Goodbye, Heroes
Posted on : 19-01-2010 | By : Andy | In : pop culture, religion
Tags: heroes, homosexuality, lesbian, love
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It’s a bit disturbing to me that NBC’s solution to Heroes’ rapidly falling ratings was to introduce a lesbian love story. Why?
First off, it’s an indicator that we’ve reached such a level of political correctness that “tolerance” has become one of our society’s greatest virtue. By this I do not mean that tolerance (in itself) is a bad thing, but I do mean that what we now term tolerance goes far beyond that. Tolerance means “I will not prohibit you from doing something,” and typically understands the action/belief in question to be one that contradicts what the tolerating person believes. Tolerance does not equate to agreement or support, nor does it entail unilateral pluralistic license.
I will tolerate it if the neighbors’ music is a little too loud up until a certain time of night. If asked, I would prefer that they keep the noise to a reasonable level, and I will even state that it is disrespectful, selfish, and unkind for them to violate my need for restful sleep. Nevertheless, I might tolerate it up to certain levels in order to maintain a more amicable relationship with my neighbors. However, there is a point at which tolerance is no longer a virtue: if I cannot sleep at 3AM because of the noise next door, or have chronic headaches from their chronic partying, I will demand that they stop and involve the police if necessary. You wouldn’t call me intolerant for that, you’d say I was standing up for my rights, my beliefs that I need sleep to function properly at school, work, etc.
So, I will tolerate homosexual couples and beliefs to a certain degree. Homosexual activity (as opposed to temptation) is a sin per God’s judgement as revealed in Scripture, but I also recognize that humans have free will and there is only one Lawgiver and Judge, and that said Lawgiver is not me. However, when Heroes (or anyone else, for that matter) attempts to equate homosexual relationships with heterosexual ones, they are preaching a morality against Scripture that unfortunately has deceived many. Wrapping it in the attractive context of trust and love makes the moral precepts being pitched that much more dangerous. Satan masquerades as an angel of light. For the sake of current and future believers, I must resist this wholeheartedly.
Lest you miss it, I am also highly disgusted by how Hollywood does this with heterosexual relationships as well: takes extramarital sexual relationships, couches them in “devoted love,” and portrays them as a good, desirable thing. This too is opposed to Scripture and deserves our censure. Why the “double standard?” It’s partially due to the compounding nature of homosexual activity (not only is it illicit in it’s nature, but it is also further sinful in its typical extra-marital context), and partially due to the fact that the extramarital relationships battle has been largely lost in our culture and avoiding all references to such activity would likely shut us out from the media entirely. The homosexual topic still has enough of a taboo and minority status attached to it that prevention of its popularization may still be feasible.
So, here we are. Heroes was starting to be lame, but I was still hooked. I just won’t support a homosexual agenda in my viewing habits.




Maybe you should stick to reviewing alkaline batteries and Mario games instead of having moral judgement on how other people wish to love one another…
p.s. Luigi is so gay… Maybe you shouldn’t be playing these morally despicable games..
I thought I explained myself pretty clearly, but there it is. If God calls homosexual behavior wrong (and I believe the Bible to be God’s Word, so I believe this to be the case), then I must also call homosexual behavior wrong. I won’t hate anyone for being gay, I won’t intentionally treat them any worse than anyone else in the world (we’re all sinners), but I will be heard on this issue: in God’s eyes, homosexual relations are not an acceptable demonstration of love. If some guy thought killing people was an appropriate way to express his love for them, I would tell him he was wrong (granted, that’s a bit hyperbolic, but actions can’t simply be justified by saying they were done out of love).
I can’t imagine ever being so attached to one religion, one way of looking at the world, that it would lead me to judge people’s private lives to such an extent. I understand christianity can be a valuable source of individual inspiration. It is an inspiration to me as-well as several other religious teachings, science and the arts. In my view religion has the tendency to become destructive when one does not treat it as a personal guide to shape your life but also a guide to judge the lives of others.
I have several gay and lesbian friends that have a sincere and true love for one another. To suggest that they are practicing a mortal sin leaves me near speechless. What gives you the moral authority? The self-righteousness, the arrogance? Those are sins in my book.
I suggest you study more than one book. It just might open up a beautiful world of nuance.