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Understanding the wages of sin: the Reverend Steven Craft denounces commonly heard lies used to justify sinful behavior, and explains why accommodating sin is bad for our country as well as for individuals.(CULTURE WAR)

The New American

| February 20, 2006 | Williamsen, Kurt | COPYRIGHT 2006 American Opinion Publishing, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

The 62-year-old Reverend Steven "Stevie" Craft is a Baptist preacher, a former chaplain at Missouri State Penitentiary, a father of four, and a grandfather of four. He says that he was called to do Christ's work from the womb, but he did not heed this call until he was 33. By that time in his life, he had suffered through drug abuse; he had spent time in jail; and he had watched friends and family members who had lived lifestyles similar to his own all die.

He then embraced God's call and got his Master's in Divinity, specializing in Religion and Social Justice. He is now working toward his Doctor of Ministry. His voice is sonorous and his message powerful. And he will soon be on the lecture circuit for the John Birch Society, preaching (because that's what he does) about social lies--not "misconceptions," not "disinformation," but lies.

One of the lies that he brings to the forefront is the lie of "moral relativism," the lie that says "morals don't matter." In making his point that morals do matter, he reminds us that the Founding Fathers made it clear that our country and our way of government and even our individual freedoms will only survive and flourish as long as our country remains moral. This is true because society-wide immorality and, worse, moral apathy pave the way for amoral people to distort our political system and to take over the reins of government--a process that the reverend is already seeing happen.

Reverend Craft blasts the popular modern credo, "I'll leave you alone to do whatever you want to do, as long as you leave me alone to do my thing." That credo, he says, is being spouted by people all over the United States--especially by the young--and shows that immorality is already morphing into the dangerous state called moral apathy.

He also takes to task those who would try to "call good works evil and evil good." He is especially unstinting in his condemnation of those who "interpret" the Bible to justify their toleration or advocacy of sin. Among those at whom he directs his pointed opinion are those people who say that we must accept public homosexuality and homosexual marriage because Jesus said, "Let he who among you who is without sin cast the first stone." In other words, those people claim that Jesus is saying that no one has the right to judge anyone else.

Reverend Craft says that people making those claims are "interpreting" the Bible, and they are wrong. He says that Jesus was not saying, "Don't judge sin!" To get that message out of the story, he asserts, one has to take the quote ...

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