Thursday, January 26, 2017

The War on ‘Male’ and ‘Female’ By Jerry Pierce • January 1, 2017 (www.billigraham.org)


Transgender Day of Remembrance
“So God created man in His own image, in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them.”
—Genesis 1:27 (NKJV)
Back in the spring and early summer of 2015, the waves of the transgender movement rolled ashore as former Olympic track and field gold medalist Bruce Jenner, a 1970s icon of masculinity, introduced the world to his new female persona.
At about the same time, the Supreme Court imposed gay marriage on the nation with the Obergefell v. Hodges decision.
It looked like a one-two punch to the gut of the Biblical family model. Gay marriage had been debated by political candidates for several years and eventually found a champion in President Barack Obama. But transgenderism was a bold step into uncharted territory. Americans knew of it, but mostly from a distance.
Jenner, whose heroics in the 1976 Olympic decathlon seemed made for the Wheaties box, told the world he would become “Caitlyn,” explaining that he had been undergoing “sex reassignment” to meet his long-held desire to be a woman.
Reactions were swift and wide-ranging, but Walt Heyer knew some things most other folks couldn’t possibly know.

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Heyer’s long, tortured journey to wholeness in Jesus Christ bears testimony to the lie being peddled by social revolutionaries—that one can actually become the opposite sex. He knows all too well that changing genders is simply not possible, regardless of misnomers such as “sex reassignment surgery” and “gender fluidity.” There are no such things.
“It’s totally cosmetic,” says Heyer, who himself went through a series of treatments and surgery to assume the female persona he presented for most of a decade, only to add disillusionment to his lingering alcoholism. “Not one person changes gender, except on paper,” he said.
That reality, Heyer says, is the reason some 41 percent of the transgender population attempts suicide, a figure cited by multiple sources, including Dr. Paul McHugh, former chief of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins Medical Center, which pioneered so-called sex reassignment procedures. McHugh now strongly opposes such treatments as psychologically harmful and has written extensively on that subject.
Heyer told Decision: “Once the ‘change’ is made, the return road is actually one of the most difficult roads imaginable. It takes a ton of faith in Christ and a ton of courage and unwavering commitment to return from such a journey.”
Those harsh realities are not what LGBT activists and the social progressives who enable them are selling, however.
Heyer, now 76, underwent “sex-reassignment” surgery in the early 1980s. In the process, he lost his marriage, alienated his children, and was essentially fired from a lucrative career with Honda—which at the time wasn’t open to such radical changes by public-facing employees.
Like many men who identify as transgender, including Bruce Jenner, Heyer has always been heterosexual; he has never had homosexual inclinations. That may counter the assumptions of most people, but Heyer says his guise as a woman was a non-sexual escape from his identity in the same way a drug addict numbs his pain through substances. The disorder is rarely about sexual arousal. For Heyer, it was about attempting to escape into another reality.
Today, he has a ministry and a website, sexchangeregret.com, geared at helping transgendered people who regret their attempts to transform themselves into the opposite sex and wish to return to their God-given identities. Those who come to him for help are overwhelmingly men and, he says, “98 percent heterosexual.”
His addiction to alcohol, Heyer says, was “like pouring fuel on the fire” of his acting out as female, which several psychiatrists would later pinpoint as dissociative—or multiple personality—disorder. Heyer believes there were several triggers that led to his sinful, downward spiral: His grandmother would playfully dress him up as a little girl when he visited her as a child. Stung by his father’s scorn at several important moments, Heyer began to feel more affirmed in his grandmother’s play dress than in his favorite cowboy outfit. Later, an uncle sexually molested Heyer, further compounding his pain.
He said these traumas created a toxic mix and required years of counseling and Christian discipleship to unpack and work out. But those very treatment approaches are now stigmatized as politically incorrect and clinically off limits.
The American Psychiatric Association made it official in 2013 when it dropped transgenderism from its diagnostic list of mental disorders, similar to its decision to drop homosexuality from the list in 1973.
“The LGBT activists are using this as a sort of Trojan horse to break down gender and sexual boundaries and essentially destroy what God has created,” Heyer said. “They are very anti one-man, one-woman and anti-traditional family. If you can destroy gender, you can destroy the family.”
Peter Sprigg, senior fellow for policy studies at the Family Research Council, says the aggressive movement toward normalizing transgenderism is the third wave of the sexual revolution; the first being the feminist movement, then the homosexual movement and now the attempt to eradicate gender categories.
“It comes down to an attack on the created order—that we are created male and female,” Sprigg says.
Heyer contends that transgenderism as a policy issue was co-opted by gay activists and progressive sympathizers seeking more strength in numbers.
“The progressives decided that’s a voting bloc they can build and use to help them win elections, and so it’s really more about power,” Heyer said. “And then you have George Soros, who is a heavy contributor to the LGBT. They’re so well-funded that they can do pretty much whatever they want … and they’ve been very successful.”
Case in point: The political pressure placed on North Carolina for passing HB2, widely known as “the bathroom bill.” It sought to preempt, among other things, local governments from passing laws forcing businesses and government offices to allow access to toilets and locker rooms based on gender identity rather than biological sex.
In Charlotte, for example, any fitness club would have been forced to allow a biological male access to a women’s locker room had he identified as female. HB2, in turn, nullified Charlotte’s nondiscrimination ordinance to keep that from happening.
With a Republican majority in both chambers of the North Carolina legislature, HB2 is likely to stand for the foreseeable future. But that hasn’t stopped big corporations such as PayPal from either pulling business out of North Carolina or threatening to do so. Several states have restricted official business travel to the Tar Heel state. The NBA pulled its All-Star Game from Charlotte in retaliation for HB2, and the NCAA and the Atlantic Coast Conference canceled prominent sporting events.
The federal Justice Department, meanwhile, filed suit as Attorney General Loretta Lynch and North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory traded volleys over whether HB2 violates sex discrimination rules for public schools under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act. The Supreme Court is expected to issue a ruling next year with direct bearing on that question.
The Family Research Council’s Sprigg says the federal Equality Act, a proposed bill that would have far-ranging negative consequences for Christians and others who believe in traditional sexual ethics, is unlikely to make headway for at least the next two years under a Republican-led Congress. However, President-elect Trump has not explicitly said how he would proceed on LGBT issues, Sprigg said.
“Mr. Trump’s position on LGBT issues has been somewhat ambiguous, shall we say, so I’m not sure that we have any firm commitment from him to veto this bill if it were somehow to be passed by Congress,” Sprigg added.
The political composition of Congress aside, social conservatives must remain vigilant.
Heyer said if the church assumes that the cultural trends are irreversible and if it therefore ceases to contend for truth, “We’d be looking at the end of the foundation of man and woman and family. Period. That’s the ultimate consequence of continuing to allow the scales to tip and to allow people in the pulpit—like some churches do—who are transgender. And then people begin to think it’s OK, that there’s nothing wrong with it.”
Joe Dallas, program director of California-based Genesis Counseling and author of six books on Biblical sexuality, including The Gay Gospel? How Pro-Gay Advocates Misread the Bible, says the LGBT movement has benefited from “the perfect storm” in the last few decades as the sexual revolution has progressed.
Dallas, who escaped the trap of years of bisexuality through the power of Christ, says many in the LGBT community feel justified in being bold these days because many have been bullied or mistreated. Their mistake, he says, is in believing the logical fallacy that because someone mistreated them, they must also be justified in their sexual and lifestyle choices.
“They are wrong in assuming that mistreatment legitimizes their identity or their behavior,” Dallas says.
Another factor in the success of the LGBT agenda is the need of the public to have a seemingly noble cause to fight for. “We haven’t had something as overtly noble a cause as the Civil Rights Movement for a while now, except for the unborn, and that’s largely a cause taken up by Christians and not by the secular culture at large.”
So, without a a Biblical worldview, the culture sides with LGBT activists and believes it is fighting a righteous cause.
A third reason, says Dallas, is the church’s timidity.
“I think for any number of reasons, the modern church in America is reticent to take clear positions on moral issues. And as a result there’s been very little challenge to these attempts to redefine gender and to redefine marriage. When those who are commissioned to steward truth suddenly find truth too hot to handle, then who’s going to steward it? Well, no one. And like Paul said, how will they hear if nobody preaches?”
©2016 BGEA

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Responding to National Geographic’s “Gender Revolution” by Avery Foley on January 23, 2017 (www.answersingenesis.org)

Responding to National Geographic’s “Gender Revolution”

Responding to National Geographic’s “Gender Revolution”

by on

The first issue of National Geographic for 2017 subscribers has recently grabbed headlines. The cover features Avery Jackson, a nine-year-old transgender girl, dressed in pink, staring proudly into the camera. The caption reads “Special Issue Gender Revolution,” followed by Avery’s quote, “The best thing about being a girl is, now I don’t have to pretend to be a boy.”
The Editor in Chief writes, “Today . . . beliefs about gender are shifting rapidly and radically. That’s why we’re devoting this month’s issue to an exploration of gender—in science, in social systems, and in civilizations throughout history.” In an online article about the issue, they write,
Our coverage doesn’t come with a political or partisan agenda. We created the gender issue—as we do every issue—with the intent to research, understand, and explain.
It’s quite obvious to anyone who reads the magazine that it has an agenda. A biblical view of gender or sexuality is never even hinted at, and the prevailing view of acceptance of all behaviors is threaded throughout. However, the magazine does draw attention to several important global issues. I’ll summarize the main points of the major articles throughout the issue and then turn to God’s Word to see how believers should understand and respond to these matters.

“Helping Families Talk About Gender”

One of the first articles features advice from the American Academy of Pediatrics’ parenting website on discussing gender with your children. They advise parents to “ensure your young child’s environment reflects diversity in gender roles and opportunities for everyone.” They encourage parents to support their child’s interests and talents, regardless of whether or not they match our society’s perceived gender roles.
They go on to urge parents that gender identity “can’t be changed by any interventions,” although they note that some children “who are gender nonconforming in early childhood grow up to become transgender adults . . . and others don’t,” and that parents need to make their homes havens of safety, unconditional love, and acceptance “for who they are.”
They then talk about sexual orientation, recommending that parents talk openly to their adolescents about sexuality and “not shy away from discussing their beliefs and their reasons for them.”
They close by explaining that a parent’s most important role “is to offer understanding, respect, and support to your child” in an affirming, nonjudgmental way while remembering gender identity and sexual orientation can’t be changed. They then caution parents to lookout for signs of bullying, anxiety, or depression and to stand up for their child in the face of harassment.
This article is complemented by “Rethinking Gender,” which attempts to apply science to help us navigate the “shifting landscape” of gender. It looks at various gender “disorders” as well as the latest findings from neuroscience, including studies that suggest individuals who identify as transgender might have “brains that most closely resemble brains of their self-identified gender than those of the gender assigned at birth.” The story also includes personal stories from transgender individuals around the world.

Gender Around the World

National Geographic Gender Issue
The focus of the magazine is the unique struggles and issues of both genders, and what it means to be male or female around the world. In “I am Nine Years Old,” kids, including transgender kids, from various cultures explain how gender affects them. For some, gender is not a barrier to accomplishing what they want. For others, they are fenced in by what their society views men and women, girls and boys, must do or be. This includes young girls who know they’ll be forced into abusive marriages, boys resigned to inevitably harassing women, and girls who acknowledge that they won’t get an education simply because they aren’t boys.
“Making a Man” looks at initiation rites into manhood from around the world. The author dwells at length on his own son who
is approaching manhood in an American culture that is lurching toward a gender-neutral society . . . [he] cannot rely on the traditional roles of men and women for an idea of what it means to be a man. . . . Scientists and scholars can’t offer him, or any of us, much clarity.
Poor body image, eating disorders, and other problems plaguing young American girls is the focus of “American Girl.” The solution provided is to fight back with positive messages and group support. “The Dangerous Lives of Girls,” a shocking account of what many young women in Sierra Leone endure, includes stories of female genital mutilation, teenage marriages and pregnancy, and lack of education.
The issue ends with an op-ed that suggests,
Once we recognize that gender identity and expression exist along a spectrum, why should we cling to the rigid characterization of men and women? The ultimate goal, surely, is to let all people define themselves as human beings, to break out of assigned categories and challenge received wisdom.

Can the Bible Give Us the Guidance We Need?

Confusion regarding gender, sexuality, masculinity, and femininity is rampant in our Western culture. But our God is “not the author of confusion but of peace” (1 Corinthians 14:33), and He has “given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness” (2 Peter 1:3). He has not left us wondering about something as basic as our identity as male and female.
When we follow our culture, confusion results. As this issue of National Geographic clearly shows, gender roles and even the concept of gender itself are radically different across cultures and generations. Here in the West, what is accepted now, for better or worse, was hardly fathomable to previous generations. But God’s Word provides us with answers that don’t change with the culture.

Created Male and Female

Scripture is plain that we, as male and female, were created with distinctions:
So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them (Genesis 1:27).
Our culture is trying to erase, ignore, or downplay the differences between male and female. They would have us believe men and women are basically the same, an opinion not supported by science. But the Bible is clear: God created two genders, male and female. Under the Old Testament Law it was even considered an abomination for a man to wear women’s clothing or a woman to wear man’s clothing (Deuteronomy 22:5)—there was to be a visible distinction.
Throughout Scripture men and women are treated as equal (Galatians 3:28). We were both made in God’s image, and neither is more-than or less-than the other. The mistreatment, degradation, and oppression of women, past and present, has no place in a Christian worldview. Indeed, the New Testament was radical in its time for its treatment of women. For example, Jesus stopped to talk to a Samaritan woman, something Jewish men did not do as evidenced by His disciples’ surprise (John 4:27). He allowed Mary to sit at His feet and learn even though this violated rabbinical law (Luke 10:38–42). Women were the first witnesses to the Resurrection of Jesus, and He commanded them to tell the disciples about it (Matthew 28:9–10), even though the testimony of a woman was not considered valid at that time.

Equal, Not Identical

But equality doesn’t necessarily mean we’re identical. Both men and women are equally made in God’s image, but we reflect this image differently.
For marriage, the Bible gives specific guidelines for each gender. The wife is to be her husband’s “helper” (Genesis 2:20) and submit to him (Ephesians 5:22). Older women are to be “reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things.” Younger women are to “to love their husbands, to love their children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers, good, obedient to their own husbands” (Titus 2:3–5). Husbands are to love their wives as Christ loved the church (Ephesians 5:28) and be the head of the home (1 Corinthians 11:3).
The virtuous woman described in Proverbs 31 sets a pattern for both single and married women to follow and be encouraged by. This passage, the words of King Lemuel given to him by his mother, describes the characteristics of a godly woman—hard working, industrious, trustworthy, generous, wise, and kind. And Paul says that young men are “to be sober-minded, in all things showing [themselves] to be a pattern of good works; in doctrine showing integrity, reverence, incorruptibility, sound speech that cannot be condemned (Titus 2:6–8).
How are we supposed to honor God’s unique commands to each gender if gender is fluid and moves on a spectrum? If we can decide the level of male-ness or female-ness we feel, we ignore the God-given distinction between the sexes and walk in disobedience to the commands God has given us as males and females.
Single men and women are equal yet distinct in their roles as well, each specifically created male or female but able to focus entirely on his or her walk with God (1 Corinthians 7:7–8, 32–35). We are “fearfully and wonderfully made” (Psalm 139:14), and God has created each of us with the gender He intends to use for His glory.

Beware of Cultural Stereotypes

Contrary to what National Geographic’s writers think, we should indeed “cling to the rigid characterization of men and women” because we do not have the authority to redefine what God has created. Now, this doesn’t mean we need to cling to cultural characterizations of men and women that don’t appear in Scripture. Throughout history societies have forced norms onto men and women and treated them as unchangeable doctrines when, in reality, they are manmade constructs. Before we say that boys can’t knit or girls can’t play sports, we need to turn to the Bible to see if our characterizations of male and female are found in the Bible or are just based on man’s opinions.
Will some people have a real and perhaps unending (in this life) struggle with their gender?
Will some people have a real and perhaps unending (in this life) struggle with their gender? Yes, because sin has corrupted everything. Romans 7:15, 22–24 gives a glimpse of the difficulty of living in this world until Christ returns to redeem us from “this body of death.”
But the answer to this very real struggle is not to ignore God’s Word and live any way we choose. This leads to death (Proverbs 14:12), not life and freedom. The answer is to submit to Christ and, through the power of the Holy Spirit, put to death the old man with its desires and put on righteousness (Romans 6:13). As believers, we are not at the mercy of our feelings or desires (verse 12). We have been freed from slavery to sin (verse 14) and have been raised to walk in newness of life (verse 4). That is the power of the gospel that every man, woman, boy, and girl needs to hear.

How Should Christian Parents Talk about Gender?

National Geographic offered parents advice on how to respond to children who are questioning their gender. Their counsel was to affirm the feelings and desires of their children. As Christian parents, we are called to “train up a child in the way he should go” (Proverbs 22:6) and “bring them up in the training and admonition of the Lord” (Ephesians 6:4). This means we cannot accept the conventional wisdom when it comes to addressing such issues as gender-questioning children. So how should believers respond? With God’s truth!
Everything National Geographic said wasn’t wrong. Indeed, there are several helpful things that, with some additions and modifications, can be gleaned from their parenting article.
  • Encourage your children in their gifts and talents, even if they don’t match society’s perceived gender roles, as long as those desires are in line with God’s Word. Some girls love computers, and some boys enjoy baking. Encourage children to serve the Lord through their unique talents.
  • Make your home a haven of safety, unconditional love, acceptance, but also truth. Our job as parents isn’t just to love our children but to guide them in truth so they can grow up to be godly adults. This involves lovingly correcting them when their thinking, especially regarding something they don’t fully understand (such as gender), differs from God’s Word (Proverbs 22:15a; 1 Corinthians 13:11). Teach them what Scripture says about gender, masculinity, and femininity. They don’t need to stumble through life trying to figure out what it means to be a man or a woman. Part of our job as parents is to guide them into biblical and godly manhood and womanhood.
  • Talk openly (and age-appropriately) to your adolescents about sexuality and don’t “shy away from discussing [your] beliefs and [your] reasons for them.” Like it or not, our young people are being exposed to sexuality at younger and younger ages. Don’t let their first lessons on sexuality be given by a godless, anything-goes culture! Be intentional about opening up God’s Word, in an age-appropriate way, and teaching them what God says about sexuality. The Bible doesn’t shy away from it, and parents shouldn’t either!

A Firm Foundation in God’s Word

In all the confusion regarding gender and sexuality in our culture, we can speak with authority because we have God’s Word. As culture changes and generations go by, we haven’t been left to wonder how we should live as men and women. When we start our thinking with Scripture as our foundation, we have answers. Praise God for the gift of His Word!

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