Digital Logos Edition
William Loader considers the key questions on what the New Testament says about issues of human sexuality. This accessible guide covers a variety of interpretations of the main texts treating this contentious issue.
In the Logos edition of Sexuality in the New Testament, you get easy access to Scripture texts and to a wealth of other resources in your digital library. Hovering over Scripture references links you instantly to the verse you’re looking for, and with passage guides, word studies, and a wealth of other tools from Logos, you can delve into God’s Word like never before!
“Via’s statement that ‘Professor Gagnon and I are in substantial agreement that the biblical texts that deal specifically with homosexual practice condemn it unconditionally’,4 which Gagnon does not dispute. They differ not over what the key biblical texts meant—exegesis—but over how they should be applied in the Church today—hermeneutics.” (Page 7)
“Sex just for pleasure and not procreation, even with one’s own wife, was frowned upon.” (Page 18)
“The emphasis here on ‘desires’ is important, not because Paul sees all desire, and especially sexual desire, as evil, but because he is connecting immoral action with sexual desire that is not properly controlled. Paul is not suggesting that they cannot help themselves, which might alleviate blame, but doing the opposite. One of the best commentaries on desires and their control is to be found in 4 Maccabees, whose theme is control of one’s desires, which are depicted as plants in a garden which have their place but should not be allowed to run wild (1:28–30; similarly Pseudo-Phocylides 59, 76; Pseudo-Aristeas 177, 227, 237, 256, 277–8).” (Page 16)
“There is a certain internal logic to Paul’s argument which suggests that he sees a close link between denying God’s true nature in idolatry and then going on to deny the true nature of human sexual relations: both are marks of sinfulness and alienation. This is all the more likely if the allusion to those deserving death in 1:32 derives directly from the prohibition of same-sex relations in Leviticus 20:13.” (Page 14)
“Brooten has shown through her extensive survey of Greco-Roman and Jewish literature, as well as magical, astrological and medical texts, that the phenomenon of female–female sexual relations was known and almost universally condemned as abhorrent.” (Page 18)
Loader has brought together sources from the ancient world and opinions from a wide range of scholarship in many contentious areas concerning sexuality. He avoids leading the witness, letting the texts speak for themselves. He states the opinion of other scholars and occasionally of himself, but his aim is to educate and not preach.
—Dr. David Instone-Brewer, senior research fellow in Rabbinics and the New Testament, Tyndale House
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Ben Clapton
4/9/2016
Robert Gange Jr
4/5/2014