26, 27. For this cause God gave them up--(See on
Ro 1:24).
for even their women--that sex whose priceless jewel and fairest
ornament is modesty, and which, when that is once lost, not only becomes
more shameless than the other sex, but lives henceforth only to drag the
other sex down to its level.
did change, &c.--The practices here referred to, though too abundantly
attested by classic authors, cannot be further illustrated, without
trenching on things which "ought not to be named among us as become the
saints." But observe how vice is here seen consuming and exhausting
itself. When the passions, scourged by violent and continued indulgence
in natural vices, became impotent to yield the craved enjoyment,
resort was had to artificial stimulants by the practice of unnatural and
monstrous vices. How early these were in full career, in the history
of the world, the case of Sodom affectingly shows; and because of such
abominations, centuries after that, the land of Canaan "spued out" its
old inhabitants. Long before this chapter was penned, the Lesbians and
others throughout refined Greece had been luxuriating in such
debasements; and as for the Romans,
TACITUS, speaking of the emperor
Tiberius, tells us that new words had then to be coined to express the
newly invented stimulants to jaded passion. No wonder that, thus sick
and dying as was this poor humanity of ours under the highest earthly
culture, its many-voiced cry for the balm in Gilead, and the Physician
there, "Come over and help us," pierced the hearts of the missionaries
of the Cross, and made them "not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ!"
JFB.
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