Rob Bell, spoke on Sunday at Grace Cathedral, an Episcopal church in
San Francisco, where he was promoting his new book, What We Talk About
When We Talk About God, and addressed a question about his views on marriage equality.
He said: “I am for marriage. I am for fidelity. I am for love,
whether it’s a man and woman, a woman and a woman, a man and a man. I
think the ship has sailed and I think the church needs — I think this is
the world we are living in and we need to affirm people wherever they
are.”
Bell went on to address American evangelism, and said he thought its
theologies “don’t actually shape people into more loving, compassionate
people”.
“I think we are witnessing the death of a particular subculture that
doesn’t work. I think there is a very narrow, politically intertwined,
culturally ghettoized, Evangelical subculture that was told ‘we’re gonna
change the thing’ and they haven’t. And they actually have turned away
lots of people… We have supported policies and ways of viewing the world
that are actually destructive. And we’ve done it in the name of God and
we need to repent,” he continued.
This is the first time Bell has offered public support for equal
marriage and is expected by equal rights advocates to affect the views
of others, historically opposed to equal marriage.
In
January, leading British evangelical has softened his views on
homosexuality, questioning whether Christians could create a “nurturing”
and “supportive” environment for gay people.
Steve Chalke, a top evangelical, wrote in the latest edition of
Christianity magazine, that he had changed his biblical understanding of
homosexuality.
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