Desire to discriminate to punish lgbtq quite strong among evangelicals

desire to discriminate to punish lgbtq quite strong among evangelicals

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  • Newsnight
  • 9 Jan 07, 01:08 PM

Religious groups are outside Parliament protesting against gay rights legislation due to be debated by the Lords today. Christians, Jews and Muslims are taking part. They're calling for a halt to laws banning discrimination against gay people in the provision of goods and services.

The Sexual Orientation Regulations, already at work in Northern Ireland, are to come into force in England and Wales under current government plans, but protestors say the regulations would limit their right to live according to their religious beliefs.

Is this just scaremongering or a justifiable concern about religious freedom of expression? The BBC's Have Your State forum is open to your views, but Newsnight would also like to hear from you. Hold you experienced gay discrimination in the goods and services industry? Have you and your partner, for instance, been refused accommodation because you're a alike sex couple? Were you turned down outright, or did you meet with unconvincing excuses?

Alternatively, have you tried to book a gay venue but been turned down because you're straight?

Comment here.

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Social work and religion: ‘It is painful to look support on the views I held’

Photo: MichaelJBerlin/Fotolia

by Anonymous

It has been interesting to trail the news of the court’s judgment to uphold the decision of Sheffield University’s Fitness to Practice panel regarding Felix Ngole’s removal from his masters in social serve course last year.

This student was removed from his course due to Facebook posts he had made defending an American registrar who was refusing to give gay couples marriage licences. During his Facebook discussions he states he sees homosexuality as a ‘sin’.

Also significant is the proof reports indicate that since the incident he didn’t prove critical reflection or regret about his comments, showing minuscule insight into how LGBTQ+ service users might experience such an attitude.

In the judgment, Judge Rice said: “It was reasonable to anticipate a student whose career was at stake to own gone further to show that he understood the questions and had some reassuring answers.”

I consider this was a good decision by the court.

Ultimately the wellbeing of service users need to be protected and this incident seems a clear breach of Health and Ca

Criminalisation of same-sex task, and therefore of LGBT people around the world, is very real.

According to the Human Dignity Trust, there are 71 jurisdictions around the world that treat consensual gay activity as crimes, including several in which the penalty for it is death.

It therefore seems timely to position out why at Living Out we are opposed to criminalisation, even though we believe that scripture teaches that God’s good tribute of sexual attachment belongs only in the context of marriage between a woman and a man.

In this quick opinion piece, I would like to focus on four reasons:

1. LGBT people, like all of us, should be treated with dignity and respect

LGBT people are made by God in his image and are precious to him. They should be treated accordingly. In John 4:1-42, we read about Jesus’s conversation with a woman who was living with a man to whom she was not married (v18). While Jesus does gently challenge her about this, what is remarkable and pretty about their conversation is the respect with which Jesus, a Jewish guy, treats her, a Samaritan woman.

It is unjust to deal with one form of consensual sexual exercise more severely than another

Far fro

This morning, I read that a "mother stabbed her teenage son to death because he was gay."

Fox World News described the incident as follows:

"A female in Brazil has confessed to stabbing her teenage son to death because she couldn’t tolerate he was gay, local media outlets are reporting.

The chick, Tatiana Lozano Pereira, lured her 17-year-old son to the family home after a heated argument on Christmas Eve. Once in the house, Itaberli Lozano was reportedly ambushed by the woman and two thugs she had hired to beat her son up to “teach him a lesson.”

However, the gal changed course and ordered the men to murder the boy as he was lying on the floor, severely beaten. When they refused, she took a kitchen knife and stabbed him herself, authorities said....

According to his uncle Dario Rosa and other relatives, Lozano had elongated been rejected by his mother for his sexual orientation."

What I find even more devastating is how this relates to the evangelizing of hate against the LGBT community by American evangelical Christians.

On July 5, 2016, The Modern York Times published an article by Andrew Jacobs titled Brazil Is Confronting an Epidemic of Anti-Gay Violence.

"The anti-gay v

Confronting Systemic Homophobia with Biblical Social Justice

Editor’s Preface:This is the second of two essays on parish ministry and sexuality. The first essay may be initiate here. The two authors ultimately land in distinct places in practical and theological terms. However, their perspectives are both so nuanced that blithe labels like “liberal” and “conservative” are not helpful; the instinct to place them in such categories reflects perhaps the lingering political sensibilities of an earlier generation. Instead, let us read, mark, and digest. It is likely that our readers will come across things to disagree with and affirm in both essays, and the discomfort of this may be frustrating. But we feel that such conversations are not just worthwhile but necessary as we look for faithfulness to the gospel.

After George Floyd was killed, white evangelical Christians seemed to lean in and learn from Black Christian leaders like Esau McCaulley and Justin Giboneyin ways that appeared miraculous compared to how many alabaster Christians engaged in conversations about race and faith after Trayvon Martin was killed. Fellow white Christians were offered tools to z