Martin Luther once wrote that if we are not defending the gospel at the very point that it is being attacked
in our own generation, we are not defending it at all. It is for this reason
that our 380-member church in the small, rural town of Brooksville, Florida
decided to act.
While we are immensely proud of a recent chicken-sandwich chain whose
founder boldly stated his convictions regarding traditional marriage, the
elders of Faith Evangelical Presbyterian Church feel that it is primarily the
church’s calling to defend biblical
orthodoxy. Our elders and I could not stand idly by while an attack on
marriage—a thinly veiled attack on the creation order and the Creator—rages
before our very eyes.
The Brooksville Statement on Marriage is a 600-word declaration of conscience
that attempts to do three things. (1) First, we hope to clearly define marriage
in a generation in which the word “marriage” itself has lost all semblance of
meaning. (2) Second, we hoped to positively state our convictions regarding the
delineations of human sexuality, rather than make a polemical attack on those
lifestyles with which we ardently disagree. (3) Third, we hoped to speak a
timely word of compassion and grace in a world of “bumper sticker” one-liners
and alleged hate-speech.
Our hope is that this small town church declaration would inspire
like-minded evangelical churches across the globe to adopt this (or a similar)
statement, in order to provide a desperately needed prophetic voice in
veritable wilderness of confusion.
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