Thursday, March 26, 2009

Facebook | Home - 2009 Exodus Freedom Conference Video Promo

I saw this for the first time today. It's a good promo piece for the Exodus Freedom Conference for 2009. I want to encourage everyone to pray about attending or providing funds for others to attend! Let me hear from you -- richard@thesightministry.org or 615-509-0782.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

God Loves Homosexuals

God Loves Homosexuals 2:14pm

This is a good article on a message given by Bob Stith to ministry leaders. Bob is the national strategist on gender issues for the Southern Baptist Convention. I serve with him on what is called the Southern Baptist Convention Taskforce on Homosexuality. He truly has a heart for God and he has a heart for individuals who struggle with same-sex issues. That's pretty incredible coming from a guy who has never struggled in this way and who, on the contrary, was pretty condemning and judgmental in the past toward those who do.

Please take just a moment and read the article. For more information feel free to contact me: Richard Holloman
The Sight Ministry
PO Box 140808
Nashville, TN 37214
615-509-0782

Pastors weigh same-sex attitudesBy: Brittany N. HowertonOriginal article can be found here, http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?Id=30004.OPELIKA, Ala. (BP)

Standing before a room of about 20 pastors and ministry leaders in Alabama, Bob Stith introduced a topic he said most Southern Baptists don't want to deal with -- homosexuality."Churches would rather avoid this issue and deal with it as I used to -- harsh and condemning," said Stith, who is the Southern Baptist Convention's national strategist for gender issues.And avoid it they have.

The mid-January meeting of the Tuskegee Lee Baptist Association in Opelika, Ala., was the first such session in the nation Stith has been invited to since accepting the position in 2006.In an effort to change that mindset, associational director of missions Bill King invited Stith to speak so pastors and churches could learn how to minister to homosexuals and their families.

In sharing his story, Stith confessed he had been "one of those guys" who was contemptuous toward homosexuals. But when God broke his heart on the matter 15 years ago, he knew he had to make a change."I realized a lot of what I had done was a reaction to what I had seen of gay activism in the media and entertainment.... I didn't know there were thousands of men and women and families whose hearts were breaking for a struggle they didn't ask for and one they didn't understand," Stith said. "My attitude was -- it's a choice; it's just a choice. What I learned was sin is always a choice ... but you don't always get to choose what temptation you get. You don't always choose the dragon; sometimes the dragon chooses you."

But his idea that "thousands" were struggling was an underestimate, Stith said. He found that studies show at least 1.4 percent of the U.S. population -- perhaps more than 4.2 million people -- deals with homosexuality.Factor in parents, siblings and a few friends and other relatives, and that number increases exponentially, Stith said."And that's a conservative estimate," he said.
"What are we doing as Christians to meet the needs these people have?"

In the book "UnChristian," authors David Kinnaman and Gabe Lyons pointed out that 91 percent of "unchurched" Americans think the church is anti-homosexual."Not [just] that we believe it's sin but that [the church] is anti-homosexual," Stith said. "And 80 percent of churched young adults felt the same way."He said young Americans who attend church also feel the church is not equipping them to "minister effectively" to their homosexual co-workers. "The homosexual community knows we think it's a sin, but do they know we care?" Stith asked. He said his goal is to get churches to be proactive and not reactive.

King said he hopes pastors will take Stith's message -- along with those who are "sometimes ignored by the church" -- to heart, stirring them to be more sensitive to the needs of church families dealing with homosexual problems. "Sometimes we just kind of brush that under the carpet and hope it will go away," King said.

Ross Kilpatrick, pastor of First Baptist Church Reeltown in Notasulga, Ala., agreed that every person has temptations."The bottom line is we are all right there -- a sinner saved by grace, all of us," Kilpatrick said. "Apart from seeking Christ and His power being made perfect in our weakness and overcoming sin, there is not one of us not vulnerable to sin."

Even as Stith continues to receive hate mail from homosexual activists and pastors alike, his challenge to Southern Baptist churches across the nation will not change.Echoing evangelist and author Josh McDowell, Stith said: "If your church is healthy, you'll have drug addicts, sex addicts, unwed mothers and those kinds of things. And [McDowell] said you will have them because if your church is what it ought to be, God will send them there to be healed. So my question is: If you don't have that problem, then why not?"

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Gays & Lesbians Must Come to Jesus, But You Cannot!

I cannot reason with an individual who embraces a gay-identified life (or any other life of unbelief) apart from Who God is and what His Word says. Every facet of my life comes out of my faith perspective. It's pretty black and white to me: either God is or He is not; either God's Word is absolute truth or it is not. I chose to believe God is and His word is Truth. I do not have any other expectations from those who chose not to believe. But I truly love every gay-identified person. Check out the article below:

Rabbi Duncan Preached to Those Who Couldn't Come
March 6, 2009 By: John Piper Category: Commentary
The Bible teaches that we are so sinful we are morally unable to please God (Romans 8:7). It also teaches that without faith it is impossible to please God (Hebrews 11:6). Yet salvation is by faith, and we are called again and again in Scripture to believe (Acts 16:31).

How then shall we preach to those who cannot come to Christ, but must come in order to be saved?

John Duncan (1796-1870) was a minister of the Free Church of Scotland and a missionary to the Jews in Hungary. He is often referred to as Rabbi Duncan because of his love for Jewish people. John Macleod wrote that "since the days of the Apostles there is hardly on record such a striking work of grace among the Jews as took place in the days of his labors in Buda-Pesth.”
Here is Duncan’s penetrating answer to our question.

It would not do to tell a man that he may come to Christ, but that he must come. Some, indeed, would have man to do all, though he could do nothing; and others would have him to do nothing, because all was done for him.

As long as I am told that I must come to God, and that I can come, I am left to suppose that some good thing, or some power of good remains in me, and I arrogate to myself that which belongs to Jehovah. The creature is exalted, and God is robbed of His glory.
If, on the other hand, I am told that I cannot come to God, but not also that I must come, I am left to rest contented at a distance from God, I am not responsible for my rebellion, and God Jehovah is not my God.

But if we preach that sinners can't come, and yet must come, then is the honour of God vindicated, and the sinner is shut up. Man must be so shut up that he must come to Christ, and yet know that he cannot. He must come to Christ, or he will look to another, when there is no other to whom he may come; he cannot come, or he will look to himself.

This is the gospel vice, to shut up men to the faith. Some grasp at one limb of the vice and some at the other, leaving the sinner open - but when a man is shut up that he must and cannot, he is shut up to the faith - shut up to the faith, and then would he be shut up in the faith. God is declared to be Jehovah, and the sinner is made willing to be saved by Him, in His own way, as sovereign in His grace. (Rich Gleanings, 392, emphases added)

In Jesus' Name,
Richard Holloman
The Sight Ministry
PO Box 140808
Nashville, TN 37214
615-509-0782