tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7232534343197493118.post5696716958621586017..comments2023-12-26T06:12:05.014-05:00Comments on A Burning Fire in My Bones: Queer Love is My Drug: A Marxist Critique of Queer TheologyJohn Daniel Hollowayhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12601759712135664650noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7232534343197493118.post-31638073458309936342016-02-27T18:50:26.988-05:002016-02-27T18:50:26.988-05:00Hello Jack. I am reading your blog. Well this is t...Hello Jack. I am reading your blog. Well this is the the second one I am reading, and I shall definitely be following you. I confess I haven't read the whole post on account of the lateness of the hour. I shall return to this. <br /><br />I have skim read your post so I won't critique it, but I would like to say as a gay Christian man, it took me many years, but I finally understood, that God who created me and knows me inside out, loves me and wants the best for me. My sexual orientation: gay, was not a choice, and it is only one aspect of my existence. As a gay Christian man, I do not believe that my sexual orientation entitles me to live promiscuously, and indeed now that I can legally marry another man, I have no excuse to engage in fornication (sex before marriage) or have sex with multiple partners. However, two people who love and are committed to one another, should be allowed to marry and live godly lives within their covented relationship. <br /><br />I do not need to see Jesus as gay, in order to identify with him. Jesus sexual orientation is irrelevant since, there is no record of Jesus having a sexual or romantic relationship. However, it is interesting that homosexuality, as a sin, was not in any way alluded to in any of Jesus recorded words. Hard to argue from silence, but given that Jesus made reference a lot to other sins, this did not arise. <br /><br />Thanks again, Gingehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18288148154196732409noreply@blogger.com