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Listen to the Heart of the Matter program!

Heaven or Hell? gospel tract

The Value of Our Souls gospel tract

An Urgent Plea to Roman Catholics

Una Advertencia Urgente a los Catolicos Romanos

More Than These: A Call for Reformation by Pastor Ralph Ovadal

No Excuses! pro-life/gospel tract

What the Bible Really Says about Homosexuality

Homosexuality: The Truth
 

Homo-Fascist Watch
For current updates on homo-fascism, listen to the "Heart
of the Matter" program:
www.theheartofthematteronline.com.

"Because sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily,
therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil."
Ecclesiastes 8:11

 

Who are the real killers?
Report for June 11, 2004

The New Zealand homo-fascists are accusing an Anglican archbishop of committing homophobia and thus causing death. Those who promote homosexual acts often and, unfortunately, effectively use the claim that "homophobic words" cause suicide. As proof, they point to the high rate of suicide among sodomites. But, of course, sodomites do have a higher rate of suicide. So do drug users, drunks, and prostitutes -- all for obvious reasons! When young sodomites, under conviction of their consciences (Romans 2:14-15), are told by older mentors that "gays and lesbians are born that way," it makes those young people even more prone to suicide. The only message the older reprobates (Romans 1:28) offer to the youth struggling with guilt over the "vile" (Romans 1:26), "filthy" (2 Peter 2:7) acts he has committed is "Get used to it, kid. You were born that way."

Christians share the gospel truth that through true repentance and genuine faith in Christ, a sodomite will become a new creature (2 Corinthians 5:17), "washed . . . sanctified . . . justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God" (1 Corinthians 6:11). We share the promise of God that if the sodomite will repent of his sins, including "fornication, and going after strange flesh" (Jude 7), our Lord promises, "though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool" (Isaiah 1:18). The promoters of perversion, in the name of "freedom," offer young people bondage (2 Peter 2:18-19) to a filthy sin and guilty conscience. Christians offer hope, freedom, and redemption through Christ. Sodomite propagandists cause suicide -- not Christian truth tellers! "If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed" (John 8:36).

Archbishop's gay comments 'threat to young' 
By MATHEW DEARNALEY, New Zealand Herald, June 7, 2004

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?thesection=news&thesubsection=&storyID=357101 1

Maori researchers are accusing the Anglican Church's new head, Archbishop Whakahuihui Vercoe, of endangering young people for calling for a world without gays.

The head of a Maori sexuality research project at Auckland University, Clive Aspin, said yesterday that struggles in coming to terms with sexuality were a significant factor in a high suicide rate among young men.

Dr Aspin said comments such as those by Archbishop Vercoe, who was quoted in the Herald as saying that homosexuality was not morally right, threatened long-term and permanent damage to youngsters grappling with their sexuality.

Early research findings from interviews with more than 70 people of all ages showed Maori had always had an open and embracing attitude towards sexual diversity within social networks.

Project researcher Leonie Pihama also rejected a claim by Richard Randerson, Dean of the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Parnell, that most Maori would probably find homosexuality culturally very difficult.

"Such statements are colonial and Victorian views that merely seek to oppress certain sectors of society and have no basis in tikanga Maori," Dr Pihama said.

"As far as we can see, there is no cultural basis for a hatred of a group of people in the community."

Archbishop Vercoe denies condemning homosexuals as individuals, saying he loves them as people despite believing their practices unnatural.

He told the Herald last night that he stood by what were personal comments, and believed he had a right as a church leader to make them.

"If you find it difficult you shouldn't lead anything, you should stay home and close your door," he said. "Everybody else has their personal right to say what they believe, but once people like me who are traditionalists make a statement, it suddenly becomes hot news.

"There is a lot of leadership in the world today that is contradictory - we say it is not right to kill people but still have leaders who tell us it is normal."

But Dr Pihama decried the primate's vision of a world without gays as "holocaustic".

Maori author Witi Ihimaera, who is gay, said he was extremely saddened by Archbishop Vercoe's views. "They were the sort of comments I would have expected to hear coming out of Noah's waka, and not from the head of the Anglican Church in New Zealand.

"I would really call for his resignation because he needs to get pastoral advice - his comments are very, very punitive, they are very patriarchal, very homophobic and very sexist."

Ihimaera was equally outraged at a statement by the archbishop that the time was not right for him to ordain a Maori woman as a bishop, even though New Zealand has had a Pakeha Anglican woman bishop since 1990.

"Maori women have suffered double discrimination from Pakeha and to hear they are also suffering the same double discrimination from a Maori, from, in fact, the head of the Anglican Church, is very worrying."

The Right Rev Dr Penny Jamieson, the Anglican Bishop of Dunedin and the first woman in the world to lead a diocese, would not be drawn on the archbishop's views.

"I cannot see what the issue is. He is talking about his culture and he is very knowledgeable about it - I have no problem with that."

But an Auckland University theological lecturer and Anglican priest, the Rev Dr Philip Culbertson, said he believed the archbishop's comments were a breach of a prohibition by the church's ruling Lambeth Conference against homophobic statements.

He said they did not represent the position of the Anglican Church, which had left the issue of homosexuality unresolved, and were potentially divisive in being "so offensive to so many people in the church".

Anglican Maori leader Professor Whatarangi Winiata defended the archbishop's right to make such comments, although he disagreed that homosexuality was morally wrong.

Additional reporting: Rosaleen Macbrayne

 


Editorial: No apologies for featuring bishop's view 
New Zealand Herald, June 9, 2004
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=3571337&thesection=news&thesubsection=dialogue

THE NEWLY appointed leader of the Anglican Church in New Zealand, Bishop Whakahuihui Vercoe, believes homosexuality is unnatural and immoral and looks forward to a day when a better society, in his view, will find it unacceptable. When he mentioned this in an interview with the Weekend Herald we thought it sufficiently extraordinary to put it on the front page. The report brought a natural response to the primate's view but the correspondence also contained an attitude no less extraordinary: that the Herald should not have given his views such prominence.

"As a gay man," one reader wrote, "I am deeply offended by you headline, 'A world without gays'. If [Bishop Vercoe] had stated 'A world without Jews' or 'A world without Maori' would you have printed that as your headline?" Another called the report cheap and downright appalling. "How dare you publish that rubbish on your front page, unless of course you ... are as bigoted, homophobic and out for cheap controversy as your Maori interviewee."

There were several more in that vein. The most considered of them, from Westmere reader Amanda Cropp, said: "The Herald and all other media should give serious thought to how information on extreme perspectives is presented. Believe it or not, this does make a difference, given that hate crimes and discrimination are still a despicable reality in our community."

The astonishing thing about this criticism is the insecurity it reflects. We gave such prominence to the bishop's attitude because it is so far out of step with the mainstream today and it is surprising that one of the country's more liberal churches should appoint someone of such an outlook. It is the very eccentricity of his views that make them remarkable. Were his attitude commonplace, as it was a generation ago, it would not have warranted a headline.

But our critics seem to believe that by reporting his views in the way we did, we risk an eruption of prejudice that has been suppressed in recent times only by a form of informal but rigorous censorship. We think that is mistaken.

The community has come to a more open view of homosexuality not by the efforts of a censorious conspiracy but by the force of factual argument. Surely most people now recognise that homosexuality is simply a variant of human nature, as elemental to gays as their gender or ethnicity. And, yes, we would have given the same prominence to the views of someone in Bishop Vercoe's position if he had advocated a world without Jews or Maori. Most definitely.

There is no point disregarding or downplaying an important person's attitude simply because it is now considered Neanderthal. Censorship, even the informal sort known as political correctness, is dangerous. It can provoke the very reaction the sensitive fear. The reason National Party leader Don Brash made such an impact with his Orewa address was not just that so many people agreed with him but that he made it suddenly permissible to vent those sentiments.

Now that those people feel free to say what they think they can be challenged to reason their view. As time goes on, the frustration to which Dr Brash appealed will lose its force and arguments of fact and fairness must be confronted. If treaty issues had been debated much more frankly over the past 20 years, Dr Brash might not have been handed such a potent cause.

In airing the views of Bishop Vercoe, Dr Brash or anyone else, newspapers do not necessarily endorse them. The Herald confines its editors' political views to this column; they play no part in decisions about the selection and treatment of news. Those who ask us to ignore or downplay attitudes unpalatable to them from a leader of the Anglican Church ask us to abandon our role. We believe exposure and free debate are better in the long run for all concerned and for that we make no apology.

Homo-Fascism Watch Main Page

 
 

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