Then I look forward to the next sermon against black pudding....
Presumably then by your reaction you would insist on Rev Graham preaching as forcefully against shirts being mixed polyester and cotton as you would he preaches against the "lifting of such shirts" ie: homosexual acts: both, after all, are condemned by Leviticus and are thus surely part of 'The Gospel'. Indeed, I look forward to the good reverend's next evangelistic preaching when he vociferously prohibits a husband and wife getting it on when she is on her period, since that is prohibited by the very same chapters of Leviticus as condemn Teh Gayz (18 and 20) and is an integral part of The Gospel.
I'm afraid I can't go along with this at all. If you want to open a thread on figurative language and cleanliness laws in Leviticus, feel free to start a thread.
We cannot back off on God's moral laws. Homosexuality is forbidden in several places in both Old and New Testaments. The fact that there is tremendous push-back from the homosexual lobby is neither here nor there. The is a very apposite quotation often wrongly assigned to Luther, but no less true for that:
"If I profess with the loudest voice and clearest exposition every portion of the word of God except precisely that little point that the world and the devil are at that moment attacking, I am not confessing Christ, however boldly I may be professing Him. Where the battle rages, there the loyalty of the soldier is proved, and to be steady on all the battlefield beside is mere flight and disgrace if he flinches at that point."
Having said that, we should note that the Lord Jesus was called the Friend of sinners. He di not go off on a rant against tax-collectors, but rather called Matthew and Zacchaeus gently to Himself. Read Rosaria Butterfield's memoir,
Confessions of an Unlikely Convert. Abuse and condemnation only hardened her in her sin. It was someone who took time to befriend her and show the Lord Jesus to her who won her for Christ.
In debate with the LBGTQWERTY lobby, let Graham and others be polite but firm. When he comes to Blackpool, let him show the people Jesus Christ and Him crucified.