Is there something wrong with you if you have same-sex attractions? Does
it mean you are in sin or under God’s judgment? Or could it be, as some
are claiming today, that God has blessed you with these attractions?
Here are five simple truths about same-sex attractions:
1. Your attractions do not define you. Despite the
fact that much is made today of “being gay” or having a gay identity,
the reality is that your romantic attractions and sexual desires do not
define who you are as a person. More importantly, if you have
surrendered your life to the Lord and are living in obedience to Him,
your primary identity is found in being a son or daughter of God. Many
believers struggle when they put gay before Christian in terms of their
identity rather than putting Christian (or child of God) first.
2. It is not a sin to be same-sex attracted. While
it is true that there really are former homosexuals (meaning, people who
went from homosexual to heterosexual through divine intervention or
counseling or discipleship—I hear from them on a regular basis, and I
know some of them personally), it is also true that there are believers
who have renounced homosexual practice but who are still same-sex
attracted, and they are living holy, blessed lives.As a former lesbian
once pointed out, God never said, “Be thou heterosexual because I the
Lord thy God am heterosexual.” He said, “Be thou holy, because I the
Lord thy God am holy.”In helping those struggling with unwanted same-sex
attractions, we need to remind them that holiness, not heterosexuality,
is the first and primary goal, encouraging them to renounce sinful
practices and relationships and to reject sinful thoughts while
recognizing that temptation can still be a real possibility.
3. Having same-sex attractions does not mean your moral character is bad.
Just as it is misguided to define yourself based on your attractions
and desires, it is also misguided to define your essential moral
character based on your attractions and desires. Put another way, people
with same-sex attractions might be some of the nicest, kindest, most
morally upright people you know.We are often imprecise in our
terminology, saying that “Homosexuality is sinful” (as opposed to the
correct statement, namely that “Homosexual practice is sinful”), because
of which it is easy for us to jump to the wrong conclusion that anyone
with same-sex attractions is especially sinful.The fact is that your
moral character is not measured by whether your attractions are same-sex
or opposite-sex. Rather, your moral character is measured by how you
live your life before God and your fellow human beings, which includes
how you deal with your attractions and desires.Do you cultivate and act
on things that are wrong in God’s sight, or do you say yes to Him and no
to those things? Do you genuinely seek to love your neighbor as
yourself, produce the fruit of the Spirit and live in purity that is
what measures your morality.
4. If you are same-sex attracted, you are still created in the image of God.
The reality is that every human being is created in the image of God,
regardless of who they are, and every human being is fallen and in need
of redemption.The whole human race is broken in God’s sight, the whole
human race is in a state of rebellion against God (outside of His
gracious intervention to save us and transform us), and so the whole
human race suffers from fatal, damnable flaws.As fallen human beings, we
are proud, greedy, lustful, selfish, dishonest, covetous,
duplicitous—just to name a few of our carnal characteristics. That’s why
we need a Savior to forgive us and to transform us.At the same time, as
God’s creation and the expression of His image on the earth, we have
many noble qualities, but they are flawed because of the fall.Same-sex
attractions, while clearly contrary to God’s design for the human race
and while certainly not a gift from Him, are just another aspect of our
fallen, broken state, one of a thousand different aspects of our weak,
human condition, putting all of us in the same boat in one way or
another.We are all created in His image, we are fallen and broken (in
part through our biology and in part through our upbringing and
choices—which is not to say people are “born gay”), and we are all loved
by Him and offered new life in Jesus.
5. Jesus shed the same blood for every human being, whether same-sex or opposite-sex attracted.
There is no discrimination or favoritism at the foot of the cross. The
blood of Jesus cleanses us from our sins if we put our trust in Him,
regardless of what sins we have committed.
In the same way, His call to all of us is the same: “If anyone wants
to come with Me, he must deny himself, take up his cross daily, and
follow Me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever
loses his life because of Me will save it” (Luke 9:23-24, HCSB).
As I recently told a same-sex attracted person, “Put your entire
emphasis on getting into right relationship with the Lord, knowing His
love and walking in obedience to Him, rather than wondering if you’ll
have to be celibate for the rest of your life. You will find Him to be
more than enough and to be there to guide you step by step, one day at a
time.”
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