I don't know how it was here in the US, but when I was a kid growing up in Germany we often heard from different religious groups that the world was going to end on such and such date. I think according to all these different groups the world should have ended about 8 to 10 times that I can remember. The first time it was very scary, because I didn't know if they might be right or not. What IF they were right and we have only three more months before the world ends? Maybe I just don't have to worry about the math test ! What would happen to everyone? Would we all die fast or painful? Many questions ran through my head. Full of anticipation and nervousness I counted down the days. My parents attitude was calming but a little alarming too. They just laughed at this. Good, I thought, they know better. But what IF they were wrong THIS time? So the doomsday came and went and nothing happened. Of course I was relieved. The next time I heard about the end of the world I didn't pay much attention anymore and the third and following times, I just laughed.
After I became a Christian, I started to read Revelation and tried to understand what God is telling us there. Though to be honest, I still don't really understand many things in Revelation. I didn't think that I will ever see the end of this world.
In the last few years, however, I have been looking at some events and am wondering now if I am indeed seeing the beginning of the end of this world. I don't think that 'doomsday' is at hand, for that there are some things that should happen which didn't happen yet. However, it seems that there are things that seem to start in just that direction. The following article written by Albert Mohler is rather eyeopening:

A
new chapter in America’s moral revolution came today as Atlanta pastor
Louie Giglio withdrew from giving the benediction at President Obama’s
second inaugural ceremony. In a statement released to the White House
and the Presidential Inaugural Committee, Giglio said that he withdrew
because of the furor that emerged yesterday after a liberal watchdog
group revealed that almost twenty years ago he had preached a sermon in
which he had stated that homosexuality is a sin and that the “only way
out of a homosexual lifestyle … is through the healing power of Jesus.”
In other words, a Christian pastor has been effectively disinvited
from delivering an inaugural prayer because he believes and teaches
Christian truth.
The fact that Giglio was actually disinvited was made clear in a
statement from Addie Whisenant of the Presidential Inaugural Committee:
“We were not aware of Pastor Giglio’s past comments at the time of his
selection, and they don’t reflect our desire to celebrate the strength
and diversity of our country at this inaugural. Pastor Giglio was asked
to deliver the benediction in large part because of his leadership in
combating human trafficking around the world. As we now work to select
someone to deliver the benediction, we will ensure their beliefs reflect
this administration’s vision of inclusion and acceptance for all
Americans.”
That statement is, in effect, an embarrassed apology for having
invited Louie Giglio in the first place. Whisenant’s statement
apologizes for the Presidential Inaugural Committee’s failure to make
certain that their selection had never, at any time, for any reason,
believed that homosexuality is less than a perfectly acceptable
lifestyle. The committee then promised to repent and learn from their
failure, committing to select a replacement who would “reflect this
administration’s vision of inclusion and acceptance.”
The imbroglio over Louie Giglio is the clearest evidence of the new
Moral McCarthyism of our sexually “tolerant” age. During the infamous
McCarthy hearings, witnesses would be asked, “Are you now or have you
ever been a member of the Communist Party?”
In the version now to be employed by the Presidential Inaugural
Committee, the question will be: “Are you now or have you ever been one
who believes that homosexuality (or bisexuality, or transsexualism,
etc.) is anything less than morally acceptable and worthy of
celebration?”
Louie Giglio, pastor of Atlanta’s Passion City Church, is also
founder of the Passion movement that brings tens of thousands of
Christian young people together to hear Giglio, along with speakers such
as John Piper. They urge a rising generation of young Christians to
make a passionate commitment to Christ. In recent years, the movement
has also sought to raise awareness and activism among young Christians
on the issue of sex trafficking. It was that activism that caught the
attention of both President Obama and the Presidential Inaugural
Committee.
Note carefully that both the White House and the committee were ready
to celebrate Giglio’s activism on sex trafficking, but all that was
swept away by the Moral McCarthyism on the question of homosexuality.
Two other dimensions of this story also demand attention. First, we
should note that Louie Giglio has not been known lately for taking any
stand on the issue of homosexuality. To the contrary, Giglio’s own
statement withdrawing from the invitation made this clear:
“Due to a message of mine that has surfaced from 15-20 years ago, it
is likely that my participation, and the prayer I would offer, will be
dwarfed by those seeking to make their agenda the focal point of the
inauguration. Clearly, speaking on this issue has not been in the range
of my priorities in the past fifteen years. Instead, my aim has been to
call people to ultimate significance as we make much of Jesus Christ.”
A fair-minded reading of that statement indicates that Pastor Giglio
has strategically avoided any confrontation with the issue of
homosexuality for at least fifteen years. The issue “has not been in the
range of my priorities,” he said. Given the Bible’s insistance that
sexual morality is inseparable from our “ultimate significance as we
make much of Jesus Christ,” this must have been a difficult strategy. It
is also a strategy that is very attractive to those who want to avoid
being castigated as intolerant or homophobic. As this controversy makes
abundantly clear, it is a failed strategy. Louie Giglio was cast out of
the circle of the acceptable simply because a liberal watchdog group
found one sermon he preached almost twenty years ago. If a preacher has
ever taken a stand on biblical conviction, he risks being exposed
decades after the fact. Anyone who teaches at any time, to any degree,
that homosexual behavior is a sin is now to be cast out.
Second, we should note that Pastor Giglio’s sermon was, as we would
expect and hope, filled with grace and the promise of the Gospel. Giglio
did not just state that homosexuals are sinners — he made clear that
every single human being is a sinner, in need of the redemption that is
found only in Jesus Christ. “We’ve got to say to the homosexuals, the
same thing that I say to you and that you would say to me … It’s not
easy to change, but it’s possible to change,” he preached. He pointed
his congregation, gay and straight, to “the healing power of Jesus.” He
called his entire congregation to repent and come to Christ by faith.
That is the quintessential Christian Gospel. That is undiluted
biblical truth. Those words are the consensus of the Church for over
2,000 years, and the firm belief held by the vast majority of Christians
around the world today.
The Presidential Inaugural Committee and the White House have now
declared historic, biblical Christianity to be out of bounds, casting it
off the inaugural program as an embarrassment. By its newly articulated
standard, any preacher who holds to the faith of the church for the
last 2,000 years is
persona non grata. By this standard, no
Roman Catholic prelate or priest can participate in the ceremony. No
Evangelical who holds to biblical orthodoxy is welcome. The vast
majority of Christians around the world have been disinvited. Mormons,
and the rabbis of Orthodox Judaism are out. Any Muslim imam who could
walk freely in Cairo would be denied a place on the inaugural program.
Billy Graham, who participated in at least ten presidential
inaugurations is welcome no more. Rick Warren, who incited a similar
controversy when he prayed at President Obama’s first inauguration, is
way out of bounds. In the span of just four years, the rules are fully
changed.
The gauntlet was thrown down yesterday, and the axe fell today. Wayne Besen, founder of the activist group Truth Wins Out, told
The New York Times
yesterday: “It is imperative that Giglio clarify his remarks and
explain whether he has evolved on gay rights, like so many other faith
and political leaders. It would be a shame to select a preacher with
backward views on LBGT people at a moment when the nation is rapidly
moving forward on our issues.”
And there you have it — anyone who has ever believed that
homosexuality is morally problematic in any way must now offer public
repentance and evidence of having “evolved” on the question. This is the
language that President Obama used of his own “evolving” position on
same-sex marriage. This is what is now openly demanded of Christians
today. If you want to avoid being thrown off the program, you had better
learn to evolve fast, and repent in public.
This is precisely what biblical Christians cannot do. While seeking
to be gentle in spirit and ruthlessly Gospel-centered in speaking of any
sin, we cannot cease to speak of sin
as sin. To do so is not
only to deny the authority of Scripture, not only to reject the moral
consensus of the saints, but it undermines the Gospel itself. The Gospel
makes no sense, and is robbed of its saving power, if sin is denied as
sin.
An imbroglio is a painful and embarrassing conflict. The imbroglio
surrounding Louie Giglio is not only painful, it is revealing. We now
see the new Moral McCarthyism in its undisguised and unvarnished
reality. If you are a Christian, get ready for the question you will now
undoubtedly face: “Do you now or have you ever believed that
homosexuality is a sin?” There is nowhere to hide.
you can read the original article
here
I think that we need to talk to God about this and ask Him to give us strength to do His will. I can only say that for my part I will hate the sin but love the sinner! I don't hate any gay person, I had gay and lesbian friends in my life and they are wonderful people. However, they do live in sin. I have known adulterers and they were nice people, however they lived in sin. I have known addicts, nice people but again, they lived in sin. We are all sinners, we are all broken the Father can heal us. Healing doesn't always looks the same for each person and the journey to healing surly is individual to a person. I don't have an answer for every question, but I do know that homosexuality is a sin according the God of Abraham, Jacob and Isaac. I do know that we as Christians should not compromise on Gods Word, it is what it is. If we don't stand up for the Word of God now, there will be a day when it is too late to want to stand up for Word of God because then we will be threatened torture and loss of life and family and friends.
It is slow and almost not noticeable slope and it starts by not caring about what is true and right. Then it continues on to "well, whatever is right for you" which means you are not defending truth and by that action you abandon the truth. You give up on the truth. Once that has happened it will be very, very costly to go back. In german we have a saying "Wehret den Anfaengen" which means something like "fight the beginnings" .