So if some of the accusations were true which ones? That he snorted before having sex. But never had sex?
THere have been further developments, but the thing that struck me the hardest was CNN's poking fun at the entire issue. TO mainline evangelical Christians, what he did was unthinkable. He accepted his responsibility for his actions and entered Christian based counseling. When CNN got word of this (and I watched this news segment with a dripping mop when it was on at work) they LAUGHED out loud at his choice and openly bashed Christian counseling in general. If a man chooses to find a way to stop something he is doing, that to him and others is wrong, then why should we laugh at that? Do we not espouse personal morality and personal responsibility? Because my wrong is not your wrong, and I would not handle it the same way, does not mean that it is subject to public ridicule... CNN has been increasingly slanted (they already leaned left, but recently they've been pretty bad even for themselves) but this is just horrible. If the man wishes to enter counseling for drug use (illegal and unethical no matter what) and alleged homosexual affairs (you can determine for yourself the morality, your state will determine the legality, but I'll bet if he was married and gay AND a pastor, there's issues there) I don't see any shame in that. /end partial hijack, but that really bothered me...
I see very little difference between a commercial evangelist like Haggard and a porn merchant - both get rich purveying a debased product to fill a basic human craving. To suggest "Christianity" comes into it sullies decent Christians.