The Sean McDowell Show - LGBTQ Relationships and the Bible: A Progressive and Evangelical Dialogue
Episode Date: September 22, 2024What does the Bible really say about same-sex unions? Where has the church gone wrong in its response to this pressing conversation? This video is a discussion between me and progressive Christian pas...tor Colby Martin, author of Unclobber. We discuss the topic together and then take live questions. READ: Same-Sex Marriage, by Sean McDowell and John Stonestreet (https://amzn.to/3ugLYh4) READ: Unclobber by Colby Martin (https://amzn.to/3ughCLO) *Get a MASTERS IN APOLOGETICS or SCIENCE AND RELIGION at BIOLA (https://bit.ly/3LdNqKf) *USE Discount Code [SMDCERTDISC] for $100 off the BIOLA APOLOGETICS CERTIFICATE program (https://bit.ly/3AzfPFM) *See our fully online UNDERGRAD DEGREE in Bible, Theology, and Apologetics: (https://bit.ly/448STKK) FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Twitter: https://twitter.com/Sean_McDowell TikTok: @sean_mcdowell Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmcdowell/ Website: https://seanmcdowell.org
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, friends, welcome to an interesting conversation.
My guest today is Colby Martin.
He is a progressive Christian pastor from San Diego.
He's also written a book that I have here.
It's called Unclobber, Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality.
If you didn't figure it out from that introduction, he takes an affirming position on LGBTQ relationships
and the bible those of you
who are new and don't know me i teach at biola university and take a historic christian view
on the nature of sex and marriage today we're gonna jump in and have not a formal debate that's
for sure but we're gonna have a substantive conversation if you follow the channel you
know that one of the big things i aim for is charity to have conversations with people who see the world differently it's possible today
in our cancel culture but second also clarity is very important so our hope today is that you can
see what positions we hold why we hold them the evidence for maybe some of the evidence against it
and then ultimately you can make up your own mind.
I was just telling Colby briefly before, thank you for coming back.
You were on my channel a few months ago and we were just talking about progressive Christianity
and that show's gotten a ton of views.
There were some people critical, but overall I heard a lot of positive feedback.
People appreciated you coming on to the channel of an evangelical Christian and you're back.
So kudos to you for being willing to do that. Thanks for coming back on. Yeah. Sean, honestly, I'll tell you this.
I, last time when we, uh, when we did our, uh, the conversation together, I walked away very
encouraged by your capacity to hold a respectful and charitable space for those
who see things differently than you. And I go through my life, maybe not like many people these
days, where we're sort of in our silos, our echo chambers of news and politics and religion. And
it's very scary to go outside of it for all sorts of really interesting reasons.
And yet I have this conviction that we kind of need to,
maybe not all the time,
like echo chambers can serve its purpose and it's good,
but I think we need to break outside of that sometimes.
And it's hard to find places and spaces and people
in which you can do that and not immediately
regret it.
Be like, never mind, I'm going back to the echo chamber.
And so thank you for the chance to practice that sort of charitable conversation with
people that, like you said, do not agree, will not move towards agreement, likely, especially
not in the next 60 minutes, and yet still see value in this. So I share that
part with you and I'm glad to be back. Well, I hope you feel the same after this conversation.
Just so our audience knows, this is my channel. So obviously I have some of the power in this
dynamic, but we have agreed on a format to try to make it more of a conversation. Colby has agreed.
We've agreed on the questions. And when we get towards the end,
probably the last, I don't know, 15, 20 minutes or so, we're going to take your questions.
So at that point, we're going to ask you to write question in caps, and we're just going to go back
and forth, taking those questions, doing our best to address them, assuming they're on topic with
what we're discussing today. So that's the goal where we're headed. And just one more thing,
for those of you comment,
whether you consider yourself on my side or Colby side or another side, make charitable comments,
please comment. It helps the metric of the show, but be charitable. If you think I'm bigoted,
homophobe, maybe don't state it here. If you think Colby is a slacker and a Bible compromiser,
maybe don't state it here. Not going to help the conversation
and the substance we want to get to. So, Kobe, let's start with the question that we both agreed
on, which is, I want to know why you chose to speak on this issue. You've done videos,
you've taught on this at your church, you've written a book on this, you've publicly addressed
LGBTQ issues. Why? Yeah, I think this is a great place to start.
When I was thinking about this question, Sean, maybe it's no shock to you because I've been a
pastor for two decades now, but I have three answers to this. I've got three points to this
answer. But I think the honest answer is that there's kind of been three stages. And at any point, if you were to take a time machine back, you would have gotten a slightly different response to this.
It's kind of been an evolving response to this question.
It's fair.
So originally, and I would say this, is because I was theologically driven
by my study of the Bible on this topic. So I grew up in conservative, like we talked about last
time, conservative Baptist evangelical world. And then when I finally got to studying this topic
and studying the Bible, I came to the conclusion that we had gotten the Bible wrong. And by we,
I mean the historic Christian church.
And we've gotten it wrong on this topic.
And at that time in my life, that was really profound to me.
I spoke out about it because I think there's a theological commitment
that I had and have to understanding and reading the Bible
as accurately as possible.
Then that sort of shifted a little bit as the years went on,
and I started to then be more in the pastoral space with this.
So a layer got added from theological to a sense of personal accountability and responsibility,
which is to say there's this story in Luke 18 where Jesus
was walking into Jericho and there's a blind man on the side of the road that says, Jesus,
son of David, have mercy on me. And the people at the front of the procession were like,
quiet. We've got places to go, things to do. Jesus doesn't have time for you. And the blind
man yells out louder, Jesus, son of David, have mercy on me. And then Jesus turns and says to
the people who had just told the man to be quiet, and
he said, go get him and bring him to me.
And there was a number of years ago I read that, and I was profoundly impacted by this
sense of Jesus turned to the individuals who had just moments ago restricted access to
this man and put the responsibility on them to set it right. Jesus didn't go into the ditch,
the side of the road. He could have. Jesus didn't yell across the road. He could have.
He said, you just prevented this man from access to me. Now it's your responsibility to go and set
it right. And so the second way I answer that question, why do I speak about this, is because I feel a personal responsibility that I was for so long personally in what I would refer to as an anti-LGBTQ theological position, but then also part of a larger religious tradition that was that.
So why do I speak about this? Because I feel this personal, like, oh my God, I contributed to building this wall to keep people on the
outside.
I need to be a part of tearing it down.
And then finally, real quick, why do I choose?
I think the current stage that I'm at, and they're all still true, it's just adding layers
of interest to the answer, is I guess I would just, a larger commitment to God, a larger commitment to this idea that God
is love, a commitment to the biblical vision of shalom, justice, a commitment to wholeness,
which is another way to talk about the Greek word sozo, which oftentimes gets translated salvation,
but can have this sense of being brought whole.
And I see that this particular topic has caused so much fracture and pain and damage and harm
that if I believe that God is love, and I do, that if I believe that shalom is a worthwhile
endeavor to work towards, and I do, and if I believe that
wholeness is in some way the goal, the point, and I do, then that is for me a huge like North Star
to work toward. And this is one of the topics that get caught up in that swell,
moving toward this idea of this commitment to God being love.
What about you, man?
Why do you, why is this a thing that you are driven to speak out about and talk to?
Yeah, I think if you told me 15 some years ago that I write a book and speak in this,
I would have told you, you are crazy, not my lane.
Sure.
I think like you, it's a range of experiences.
One that stands out to me when I first started speaking in the early 2000s,
I had a student wrestling profoundly. It's a high school student at a Christian school.
And he said to me, he goes, I can't keep living my life because it's a living hell.
I can't die because if I die, I think I'll go to hell. And his issue was the same-sex attraction.
And that jarred me. It was one of the first times i was like holy cow this is a painful issue for this young man and he doesn't know how to navigate it well in terms of scripture and his family and
his christian community so it really started pastorally for me how do i care for this young
man and then of course out of that probably early 2000s almost everywhere i'd go speak, almost every question was started to be turned about like same-sex relationships.
Of course, the past five years, it's shifted to the transgender topic.
But before that, it was homosexuality, same-sex unions.
I mean the top two or three questions everywhere I went, even internationally, and was like I need to give some thought to this.
Ultimately, I think two reasons.
Number one is, well, I guess the other thing I would say is I didn't see a lot of Christians
who were speaking out, who I felt like were staying faithful to what scripture teaches,
but doing it in a gracious, loving manner.
It tended to be people who stayed what I would consider faithful,
but sometimes were jerks and lacked compassion,
lacked a pastoral heart,
or some people who I thought were very gracious,
but not staying faithful to what scripture teaches.
Now, of course, you and I will differ over that and we'll get into it.
But one of the reasons I spoke up somewhat reluctantly was like,
you know what?
There needs to be voices that says to people who are LGBTQ, we love you.
You're made in God's image.
I'm sorry if we have treated you inconsistently and the pain that you bear.
You are valuable.
Jesus loves you and I love you.
While staying faithful to what Jesus taught.
So I think those are some of the reasons why I felt compelled to speak up. Now, I'm curious, just for sake of those watching, what is your position on same-sex
unions and or sometimes it's described as LGBTQ relationships? I think this will give some clarity
to those watching. And ultimately, why do you hold it without giving us your whole book yeah that's right um
yeah first i'll say thanks for thanks for sharing that story thanks for sharing
that heart i didn't i didn't i didn't know that about took seriously that young man's pain.
Enough to where it moved you.
It moved you to ask questions.
It moved you to curiosity.
And if Ted Lasso taught us anything, it's that curiosity is better than judgment. And I think that is a posture that sadly we don't see enough of, that curiosity, that
desire to understand the pain and sit with the pain and maybe even consider in our own
self, is there something that I need to know different or change,
if I can help alleviate that pain? Now, obviously, I wish you would have maybe landed on a different
theological landing place of it. But the fact that you even were like, oh, he hurts. And why is that?
And is there something I can do? And landing at least at a pastoral posture of you are made in God's image. That's no small thing. That's no small thing. So for anybody who's watching this that, you know, the two people that might be on more my end of the spectrum, that's not nothing. That's not nothing. And I know that we can oftentimes, in our desire for wanting more from individuals like Sean, like we want your made in God's image and fully affirmed as you are.
Let us, to the extent that we are able, appreciate the posture, the pastoral posture, even taking pastoral off, just the compassionate human
posture of you are loved and made in God's image. I just think that's, we could use more of that,
if nothing else. Okay. Your question was, what's my position on LGBTQ relationships? I think I'll
start by saying this. My fundamental position is that human
sexuality is a beautiful gift. It's a beautiful gift, and it is expressed and experienced in many
different ways. So I start there. And then I say, as it relates to sexual orientation,
which is just a part of sexuality, human sexuality, as it relates to sexual orientation,
my position is that people experience a type of attraction, a type of desire toward other humans,
parentheses, or not. I see you, asexual crowd, or not. But the majority of humans experience some kind of attraction and desire for other people.
That is a real phenomenon.
It is a real thing that happens.
But why it happens and how it sort of manifests, I think, is mysterious.
And so for me, it seems that there is a glorious cocktail.
This is kind of where I've landed.
A glorious cocktail of what kind of where I've landed a glorious
cocktail of what we call nature and nurture and somehow these two forces
come together and contribute to what we phrase for now a person's particular
sexual sexual orientation which is a way to say that someone has like these innate desires and attractions towards people.
We seem to accept that the majority of humans experience this attraction towards people of the opposite sex.
Then there are some people that seem to experience this innate desire and attraction towards people of the same sex and some of both sex. And my position is that that comes about through, like I said, a combination of nature and nurture. And we
don't really know. It's kind of a mystery. But from that position, my position is that
whatever a person's orientation is, is not chosen, not in any like real sense of the term. Second, that this
person's orientation really cannot be changed or altered in any real sense.
That's not to say that, especially people who are more maybe in this middle space who can be and can experience an attraction towards people
of multiple sexes, they could experience different seasons in life, or maybe that's stronger
than others.
So that might be described on the outside as someone's orientation changing.
But I think the more accurate is like, well, that was always within the realm of possibility
for that person whereas those who maybe are on the more extremes solely attracted for like since
myself solely attracted people in the opposite sex i there's not going to be a scenario in which
someone can successfully change me to be attracted to men and likewise my gay and lesbian brothers
and sisters and siblings there's no scenario in which their orientation can be
changed to the other. So orientation has come about through a mysterious cocktail of nature
and nurture. It is not really changeable, for the most part, in any real sense of the word. It's not
chosen in any real way. And then lastly, I'll say this, that it's not inherently wicked or evil. Like a person's sexual orientation is just that,
it's their orientation. So to just be a person who is attracted towards whatever sex, that in and of
itself is not a problem. There's no problem to fix there. There's no issue to solve. There's no, in the Christian tradition, there's no sin to repent of.
An orientation is just that, an orientation.
And then you might say it's morally neutral would be the term I would use.
Okay.
And then, of course, how a person sort of lives from that place.
Now you can start to talk about issues of morality and ethics and behavior and all that.
But for me, those sorts of conversations are applicable for all humans, irrespective of their orientation.
So that's my position on LGBTQ relationships as it relates to the relationships of people who identify lesbian, gay, transgender,
bisexual, queer, whatever it might be, really, for me, it's the same standard.
If we're going to talk standards or ethics or morals, it's the same standard as it would
be for me and my wife or a heterosexual couple.
So now we're getting into territory like, is there mutual respect?
Is there, you know, bell hooks talks about love as being six pieces, commitment, respect,
trust, honesty.
There's a couple more that I'm forgetting, but like, are all those ingredients there?
And that I think is a really interesting discussion we could talk about, not today necessarily,
but I mean, in general, what makes for a healthy whole relationship?
And to what extent does a person's orientation play
into that for me it really doesn't so that that's me that's my thought those are my positions uh on
that um you go sean yeah what are your position on lgbt let me jump down let me jump on a beautiful
on a few things that you said that I think will be helpful for clarity.
I agree 100% sex is a beautiful gift.
My dad in the 80s before True Love Waits, before Joshua Harris led the first international sexual purity campaign and would regularly say to me, he'd say, sex is a good, beautiful gift from God.
It's a blessing.
But God's given us boundaries and a design for how to live that out and express our sexual desires. But I agree with you. It's a gift. I think sexual orientation is
mysterious. I think you're right. All the data shows APA would say there's some combination of
nature and nurture. We don't know why people are attracted to same sex. There might be a host of
different reasons and different pathways. I totally agree it's not chosen. I also agree it's not changed and that we shouldn't try to
actively change somebody's. My only qualifier is the work of Lisa Diamond and her book on sexual
fluidity. She says, obviously, when it comes to race, that never changes. But when it comes to
sexual orientation, it is more fluid in many cases in men and women than was suspected.
So that's an interesting caveat we don't need to go into. As I approach LGBTQ relationships,
I think the Bible says there's two ways to live out in God-honoring ways. One is singleness,
and the other way is marriage. In fact, today we highlight marriage very highly,
but Jesus in Matthew 19 and Paul in 1 Corinthians 7
almost seem to indicate that singleness is preferable.
Now, do we do a good job in the church embracing the call of singleness?
No, that's a pastoral question we could get to
and probably both agree we need to do better.
But I think scripturally speaking, there's singleness and there's marriage.
Now marriage, I would argue, and we can get into some of this.
I think the scriptures are clear that marriage, going back to Genesis through the Old Testament,
Jesus teaching of Paul, etc., is one man, one woman, one flesh for one lifetime.
That's what marriage is.
It's meant to be a permanent union between a man and one woman, one flesh for one lifetime. That's what marriage is. It's meant to be a permanent
union between a man and a woman. There's companionship that is there, and it's oriented
towards procreation. I think that's a view that is Catholic in the sense of lowercase c throughout
the history of the church, in the sense that it's old it's from antiquity is universal and there's
consensus on it so that's why i would refer to my position as the historic christian position
that's how i hold that's my view probably no surprise to you but when it comes to really
all relationships and marriage including lgbtq. I think God has singleness in marriage. Marriage is one man, one woman, one flesh, one lifetime, and sexual expression is
always condemned outside of that relationship, but encouraged and praised within it.
Two more questions we're going to tackle. Let's maybe skip the fourth because I think we've
discussed it, but maybe just say before we jump into some of the q
a for each other where do you think the church needs to reform in this issue and then we'll get
to some of the theology and the differences what would you like to see changed oh god how much time
do we have so i've looked at my watch i haven't changed the battery, so that wasn't helpful.
For sure, I think the church needs to reform its theological thinking around the sinfulness of sexuality.
Okay. And that sinfulness of sexuality, not how I want to phrase that.
Let me, needs to reform its sort of theological thinking around sex, period.
End of sentence.
We have now gobs of evidence, I think that's the correct theological term, what is referred to as the purity culture from within conservative
evangelical Christianity, what that has done to the psyche of people, the bodies of people,
because we carry trauma in our bodies. So when we are living these sort of shame-induced narratives,
and when we are taught to be so disconnected from our bodies, when we are living these sort of shame induced narratives. And when we are, are,
are taught to be so disconnected from our bodies,
when we are taught to fear our instincts and intuitions and desires,
and we are taught that, uh, you know,
people like your father might say out of one part of them,
I'm not saying your father talks like this, but that idea that sex is a gift.
They'll say that out of one side of their mouth,
but then the other side of their mouth, but then the other
side of their mouth is this asterisk that really just undermines what they just said. It's not
really a gift. It's something to be feared. And it's something that can cause so much
sin and disaster and destruction. So anyway, so we have a real sex problem in the church,
theologically speaking. And one of the ways that is manifest
is as it relates to those who identify as LGBTQ.
So I think reform, the theology of sex,
and then the way that sort of trickles down
is come to understand and accept and humbly admit
that the church has been wrong on this issue, that the historic Christian
teaching on this has been wrong, that we've been wrong about this.
And we've done that before to varying degrees of success, right? We were, we, meaning the
lowercase Catholic church, we were wrong about the earth being the center of
the universe. We were wrong about slavery. You know, there is significant chunk of theological
effort that was given towards showing why slavery was the biblical way to move through this world.
And there was a moment at which humans had to reconcile with that,
and the church had to reconcile with that,
and the church had to acknowledge that we had been wrong on this particular issue.
And I think we are way past time to acknowledge that we have been wrong
on the sexuality of those who identify
lesbian gay transsexual transgender bisexual so I want to see a theological
reform that might take some time but I'm confident we're gonna get there I mean I
won't see it I'll be like Moses in the promised land y'all can figure it out
once you get in there I'm not gonna see that but I do believe that that day will
come in the meantime the other thing I want to see about the church reform is and I know
this, this word is means a lot to you, Sean, is they have
clarity. There is a real clarity problem right now in the
traditional conservative church world. And this gets manifest
in, you know, what's referred to as the bait and switch
tactic, where churches tell their community through website, through the sermons, through
whatever it is, that all people are welcome here, that we love all people, everyone is
welcome, come as you are. But really, the closer you get to the Holy of Holies, whatever, however that might
metaphorically work out, whether it's wanting to get married there to your partner, whether it's
wanting to serve in certain ministries if you're gay, whether it's wanting to be on staff or be on
elder board, like the closer you get, then you begin to realize, oh, no, no, no, hold on. You can't be gay and be here. Like,
that's not what we meant. You're welcome here to a certain extent. And this is a really harmful
practice of bait and switch that the number of hearts that I have attempted to hold and mend
from people that thought they were going to churches where they were going to be loved and
accepted, only to discover months, years into it.
Like, wait, what? That's your actual position? I thought my partner and I and our kids were going
to be welcome here. So the church needs to reform as it regards to clarity. Like, if your theological
position is that you cannot be gay and Christian, if your church policy is that you will not marry two people of the same sex,
you owe it to humans to be clear about that.
You do.
Like, just be right up front.
Be right up front and put your policy on LGBTQ relationships
right on the front of your webpage.
I'm not saying it's got to always be that way.
Maybe 10 years from now, we'll be in a different position.
But right now, there are young families that are wondering,
is this a place that's going to be safe for me to raise my kids? And the website and the pastor at their first coffee assures them, yes, you're welcome here. And inevitably, there will
come a point where it's like, oh, but that's not really true. You really, if you're going to want
to, if you want to work your way up into these other levels of leadership, or if you want to
get married, you can't be gay. You really just can't be gay. So that is a place where barring theological
reform, which I understand is going to take some time, in the meantime, churches, for the love,
like honestly, for the love, be more clear about your position so that
we get rid of this bait and switch that is so painful.
Do you have thoughts on where you'd like to see reform?
Yeah, thanks.
So I actually agree with you on a lot of the damaging effects of purity culture.
Some of the shaming that took place, I think we would agree there.
I think some of the sexual prosperity gospel, we would agree with some some of that critique probably some of the ways modesty was taught I think where we would differ on obviously is when it comes to
the message on LGBTQ now a lot of purity culture didn't even talk about it which sent a message
that if you have same-sex attraction uh you don't even exist that in itself is damaging so if the church reforms its purity
culture and teaches a more biblical message with clarity and addresses lgbtq at least it would
bring clarity like you said which i think would help kids not feel like they're not even being
talked about and don't have a space to address with it i think that's an area we can find some common ground i think overall i'd like to see two things within
the church number one is when we talk about a biblical sexual ethic and what jesus taught about
marriage is we also remember that jesus gave us the command to love your enemy to love your neighbor
he told the story of the Good Samaritan.
And you write in your book, I don't remember how there's an inconsistency often in the church and a great fear around this issue that doesn't exist with others.
I think sometimes that can be overstated, but I also don't totally disagree with that.
I have seen a double standard and a fear on this issue.
I would like, you know,
what scripture says, 1 John 4, 18, perfect love casts out fear. So I want to see the church led
not by fear, not by lack of information, but motivated by love. Now, of course, we have to
define what that means. And you and I may differ on that fine, but within the church, I would love to see that posture of just saying we're going to lead with love above all else.
Obviously, when it comes to theologically, I don't think the church got it wrong.
I read every book I can get my hands on, and I find the arguments biblically lacking. what's interesting to me is throughout the history of the church, it doesn't matter geography,
Orthodox, Protestant, Catholic, ethnicity, male and female, there is a universal consensus
that marriage minimally is a sexed institution that's meant to be permanent and that sexual
activity is to be characterized, is to be practiced within that
marriage union. So for me, what's interesting, and maybe you'll take issue with this, but
in Georgiancy's book on progressive Christianity, he's like, it's actually progressive Christians
are far more white, educated, upper-class males,
in other words, a certain view of sexuality trying to reform the church,
ignores so many voices throughout the history of the church
that that doesn't mean it's wrong.
You're right.
The church has gotten some things wrong in the past.
That's for sure.
But because we've gotten A wrong,
it doesn't fall that we've gotten
b wrong and especially when we're talking about something as central to scripture as marriage and
there's such universal consensus on this i think there's a huge burden of proof that hasn't remotely
been met by the affirming side now you differ on that but i would like the church i think sometimes
we don't engage people confidently and
graciously because we don't really know what we believe and why. So we get defensive and we get
angry. But if we would go back to the scriptures and teach, not only here's what the Bible says
about marriage, but here's why it teaches this about marriage. Here's why male and female
translating to mom and dad is important for the development of a kid.
These are the kinds of things that I don't think we do well teaching in the church, and thus we often act out of fear rather than love.
So I think the two of us would both like to see the church more loving, although we differ
that.
You'd like to see theological change.
I'd like to see the church not have theological change and hold on to what
it has for 2000 years. No surprise, but what we're going to shift right now to keep the conversation
going is maybe 10 minutes each. You can take this conversation wherever you want to. What questions
do you have for me theologically, biblically, pastorally? I'll have 10 minutes or so for you,
and then we'll go to live questions. Cool.
And I've seen some of y'all commenting, and I appreciate the overall inner and kindness.
So thanks for following Sean's lead on that.
And I've seen a couple that have, I think they're wishing for more Bible from me,
which I can understand. I i can i i see you i understand you um but also i did as sean said in the beginning i wrote a whole
book on it so i'm not here to just talk about all of the arguments from the book that's not
that's not the point of this and and then i would also say this i think one of the reasons and i
don't know if sean this was a conscious decision on your part, maybe you just wanted to have a different conversation, but if it was your conscious
choice, I affirm it. I think it's a good one. For me, one of the reasons why we're not just
putting up on the screen 1 Corinthians 6, 9, and then being like, all right, now let's talk about
it. Let's dig into Arsinoe Coite, and let's dig into Malakoi, and let's dig into Romans 1. And
I think one of the reasons
why we're maybe not doing that um and i'm not entirely opposed to it but i think for me a lot
of with that conversation it comes down to like jordan versus lebron sort of conversations and
this may not be the best metaphor but i've never been one to shy away from a bad metaphor i just
jump into it and i hope it works out i think in the Jordan-LeBron conversation, the starting places are sort of
fundamentally different, which is going to lead to maybe some different conclusions.
So I think maybe why there's less really engaging with the Bible between you and I right now
is because you have a particular way that you understand the Bible, way that you see the Bible between you and I right now, is because you have a particular
way that you understand the Bible, way that you see the Bible, like the way that this whole thing
makes sense to you. Therefore, certain conclusions are going to make sense to you. I don't hold that
same view of the Bible. Therefore, different conclusions will perhaps be open to me.
And so for me to just go into the Bible, and for you to go into the Bible,
I don't think it's going to satisfy your viewers the way that they would like to be satisfied,
because we have different foundations that we're coming from. So if a person is interested
in my understanding and my research and my study into the story of Sodom and Gomorrah and Leviticus 18 and 20 and the term abomination and the idea of Paul speaking against these individuals
and Romans.
You can go and look at all that.
It's out there.
That stuff's pretty easy to access.
But yeah, I think that's part of why maybe we're not going too much into the Bible right
now because we can kind of just miss each other with all of our different points. That being said, if you have direct questions
about my work and mine with yours, I know we can get into that. But I think what I'm more
interested though in asking you about, Sean, is you opened up with that story about that individual and how it spurred within you this, this, um, I read it as this
compassionate heart to, to want to lean in with love. Where, where do you, how does it feel for
you? Like, what do you notice in your body? How does it feel in your heart space? What does it feel for you when you tell someone who is queer, when you tell them that your sexuality cannot be expressed in the way that mine can, or that you cannot be in a loving, committed relationship in the same way that I can, that you're only, I'm assuming based on your earlier
observation that said that there is a singleness or marriage, I'm assuming that your counsel,
your advice, your direction for them would be singleness because marriage isn't an option for
them. How does it feel for you to say that to people?
So let me make a couple comments on how you opened up, and then I'll jump into this question.
Cool. Yeah.
So I think you're right that really this is a question of how we interpret the Bible.
And some would even say a question of the authority of the Bible depending on what we mean by the Bible being authoritative.
So that question has to be answered. Now in your book, you do go into some biblical exegesis. So you think Christians
should dive into the passages. And I hope at some point we can get into those. But again,
the interesting thing to me is there's a range of ways that people handle the Bible from Orthodox,
from Catholic, Protestant, from the Middle East to Africa to Europe,
and the universality of the common view of marriage, one man, one woman, one flesh, one lifetime,
apart from this approach, at least seems to me should give anybody pause who comes around with
a different view of the authority of the scripture and a different interpretation of what it means for same-sex relationships. If I weren't that shoes,
that would give me serious pause. Now you asked the question, what would I say to somebody who
cannot express their sexual orientation like me? My thought goes... Sorry, not what would you say,
which you can't say, but how does it feel for you? Oh, what would I feel? Yeah, how do you feel when you tell them that?
I feel love and compassion for anybody who's wrestling with their sexuality in any fashion whatsoever.
I think this is – maybe it's the way I'm wired.
Maybe it's the heart that God has given me.
This is an issue I've talked on.
I've done a ton of counseling for.
And I have talked to people all over the theological map,
people that are married, people that are single,
people who are straight, people who are gay,
trying to make sense of feelings they have
about a range of issues.
And how does this line up with God's design so of course if there's somebody who's
sitting there and there's a cultural narrative that says this behavior is okay and i would say
scripture says it doesn't it's not like i go hey here's good news for you you know this feels great
any more than i would say any other behavior that somebody has been
told is okay, doesn't line up with scripture.
But with that said, Colby, I think of two other things that come to kind of my mind
and come to my heart.
One is some of the same sex attracted Christians, friends of mine, I won't mention, just won't
call them out, who've told me many times that God's guidelines and design
for marriage and singleness actually sets them free. And like you said earlier,
you don't want people to lack clarity when it comes to sexuality. Let's state what we believe,
why we believe it. A number of my same-sex attracted
friends have said to me, hey, keep speaking what scripture says. Have the boldness and have the
clarity and the conviction because as Jesus said, you shall know the truth and the truth shall set
you free. So I believe that, and I know you do do too i believe that what i hold about sexuality is in
line with what jesus held in line with what the scripture has so i firmly believe there's a kind
of freedom that comes emotionally and intellectually from aligning one's life with God's design. That's a deep conviction that I have.
So I hurt with somebody. I mourn with that person. I try to be gentle with that person,
but I think it is actually truth and God's design in scripture that brings freedom.
So I really believe that that person, if they live out and follow what Jesus taught, will experience a
different kind of freedom. Go ahead. Keep going. Yeah, thanks for that follow-up. What makes you
believe those friends of yours that tell you that? You say you have friends that told you that when
they leaned more into sort of your reading of the Bible that they experience.
I think you said they experience a type of freedom.
What makes you believe them?
I mean, I guess the same reason I would believe any of my other friends on anything.
I don't think it's unique to this issue that it's not with others.
But this is probably, I mean, maybe half a dozen friends where we've spent a lot of time and in some cases shed some tears.
And they've told me distinctly from their own experience and understanding of Scripture that this has brought a kind of freedom for them.
Now, some people have come out of certain experiences in their past that they felt were far more damaging, relationships that did not line up with God's design
and are saying, okay, time out.
Now I understand why God gives these particular commandments.
So yeah, I don't know if that answers your question, but...
Kind of, because then I guess the question is,
why wouldn't you believe my friends that tell me that when I accepted my sexual orientation for
what it was when I saw my sexuality as a gift when I let go of the shame of feeling like I couldn't
be in a relationship with someone of the same
gender.
And when I began a loving relationship with my now partner or now spouse, I finally experienced
the sort of freedom that I've always longed for.
And this is the story that I hear over and over and over again.
This is the story that people gather at conferences by the thousands to share this story of, and they say the same thing, which is,
you shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free. The truth that they are loved just as
they are, the truth that there's nothing wrong with them, the truth that they can be in a loving,
committed relationship with someone of the same sex and it leads them to freedom why are we not believing them and why what makes you believe
the people who land where you land and not the not the others that's a great question by the way
very thoughtful and here's what i would say because the basis of my view of this is not somebody's experience that's not where my theology comes from
so clearly because people can say hey i'm free following the historic christian path hey i'm free
not following the historic christian path then we have to point to something besides
somebody's lived experience as the basis of what's actually true now that could be some
objective scientific data about the person's psychological health that would be one way
but as christians i want to go back to scripture so people who tell me they feel that way i'm not
going to say they're liars of course they feel feel that way. But ultimately, as a Christian, I'm going
to have to say our feelings and our experience of freedom needs to line up with what scripture
says. So it's not that I don't believe them. It's that ultimately freedom to me cannot be divorced from what it means to be human, what God's design
for marriage actually is, how we're supposed to function and use our bodies. I mean, I think
somebody could be free in a sense and have a more difficult emotional road and somebody have an easier emotional road and be less free.
So freedom cannot be separated from truth in my mind, which is why I evaluate those
two experiences differently.
Okay.
All right.
Thanks for sharing.
Feels a little disjointed to me that you could hear two people share a very similar feeling
space and you believe one
because it matches with your theological conviction, but you don't believe the other.
And yet I have to be honest with how in my own, like, I don't know that I'm a whole lot different,
which is to say, I might meet one of your six friends and hear their story of like, no,
Colby, you don't understand. I feel so much freer now that I have
committed myself to singleness or now that I have sort of forced myself into a
heterosexual relationship, I would probably also struggle to really
believe them, I think. So, you know, that's I think
I'm trying to name how that's probably hard for both of us to really accept that people are reliable narrators of their own experience if it doesn't also match up with how we understand the Bible to be on this one.
Anyway, I'll ask you one more question, Sean, and then I'll throw it back.
I'd love to know what questions you have for me.
Is there any scenario for you in which you could imagine
potentially changing your mind on this?
What would it take for you to change your mind on this?
And then,
and I'll just add this because it's not all that interesting to me to say,
well, for the last 2000 years, across many different traditions, this has sort of been
the fundamental way of thinking about it. I guess that's interesting to me. But if we hop in a time
machine and go 2000 more years into the future, then you could theoretically look back and be like, well, for the
first 2,000 years, it looked like this. For the second 2,000 years, it looked like that. It's
only interesting insofar as this is our present moment, and this is what we have to work with.
But that doesn't, to me, say anything other than this is just the point in history in which we're
at. Again, this doesn't affirm that it's been the correct way to think about it for 2000 years.
So anyway, what would it take for you to change your mind?
Could you envision any scenario in which your mind did change on this?
Again, love the question.
This is great.
Let me make a couple comments from earlier.
And I understand you're wrestling through why I would see two different people and find
it somewhat disjointed
to believe one and not the other. I think we may be operating a little bit on different
understandings of freedom. I don't just mean emotional freedom and happiness in life. I meet
people who say, hey, I'm a new ager. I left Jesus. I'm a new ager. I feel more free. Hey, I'm in
Marxism. I feel more free. Hey, I'm a Muslim. I'm not talking about somebody's lived experience of being free. I would tie freedom to our objective design and having the
capacity to do what is right. Now that could take us a huge side, but I think some of our,
some of the tension in what you're saying, which is fair, we may be operating a little bit off
different understandings of freedom. Now, with that said, we can come back to that if you want
to. What would it cause to change my mind? I remember when I first started really studying
this issue around 2012, 2013, if I remember. I remember reading some of the first books by
Matthew Vines, by Justin Lee, the book Loves and Orientation, some of the more academic books by Boswell.
And I remember very first reading those feeling unsettled, and I went to my wife.
I was like, I might be wrong about this.
Like I have not thought about these passages, and I realize a lot's at stake.
But as I study this, I've got to be willing to change my mind.
Now, do I have built incentives not to?
Sure, I get that.
I'm not going to pretend complete objective space there.
I appreciate that.
But I mean, I can tell you for seven or eight years, even when I went back and revisited your book, I was like, OK, what's Colby saying?
Is this reasonable?
What if he's right? Like,
all I can tell you is, you know, when I first started questioning my faith with my dad,
who's an apologist, instead of going, well, the Bible's true. Jesus is true. He goes, son,
follow truth and only give up your faith. If you're convinced it's not true. My dad, this great apologist is like, follow truth. That should be your guide.
So as much as I have to push back against my biases and again, not pretending to be,
I can tell you, I have intentionally read these books and looked at it.
And I had a affirming person I won't mention reach out to me recently, some post that I did and she contacted me and was like you're totally
disingenuous and i said you completely misunderstood my point and she was kind of attacking me and i
said look if you want to change my views number one be kind towards people who hold the view
differently and second make the arguments prove that jesus was okay with same-sex unions, prove that Paul was,
and not only knock down the supposed clobberverses,
but give some positive reason why that is more compelling
that I should discount what the universal church has held for 2,000 years.
And I'm not making a historical argument.
To me,
there's a burden of proof here. Even if it were 50-50, Colby, that would be hard for me to shift.
51-49, I would. 50-50, I go, I don't know if I would. But I don't even think it's close to that
exegetically, biblically. So all I can say is somebody's got to make the biblical argument.
And I look at people like William Loader,
who's one of the leading, arguably, scholars in the world
on the ancient Near East who writes on sexuality.
And he's like, here's what Paul meant.
Here's what Leviticus means.
Here's what Jesus means.
If you take the Bible seriously, it takes the historic Christian view.
Now, he rejects that for reasons that he owns and says, I have a different view of the Bible.
Yeah.
And I have a different view of same-sex relationships.
I look at that.
I'm like, OK, even this guy who has all incentive to think that the Bible holds his view doesn't.
So I just don't think theologically it's remotely there.
And so I'm not really tempted to shift my views on it in a
way at the beginning i think i was more unsettled for a season so i appreciate your your response so
it sounds like i hear you correctly the the only scenario in which you could imagine changing your
mind on this is if there was a superior exegetical argument that I'm assuming means exegesis from within your approach to how to interpret the Bible.
Like it's got to be within your framework and your grid, and it's got to be a better interpretation or a better understanding of the texts.
That might be the only scenario in which you would change your mind.
Is that – am i saying here's what i would say i would say it has to be the ultimate issue for me is biblical
and theological that's the question so just within my system makes it sound like i have an arbitrary
system and which i don't think it's yeah i just meant there are different types of exegetical
there are different types of hermeneutics maybe that that's the word I should use. Or then you're a hermeneutic because someone else is hermeneutic, which might be more like mine, which is, does it lead towards love? Like that's the hermeneutic, look at it with the lens of love. That's a far less interesting or compelling hermeneutic for you. So you're like, well, that doesn't really change the way i understand the text yeah and it's not just interesting i want to know not just myself why was the entirety of the church wrong about this yeah and i'm open to that colby
believe it or not i think you know me well enough i will have this conversation i will entertain
both sides i will hear people out so it's not just sean over here in a corner it's the history of the
church all these range of views yeah why should I adopt this new hermeneutic?
I want to know that.
If you make a compelling biblical case, I'm game.
If not, I don't see myself changing my mind.
Has there been something that you have changed your mind on?
There has been.
Specifically, sort of theologically, not obviously by Lexus or Toyota,
but I mean, which actually aren't both the same company.
Yeah, there's been a few issues like the age of the earth, the potential compatibility of evolution understood a certain way, and Christianity.
Those are two that come to mind, the role of women in the church.
I've rethought certain issues that are there. And I'm not going to tell you where I land because people are going to freak out and go that
direction. But within conservative circles, those are not insignificant things to try to think
through and wrestle with. So yeah, there have been some other issues I've shifted on tied to
Calvinism and Arminianism. Yeah. No, thanks for sharing. And yeah,
I'm not looking for details. I guess what I'm curious then is, when you look back at the
Sean that held maybe a young earth or the Sean that held maybe a more released,
a different position on women in the church, was that version version of you tell me about that version of you was that version
of you just not reading the bible correctly was that version of you not did you just not have the
right information yet what how do you compare that version of you that believe that versus the one
that you are now yeah so i i would i would say this then i'm going to shift and i get to ask
you some questions that's true i've taken up way too much time. Sorry, Sean.
No, that's okay. It's great.
I just find this so fascinating and I don't oftentimes get to ask somebody who really responds in a legitimate way.
I agree. I think I look back and on those issues, I think, huh, I heard one side of the issue.
And like it says in what, Proverbs 18 or Proverbs 20, the first to speak in court sounds right until the cross-examination begins.
I simply hadn't cross-examined my views.
Now, there are some issues, namely this one on sexuality.
I have probably read as many books on this on any topic anywhere.
So it's not a matter of not hearing the arguments.
I've heard them.
I've cross-examined them and don't find it compelling.
So all I can say is I try to change my views.
I think it's a virtue that if you find a position you think is more compelling to say, you know
what?
I was wrong.
I was naive.
I missed it.
I'm changing.
I think that's something I'm working on in my life and trying to do, whether it's politically
or any other issue.
So on those issues, I look back. I was like, yeah, I was naive. I just believe what people told me.
I hadn't really considered other ways to read the text. I look at the question of same-sex unions,
and I think that is not the issue. We're talking probably thousands of hours reading every
conceivable angle and just not being convinced now here's here's my question
for you and i'm going to go a little bit more theological and biblical i in your book at the
very beginning you call it unclobber and you have a statement and see if i can find it here
there are approximately six verses out of 31 000 of scripture that appears to reference same-sex sex acts. The implication being because this is only dealt with in so few,
we can't have the confidence that we have to hold the traditional view.
To me, as I approach a biblical sexuality, these six passages are secondary.
The primary question is this, is we can only understand how to think about same-sex
marriage when we understand how to think biblically about marriage and marriage is not dealt with in
six passages the bible starts with it ten commandments prophets jesus paul revelation
from beginning to end we have marriage so'm curious, how would you define marriage?
What is marriage to you?
Very challenging.
Marriage to me is very challenging.
It is work.
It is effort.
It is... I mean is effort. It is...
I mean defining marriage. I agree.
I understand, but I'm claims to have a biblical view of marriage,
which they define in a very particular way, which others can push back on and be like,
come on, the Bible has a whole different—there's a lot of other marriages, types of marriage
in the Bible, let's be honest about that.
But when someone—I get worried that when someone like yourself talks about a particular version,
that it becomes so reductionistic that it becomes, that it's just reduced to,
is there one man, is there one woman, and are they, I guess at that point it's like, okay, and what?
Because there was no county office, you know, in ancient civilization.
So there was no city registrar that signed off.
There was no marriage license or certificate.
So even that becomes a, if we're really, if we're really going to say,
and I reject this,
but if we're really going to say that God had one idea for what marriage is and one acceptable manifestation of that, and it looks like one man, one woman married,
how on earth do we wrap our arms around what married means in any other context outside of ours and maybe more recent ones that we have some data and
records on, which is to say for hundreds of thousands of homo sapien years, when was marriage
a real thing? When did it actually move from just one man, one woman being interested in each other,
holding hands, snuggling at night to keep warm? When was it? at what point in that relationship was god like no no no no yes now you
can have sex now it's fine um my point is i think when we reduce it to just this this sort of flat
definition of one man one woman we are it's such a low bar for me.
It's like, that doesn't really tell me anything.
Because I know plenty of heterosexual couples,
myself included, that you could look at their marriage
at certain points in time and be like,
there's a whole, that marriage is really sinful.
That's a really sinful marriage.
I don't care that you're a man and a woman
and you have a certificate from the county.
That's irrelevant.
That's completely irrelevant to whether or not this relationship is honoring to God or is generating good fruit or is contributing towards wholeness and well-being.
So that's kind of why I start there.
Like marriage is hard.
It's challenging.
It's complicated.
It's not easy.
It's not simple.
It can't be reduced to just a simple definition.
I think when we do that, we're not being fair or honest with the larger experience of what humans have tried to do to figure out how do we live peaceably in a society with each other without – yeah, anyway.
All right.
Take it one more time.
So fair enough.
I didn't really answer your question. You want my definition of marriage? Yeah, anyway. All right. Take your time. Okay, so fair enough. I didn't really answer your question.
You won't – my definition of marriage – yeah, go ahead.
Let me just press in a couple areas to see where you go with this. I drive people like you and I drive people that watch this – I drive you all nuts because I don't really answer questions as directly as people wish I would.
So would you say marriage minimally requires commitment?
Yes. Okay. 100%. requires commitment yes okay 100 so it requires commitment okay so we've got that part of it
would you agree that marriage is meant to be permanent it's meant to be permanent
when you say meant i just want to clarify clarify that for you, I think you're imagining, if I'm correct, you're imagining a God somewhere who has like a, here is the outline of what marriage is.
Earth, I hope you get it.
Good luck.
Like minus the corny cheesiness of it.
That's kind of when you say meant to be like you're saying.
I'm saying is there a design that God has given? Yes. I believe if we want to understand what
marriage is and God is a creator, just like we look at a design for my smartphone, we ask the
creator, there is a sense where we get asked if there's a design. But in this case, I'm just
simply asking if it's supposed to be, I mean, even non-Christians will give vows.
When you give a vow, nobody gets married and says, well, it might be permanent.
Like we get married intending to be permanent.
I'm not saying there's not justification for ending it.
So, okay, fair enough.
I'm with you.
So commitment.
When people enter into this commitment, this sacred commitment, they intend for it to be for the duration.
That's it.
Would you say marriage is two?
Two people.
I think that's been the predominant construct for marriage for a lot of civilization, not for all of it, right? We have very good reasons to
look back at time and see that marriage looked different. It was more of a communal experience.
I personally can only imagine, see the aforementioned comment about marriage being
very challenging, I can only imagine being married to one person at a time.
There are others that I'm close to that, that,
that have a different way of thinking about that and experiencing that.
And I don't, I don't know what to tell them.
Let me try that again.
I affirm their life-giving relationships.
So you can't imagine being married to more than one person, but you can imagine
a couple, I guess it'd be called a thruple, that could be life-giving and honored by God.
Yes. You're open to that. Yeah i've seen it i've said i i'm
familiar with it personally like not personally but within my case so i guess my next question
would be for me the answer is if we go back to genesis god makes male and female so marriage is
sexed the two shall become one There's a unity that's there.
Cling to his wife.
It's meant to be permanent.
These factors can be found.
And two, because it's God's mechanism for multiplying and filling the earth, man and woman is all that is necessary.
If you take away the difference in complementarity between man and woman, can't keep to two it could be three it could be four and so on so for me and this is probably
no surprise to you i think there's a very simple clear way to find a definition of marriage go back
to genesis jesus affirms it in matthew 19 that it's sexed it's permanent and there's a commitment that's there and it's about populating
fill in the earth amongst other things where does your understand of marriage come from is it from
the Bible is it from somewhere else that's part of my question I'm curious where did you get this
definition what biblical support is there if that's not the place you get this definition from sure but before i respond let me go back to something you said where you
you talked about a certain clarity in the bible about marriage but i submit to you sean that
again you even go go back to pick any pick any point in the Jewish people's history, when or even before that, when were couples
considered married? I would hope you would acknowledge that that's a moving target. It
has been a moving target, which is to say we have a target in our culture right now that marriage
is official when maybe there's an officiant that says you know I now pronounce you
maybe some people like no it's not until they sign the document maybe some people go as hardcore no
it's not tell it's like in the file folder I I would like you to admit if you're comfortable
that the point at which someone becomes actually officially married is not only a sort of nebulous, hard
to pin down, slippery target, but it is changed and it's different depending on culture, depending
on time and history.
And the reason why I think that is worth pointing out is because I think in some part that pushes
back a little bit against this idea that God
has this one very simple biblical idea of what marriage is and that we can just know what it is.
I don't think that's true. I don't think we can say this is the point at which that couple's
married. Not then, not then. Yes. No, no. Yes. How do you reconcile that?
Yeah. So my honest answer is –
Does that question even make sense?
It does make sense and my answer might not be what you expect.
That's fine.
I don't see why it matters.
Now, let me explain why.
Just because there's debate about the particular moment that somebody is married doesn't mean we can't distinguish an essence of marriage from something that's not married.
In fact, maybe you'll like this one, maybe not.
It's the fallacy of the beard, right?
Exactly at what point does somebody have a beard?
And we can debate some of the particulars,
but I know that you have a beard and I know that I don't.
When we look at marriage, I'm talking Jewish tradition and Christian tradition. There's no debate until
this generation that marriage is meant to be permanent. It's a commitment that it's a sexed
institution and that it's about procreation. I think, I think you're getting lost on the particular secondary issue of exactly when somebody's getting married and missing the large universal commonality.
And the reason it's been held so much in the church is because it's so clear in Genesis and Jesus spoke on this and in the other passages.
Now, that might not be how you expected me to push
back, but tell me what you think. Yeah, I completely submit that from your perspective,
I'm losing the forest for the tree. Why I'm narrowing in on the tree is because
when I was in the evangelical world and when that was my viewpoint,
the tree that mattered in the forest was the tree of, is this sin or not?
At what point does this become a behavior or an action that the God of the
universe would deem wicked and sinful? And at what point is it not?
And if we were to use your beard example
if the if we buy into this idea that there's a God that says having a beard
is sinful then we darn well would imagine and actually we don't have to
imagine like there were in the Jewish scriptures there were very strict
parameters around what length of beard and all that like to keep it in that
not sinful category the reason why i think it matters and it maybe i i think it matters i think
it needs to matter to you when marriage happens and when it actually is god ordained or god
approved is because your fundamental uh operating position is that not married sex is sinful.
And I'm saying, well, then doesn't that require that you know when a marriage is valid in the eyes of God and when it's not?
So the reason why I'm zeroing in on this tree is because I think this tree infects the whole forest with this disease of the idea that God has this one very narrow idea of what is acceptable sexual activity
and that we've got it figured out through these ancient words that we've read and interpreted.
So I think the tree matters more than maybe you're giving credit.
So here's what I think. I think some of the particular ways this expressed in culture,
whether it's in a public vow with people watching from chairs, whether you sign a contract,
whether it's a handshake, whatever it is, those are secondary to the biblical minimalist that a man leaves a father and mother, clings, makes a commitment to his wife, and then the sexual union follows.
So just because there can be some cultural expression of this norm of marriage doesn't mean we can't know what marriage is.
It doesn't mean that it's not sexed.
It doesn't mean it's not limited to two. It doesn't undermine because there's particular
cultural ways that these commandments are to be practiced. So look, even look in scriptures,
divorce is allowed by Jesus, Matthew 19, at least minimally for sexual unfaithfulness paul in first
corinthians 7 is abandonment so on the flip side there's a commitment to sexual faithfulness in
marriage and the opposite abandonment is making a commitment to stick with somebody i think we
can derive a pretty minimalist view of what marriage is without getting lost on the particular
cultural moment. I mean, I don't know any church father who had history who would say, okay, you've
left your mother and father. You've made a commitment. People culturally understand this,
but you can't have sex. You're not married because of this particular detail.
And maybe we're going round and round on this one. That's certainly what pastors do today.
Well, if they, yeah, I don't know if I've ever seen a pastor do that. Maybe you have,
but if they do, then like shame on them.
It's before you're married and married is very limited to the ceremony and or the signing of
the document. Like that's exactly what most pastors tell their people. But that's not arbitrary. That's a cultural expression with particulars from the biblical model and norm of leaving father and mother, making a commitment.
This is how the community recognizes it.
So, okay, maybe we differ on this.
Let me ask you one more.
And I somewhat hesitate on this uh because i don't know i don't
want it to feel like it's below the belt but i want to know where you want to go on this and i
won't press you after asking this you can just take it where you want to but as i i read in your
book it said it's talking about same-sex attraction it doesn't commit loving, committed, mutually honoring, and respecting relationships between people of the same sex.
So the Bible doesn't specifically condemn those categories of loving, mutually honoring, committed, and respectful.
You said you'd be okay with a throuple because the bible doesn't explicitly condemn that the question that people
often ask me and some have asked me from my last conversation is what about something like incest
would you be okay with a marriage if there's commitment it's honoring it's mutual and the
other adjectives that are used are you okay with with that? Are you undecided? You're not sure.
Are you against it?
And if you're against it, why would that be different than same-sex unions?
I'm fine responding to this question.
I do typically start when – because this question, like you said, there's a handful of questions that tends to come up yeah and i often respond initially with why do you care what i think
and my only my only you know the reason why i say that is because like i'm just one guy who's trying
to figure some stuff out and try to share i'm one you beggar who's found some bread, offering it to some other beggars. So I would hope nobody would be hanging their hopes on whether or not their desire for an
incestual relationship will be okay or not based on what some random dude from San Diego says.
So that's my first sort of preamble is like i mean i can
tell you what i think but i don't really know why it matters
but then secondly or the other the other thing i say by way of preamble is
who's asking this question
like where where are the people in our society that are pushing against the,
the larger church institution to say like this desire,
this innate desire that I have to marry my sister.
Like I didn't ask for it.
It's here.
I can't change it. It's just part of who I am. And the fact that you won't marry me to my sister is really harmful and oppressive.
Like, where are all these people? Like, where does this question come from other than just an
exercise in Colby, where do you draw the lines? Which is fine,
we can talk about where does Colby draw the lines. They're still just Colby's ideas of where the
lines are. I would caution everybody to not put too much stock what I'm saying, which I don't
think is a problem based on the comments. For me, I have not seen any evidence psychologically, I have not seen any evidence in terms of the
well-being of humans, I have not seen anything that says incestual relationships can be generative
and life-giving and lead to flourishing. It's not to say they're not out there.
I mean, especially in other cultures, other times,
I hold the space that I'm just ignorant
on whether or not that has happened.
But for me personally,
I don't know that anybody is really clamoring
to engage in an incestual relationship.
So it feels a bit like a hypothetical red herring.
But if like a real world hypothetical, if someone came to our church and they were first cousins and they're like,
Hey, we want to get married. That would be really weird. That would just be really awkward. I would
have a lot of follow-up questions. And if the people in that I'm speaking to have a really
particular commitment to the Bible as like being their prescriptive guide for how to live life, it's not too hard to go to the Bible and say, well, here's some prohibitions against incest.
So our ancient spiritual ancestors seem to think it was a bad idea.
If that has any weight for you today, I present it to you.
Okay.
I got a million more questions for you, but I said I wouldn't press this one further and let you speak.
Fair enough.
Now, we are pushing limits on time, so I don't want you to feel like the bad guy here.
Do you want to take a handful of questions or you had committed really to lessen this?
If you got to go, everybody's going to understand.
Want to do one or two questions?
If you have some questions that you think would be additive to the conversation, I've got time for that.
All right.
We don't have a lot of time.
If you have a question for Colby or myself, write QUESTION in caps.
Put it in there quickly.
And if we see it in the next few moments, we will take your questions live.
I'm seeing a ton of comments uh mostly positive
some that maybe are not so but you know it is theophilus says that i can't just give a straight
answer no i give a very crooked answer um just like my theology let's so i get i mean here's
the first one on straight whatever forget it don't worry about mean, here's the first one that. Forget it, non-straight, whatever, forget it.
Don't worry about it.
There's a joke for the people.
Here's an interesting one.
This is for you, but I think we should probably both answer this.
Cool.
This is Colby.
What if you're wrong?
What if you're preaching the wrong gospel?
Yeah.
If you're wrong, then you're a false teacher.
Why change God's word?
Why reform what God says?
Yeah.
So I don't believe I'm changing God's word, D-R. So right out the gate, that's
kind of the point of my book is that I'm exploring what the Bible actually says and doesn't say.
So I'm not changing God's word. I'm not reforming what God says. I'm reforming what the church has
historically taught based on bad ideas. If you're wrong, then you're a false
teacher. I'm assuming I'm wrong on a whole bunch of things. So if I have to be right on everything
to not be a false teacher, then I guess you're correct. I am a false teacher. You win. But the
more interesting thing is what if I'm wrong overall in this? If I'm wrong overall in this?
I think I'm in a better position than Sean if you're wrong. I think that if I'm wrong on this,
I get to stand before the pearly gates and say, I was just following Jesus's example.
That's exactly what I was doing. Uh, and that's all
Jesus ever asked of me is to, is to follow his example. And Jesus would lean over Peter's
shoulder and be like, yeah, he did let him in. He's fine. Even it was, he had some weird ideas.
He's he did just all I really wanted was for people to follow me. And, and he, he did that.
He had a, he had trust in my way. my way and he let me in.
I think if you're wrong though, Sean, and those like you are wrong, I think then it's this, you still get to be let in because you're a wonderful man and I'm sure Peter would have
no problem with you.
But then there would be follow-up questions like, were you not paying attention when I said that I desire mercy and not sacrifice?
Were you not paying attention at this idea of grace being quite literally just a free gift that you don't have to do anything to earn it?
Like, it's just there.
It's just there.
Like, why were you hanging all these millstones around people?
Why were you making it hard? Were you not listening when I said, take my yoke? It's easy.
The yoke of the Pharisees, where you have to behave a certain way, where you have to believe
a certain way, where you have to do all the right things. The whole point was that that's not the
point. And so I think you might have a lot more things to answer for if you're wrong. If I'm wrong,
Jesus is like, yeah, but he was just following me.
Paul might have some issues with him once he gets inside, but he's cool with me.
So no surprise, Colby, I see it very differently than you do.
I think you have it way worse if you're wrong than me on two levels.
Number one, I think 1 Corinthians 6 is pretty clear that certain behavior people
engage in can keep them away from the kingdom of God. Now, I realize from your book that you would
interpret those passages differently, and out of total fairness, I recognize that we have not
entered into those passages and gone into that debate. But the question is, what if we're wrong?
If we're wrong, you're telling people something that the Bible explicitly calls sin is okay
and misleading them about their salvation.
On that level, I think you have it way worse.
But there's a second way that I think your position has it way worse,
is that the primary reference point in scripture to
god's love for the church is a particular relationship and it's not a brother-sister
relationship it's not a motherly love for her child it's not comrades in war it's marriage it's marriage the primary metaphor that god gave us to show his love for the church
is marriage the bible begins with the marriage it's all through the old testament unfaithfulness
to god was compared to in the prophets compared to adultery jose is commanded to live with a
prophet i'm sorry jose the prophet is commanded to live with a prophet. I'm sorry, Hosea the prophet is commanded to live with a prostitute. Very different. Jesus talks about marriage. And Paul in Ephesians 5 is like,
husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church. This is a mystery that points to the
salvific plan of God and his love for the church. So I think if I'm right about this and you're wrong,
you are arguably twisting the primary metaphor
that God gives us to understand his love for the church.
That strikes me as a pretty serious thing.
Yeah, I hope you are not right i get that i hope you're not that's fair because
i that that's a that's a god i really want nothing to do with
okay that's that's the that's the god uh that i think jesus came to point us away from okay um
fair enough man there's so many things i want to talk to you about coley this this one is for me
but i think maybe it came up let's just let's end with this one because i don't want to push the
time too much but this was for me it says sean can you share more about the freedom christians have when they align their lives with god's design this is for me but i just got done talking will you talk about what you mean
by freedom what it means to be a person who is free in their relationships and this goes back
i'm talking for a second to give you time to think of an answer this goes back to our our question about um the two experiences that you had asked me why i believe one story and not
the other and you described the couple in a same-sex relationship being more free and
articulating that to you so explain to us or the audience what you mean by the freedom somebody can
have and then i'll give mine i think
that'll add more clarity and then we'll wrap up cool we you and i clearly read the early chapters
of genesis differently um oh one second i'll be with you in just a few minutes. Okay. Just give me like five or ten minutes. Okay. All right.
We clearly feel differently about Genesis.
For me, it's not a prescription for how marriage should be.
For me, it includes, among other things, a description of how the ancient Jews thought about marriage in a particular context, and that's fine and all.
But I want to go back to this moment in these opening story of Genesis, where man and woman
are created, and woman's created for man because it's not good for man to be alone, which is
interesting right there, right?
That everything that God creates is good.
Stars good, moon good, trees good, good buffalo good even scorpions good and i guess
but then loneliness like reverses the the flow of goodness this divine record scratch
and yet now we have many churches that say you you're only your path is singleness which i
think singleness is wonderful if people choose
it for themselves it should never be given to them by others but there's this moment where man and a
woman eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil which again goes back to why i think i'll be
fine um you know if i'm wrong because the one thing God wanted to keep from humanity was the knowledge
of good and evil. Like the one thing God's like, you all can have everything. I'm going to hold
on to the capacity to discern between what's right and wrong. Because if I give it to you,
you're going to screw it up. And that's all we've been doing is we've been screwing it up.
They eat of it. And immediately they see each other naked, and they're filled with shame, and they cover themselves up.
And then the story goes on that God is like, where is everybody? Where'd you go?
And they're hiding from God.
And you know what God says next, Sean? God says, who told you that you were naked?
I say that because for me, Sean, freedom is the absence of shame.
For me, freedom is...
Freedom is trusting that we are loved by God as we are, that we do not need to cover up
who we are.
Who told you?
Who told you, young kid who has feelings for people of the same sex?
Who told you there's anything wrong with you?
Who told you?
No, like, it's—don't believe it.
It's not true. So freedom for me means being being uh
being free of shame i think that that is one of the things uh that jesus's death and resurrection
um does is it is it unlocks the power of shame and and and that is part of how we are free free from
the powers of sin and shame uh And for me, that is sort of
what leads to freedom is when someone is no longer mired and feeling like they need to cover up and
sew themselves some fig leaves. Okay. So freedom is very much an emotional experience for you,
the absence of shame. Emotional, spiritual, mental, physical. Yeah, man, we're trinity of beings, heart, body,
soul, mind. That's four things, but all of it. Yeah. Shame runs deep. Shame lives in our body.
It doesn't just live in our feelings. Shame lives in our mind and our soul. So getting all of that
out is the path of freedom. So I agree with you on freedom in terms of its
relationship to shame but let me take a step back and explain how i understand freedom and how i
think it lines up scripturally so when i ask students and i do frequently how do you define
freedom the common answer they'll give me is freedom is doing whatever you want without
restraint as long as you're the author of your life, no unrestraint, which is a bad answer.
As long as you do whatever you want, you're the author of your life, and there's no restraint,
you're free.
I asked students one time, I said, give me a depiction of this of the person who's most
free.
And the answer is like a person alone on an island with no restraint, live uninhibited,
do whatever they want. Well, I think these students understand
freedom from, but they don't understand freedom for. Half of freedom is negative where we lack
something. If we're locked up in prison, we're not free because we're restrained to a degree.
But the other part of freedom is understanding what we're made for and then living according
to that design again like my smartphone was made for something it's not a waffle maker it's not a
scuba tank so when i understand what it's for and use it accordingly you could say that it's set
free well it's interesting the bible starts with with, in the beginning, God created. He
made us for something. We're not accidents. We were designed. And if we want to be free,
we have to understand what God made us for. And of course, the answer is to be in a relationship
with him and to be in a relationship with other people. Like you said in Genesis, it's not good that man is alone.
So there is a sense, you and I agree, that we're made for relationships.
In fact, hell is described as darkness, which is loss and the lack of relationships.
Heaven is a city where there's bustling and you know a banquet where there's relationships
so we're made for relationships but the same passage that you and i are talking about
that says we're made for relationships and you just shared in genesis chapter one
is the same passage that tells us marriage is one man and one woman in a committed relationship for life.
So we agree the absence of shame.
We agree on the importance of relationships, that we're not to be alone on an island.
But I also have to say who's the maker, who's the creator?
How did he design us to be?
And we're free when we're living out according to God's design.
So here's one illustration.
I'll end with this that I'll sometimes share with students.
Like take a piano.
If you sit down at a piano and you have person A and person B.
Person A goes, I don't care what the person at that piano.
I'm going to take a bat.
I'm going to beat this thing up and bash it.
I'm free to do whatever I want to that piano.
In one sense, you could say that person's free if they own it. Another person looks and goes, I know the truth of that piano. I know what it was made for
and how it's meant to be used. And they've cultivated the discipline, which involves
resisting certain urges and feelings, cultivated the discipline to play that piano as it's meant to
be played whether they feel like they enjoy it or not that is beautiful music using something
according to its design now when somebody does that there's often the feelings that follow because
music is beautiful but there's a sense where the person is free when they understand what the piano
is, use it the way it's meant to. That's how I look at human nature and I look at sexuality.
You can't have freedom without limitations. You can't have freedom without restrictions
and boundaries. That's exactly right. And I think you and I differ over where those
restrictions and those boundaries are. Sure. But fundamentally, yeah, I agree.
That's where it comes in. So, all right, Colby, I hope you'll forgive me for keeping you
way past we agreed to. This conversation was really fantastic.
77, brother.
I enjoyed it a ton. Thank you for coming on. Those who've watched this, make sure you hit
subscribe. We've got some other conversations like this coming up. If you want a book that will make a case for an affirming view, I think Colby's book is fair and it's interesting. It's worth reading.
Oh, thanks, Sean.
If you want a book that – I don't critique his book, but I wrote a book with John Stonestreet on same-sex marriage that would offer obviously a different perspective.
So give us a comment and a thumbs up before you leave.
Make sure you subscribe.
Colby, if I haven't worn out my welcome,
we'll do it again.
All right, thanks, bud.
Have a great Christmas, rest of holiday season too.
Thanks, everyone.
Blessings.
Thank you.