tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6919673094294171167.post4469696553849428473..comments2023-11-27T11:49:41.252-05:00Comments on Feel My Faith: Is Sin Biological?Brian Branamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09365695527021008661noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6919673094294171167.post-23231841029329169962009-01-06T11:08:00.000-05:002009-01-06T11:08:00.000-05:00This article has a claim to the visionary. Our clo...This article has a claim to the visionary. Our clouded sight is obscured by scientific dogma which has made a false provision: that biology and sin are separate. I submit that they are referencing the same thing. <BR/><BR/>If we now understand that alcoholism, mental illness, and even sexual deviancy - homosexuality - is sin, the next question becomes: God made me this way, why would he make me inherently sinful if he is a good God? If sin made its way into the DNA, are we now being punished for the sins of our forefathers? relation to addictions and deviancy especially.<BR/><BR/>I am not suggesting that God is not good nor am I suggesting that homosexuality is not a sin. What I am identifying is that their are some missing pieces that need explanation to bring it all together.<BR/><BR/>A sound theological model in our day and age, would, without bending to culture, traverse the duality of the Christian God - love/inclusiveness & condemnation/judgment - to human history and to human genetic disease. Scientists fault the folks 2000 years ago for not knowing about molecular structure. Imagine if Jesus lived today and was crucified. What would he say about God and genetic disease? Would be so interesting.Biggleshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12303638860390121138noreply@blogger.com