The question is “why should anyone care about Paul’s view on homosexuality, since Paul never met Jesus?”
Here is the answer:
Dr. Craig’s answer is two-fold. First, he said that Jesus was a Jew and had the same views on this question as Jews normally did. Second, he cited Jesus’ teaching about marriage being the union of one man and one woman in Mark 10:7-9 and Matthew 19:5. I heard this same verse presented when I was listening to the “It takes a Family” 2013 lectures, in the lecture by Dr. Robert Gagnon, who is an expert on what Jesus says about homosexuality.
Here are the relevant links, if you want to get yourself ready:
- “Jesus and Marriage” ~ Dr. Robert Gagnon @ ITAF ’13
- Jesus and Marriage Q&A ~ Dr. Robert Gagnon @ ITAF ’13
- “Paul and Homosexual Practice” ~ Dr. Robert Gagnon @ ITAF ’13
- “Paul and Homosexual Practice” Q&A ~ Dr. Robert Gagnon @ ITAF ’13
I think the important thing about Dr. Craig’s answer is that we have to be ready for tough questions like this and to have an answer. That’s what it means to be an apologist. To prepare in advance, not to wait until you are asked to think about it for the first time.
J. Warner Wallace recently wrote a post about what it takes to be a Christian apologist.
He had 3 points:
Accept Your Identification
Peter tells us in 1 Peter 3:15 that all of us have a duty to be ever-ready to make the case for our hope in Jesus. This isn’t an option reserved for a few well-trained professionals; all of us, regardless of position or vocation, are tasked with this honor. As I wrote in Cold Case Christianity, when we, as Christians, live without embracing this aspect of our identity, we are living an abbreviated Christian life. The sooner you accept this aspect of your Christian character and identify yourself as an apologist, the more likely you are going to take it seriously. Start calling yourself a Christian Case Maker (“apologist”) today.Accept Your Obligation
Although every Christian is called to be a Case Maker, some are definitely better than others. Once you begin to identify yourself in this way, you’ll sense your own inadequacies as you engage others. As a result, you’ll likely begin to train yourself (formally or informally) to meet the challenge. You may find yourself in a certification or advanced education program, but you may not. Some of the best and most effective apologists are not formally trained in apologetics. The two best-selling apologetics authors in America, Josh McDowell and Lee Strobel, have no formal training in the area of apologetics or philosophy. It’s clear, however, that both of these men take their obligation as Christian Case Makers seriously and have studied their worldview and practiced their craft.Accept Your Location
While many of us would love to leave our “day jobs” to work as vocational apologists, let me encourage you to stay wherever God has already placed you. I am a “one dollar apologist”; a Christian Case Maker who still derives 90% of my income from my career as a detective. I have always equated my life as a Christian with my life as a Christian Case Maker. For this reason, I could no more call myself a vocational Christian apologist than I could call myself a vocational Christian. God has given me this set of investigative skills so I can share them with others, and He’s placed me in this career, at this time and place, as part of the larger Christian family.
I don’t think anyone sees the battlefield as well as J. Warner Wallace does. This is where we need to be.
I thought Paul met Jesus on the Road to Damascus. :-)
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And the thing is, that is reliable – it is in 1 Cor 15:3-8, and everyone accepts that some sort of powerful, transformative experience is needed to explain Paul’s conversion from persecuter of the church to pillar of the church. This is not even controversial!
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