OK, so I wanted to give further updates. I had dinner with my trombone playing friend, and we had a good discussion on how my conversation went with the worship pastor. I decided to reach out to some of the other orchestra members as well, for fear that the leadership might instruct them to ostracize me. I confirmed that this did not happen, but I wanted to get out ahead of it, just in case that were to have happened. I know that they are uneasy about people talking to me, but they haven't gone that far. Two of the members of the orchestra responded to me. One of them wanted to call me, so I gave her my number and we spoke on the phone. She said that she agrees with the church's position, and I told her that this did not surprise me. Her proof texts were I Tim 3:12 and I Cor 7:2. I wish I had thought of what
@Julia Mykaele mentioned here, because that would have been an excellent rebuttal to her misuse of I Tim 3:12. I did mention the use of Heaoutu and idios in I Cor 7:2, but she ignored that, and I pointed out the fact that she quoted that verse completely out of context, where Paul is not talking about polygamy at all, but rather, celibacy. She said that I was trying to convince her, when in reality, I was challenging her to try to convince me. She said that she would pray for me. That's what a lot of Christians like to do when they don't have facts to back up their assertions. I don't ever do that myself, especially if I am talking with a skeptic. I had a coworker who embraced Buddhism. and his parents were Christians. I asked him if his mother always told him that she was going to pray for him, and he confirmed that she did. My response was that we should not tell the person who doesn't believe that we are going to pray for them, but just do so privately, because God doesn't need us to tell that person that we are going to pray for them in order to answer that prayer.
The first chair violinist also responded and we had an interesting email exchange. He tried to bring in some non-Biblical arguments into the debate, and I wasn't going to let him get away with that. He asserted that he was surprised that no one has "set me straight", and I called him out on that. He then proposed a series of theological mind reading questions for me. I initially responded that I am not into reading God's mind, and that His thoughts are not ours, and His ways are higher than ours. He said that I was misusing Isaiah and Paul, because that was specifically about the message of salvation. So he wanted me to speculate on why homosexuality is wrong, why adultery and divorce are wrong, why one man and one woman is good, and what is really going on in Ephesians 5. Well, I responded that Scripture tells us that homosexuality is an abomination; we don't have to speculate about that. I said that Malachi tells us that God wanted to raise godly offspring, and that was why He said that He hates divorce, and I said that one man and one woman is good for the same reason that one man and multiple women is good, and that Scripture tells us that marriage is honorable. I said that the Greek word used, is "Gamos", and that is where we get our words, "monogamy" and "polygamy" from. I said that I think I know the answer that he expected to give and that I don't subscribe to New Age philosophies that have infiltrated the church. I saw him on Sunday. He said in his email that he wants to get together with me, and I know that he saw me, but he didn't make any effort to reach out and talk to me so that we could get together, and I just let it go. In his initial response, he came across as if he was going to let me have it, and I told him to hold off until I was ready to stomach his verbal tirade, though not in those words, and he clarified that what he meant, was that he was not going to be soft on this particular issue. We will have to see how that turns out.