Thursday, January 31, 2013


31 January 2013 –

On 6 February, the national board of the Boy Scouts of America meets to discuss the removal of the national membership restriction regarding sexual orientation.  If the board votes to remove the restriction, homosexual men can be scoutmasters.  The board offers the sop to its many church sponsors that if it lifts the restriction, local sponsors can still decide for themselves on such issues for their troops. 

The sponsors of local BSA troops, the majority of which are churches, must think cleanly and clearly about how this decision may indeed pollute their local organization through association.  Would you, as an upright, church-goer want your twelve-year-old daughter in a girls’ softball league where the other teams’ uniforms bear the sponsor names of local strip joints, saloons, and x-rated movie parlors?  I don’t think so.  You might be able to protect her from such influences during closed practices and scrimmages; but, once your daughter runs on the field to play the other teams, you won’t be able to control what is imposed upon her.  And whose fault would that be?  Yours.  After all, you knew what the league was when you joined it.     

Churches claim, by traditional definition, to be organizations built on enduring principles—truths.  Churches claim that these truths come by commandment from God.  By living according to these principles, one builds in one’s character certain virtues that enable one to draw closer to God.  Among the virtues that Christians want to develop are the following:  trustworthiness, loyalty, charity, compassion, courtesy, kindness, obedience, happiness, thrift, bravery, cleanliness, and reverence.  If one’s church—the structure that enables one to draw closer to God, the structure that one supports with sacrifice of time and effort—preaches that homosexual acts cripples one’s ability to be close to God, and, by extension, defining oneself by one’s indulgence in such acts continues to distance one from God’s presence, then why would one want to continue to embrace a church when that church associates with a secular organization that now endorses the opposite?  And, indeed, why would one offer up as sacrifice one’s son to the false gods of such a secular organization? 

Christian churches, particularly the Latter-day Saint and Catholic churches, sponsor many of the  Boy Scouts of America’s tens of thousands of local troops.  They are found in nearly every community in America.  These two mentioned churches are more centralized in their policy and doctrine making than any other Christian churches in America.  Therefore, they should take the lead in the Christian community.  They should show others how to build better programs to teach their young men the truths necessary to develop the virtues that will enable these young men to be physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.  Otherwise, their sacrifice to Baal will have already been offered.  

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