For this generation of Christians in the western world, sexuality is the battle being waged in the culture. Traditional marriage is out the window and every manner of sexual perversity is being pushed as good and healthy and normal on TV, in the movies, by the mainstream media, and by the fathers of our city and nation. At the forefront of this battle is homosexuality.
It’s easy for Christians to see the enemy out there—to see all the ways that the modern tolerance machine is tearing down the bulwark of God’s moral law. But what if the culture doesn’t lead the church? What if the church leads the culture? What if the real responsibility lies with us?
The Grace of Shame exposes the errors the church has made on sexuality over the last several decades, from failing to understand the sin of effeminacy to promoting the “gay Christian” movement. With reverence for the church universal, and a keen prophetic eye for the sins and failures of our modern church, this book exposes all the ways we have allowed this sin to triumph in the culture at large, and offers hope for the future.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments; Introduction: Words Matter; 1. Some Personal History; 2. The Church Yesterday; 3. Error 1: Removing the Sin of Effeminacy (Part 1); 4. Error 1: Removing the Sin of Efeminacy (Part 2); 5. Error 2: The “Gay Christian” Error; 6. Error 3: The “Godliness Is Not Heterosexuality” Error; 7. Error 4: The “Sexual Orientation” Error; 8. The “Reparative Therapy” Error; 9. Error 6: The “Such Are Some of You” Error; 10. The “Living Out” Error; 11. Leading Hommosexuals to Repentance; 12. The Way Forward; Further Reading; Scripture Index
Despre autor
Jürgen von Hagen and his wife Ilse have four children. Jürgen recently completed six years as vice rector of the University of Bonn, where he continues as professor of economics. A research fellow of London’s Centre for Economic Policy Research, Jürgen is a member of the Academic Advisory Council of the Federal Minister of Economics and Technology in Germany and vice chair of the Portuguese Fiscal Council. He has been a consultant to the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Federal Reserve Board, the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the governments of several sovereign nations. Jürgen is senior pastor of Free Evangelical Church in Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany.