Buttigieg is a graduate of Harvard and studied at Oxford as a Rhodes scholar. He served in the military in Afghanistan, reportedly speaks eight languages, plays the guitar and piano, and is active in the Episcopal Church. His debate performances have displayed his obvious intelligence and grasp of policy detail. In many ways, he seems an ideal fit for many Democratic voters.
Buttigieg is also gay and is married to his husband, Chasten. An LGBTQ advocacy magazine named him one of fifty “trailblazing individuals who actively ensure society remains moving toward equality, acceptance and dignity for all queer people.” In their view, he is “reshaping politics and driving the religious right crazy in the process.”
How our society has changed on same-sex marriage
As the leader of a nonpartisan ministry, my purpose today is not to endorse or criticize Mr. Buttigieg as a politician. Rather, it is to note the degree to which his popularity highlights our society’s acceptance of homosexuality.
A recent essay in the Wall Street Journal notes that 44 percent of Americans aged eighteen to twenty-nine say they identify with no religion; one of the reasons most cited by “nones” for their antipathy is that they “don’t like the positions churches take on political/social issues.” The author, a college professor, adds that some of the “issues” his students object to most often have to do with “women’s reproductive rights and non-heteronormative sexuality, especially same-sex marriage and transgender rights.”
A group of clergy prayed for a Planned Parenthood clinic
In the last chapter of the last letter Paul ever wrote, we find this warning: “The time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions” (2 Timothy 4:3).
The “teachers” to whom Paul refers are inside the church. As The New American Commentary explains, people would “pack the pulpits of their churches with preachers who would tell them only what they desired to hear.”
Such preachers might be well-intentioned. They might believe personally the unbiblical messages they propagate. They might want to connect with non-Christians or demonstrate the tolerance of their congregations.
But the result for the misled people who hear them is that they will “turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths” (v. 4).
That’s why Paul instructs Timothy to “preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching” (v. 2). To “reprove” is to speak to the mind, to “rebuke” is to address the conscience, and to “exhort” is to encourage the will. Taken together, these imperatives required Timothy—and us—to declare biblical truth on cultural issues.
But we must do so “with complete patience” (steadfast endurance in the face of all opposition) and “teaching” (consistent and careful instruction).
“Nothing is insignificant in your life”
Whatever happens with Pete Buttigieg’s candidacy for president, his popularity has already normalized same-sex sexual relationships and marriage in our culture on a new level.
His candidacy illustrates the dilemma evangelicals in America face: We can declare and defend biblical truth about same-sex relationships and other culturally accepted immorality, or we can teach what the culture wants to hear rather than what it needs to hear.
I hope we’ll remember the words with which Paul began 2 Timothy 4: “I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead” (v. 1). What it may cost us in this world to serve God pales in comparison to what it will cost us in the next world if we do not. And what it will cost those we influence as well.
Let’s end on a positive note. Max Lucado: “God never said that the journey would be easy, but he did say that the arrival would be worthwhile.” Rick Warren adds: “When you understand that life is a test, you realize that nothing is insignificant in your life.”