Today's Scripture Reading (April 23, 2026): Isaiah 3
For the past
few years, I have been convicted by the "Sin of Sodom." I also have
been bothered by the church's flirtation with Sodom's sin. Here is the problem:
I think we have misidentified the sin. We have made the sin of Sodom about
homosexuality, and we have taken a stand against that sin. Part of the reason
why we have misidentified the sin is that we do not have many LGBTQ people in
our midst, and the ones who are attending are deeply closeted. As a result,
there has been no pushback. So, for most of the Christian Church, we can
identify homosexuality as Sodom's sin and, with the same breath, say that we
don't have a problem. The problem is out there somewhere. Then we can point at
the others who identify as either homosexual, bisexual, or pansexual, as the
ones caught in this sin. Worldwide, about 10% of people self-identify this way.
We treat
Sodom as if it were a city full of gay men. After all, the story seems to make
that accusation.
Before they had
gone to bed, all the men from every part of the city of
Sodom—both young and old—surrounded the house. They called to Lot, "Where are the men who came to you tonight?
Bring them out to us so that we can have sex with them" (Genesis 19:3-4 – italics
mine).
The author
of Genesis doesn't say "some," he says "all the men." It
should be the first clue that something unusual is at work here. Add to this
that the story is not just about Sodom, but Gomorrah and the other cities of
the plain, do we really believe that all of these men had adopted a gay
lifestyle? For me, that doesn't make sense.
So, if the
sin of Sodom is not homosexuality, what is it? I think the answer to that
question is hospitality. Sodom refused to welcome the strangers and make them
feel welcome and safe. They didn't want visitors to the city. They refused to
offer assistance to the stranger. They persecuted people whom Jesus called "the
least of these." And they had decided that the best way to keep visitors
away was to humiliate those who came to their cities and then let them go to
tell the story of Sodom. They paraded their sin, were even proud of it, and
they wanted people to know.
I think we
still do. We parade our ideas about the people who are not welcome in our
midst. And the LGBTQ community is only a portion of the people that we don't
want in our fellowships. Visitors quickly understand that they are not welcome.
I have had to discipline church leaders who went to people and declared, "We
don't want your kind here." It is something that every church needs to
guard against.
I belong to
a congregation that enjoys handing out candy to children on Halloween. I get
it, Halloween is not really our holiday, but kids are out and wandering the
neighborhood. So, we hand out candy. Three to four hundred children, together
with their parents, stop by for candy, a free hot dog, and hot chocolate during
the evening. They can warm themselves by a fire and dance to the Halloween-appropriate
music, assisted by a laser light show. Last year, we were picketed by people
who believed we were welcoming people into the church who shouldn't be invited
into the Christian community. I couldn't disagree more. I am proud to be part
of a group of people who just want to use any excuse to roll out the welcome
mat.
The sin of
Sodom was alive and well in Jerusalem and Judah. And it is alive with us as
well. The truth is that we need to find excuses to welcome people, because the
sin of Sodom is insidious. Unless we are on guard against it, it will find its
way into even the best-intentioned congregation of Christ's believers.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Isaiah 4