosexual practice is detestable in God's sight (as stated plainly in
the Scriptures); I totally oppose same-sex "marriage"; and I firmly
believe that homosexual activism is the principle threat to our freedoms
of religion, speech, and conscience.
I also share Theodore's abhorrence of the abusive acts of
homosexual predators, just as I abhor the abusive acts of heterosexual
predators.
At the same time, I categorically reject his encouragement
of violent acts against homosexual men and women, and I renounce his
statement that Jesus would have killed homosexuals who walked into the
temple.
That is utter rubbish.
After referring to gays as "faggots," Theodore said on his
video, "When you have the sodomites coming out into the streets
[meaning, in a gay pride parade] and the Christians come and beat them
up, the people who are beating up the sodomites don't really get
punished because the society is so conditioned that way. ... If there's a
law written in the hearts of the people, then the people who are
fighting this evil, physically, with their hands, fighting them, beating
them up, those people are not going to get in trouble."
But, he added, "we don't have that in America."
So Theodore is telling us that it's a good thing when
"Christians" physically attack gays and lesbians who are marching down
the street in a gay pride event, in particular when these "Christians"
do it in a country that will not punish them. And the reason the country
will not punish them is because "there's a law written in the hearts of
the people," meaning, the law of God that detests homosexual practice.
Not only is this not supported anywhere in the New
Testament, which teaches us to overcome evil with good (see, for
example, Romans 12:17-21), but it is flatly against the law, since, as
much as we may oppose these gay demonstrations, we do not have the right
to take the law into our hands and attack homosexual men and women. And
if you have God's heart of love and you want to see them saved and
transformed, why would you want to beat them up?
The fact that Theodore laments our lack of anti-gay
violence is deplorable, and to the extent that he speaks these things as
a professing Christian, he hurts the cause of the gospel, brings
reproach to the name of Jesus, and blemishes the witness of 99 percent
of true Christians who reject his violent rhetoric.
In fact, after listening to Theodore's words, one can only
wonder if he would commend Yishai Schlissel, the ultra-Orthodox Jew who
stabbed six participants at a gay pride event in Jerusalem last year,
shortly after being released from prison for stabbing three participants
at a similar event in 2005.
Lest you think I'm exaggerating, consider what
Theodore said about Jesus Himself, referring to John 2:14-15: "In the
temple, He found the merchants selling oxen, sheep and doves; also the
moneychangers sitting there. Then He made a whip of cords and drove them
all out of the Temple, both the sheep and oxen. He dumped out the coins
of the moneychangers and overturned their tables" (TLV).
Theodore states, "Jesus Christ took up a whip and beat
people up in his Father's temple," adding, "Now imagine if sodomites
were in his Father's temple. Jesus would have killed them all. He
wouldn't just have hit them; Jesus got violent!"
First, the prophet Isaiah tells us explicitly that Jesus
did not get violent: "His grave was assigned with the wicked, yet with
the rich in his death, because he had done no violence, nor was any
deceit in his mouth" (Is. 53:9).
If Jesus had whipped people bloody, that would have been
violence. Instead, He overthrew tables and drove out the vendors, using a
whip on the cattle.
So, I'll take Isaiah's word for this rather than Theodore's.
But even if you want to claim that Jesus swung a whip at
people to drive them out of the Temple, it's more than a massive jump to
claim that "if sodomites were in His Father's temple, Jesus would have
killed them all."
Actually, there's a good chance that there were "sodomites"
in the temple—or, if not "sodomites," then others, like adulterers, who
also deserved the death penalty under Old Testament law. (Jeremiah
7:1-11, which underlies the gospel accounts of Jesus' cleansing of the
Temple, would suggest that, just as in Jeremiah's day, there were
adulterers, murderers and idolaters who hypocritically worshipped at the
temple in Jerusalem, and all of them were liable to the death penalty
at that time.)
Jesus, who knew what was in man (John 2:24-25), surely knew
that there were gross sinners in the temple courts. But He didn't kill
them; He died for them.
Not only, then, are Theodore's words terribly dangerous,
since some unstable listeners might think they are doing God's service
by attacking or even, God forbid, trying to kill homosexual men and
women.
But they also bear false witness to the character of Jesus,
who "when He was reviled, He did not revile back; when He suffered, He
did not threaten, but He entrusted Himself to Him who judges
righteously. He Himself bore our sins in His own body on the tree, that
we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness. 'By His wounds
you were healed'" (1 Pet 2:23-24).
It is my privilege to work with godly leaders throughout
America and around the world, a good number of whom are frontline,
fearless Christians who stand firmly against homosexual activism, and
every single one of them would join me in renouncing Theodore Shoebat's
words.
His words do not represent Jesus, they do not represent the
spirit or letter of the New Testament, and they do not represent His
true followers.
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