Ten Things The Christian Learned About Gay People in Ten Years

Ten Things The Christian Learned About Gay People in Ten Years

“God, is the truth as I understand it about being gay and Christian Your truth?”

Written by Kathy, and originally published on canyonwalkerconnections.com

In 2001, if you had asked me, “Kathy, can you be gay and Christian?”  I would have hedged a bit and fallen on the side of “No”.  I did not have any close relationships with gay people nor had I ever studied the issue in the Bible.  I did not even know one gay Christian that I knew of.  It was from this paradigm that I formulated my opinions about the lives of gay people and made assumptions about their status with God.  All that changed when I met Netto on a hiking trail.  It is now ten years later and I offer ten things that I wish straight people, especially Christians, knew about gay people.

People who do not understand the views of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are not all bigots; and people who are fully affirming in their support of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are not all heretics.  This conversation often is relegated to love and hate, right and wrong, but there is a wide expanse between the two sides.  And that middle group is, for the most part, silent.  You are the ones to whom I am offering these insights, from experience, knowledge, study, relationship and with a genuine interest in engaging the too-often-silent middle.

With Bible in hand and in spirit, an open mind and heart and a willingness to listen to people, I entered the conversation that often brings out the worst in people.  I hope to inspire you to move and to speak up with the Jesus-voice inside you.

Ten years and thousands of miles ago, I met Netto on a hiking trail.  It was a time for conversation, the answering of all my stupid questions, and an opportunity to get to know my Native American, agnostic, lesbian friend. Miles translated to trust for both of us, and the growing relationship challenged my cultural Evangelical stances on homosexuality. My insights include a timeline to show the long, thoughtful and prayerful process. These are ten things I have learned in ten years about the gay, lesbian and bisexual community; especially the Christian segment of that community.

1. BEING GAY IS NOT A CHOICE. In the US, we are almost evenly divided on the question of choice: “Are people born gay?” (42%) vs. “Do they choose to be gay?” (44%).  For the most part, how we answer this will dictate related views about inclusion in the church and civil rights for gay, lesbian and bisexual people. When individuals hold the “born gay” option as true, it is more probable that they are also supportive about extending equality to the gay, lesbian and bisexual people.

To the contrary, those who believe people “choose to be gay” most often see being gay as a “behavior” and not an intrinsic part of a person’s being. Behaviors, they reason, are controllable and changeable and therefore, they conclude, sexual attraction is controllable, if not changeable. When sexual orientation is seen as a choice and a behavior, people are less likely to extend civil rights and inclusion in the church for gay, lesbian and bisexual people.

This one issue is the key and it took a long time and many relationships for me to understand.  What you believe either unlocks the passage to equality, or it keeps the door shut and segregates.  It is the premise upon which most of the insights I offer builds.

There is no gene yet discovered for human sexuality, whether that be heterosexual or homosexual.  Opinions formed in and out of relationships along with anecdotal evidence become the basis for each of our truths. Relationship.  I write and say that word a lot — it matters.

I was raised in a moderately prejudiced home in the New York City area; my stepfather was horribly biased against the black community.  While he was recovering from cancer surgery, he roomed with a lovely elderly black man.  After a week together in a hospital room, sharing experiences and interacting with this man’s family, my stepfather’s views about the black community changed.  After six decades of bigotry, he saw this man as just another human.  Relationship does that.

Similarly, for me and the 42% who believe that being gay is not a choice, that conclusion is the fruit of relationships and listening.  Informed decisions based in information and experience is best, lacking that your opinion on this issue says nothing about your intelligence or your ranking on the “good person” scale.  Without interaction with gay people, you may not understand that most gay people know between the ages of five and eight that they are “different”; this was a powerful message for me.  Before a sexual thought ever occurs, they “knew.”  Typically, it took another five years before they began to label the difference.  When puberty kicked in, they noticed the comments and feelings of their friends did not jive with their experiences.  What followed was an average of another three and a half years of struggling, in confusion, for a self-acceptance of being gay.

Being gay and sexual orientation are not as simple as “who you have sex with.”  Sexual orientation speaks of an emotional, relational and sexual fulfillment and comfort.  Gay people, just like heterosexual people, are attracted, at the core, to a gender at a young age.  All of this is innocent and has no sexual overtones.  As heterosexuals, when we recall a crush on a second grade teacher or the warm ease of being with a family friend, we never associate “sex” with it; yet we will often insert “sex” into the historical impressions of a gay person. Long before thoughts of sex enter a child’s brain, both heterosexual and homosexual children have a brain imprint of attraction. There is no choice for “behavior.”  It is innate.  Actually, 93% of mothers say they knew their gay sons were gay at an early age.

All this information bore out in the lives of people I met while with Netto.  I started to meet people in long-term, same-sex relationships that had never been romantically interested in the opposite sex, ever.  Others had been married and were parents.  I had fallen into believing marriage to the opposite sex was “proof” of a person’s heterosexuality.  Being married and bearing children do not mean one is straight.  As one of my friends puts it, “It just means that you fantasize really well.”  There are numerous reasons gay people marry the opposite sex:

They know they are “different,” however, exploring that difference is taboo and culturally or religiously unacceptable.  Some people get married before they understand that they are not heterosexual.

They marry because it is expected, or they want a family.

They are told they will change by getting married.  Some people still believe the careless attitude of “All you need to do is find the right woman/right man and you will get rid of these feelings.”  No amount of time I spend with women, and in the last ten years, with legions of lesbians, can or will make me a lesbian.  Just as I am straight, about 5% of people are gay.  (Situational sex in prisons does occur.  This is NOT a change in orientation; it is a sex choice for convenience.)

The question of “born gay” or “choose to be gay” is the hinge of the rest of my insights.  A passing relationship with the lesbian coffee shop barista, your gay hairdresser and/or a neighbor as he passes you walking his dog will not help you honestly evaluate an entire class of people.  Don’t rely on an equally uninformed pastor, politician or pundit. Actually get to know people. Using uninformed opinions to decide on civil matters for a class of people is careless. Allowing those same distant opinions to influence spiritual “policies” is even more egregious.  Do relationship: ask, listen and listen some more.

2. THERE ARE GAY CHRISTIANS. It took me six years amongst un-churched gay and lesbian friends until I discovered groups of gay Christians. They were there; I was just not among them. It was a “chance” reading of a New York Times article about the Gay Christian Network (GCN) that sent me to their website.  I was confident that I would not agree with the mission statement or statement of faith, but it was Jesus focused and I did agree.  Feeling a definite tug, three weeks later I flew to Seattle for four days to the GCN annual conference.

The experience of standing at the back of the room on the first night filled with four hundred gay Christians stunned me.  The depth and richness of God and Jesus worship was unmistakable, the resonance of the Holy Spirit flipped my theology on end; real relationships confounded my created theology.  When I left the GCN conference, I was willing to be uncomfortably in doubt.  I am a list-maker, driven, likes-to-have-answers person, but seeing the Trinity in gay people made me question what I believed and why I believed it.  It is scary to be in doubt and not know when black and white, right and wrong segment your world.

I began to ask, “God, is the truth as I understand it about being gay and Christian Your truth?”  I knew whatever thinking process I had used to conclude a person could not be gay and Christian was deeply flawed. I stood in a place few straight Christians have stood, as the only straight person amongst hundreds of gay Christians.  I knew I was the one in error, not them.  Reconciling my faith and beliefs with what I saw in gay believers became a God-quest in which I have risked precious things over the past ten years.

I know thousands of gay Christians.  Sexual orientation is not part of my “assessment” of their status in God. When the invitation to Jesus is extended, I believe the words “all” and “whosoever” in the Bible are intentional. My evaluation list is non-gender, non-orientation, non-any-condition specific: is there a profession of faith, do they follow Jesus, are there fruits of the Spirit and is there a changed life?  Does your list require a change in sexual orientation or celibacy?  Humbly consider that you may be wrong.

3. GAY COUPLES DO ENTER INTO LONG-TERM, COMMITTED, LOVING, AND MONOGAMOUS RELATIONSHIPS. I had been warned by my heterosexual religious culture that gay people had erotic love, and not deep, committed, monogamous love.  However, the relationships I witnessed as I engaged socially in the gay community with Netto were not distortions; I saw authentic relationships.  My know-it-all, possessor-of-all-truth, gift-of-evangelism self had to struggle with a simple question:

How do I tell a gay person about the possibility of a relationship with a God they cannot see, if that relationship first requires them to stop loving the person they can see?

As trite a thought as this seems, it tripped me up.  Asking people to deny authentic, earthly love as a condition of God-love is never a condition we heterosexuals ask of ourselves.  Yet, we ask it of same-sex attracted people.

“Studies” tell us gay people cannot honor monogamous relationships and that they will “destroy marriage.”  I have researched most of these “studies” on relationship length, health issues, child safety and emotional health, and have not found one study or paper concerning the gay community presented by groups like Family Research Council, Americans for Truth, Family Research Institute, NARTH or Concerned Women for America, amongst many others, to be truthful. Not one. That is a bold statement to make, but I have done the work.  I dig into the reports and check the sources.

One such “study,” The Dutch Marriage Study, is cited by preachers and politicians and quoted in conservative materials and books. This “study” has made its way around the world and fuels the anti-gay marriage flames as “proof” that gay people will destroy the sacredness and stability of marriage.  The results of the widely quoted “study” warn us that married gay men will each have eight partners outside the relationship/marriage in the first year and a half.  Yikes!

The Dutch Marriage Study was actually a study conducted to find out how HIV/AIDS was transmitted; it was not a “marriage study.” The control group consisted of only non-monogamous men under thirty who were involved in risky sexual behavior (they were solicited from an HIV/STD clinic).  Furthermore, the test (1984-1996) was completed before the Netherlands even allowed same-sex marriage (2001).  Every piece of propaganda written by conservative groups to discount the ability of gay people to enter into healthy, loving, monogamous relationships will cite the statistics from ‘The Dutch Marriage Study.’  Good people with good intentions will even repeat these “facts” out of ignorance.  Be assured though that not-so-good-people with less than honorable intentions publish these facts, knowingly.

Rather than discounting the genuineness of same-sex relationships, we should be impressed that they have survived without the benefits of legal contract and the support of family, society and religious communities. Get honest. How many of us straight married people would have walked out on our spouses had it not been for a legal agreement, children and the positive tension placed on us by families and faith communities?  Lacking all of that benefit, gay couples stay together.  Get to know some gay couples and families; they are as partner- and family-focused as the rest of us.  True story.

4. EVERY WORD TRANSLATED AS “HOMOSEXUAL” IN THE MODERN VERSIONS OF THE BIBLE IS SPEAKING OF SAME SEX BEHAVIOR IN AN EXTREME CIRCUMSTANCE. I have consistently asked God, “Is the truth, as I understand it, Your truth?”  I love the Word of God, the challenge to follow Jesus and the faithfulness of the Holy Spirit. I know thousands of gay Christians but still needed to align my understanding of the Bible with what I saw in their lives.  It was another simple question I asked:

Why, God, did You create people that you would reject?

Theologically, I knew that was not possible; no one makes a choice to be gay, and all God creates is good.  Once again, the thinking I used to understand the five verses had to be flawed.

When I finally took several days to study this on my own in earnest, I got very angry, very angry about the lies I believed about gay people.  I had believed what I had been too lazy to investigate for myself.

I am quite strong in discussing these sections of Scripture, yet I encourage readers to go through the process I went through.  Believing what others told me caused me to consider gay people as “less than” in God’s eyes for three decades of my adulthood.  I am confident enough in God to let go of the process and let Him talk to His people when they earnestly ask and listen. Until I met gay Christians and did the work myself, I was exactly like the silently judging majority of the church. I read the verses used to investigate same-sex attractions as stand-alone verses out of context and with the English translations of words. Investigate same-sex attractions as stand-alone verses out of context and with the English translations of words.

It is risky to lay down a belief and study it.  The far greater risk is casting aside people in our laziness.  Make sure you go after the truth; your precious children are jewels and deserve your personal investigation of these verses.

Ten years of experience show that people rarely study the verses without prejudice until interaction with a gay, lesbian or bisexual person challenges their theology.  When I could not reconcile the lives I could see with the words I thought I understood, then I did the work.

5. THE CHURCH IS NOT OFFERING A MODEL OF BEING GAY AND CHRISTIAN AND LIVING A VIRTUOUS LIFE BEFORE GOD. Gay people exist, gay Christian kids exist (even gay preacher’s kids exist) and they are in your churches. In most churches, we give them two options: “stay and hide” or “get out.”

For gay youth, this is the message: “Sex is only appropriate inside marriage.  However, you gay kids, it is never appropriate for you.  God has called you to a life of celibacy, forever.”  Do you remember being a teenager or a twenty-something?  The sexual drive is strong.  Most churches do not give gay youth a “wait until” time and they take away all hope of normal relationship and family. They effectively trap this kid.  He cannot be gay, he cannot be holy, he’ll always be alone, he is broken.

The most common reactions will be either: internalized shame with a reaction of rebellion or depression; or he or she will walk away, never able to please you, and rebel against all the hopeless and impossible teachings on sexual morality.

For most faith communities, we do not offer a place of safety for gay Christians.  The affirming churches offer strong gay Christian role models and the balance of the churches offer up condemnation.  When kids find me, I point them to a list of welcoming churches and suggest they get back in community where they are loved and safe.  In lieu of a nearby church, there are online churches who will feed them spiritually.  I always point youth to The Gay Christian Network, an online community of over twenty thousand gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Christians and their allies.  I also try to find them gay Christian mentors on Facebook that I know and trust.  Many of us will do what it takes to keep these kids in a faith community where they feel loved, supported and hopeful.

TO BE CONTINUED.

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  1. maxonex
    September 21, 06:43 Reply

    Best piece ever written here IMO….
    I wish every Nigerian could see this… I’mma save this link…or better …copy the entire thing…What a great way to start a day..

    • pinkpanthertb
      September 21, 07:00 Reply

      There’s more. The woman (the writer) had lots to say, much more wisdom to impart. The remaining five are yet to come

      • maxonex
        September 21, 07:07 Reply

        Ok..pls don’t waste time.. Can’t wait to see more of it.

      • maxonex
        September 21, 07:11 Reply

        This almost got me crying.. It’s like one of those wow moments in an interesting movie.

        “How do I tell a gay person about the possibility of a relationship with a God they cannot see, if that relationship first requires them to stop loving the person they can see?”

      • gad
        September 21, 08:33 Reply

        If I’m correct on ur views about God and Christianity,im wondering what ur stand and views presently are. I hate getting personal on forum but ur views on xtianity as I know it (I might be wrong) keeps me worried especially when I think of youngsters and the conflicts it creates in their minds.I wish I could give a testimony in church today because of the truths this article has brought to light.I bless God for d lady she used to do this work of love and for you for allowing Him to use u to bring this to us.you can’t imagine the smiles in my heart right now.May God reward u for this duty of love

  2. Dennis Macauley
    September 21, 07:37 Reply

    Seeing as I am hung over from last night, I will come back later to read this and form and opinion
    *goes back to bed*

  3. Colossus
    September 21, 07:44 Reply

    I agree, one of the best pieces written on this blog and it would be nice to get the 2nd half. Although, I’ve clicked on the link already to find it, the writer said we should be investigative after all.
    The truth is when you get to interact with some gay people, you get to see their lives, their struggles and the fact that they are not different from the general population. Most Christians fail to see that and it becomes hard for gays to believe in a loving God they cannot see when they only get hate from the ‘gods’ they can see.
    I also loved how the article shows that one can still practice your faith despite your sexual orientation. Being gay is never a choice, who wants to choose this ‘hell’?
    Truly a wonderful piece, so many parts you just want to copy, print and paste on your bedroom wall.

    • pinkpanthertb
      September 21, 07:51 Reply

      Aswear! Copy, print and slip into Sunday newsletter of your church as well.

  4. adebolu roland
    September 21, 08:27 Reply

    Best piece ever here,I really love dis,can’t wait for the remaining.What a great work……..Kudos admin,more grace…

  5. JustJames
    September 21, 09:15 Reply

    I sat down last night to write something like this. This piece echoes what was in my mind. It is possible to be Christian and be gay. Thanks pinky.

  6. Khaleesi
    September 21, 12:44 Reply

    Great piece! This woman made sense on so many levels. Its sad how Nigerians allow hate and bigotry cloud their judgment. If only some Nigerians would dare to hold such views.

  7. Lesbiangaydude
    September 21, 13:19 Reply

    I wish this piece can in a way get to Lindaz blog or Nairaland. ….. pple really need to see or feel our struggles

    • gad
      September 21, 14:07 Reply

      When we mind less about homophobes and their ignorance/hate, d battle is more than half won. I care less about anybody,s perception of gays.if anyone makes too much noise around me about the “evilness” of gayism,i simply put a few posers to him and he will surely walk away in shame

  8. s_sensei
    September 21, 17:18 Reply

    I do not know one christian who hates homosexuals. Maybe it would be more accurate if I said “I do not know one christian”.

  9. king
    September 21, 20:39 Reply

    “”I am quite strong in discussing these sections of Scripture, yet I encourage readers to go through the process I went through.  Believing what others told me caused me to consider gay people as “less than” in God’s eyes for three decades of my adulthood.  I am confident enough in God to let go of the process and let Him talk to His people when they earnestly ask and listen. Until I met gay Christians and did the work myself, I was exactly like the silently judging majority of the church. I read the verses used to investigate same-sex attractions as stand-alone verses out of context and with the English translations of words. Investigate same-sex attractions as stand-alone verses out of context and with the English translations of words””..

    ..erm I still didn’t see the verses she was talking bout…so to me this really hasn’t said anything…and am serious cause until someone comes along with raw and sheer scriptures to show me that the Bible as I KNOW it supports being BORN GAY….hmm

    • pinkpanthertb
      September 22, 01:34 Reply

      I honestly don’t get you king. I don’t understand why you’re so determined to stick to the condemnation of your sexuality by your faith. How that doesn’t make you conflicted is beyond me

      • king
        September 22, 05:29 Reply

        Oh no luv..dont misunderstand me. I WANT so bad to validate my sexuality but ONLY if ITS FROM THE WORD OF GOD…now I know what the word says and God cannot be a God of confusion but I know he also UNVEILS truth to certain chosen people and so I am patient for someone to reveal the truth about this situation and until that time……i am not about to get phazed by someone’s attempt to and not HIS TRUTH!!! so until I see those SCRIPTURES she made mention of and validate them for myself JUST LIKE SHE SAID anyway eehhh!!!!

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