A Word about Sexual Sins
By Fred O. Blakely
Very
much of today's society not only condones sexual sins; it actually glorifies
them. Fornication among teenage boys and girls is euphemized as "sexual
activity," and paraded in some circles as an acceptable norm. In case of
the adults, it is dubbed "living-in," "trial marriage”, or the
like. Adultery, which is the sin of sexual relation between a married person
and someone other than the lawful spouse, is simply called "extramarital
sex" and is increasingly practiced and "respectabilized".
Recently,
on the news there has been brought to light a company that provides a service,
via the Internet, enabling married persons to “cheat” on their spouses, only
behind their backs. This company made
news headlines only because their database had been hacked, unveiling the
confidential information of up to 32 million individuals who had used the
“behind the scenes” dating site. According to one news report, there were only
3 Zip Codes in the United States that did not have records of persons who had patronized this company. And those 3 Zip Codes
encompassed areas either where there was no Internet, or had very low
population levels. The issues that were
reported in the news pertained primarily to the consequences of the data
breach, not to the gross impropriety and wickedness entailed in what this
company is doing.
Whoredom,
or harlotry, is more and more presented as something taken for granted, and is
often toleratingly referred to as "the oldest profession" known to the
race. Even sodomy, the ultra-degraded sex sin, is glossed as homosexuality, or
“gay”, and depicted as an "alternate life-style", a life-style that
is now demanding acceptance and equal rights.
But
these attempts at softening the impact upon the conscience of the hard, ugly,
and jarring reality of sin are wholly futile with those who know the truth of
God's Word, and are determined to abide by it. Sin cannot be redefined, or
reinterpreted as to its involvements and consequences by a pope. Sin is not mitigated by majority practice,
public approval, or by giving it new and more acceptable names. And certainly
its direful consequences—which, if persisted in, is death—are in no degree
whatever altered. Sin still separates from God, which separation in itself is
spiritual death (Isa. 59:1-2), and its ultimate end is eternal death (Rom.
6:23: Rev. 21:8, 27), or everlasting exclusion from God's Presence and
"the glory of His power" (II Th. 1:7-10).
The
Spirit by Paul plainly declares that "neither fornicators, nor idolators,
nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind
[sodomites] . . . shall inherit the kingdom of God" (I Cor. 6:9-10).
"Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge", the Apostle says in
another place (Heb. 13:4). They shall "have their part in the lake which
burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death (Rev. 21:8).
Jude takes up the refrain in his very short, yet pungent epistle: "Even as Sodom and Gomorrha, and the cities about them in like manner, giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of eternal fire" (v. 7). The "strange flesh" of reference is any "flesh" outside the divinely ordained husband and wife relationship.
For
those in Christ, the body is "the temple of the Holy Spirit," and
they are not their own, having been "bought with a price," even the
precious blood of God's Son (I Cor. 3:19-20).
Thus,
whoever commits fornication or adultery both "sinneth against his own
body," and against God (vv. 15-18; cf. Gen. 39:8). This is because the
body "is not for" such desecration, "but for the Lord" (v.
13). The commandment, then, is to "flee" both sins (v. 18). (The
Greek word from which we get our word "fornication" as used here,
denotes the practice of sexual immorality, irrespective of whether the involved
persons are married or unmarried.)
In
view of this unequivocal condemnation of fornication and adultery, it is
incumbent upon the church to make it known to this wantonly wicked generation.
"God is not mocked" by man's impudent defiance of His laws (Gal.
6:7-8), but will, as Solomon declared, "bring every work into judgment,
with every secret thing" (Eccl. 12:14). And, as we have seen from
Corinthians and Revelation, that judgment against fornicators and adulterers,
unless they repent, forsake those sins, and are forgiven of them, will be
eternal banishment from the Divine Presence. Today's profligates desperately
need to have that grave reality drummed into their ears and hearts.
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