Do gay people go to heaven
Let me say something very clearly: Homosexuality does not send you to hell. He told her that according to Romans 1, the real issue was who got to call the shots in her life. Can a practicing homosexual get into heaven if they don't stop?
Anger or ambition or certain sexual desires are not right simply because they come from deep within me. We may not think of deceit, boasting, greed or a rebellious attitude toward parents as equally depraved as same-sex behavior.
Jesus’ gay fat pirn of salvation is open to everyone. The biblical depiction of sexuality hangs on much more than these passages, but the relevant passages directly addressing homosexuality are Genesis —11, Leviticus andRomans —27, 1 Timothy and 1 Corinthians b— Possessing a desire innately just shows us that we have corrupt hearts and we need to be born again.
A gay or homosexual person can accept Christ, just as an alcoholic, a drug addict, or a mass-murderer can accept Christ. How she sought fulfillment. At the heart of this issue are questions about sin, repentance, and God’s grace and mercy. In Romans 1, Paul lists same-sex behavior as one corruption among many.
Unrepentant sinners will die in their sin and be judged accordingly. Are we just as clear? So the only conclusion I can come to is that I must have been born polygamous. Romans 1, Rosaria explains, revealed her heart. When Jesus met with those in sexual sin, he graciously invited them back to him.
The worst sin—the core sin, the sin behind all the other sins—is something of which we are all guilty. How she defined herself. Gay people go to either heaven or hell on the same basis that drunkards, liars, haters, and self-righteous church people go to either heaven or hell.
Scripture is crystal clear in its condemnation of these two sins, both of which are enormous issues for the American church today. He does care. Our final destination depends not on what we’ve done but on how we responded to Jesus’ sacrifice on our behalf.
My point is that we often present it differently than the Bible does, as a sort of uber-sin in a categorically different realm. That’s what repentance looks like for a gay, straight, rich, poor, young, old, Jew, Gentile, black or white person.
Consider, for instance, materialism and pride. As the church, this truth should define the way we interact with gay and lesbian people as we communicate with them: God loves you. But when he met those who were religiously proud, his words were blistering in their confrontation.
My point is not to say same-sex behavior is not sinful. It should be. We only grasp the gospel when we understand, as Paul did, that we are the worst sinner we know 1 Tim. We will see in the face of every sinner a reflection of the corruption that afflicts our own hearts, the fruit of the rebellion we have participated in.
We all come to Jesus in the same way. She goes on to say that in Romans 1, Paul shows us that we all go through what Eve went through in the Garden of Eden. Biblical explanation of how God sees practicing homosexuals and what gets them into heaven.
The good news is that Jesus came to save sinners—all kinds. Is that equally depraved in our book? The question of whether gay people go to heaven is a complex one that requires carefully examining what the Bible says about homosexuality and salvation.