I commend Mr Museveni for taking a stance on this topic. We need more leaders like him. A man sleeping with another man is not normal and never will it be!
I real love you Mr president true African great man As someone mentioned many Ugandans do not appreciate you But when you go outside uganda real Africans know that they have wise man in Africa Iam proud of you my president Africa is rich we are wise but we don't see it Africa Unite for the better of us
Parts of Africa are following old British laws that were put in place when they took over Africa. Before that Africa had no problem with LGBT people. So in essence, some countries in Africa are still following old British laws. Living in Ancient times and going backward and not forward. Following old British law, rather than their roots. African history is replete with examples of both erotic and nonerotic same-sex relationships. For example, the ancient cave paintings of the San people near Guruve in Zimbabwe depict two men engaged in some form of ritual sex. During precolonial times, the "mudoko dako", or effeminate males among the Langi of northern Uganda were treated as women and could marry men. In Buganda, one of the largest traditional kingdoms in Uganda, it was an open secret that Kabaka (king) Mwanga II, who ruled in the latter half of the 19th century, was gay. The vocabulary used to describe same-sex relations in traditional languages, predating colonialism, is further proof of the existence of such relations in precolonial Africa. To name but a few, the Shangaan of southern Africa referred to same-sex relations as "inkotshane" (male-wife); Basotho women in present-day Lesotho engage in socially sanctioned erotic relationships called "motsoalle" (special friend) and in the Wolof language, spoken in Senegal, homosexual men are known as “gor-digen” (men-women). Same-sex relationships in Africa were far more complex than what the champions of the "un-African" myth would have us believe. Apart from erotic same-sex desire, in precolonial Africa, several other activities were involved in same-sex (or what the colonialists branded "unnatural") sexuality. For example, the Ndebele and Shona in Zimbabwe, the Azande in Sudan and Congo, the Nupe in Nigeria and the Tutsi in Rwanda and Burundi all engaged in same-sex acts for spiritual rearmament - i.e., as a source of fresh power for their territories. It was also used for ritual purposes. Among various communities in South Africa, sex education among adolescent peers allowed them to experiment through acts such as "thigh sex" ("hlobonga" among the Zulu, "ukumetsha" among the Xhosa and "gangisa" among the Shangaan). In many African societies, same-sex sexuality was also believed to be a source of magical powers to guarantee bountiful crop yields and abundant hunting, good health and to ward off evil spirits. In Angola and Namibia, for instance, a caste of male diviners - known as "zvibanda," "chibados," "quimbanda," "gangas" and "kibambaa" - were believed to carry powerful female spirits that they would pass on to fellow men through anal sex. Even today, marriages between women for reproductive, economic and diplomatic reasons still exist among the Nandi and Kisii of Kenya, the Igbo of Nigeria, the Nuer of Sudan and the Kuria of Tanzania. Like elsewhere around the world, anal intercourse between married opposite-sex partners to avoid pregnancy was historically practiced by many Africans before the invention of modern contraceptive methods. Clearly, it is not homosexuality that is un-African but the laws that criminalized such relations. In other words, what is alien to the continent is legalized homophobia, exported to Africa by the imperialists where there had been indifference to and even tolerance of same-sex relations. In Uganda such laws were introduced by the British and have been part of our penal law since the late 19th century. The current wave of anti-homosexuality laws sweeping across the continent is therefore part of a thinly veiled and wider political attempt to entrench repressive and undemocratic regimes.
@@joey9562 well if it was there fine but as human do you believe that man to man is good or woman to woman We can forget those spiritual powers there's nothing good can come from LGBTQ just misleading people Can they produce NO they can't they just want to eliminate us They force bad acts to us but they don't want us to know good things, gud things remain to them There's no European government that will force African how to make a car no why? But they are forcing us on such disgusting behavior I love Africa instead of bringing Africa together developing Africa they are just teaching us how we can eliminate ourselves No me say no I don't like it Joey this is bad
@@joey9562 Uganda isn't poor because of rejecting homosexuality, it's a process and we'll develop sooner or later...the issue here is about molarity! It's culturally evil to be a homosexual in African society
@@Patrick-ge3pi Ignorance is bliss. Homosexuality should be the least of their worries. Yes being homophobic ruins economies….tourism, aide, many move out, businesses won’t locate there,etc.
I mean…the thing is… I agree with some things you all say here in the comments and his point of view. The fact is that I always wanted to visit Your beautiful Continent, as I met so many wonderful people coming from Uganda, Nigeria, Senegal… But now I feel I won’t be welcomed, just because I’m gay. I don’t want to promote homosexuality, I don’t want to go with any flag, nor speaking about it, I just want to immerse myself in your culture and live it with all my heart as I truly sense it’s marvellous. However, I feel rejected, almost like an exclusion based on ideas without even knowing me. Like doors that close before me. I’m sure you don’t mind, but I feel for you guys. We were meant to be human, to feel compassion and unity, we are going towards segregation and exclusion instead… I have mix feelings…
Parts of Africa are following old British laws that were put in place when they took over Africa. Before that Africa had no problem with LGBT people. So in essence, some countries in Africa are still following old British laws. Living in Ancient times and going backward and not forward. Following old British law, rather than their roots. African history is replete with examples of both erotic and nonerotic same-sex relationships. For example, the ancient cave paintings of the San people near Guruve in Zimbabwe depict two men engaged in some form of ritual sex. During precolonial times, the "mudoko dako", or effeminate males among the Langi of northern Uganda were treated as women and could marry men. In Buganda, one of the largest traditional kingdoms in Uganda, it was an open secret that Kabaka (king) Mwanga II, who ruled in the latter half of the 19th century, was gay. The vocabulary used to describe same-sex relations in traditional languages, predating colonialism, is further proof of the existence of such relations in precolonial Africa. To name but a few, the Shangaan of southern Africa referred to same-sex relations as "inkotshane" (male-wife); Basotho women in present-day Lesotho engage in socially sanctioned erotic relationships called "motsoalle" (special friend) and in the Wolof language, spoken in Senegal, homosexual men are known as “gor-digen” (men-women). Same-sex relationships in Africa were far more complex than what the champions of the "un-African" myth would have us believe. Apart from erotic same-sex desire, in precolonial Africa, several other activities were involved in same-sex (or what the colonialists branded "unnatural") sexuality. For example, the Ndebele and Shona in Zimbabwe, the Azande in Sudan and Congo, the Nupe in Nigeria and the Tutsi in Rwanda and Burundi all engaged in same-sex acts for spiritual rearmament - i.e., as a source of fresh power for their territories. It was also used for ritual purposes. Among various communities in South Africa, sex education among adolescent peers allowed them to experiment through acts such as "thigh sex" ("hlobonga" among the Zulu, "ukumetsha" among the Xhosa and "gangisa" among the Shangaan). In many African societies, same-sex sexuality was also believed to be a source of magical powers to guarantee bountiful crop yields and abundant hunting, good health and to ward off evil spirits. In Angola and Namibia, for instance, a caste of male diviners - known as "zvibanda," "chibados," "quimbanda," "gangas" and "kibambaa" - were believed to carry powerful female spirits that they would pass on to fellow men through anal sex. Even today, marriages between women for reproductive, economic and diplomatic reasons still exist among the Nandi and Kisii of Kenya, the Igbo of Nigeria, the Nuer of Sudan and the Kuria of Tanzania. Like elsewhere around the world, anal intercourse between married opposite-sex partners to avoid pregnancy was historically practiced by many Africans before the invention of modern contraceptive methods. Clearly, it is not homosexuality that is un-African but the laws that criminalized such relations. In other words, what is alien to the continent is legalized homophobia, exported to Africa by the imperialists where there had been indifference to and even tolerance of same-sex relations. In Uganda such laws were introduced by the British and have been part of our penal law since the late 19th century. The current wave of anti-homosexuality laws sweeping across the continent is therefore part of a thinly veiled and wider political attempt to entrench repressive and undemocratic regimes.
B L A C K man is GOD! Leviticus 20:13 If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them.
God prepares leaders for seasons like this.when the devil comes in like a flood he raises a standard .Thank you lord for my president.May God continue giving you guidance in your reign.
You may call it promotion or whatever you wanna call it but what you won’t do is to dictate the lives of innocent gay people…they’ve been here and not going anywhere. Gay people have all rights to get support of any form from someone else if you have decided to not support and seee them as fellow humans. Those who see value in all human beings have an obligation to stand for them whether the majority thinks otherwise. If you have made it clear that you can’t protect all your citizens, someone else has then to stand in and do your job🤗🤗 you can’t then be the same person making noise
The bible has been mistranslated. CORINTHIANS 1, TIMOTHY 1 AND ROMANS1 The word homosexual wasn't even inserted into the Bible until 1946. And even those Scholars agreed that they misinterpreted and it should not have been interpreted as homosexuals, and was changed back to sexual perverts in 1971. But many Bibles printed from 1946 to 1971 still contain the misinterpreted word "homosexual". Paul could have used many words if he intended to blast gays and lesbians. Yet Paul used none of those available words, choosing instead to coin an interesting new word, arsenokoitai. Over the thousands of years, it has been changed. We must look at the "original" text. That word is an unusual word. It’s a new word; we don’t know of any other instances of the word until Paul coins the word in 1 Corinthians 6 and 1 Timothy 1. It’s a compound word: “arsen” means man and “koite” or “koitas” or “koitai”-depending on a verb or a noun-means bed. It’s quite clear that Paul has coined this word from Leviticus 18 and 20. Even if you don’t know any Greek, you could find online or pull up the Greek transliteration of these two verses. Look at the Septuagint, which is the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, and then just look at the Greek for the necessary passage in Leviticus 18 and Leviticus 20 and you'll see there (and in fact the words are right next to each other in Leviticus 20) this word for man (“arsen”) and the word for bed (“koitai” or “koite”). And if we are so bold to stretch this to encompass gay sex, how can we possibly stretch it so far as to include lesbians? We must be careful of taking a word, a sentence or even a passage without looking at the context of the entire chapter. During the time Paul wrote this, he was traveling and came across these people performing public orgies in Pagan rituals to appease their gods. Of course this is totally unlike a same-sex loving committed monogamous relationship. Arsenokoitai is never used in any extant Greek literature with our modern meaning of homosexual. The best evidence available today indicates that arsenokoitai described shrine prostitutes. That is the learned opinion of Philo, a contemporary of both Jesus and the apostle Paul and one of the most widely read Jewish intellectuals in the first century. Because Paul, AD 4 - 67, and Philo of Alexandria, 20 BC - AD 50, were contemporaries and because Paul was well educated and widely read, it is reasonable to believe that Paul was familiar with the writings of Philo, a fellow Jew and public intellectual, although not a fellow Christian. Philo understood Moses, in Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13, to be condemning shrine prostitution. Philo's understanding that arsenos koiten refers to shrine prostitution is 2000 years old. It was a Jewish belief with which the Apostle Paul was familiar because Paul coins a new word describing temple prostitution using the Septuagint Greek words of Leviticus 20:13. Believing that Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13 refers to shrine or temple prostitution is not a modern belief invented by gays to alibi their "sin". It is the ancient Jewish and Christian belief for thousands of years. So this research reveals that "man" tweaked the word of God to control mankind. At that time procreation was an utmost necessity, as it empowered nations to build up strong armies and increase their wealth. This was their way of suppressing homosexuals. And some Autocratic/Communist countries still do this today for the same reasons but the difference is today homosexuals are able to have children through in vitro fertilization and also fill the gap for those children abandoned in orphanages through adoption. Since RUclips won't let me post the links, I suggest you search, " 1946 the movie", and you will see how they explain this in greater detail.
Thank u so much my president ❤ 💓 💗 💖 lng live my hero
Respect a man that wants to kill people for who they love?? Absolute insanity!
We love you. From Dakar, Senegal
That's my President.
Thank you president museveni u can secure the future of the generation 😊am so happy like a mother
God bless u ❤
I commend Mr Museveni for taking a stance on this topic. We need more leaders like him. A man sleeping with another man is not normal and never will it be!
That's my president,the mighty father sent leader .
Humanity will forever remain despite these dark times.Thank you pan Africanists and some Western,Eastern partners.Thank you Lord.
My respect for this man grows everyday.
Respect a man that wants to kill people for who they love?? Absolute insanity!
IGNORANCE PREVAILING....SAD!
Africans must Unite on this matter! We must all say no to LGBTQ .
He is hero of Uganda and all African ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Respect a man that wants to kill people for who they love?? Absolute insanity!
We are missing you
Support of President Museveni from Lesotho.🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬❤🌹🇱🇸🇱🇸🇱🇸💯👍🏿
I real love you Mr president true African great man
As someone mentioned many Ugandans do not appreciate you
But when you go outside uganda real Africans know that they have wise man in Africa
Iam proud of you my president
Africa is rich we are wise but we don't see it
Africa Unite for the better of us
Parts of Africa are following old British laws that were put in place when they took over Africa. Before that Africa had no problem with LGBT people. So in essence, some countries in Africa are still following old British laws. Living in Ancient times and going backward and not forward. Following old British law, rather than their roots.
African history is replete with examples of both erotic and nonerotic same-sex relationships. For example, the ancient cave paintings of the San people near Guruve in Zimbabwe depict two men engaged in some form of ritual sex. During precolonial times, the "mudoko dako", or effeminate males among the Langi of northern Uganda were treated as women and could marry men. In Buganda, one of the largest traditional kingdoms in Uganda, it was an open secret that Kabaka (king) Mwanga II, who ruled in the latter half of the 19th century, was gay.
The vocabulary used to describe same-sex relations in traditional languages, predating colonialism, is further proof of the existence of such relations in precolonial Africa. To name but a few, the Shangaan of southern Africa referred to same-sex relations as "inkotshane" (male-wife); Basotho women in present-day Lesotho engage in socially sanctioned erotic relationships called "motsoalle" (special friend) and in the Wolof language, spoken in Senegal, homosexual men are known as “gor-digen” (men-women).
Same-sex relationships in Africa were far more complex than what the champions of the "un-African" myth would have us believe. Apart from erotic same-sex desire, in precolonial Africa, several other activities were involved in same-sex (or what the colonialists branded "unnatural") sexuality. For example, the Ndebele and Shona in Zimbabwe, the Azande in Sudan and Congo, the Nupe in Nigeria and the Tutsi in Rwanda and Burundi all engaged in same-sex acts for spiritual rearmament - i.e., as a source of fresh power for their territories. It was also used for ritual purposes. Among various communities in South Africa, sex education among adolescent peers allowed them to experiment through acts such as "thigh sex" ("hlobonga" among the Zulu, "ukumetsha" among the Xhosa and "gangisa" among the Shangaan).
In many African societies, same-sex sexuality was also believed to be a source of magical powers to guarantee bountiful crop yields and abundant hunting, good health and to ward off evil spirits. In Angola and Namibia, for instance, a caste of male diviners - known as "zvibanda," "chibados," "quimbanda," "gangas" and "kibambaa" - were believed to carry powerful female spirits that they would pass on to fellow men through anal sex.
Even today, marriages between women for reproductive, economic and diplomatic reasons still exist among the Nandi and Kisii of Kenya, the Igbo of Nigeria, the Nuer of Sudan and the Kuria of Tanzania. Like elsewhere around the world, anal intercourse between married opposite-sex partners to avoid pregnancy was historically practiced by many Africans before the invention of modern contraceptive methods.
Clearly, it is not homosexuality that is un-African but the laws that criminalized such relations. In other words, what is alien to the continent is legalized homophobia, exported to Africa by the imperialists where there had been indifference to and even tolerance of same-sex relations. In Uganda such laws were introduced by the British and have been part of our penal law since the late 19th century. The current wave of anti-homosexuality laws sweeping across the continent is therefore part of a thinly veiled and wider political attempt to entrench repressive and undemocratic regimes.
@@joey9562 well if it was there fine but as human do you believe that man to man is good or woman to woman
We can forget those spiritual powers there's nothing good can come from LGBTQ just misleading people
Can they produce NO they can't they just want to eliminate us
They force bad acts to us but they don't want us to know good things, gud things remain to them
There's no European government that will force African how to make a car no why?
But they are forcing us on such disgusting behavior
I love Africa instead of bringing Africa together developing Africa they are just teaching us how we can eliminate ourselves
No me say no I don't like it Joey this is bad
God given,Long live Mzee
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
The wisdom of this man is beyond these days therefore we need such president in the whole Africa nations
African president speaks now.
Yes
As angolan I'm so happy with this President.
Thank you
THERE WILL BE NO PROMOTION OF HOMOSEXUALITY IN UGANDA 🇺🇬
😂😂😂😂😂🤡
Powerful
Based dude
We love you so much mr president Museveni God protect you and your family
Babylon are sick...😂😂😮 We defend the rigths of the Afrikan family ..
Brilliant talk 💖💖💖
May God bless our president and protect him. He is blessed beyond a curse
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏💪💪💪💪💪💪thank you my president, Yoweri kaguta museveni. FOR GOD AND MY COUNTRY.🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬.NO HOMOSEXUALITY IN UGANDA 🙅🙅🙅🙅🙅🙅🙅🙅🙅
Best wishes good luck 😉 God bless you🇬🇧😉
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
This is brilliant 🙏🏾
Love this man
He speaks facts!
God bless the black race
Amen
😂😂😂😂
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
Racist homophobes 👹👎🏼
@@joey9562 Uganda isn't poor because of rejecting homosexuality, it's a process and we'll develop sooner or later...the issue here is about molarity! It's culturally evil to be a homosexual in African society
@@Patrick-ge3pi
Ignorance is bliss.
Homosexuality should be the least of their worries.
Yes being homophobic ruins economies….tourism, aide, many move out, businesses won’t locate there,etc.
Thank you lord for giving us a good leader💞💞💞💞💞💞💞
I mean…the thing is…
I agree with some things you all say here in the comments and his point of view.
The fact is that I always wanted to visit Your beautiful Continent, as I met so many wonderful people coming from Uganda, Nigeria, Senegal…
But now I feel I won’t be welcomed, just because I’m gay.
I don’t want to promote homosexuality, I don’t want to go with any flag, nor speaking about it, I just want to immerse myself in your culture and live it with all my heart as I truly sense it’s marvellous.
However, I feel rejected, almost like an exclusion based on ideas without even knowing me.
Like doors that close before me. I’m sure you don’t mind, but I feel for you guys. We were meant to be human, to feel compassion and unity, we are going towards segregation and exclusion instead…
I have mix feelings…
Yes, this is my African Father speaking. Protecting and Defending God's Human Family.
Parts of Africa are following old British laws that were put in place when they took over Africa. Before that Africa had no problem with LGBT people. So in essence, some countries in Africa are still following old British laws. Living in Ancient times and going backward and not forward. Following old British law, rather than their roots.
African history is replete with examples of both erotic and nonerotic same-sex relationships. For example, the ancient cave paintings of the San people near Guruve in Zimbabwe depict two men engaged in some form of ritual sex. During precolonial times, the "mudoko dako", or effeminate males among the Langi of northern Uganda were treated as women and could marry men. In Buganda, one of the largest traditional kingdoms in Uganda, it was an open secret that Kabaka (king) Mwanga II, who ruled in the latter half of the 19th century, was gay.
The vocabulary used to describe same-sex relations in traditional languages, predating colonialism, is further proof of the existence of such relations in precolonial Africa. To name but a few, the Shangaan of southern Africa referred to same-sex relations as "inkotshane" (male-wife); Basotho women in present-day Lesotho engage in socially sanctioned erotic relationships called "motsoalle" (special friend) and in the Wolof language, spoken in Senegal, homosexual men are known as “gor-digen” (men-women).
Same-sex relationships in Africa were far more complex than what the champions of the "un-African" myth would have us believe. Apart from erotic same-sex desire, in precolonial Africa, several other activities were involved in same-sex (or what the colonialists branded "unnatural") sexuality. For example, the Ndebele and Shona in Zimbabwe, the Azande in Sudan and Congo, the Nupe in Nigeria and the Tutsi in Rwanda and Burundi all engaged in same-sex acts for spiritual rearmament - i.e., as a source of fresh power for their territories. It was also used for ritual purposes. Among various communities in South Africa, sex education among adolescent peers allowed them to experiment through acts such as "thigh sex" ("hlobonga" among the Zulu, "ukumetsha" among the Xhosa and "gangisa" among the Shangaan).
In many African societies, same-sex sexuality was also believed to be a source of magical powers to guarantee bountiful crop yields and abundant hunting, good health and to ward off evil spirits. In Angola and Namibia, for instance, a caste of male diviners - known as "zvibanda," "chibados," "quimbanda," "gangas" and "kibambaa" - were believed to carry powerful female spirits that they would pass on to fellow men through anal sex.
Even today, marriages between women for reproductive, economic and diplomatic reasons still exist among the Nandi and Kisii of Kenya, the Igbo of Nigeria, the Nuer of Sudan and the Kuria of Tanzania. Like elsewhere around the world, anal intercourse between married opposite-sex partners to avoid pregnancy was historically practiced by many Africans before the invention of modern contraceptive methods.
Clearly, it is not homosexuality that is un-African but the laws that criminalized such relations. In other words, what is alien to the continent is legalized homophobia, exported to Africa by the imperialists where there had been indifference to and even tolerance of same-sex relations. In Uganda such laws were introduced by the British and have been part of our penal law since the late 19th century. The current wave of anti-homosexuality laws sweeping across the continent is therefore part of a thinly veiled and wider political attempt to entrench repressive and undemocratic regimes.
Tatenda - staying vigilant and steadfast on your values is how you keep Africa strong.
Special thx to my president M7 for being strong and Man 🤝🤝🤝
👍
B L A C K man is GOD! Leviticus 20:13 If a man lies with a male as with a woman, both of them have committed an abomination; they shall surely be put to death; their blood is upon them.
I love the thinking of the perliamenterian of Uganda and the president about it
😂😂😂😂
Much love ❤❤❤
😂😂😂😂
Many thanks to the president for standing up against animalsity and evil pervations that can plunged the country into the fury of the judgement of GOD
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
Yes speak
God bless you Jjaja' m7
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
I love u
God prepares leaders for seasons like this.when the devil comes in like a flood he raises a standard .Thank you lord for my president.May God continue giving you guidance in your reign.
God does not support killing your fellow man because of who they love!
That is why Uganda poor and struggling
And now his ill
How do you seek to establish un abnormality to be a universal normality....
Homophobes are abnormal
❤️❤️❤️🙏🇺🇬
Well done Uganda
👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼👹👺
Same sex marriage is not African. It's a taboo 😂
You may call it promotion or whatever you wanna call it but what you won’t do is to dictate the lives of innocent gay people…they’ve been here and not going anywhere.
Gay people have all rights to get support of any form from someone else if you have decided to not support and seee them as fellow humans. Those who see value in all human beings have an obligation to stand for them whether the majority thinks otherwise.
If you have made it clear that you can’t protect all your citizens, someone else has then to stand in and do your job🤗🤗 you can’t then be the same person making noise
God bless these leaders and thier countries
This m7 will not sign now he's speaking in tongues 😂😅
Papa sevo Big daddy
Tell them to read Romans chapters 1&2.
The bible has been mistranslated.
CORINTHIANS 1, TIMOTHY 1 AND ROMANS1
The word homosexual wasn't even inserted into the Bible until 1946. And even those Scholars agreed that they misinterpreted and it should not have been interpreted as homosexuals, and was changed back to sexual perverts in 1971. But many Bibles printed from 1946 to 1971 still contain the misinterpreted word "homosexual".
Paul could have used many words if he intended to blast gays and lesbians. Yet Paul used none of those available words, choosing instead to coin an interesting new word, arsenokoitai.
Over the thousands of years, it has been changed. We must look at the "original" text. That word is an unusual word. It’s a new word; we don’t know of any other instances of the word until Paul coins the word in 1 Corinthians 6 and 1 Timothy 1.
It’s a compound word: “arsen” means man and “koite” or “koitas” or “koitai”-depending on a verb or a noun-means bed. It’s quite clear that Paul has coined this word from Leviticus 18 and 20. Even if you don’t know any Greek, you could find online or pull up the Greek transliteration of these two verses. Look at the Septuagint, which is the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, and then just look at the Greek for the necessary passage in Leviticus 18 and Leviticus 20 and you'll see there (and in fact the words are right next to each other in Leviticus 20) this word for man (“arsen”) and the word for bed (“koitai” or “koite”). And if we are so bold to stretch this to encompass gay sex, how can we possibly stretch it so far as to include lesbians?
We must be careful of taking a word, a sentence or even a passage without looking at the context of the entire chapter. During the time Paul wrote this, he was traveling and came across these people performing public orgies in Pagan rituals to appease their gods. Of course this is totally unlike a same-sex loving committed monogamous relationship. Arsenokoitai is never used in any extant Greek literature with our modern meaning of homosexual. The best evidence available today indicates that arsenokoitai described shrine prostitutes. That is the learned opinion of Philo, a contemporary of both Jesus and the apostle Paul and one of the most widely read Jewish intellectuals in the first century. Because Paul, AD 4 - 67, and Philo of Alexandria, 20 BC - AD 50, were contemporaries and because Paul was well educated and widely read, it is reasonable to believe that Paul was familiar with the writings of Philo, a fellow Jew and public intellectual, although not a fellow Christian. Philo understood Moses, in Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13, to be condemning shrine prostitution. Philo's understanding that arsenos koiten refers to shrine prostitution is 2000 years old. It was a Jewish belief with which the Apostle Paul was familiar because Paul coins a new word describing temple prostitution using the Septuagint Greek words of Leviticus 20:13.
Believing that Leviticus 18:22 and 20:13 refers to shrine or temple prostitution is not a modern belief invented by gays to alibi their "sin".
It is the ancient Jewish and Christian belief for thousands of years.
So this research reveals that "man" tweaked the word of God to control mankind. At that time procreation was an utmost necessity, as it empowered nations to build up strong armies and increase their wealth. This was their way of suppressing homosexuals.
And some Autocratic/Communist countries still do this today for the same reasons but the difference is today homosexuals are able to have children through in vitro fertilization and also fill the gap for those children abandoned in orphanages through adoption.
Since RUclips won't let me post the links, I suggest you search,
" 1946 the movie", and you will see how they explain this in greater detail.
Just learned about this man a few minutes ago. You got some support from the states, sir. 🫡🇺🇲 May your country be blessed!
Therefore sign the bill