Ministry News

Merging Ministries for Homosexual Outreach

A leading ministry to people battling same-sex attraction is expanding its reach in an effort to bridge differing views about ministering to homosexuals.

During a press conference Wednesday in Wheaton, Ill., Exodus International announced a merger with Transforming Congregations, an ex-gay ministry affiliated with the United Methodist Church, and One by One, a similar outreach affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA).

"The compassionate truth of the gospel is still the hope of the world today," said Alan Chambers, president of Exodus International. "Together, we hope to advance a new era in the global Christian church that is defined by God's truth as well as His heart for hurting individuals experiencing confusion and conflict about their sexuality."

In recent decades, both denominations have seen increasingly vocal segments of their memberships lean toward a more liberal theology that embraces homosexuality. But Exodus leaders say the merger could help the ministry better reach those groups with more effective resources that promote a biblically orthodox view of sexuality. Transforming Congregations and One by One will function essentially as departments within Exodus' church-equipping ministry.

"Part of the merger understanding is that we will retain our own identity and focus on missions," said Karen Booth, executive director of Transforming Congregations, which has been affiliated with Exodus since 2000. "We still will be working within the United Methodist Church or with churches from the Wesleyan heritage. ... I hope with Exodus working with us, we will be a bit more strategic in our outreach."

Randy Thomas, executive vice president of Exodus International, said the ministry also hopes to reduce the culture-war dichotomy that casts Christians as either condemning homosexuals or uncritically embracing the gay lifestyle. "While the culture war has taken us into a polarization of either condemning the sin or condoning the behavior, Exodus and these groups are speaking into it redemptively and we're saying we can hold on to truth but at the same time have compassion, have grace, have mercy and have resources available to those who do want to overcome homosexuality," he said.

Exodus leaders say navigating the fine line between loving homosexuals and communicating to them the truth of Scripture is the real challenge facing Christians. "I think it's critical that Christians do take a stand for a traditional understanding of marriage," Booth said. "But I think we need to move beyond that to proactively reach out and do ministry. From a lot of the churches I work with, there's a fear in doing that. There's a fear of not knowing quite what to do."

Complicating that even further are concerns that with six states now allowing same-sex marriage, gay rights will one day trump religious liberty, leading to laws that punish those who preach that homosexual practice is sinful. In parts of Europe and Canada, preaching against homosexuality has been deemed hate speech, and some Christians have been prosecuted.

"I do believe that that is a very real threat, and that we should be involved in [public policy issues]," Thomas said. "At the same time, even if I lost all my personal rights or my civil liberties, my God calls me to be a witness to the world, to have a loving, gracious witness that speaks of His redemption and honors His work on the cross and respects the atonement. We must be involved in [public policy], but that shouldn't be our top priority. Our top priority is loving God and loving others as ourselves." [charismamag.com, 7/15/09]

Comments   

 
0 #6 michael w. smith 2009-08-10 18:22
I have a large counseling, radio, inner healing and deliverance ministry in Phoenix, Arizona. I have homosexual Christians come for counseling on a regular basis. Most of them have tried everything to change (retreats, conferences, seminars, cleansing programs, therapy, etc.) and nothing works. I have seen them healed. but only after the root cause of the issue is healed. Most incidences of homosexuality are caused by childhood abuse that opened a door for the entrance of unclean spirits of sexual perversion. The demons morph the child's sexuality during puberty. After the person is born again later in life the demons, unfortunately are not removed, so the person carries their homosexual desires from their sinful life into their Christian life. Once the demons are removed the person's sexuality gradually restores and they are healed by the grace God. www.hardcorechristianity.com
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0 #5 snowbird 2009-07-17 16:15
Its really very simple. Sin is seldom preached against in the gathering places of today. I dare not in a million years call it the church. Compromise and sociability is the acceptable norm these days. That's exactly why there are so many being found out with judgment pending. How can people realize their sin and become convicted if there's no honest preaching against what will eventually cause them to lose their eternal soul? WHERE ARE THE TRUE MINISTERS OF GOD?
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+1 #4 Charles P. Allen 2009-07-17 10:20
There are fewer and fewer constraints in place. In my day, anyone caught with his paws on another soldiers "underwear wares" was flogged and DISHONORABLY discharged. Now-a-days, we're instructed to treat them as 'one of the men'. God have mercy on this nation! Christians! Get back to the roots of the Gospel and grow some brass. Be strong, be vigilant! Have courage and act like MEN OF GOD - not panny waists. Ladies of the Lord, read Proverbs 31 and start acting like chaste women of God. Children, mind your moms and dads or expect the reciprocity of the rod. (old-fashioned hickory-stick spanking). Men, stop playing dumb-head video games and oogling trollops on the internet. Act like MEN of God and instruct, reprove, and rightly divide the Word to a lost and dying world. Jesus loved all men, but he didn't attend a gay union in Galilee - he chased out money changers with a whip. Jesus was a gentle, but strong "Man's man."
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-1 #3 Charles P. Allen 2009-07-17 10:15
If Christians still shouted hallelujah! and really understood what it meant, we wouldn't have all this nonsense going on in the 1st place. 50 years ago, very, very few would have had "the brass" to openly admit to this perversion. While sin has always existed, it has increased exponentially since the 1960s. For the most part, the majority of our society held to Christian principles and beliefs, 50+ years ago. We allowed the terrible plague of prejudice, by ungodly reprobates, and of course, suffered from many vile "secret" sins, but the degree of sin has been greatly amplified over the past few decades.
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+2 #2 N Smith 2009-07-17 09:33
I assume this is a person you are close to or you would not be asking. Is your friend(s) professing Christians? Is so, Scripture is clear.
1 Cor 5:11But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother, who is sexually immoral...not even to eat with such a person.
If they are not Christian then you look for opportunities to witness, how else would one get saved? Attending a wedding shows support of the person and the union. However, if the person knows your opposition, yet see's that you are still willing to come and support them as an individual, but not their union, this will likely be seen as an act of love on your part and leave the door open for future witnessing. If you choose not to go, it is important that the person(s) knows why and that you still love them. What's critical is that we not be fearful to let others know the truth, even at the cost of alienation or friendship.
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0 #1 Joan Lose 2009-07-17 08:00
Is it wrong for a christian to go to a gay commitment service even though they don't agree with it but to just love the person and not their sin. Please, need a answer
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