Christian theologian Mr. Aaron Edwards was allegedly fired by a Methodist Bible institution in the United Kingdom due to his anti-homosexuality tweets.
It was discovered that the college also implied that it will label Dr. Aaron, a theology professor at Cliff College in Derbyshire, England, as a terrorist.
Fox News reports that he was dismissed from the school after being accused of “bringing the college into disrepute” on social media last month, when he tweeted, “Homosexuality is invading the church,” on February 19.
“Evangelicals no longer see the severity of this [because] they’re busy apologizing for their apparently barbaric homophobia, whether or not it’s true.
“This *is* a ‘Gospel issue,’ by the way. If sin is no longer sin, we no longer need a Savior,” Edwards added.
According to the report, Edwards’ tweet went viral and prompted blowback, to which Edwards responded: “That *is* the conservative view. The acceptance of homosexuality as ‘not sinful’ *is* an invasion upon the Church, doctrinally.
“This is not controversial. The acceptance is controversial. Most of the global Church would agree. It is not homophobic to declare homosexuality sinful.
“I expressed the conservative view as a doctrinal issue, re. the implications for sin/the Gospel. It was not an attack on individuals, it was addressed to evangelicals. It seems that holding the view that homosexuality is sinful is only welcome if it remains ‘unexpressed,’” he added.
Edwards’ tweets reportedly caused “distress” among members of the Methodist Church in Britain, with one senior staff member saying they “could be extremely damaging” and “impact the college’s core work” and “business plan,” according to Edwards’ legal counsel at the London-based Christian Legal Centre.
During a disciplinary hearing on March 8, the college disclosed that it was considering submitting Edwards to Prevent, which oversees claims of terrorism in the United Kingdom. Edwards was suspended from the school pending an investigation.
Edwards claims that he was tricked into endorsing “conversion therapy” at the hearing when he was asked what he would do if a student requested him to pray with them about their same-sex attraction. The U.K. Parliament has discussed making conversion therapy a crime.
“The reaction to my tweet and the unjust treatment I have experienced by Cliff College and the Methodist Church in Britain completely illustrates the problem my tweet addressed,” Edwards said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital.
“The tweet was not defamatory; it was not an attack on any colleague or individual; it was not abusive; and it was not an extremist religious view. It was addressed to evangelicals as a point of doctrine, and it has been misunderstood by many who wish to cause personal and institutional trouble for those who express that view,” he continued.
Edwards added that traditional Christian beliefs about sexuality are being “silenced and stamped out” in the Methodist Church.