God and the Transgender Debate Quotes
God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
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Andrew T. Walker959 ratings, 4.14 average rating, 223 reviews
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God and the Transgender Debate Quotes
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“We are broken actors living on a broken stage, and we do not stand on the stage for very long.”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What Does the Bible Actually Say about Gender Identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What Does the Bible Actually Say about Gender Identity?
“Gnosticism says that there is an inherent tension between our true selves and the bodies we inhabit. The idea that our true self is different than the body we live in communicates that our body is something less than us, and can be used, shaped, and changed to match how we feel. The concept that our gender can be different than our biological sex is a modern form of the old Gnostic idea. What this means, practically, is that a man can identify as a woman, even if they have male chromosomes and the body of a man.”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
“This period when Christian ideas of sexual morality were challenged and overturned coincided with (and very possibly contributed to) industrialized hormonal contraception. This is not the book to debate the pros and cons of the pill—but one consequence of its availability was to sever the connection between sex and procreation. This was nothing short of revolutionary. While people in times past engaged in pre-marital sex, there was always the potential for a pregnancy to occur. Not any more—and this has enormous repercussions for how society thinks about the purpose of sex. No longer is sex assumed to take place only in marriage.”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
“Can a man become a woman? Can a woman become a man? How and when should children be confronted with the debates about gender? What are we to do with children who are a member of one biological sex but feel as though they were born in the wrong body? What do we say to someone experiencing these feelings and desires? How do we love and help those who are deeply hurting? These questions go deeper than simply what we understand by “gender.” They go to what we understand by “humanity”: who we are, how we got here, what it means to be a human, and what role (if any) God plays in that.”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
“What Happened to Our Hearts Beloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul. (1 Peter 2 v 11) Inside every heart, there’s a war; and the heart is both the victim and the culprit. Why? Because every person’s heart is inhabited by sinful desires, and produces sinful desires. There is an ongoing battle within the heart in which unhelpful desires wage war with our conscience. Bitterness. Anger. Envy. Greed. We cannot trust our feelings or all the passions that reside within us simply because we feel them. Our hearts are not pure—far from it: The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it? (Jeremiah 17 v 9) The nature of deception is to convince us that our hearts will not be satisfied unless we indulge what our hearts desire. But our hearts lead us astray in countless ways. Envy robs people of joy and contentment, sours friendships, and can lead to compromising morality in order to “get ahead.” Envy does not produce flourishing or joy in people. Indulging envy only results in misery for yourself and others. But none of us think this way as envy rages on. In the moment, the wrath and bitterness of envy assuages the sense of loss and jealousy residing within each of us. Not every impulse we experience should be indulged. We should be suspicious about “listening to our hearts.” Actually, everyone knows this is true. Prisons are full of people who acted in accord with their feelings—and who have been told by society that they shouldn’t. Every time a therapist tells a patient to view themselves more positively, they are accepting that there are feelings that are unhelpful to someone’s fulfillment. Our hearts’ desires can be at war with what is actually good for our hearts. The real question is: which desires should be fed, and which should be starved?”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
“Being creatures means that we cannot re-create ourselves in any fashion or form that we desire by a simple act of the will or the complex work of a surgeon. When we as creatures reject the Creator's blueprint, we are both rebelling against the natural order of how things objectively are, and (thought it may not seem like it) we are rejecting the life that is going to be the highest good for us.”
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
― God and the Transgender Debate: What does the Bible actually say about gender identity?
