Ep. 109: I’m Attracted to the Same Sex, What Do I Do? (with Sam Allberry)
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“I’m attracted to the same sex – what do I do?” We’re in the midst of a sexual revolution. What’s been considered foundational truth for millennia is now being changed – and in the midst of this transition, questions and confusion are on the rise. With us this week is author and speaker Sam Allberry. He defines some relevant terms, keeps us in tune and in line with the Bible, and even gets into his own story of same-sex attraction. Whether you struggle with same-sex attraction, know someone who does, or are quite separate from it, you’d benefit highly from listening to this conversation.
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Isaac Dagneau:
With me today is Sam Allberry. Sam is an editor for The Gospel Coalition, a global speaker for Ravi Zacharias International Ministries, a pastor based in the UK. He’s also the author of quite a few books. As well as one of the founding editors of Living Out. It’s great to have you with us today, Sam.
Sam Allberry:
Thanks for having me.
Isaac Dagneau:
As we begin every conversation, Sam, can you just let us know a bit about who you are, perhaps maybe your story of meeting Jesus for the first time, then what your life looks like day to day?
Sam Allberry:
I became a Christian just around the time I turned 18. I hadn’t been going to church or really thinking about Christian things before then but had a couple of good Christian friends. They invited me to their churches youth ministry, and I couldn’t think of a reason not to go. I went along, and the very first time I went, I heard that Jesus didn’t come to tell people to be good but came to tell people who aren’t good that they need forgiveness. I hadn’t heard that before, even growing up in the UK. As I began to hear more about His message, I began to realize He was far more interesting than the Jesus I had assumed He was, and I found His message compelling and began to realize He’d come for me and that I needed to give myself to Him. So all that happened around the time I turned 18.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. As you say that, it makes me think – I don’t hear a lot of stories of people going to youth group even nowadays and hearing that kind of gospel right away. So that’s encouraging to say that. That was a youth group that you went to, and that’s what you heard the first time. That is really encouraging.
Sam Allberry:
It was, and it’s a reminder that it’s good to have a message at a youth ministry, that it’s not just social stuff up. The first time I went, I heard the gospel, and I realized it was true.
Isaac Dagneau:
For sure. We’re going to jump into what you do for a living because that pertains most to our conversation. What does your life look like day to day? I know that you’re from the UK and I know that right now as we’re talking, you’re on the East Coast of the States, so obviously you travel. What do you do?
Sam Allberry:
I kind of do a mixture of things. Over the last couple of years, I’ve been working for Ravi Zacharias International Ministries, so I’m on the road a lot with that, helping churches, speaking at mission events, conferences, that kind of thing, especially on the issues that we’re talking about today, but also more widely. Over these next few months, I’m a visiting professor at Cedarville University in southern Ohio. So that’s where I’m speaking to you from at the moment, doing some teaching here in the theology department.
Life is very varied, which is good fun. I’ve been a church pastor for a number of years, so I’m used to life being in one place with a very specific rhythm and routine. It’s taken a while to get used to every week looking different to the week before. I’m enjoying being on the road. It’s fun to see different parts of God’s kingdom and to see what He is up to in some unusual places.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. We mentioned that you were the founding editor of Living Out. For those of us who don’t know exactly what that is, how would you explain this ministry?
Sam Allberry:
It’s something that was started by me and a couple of friends of mine back in the UK. We already knew each other, and each of us then began to share that we experienced same sex attraction. We realized we had that issue in common. We were trying to think what can we do as a group of friends that might help the church on this? We were asking this question about five years ago, I guess.
We thought actually probably the most useful thing is to share our stories. There aren’t many Christians who are kind of conservative on this issue who experienced this firsthand and who are out there telling their stories. We thought well, let’s do that, and we’ll rope in a few other people that we know that would be happy to share their stories. Other friends gathered around us and said if we’re going to do this, let’s do it really well. So we set up a new website. We got a film crew in to film each of us giving our stories. And so Living Out, really the heart of it is gathering up stories. We want to show people out there that there is more than one narrative when it comes to issues of homosexuality.
There’s the particular narrative we hear so much in Western culture, and we wanted to show actually there are great stories about this issue within the church as well. So we’ve got at the moment, I think, 11 or 12 testimonies on the website. As you would imagine, it’s not appropriate or possible that every Christian who has experienced this to be able to be quite that public about it, but we’ve got a number who have been, and it’s great to share their stories.
We’ve also got a lot of other resources. We’ve got answers to common questions, again lots more videos. We’ve got book reviews, guidance for church leaders, guidance for Christians who are wrestling with this themselves. Each of us was really kind of having to deal with this issue in our formative years as young adults so we’ve got a particular heart for young people who are trying to figure this out themselves, particularly within the church. We hope we can equip churches to be places where Christians who wrestle with this can flourish and feel able to talk about this and have support. We hope it will help any more Christians who come across the website to see how Christians respond to an issue like this. We hope it will commend our viewpoint to others.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. As you say that, I’m curious, how has the feedback been from those watching the testimonies? Has it opened up a gateway of fruit and things like that?
Sam Allberry:
It has. As you imagine, you say anything on this issue, you’re going to get mixed responses.
We’ve had a fair few of those from different directions, actually. But actually the thing that’s overwhelmed us, we were a group of British guys telling our stories thinking this will help some of the churches we know back home. But of course the moment you put something online and it could be reached by anyone anywhere, we quickly were receiving emails from people in all kinds of places, right across the world, pretty much from every continent immediately. The ones that touched us the most, we had an email from someone in, I think it was Puerto Rico or something like that, saying “For the first time in my life, I realize I’m not alone.” There’s so many Christians out there who have been wrestling with this issue personally and who thought they’re the only one that this is… that they’re the freak. If nothing else, it just shows people actually, no, you’re not on your own. This is an issue that affects a lot of us within the church. That in itself is an encouragement to so many people. I know that myself, the first time I came across another Christian who was wrestling with this just it was a profound relief to think I’m not the only one.
We want to give people a positive message on this issue as well. So it’s been hugely touching. Because we have a global audience, we’re really wanting to begin to reflect that in the stories we have on the website. We’re hoping to get some stories from people from different places. I would love for us to have a collection of stories from North America. We’re working toward that at the moment.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. If you’re listening right now, that’s livingout.org, and I’ll remind us again at the end of the episode.
But anyways, I want to start with some general questions, Sam. Then we can move into more biblical or situational things. The first is, and this might seem simple to some, but to others, it’s good to have these definitions of these words that are being used all around. What exactly is same-sex attraction, and does this idea or title or definition, does this differ from what’s commonly understood as just being homosexual or being gay and things like that?
Sam Allberry:
It’s an important question and one of the problems or confusions that we have is sometimes this terminology is used in different ways by different people. So it can get very confusing very quickly, even within the Christian world. By same-sex attraction, I mean romantic and sexual attractions to people of the same biological sex as oneself. It’s more than just lust. I’ve had some people say we should call it same-sex lust. It is more than that because for many of us, the attractions are not just physical. They can often begin as deeper emotional attractions and can become quite unhealthy emotional attractions as well. So it’s good to broaden it out just from maybe sexual feelings. There can sometimes be emotional dependence or idolatry as well as a physical and sexual component. That’s what we’re generally meaning within Living Out.
In that sense, there’s significant overlap with what our culture tends to commonly refer to as being homosexual, being gay. The main difference is that certainly for us at Living Out, this is not something we think of as being a core identity for us. Often today, when people talk about being gay, it’s often not just talking about the particular attractions that they feel, but it tends to be used in a way that suggests “This is who I am. This is the key thing you need to know about me.” Part of what we’re trying to say is these things describe us, but they don’t necessarily define us. Actually, that’s quite key for us as Christians to learn how to define ourselves in a way that actually is in line with what God says about us.
Isaac Dagneau:
Totally, and that leads perfectly into this next question. Again, this might seem obvious again, but what is a Christian in the sense of, does being a Christian have anything to do with our sexuality?
Sam Allberry:
It does in the sense that being a Christian is someone who follows and trusts Jesus Christ, someone who has put their faith in Him. By following Him, we mean not just that we try to copy Him, but more profoundly that we follow Him when He says that we need His death for us in order to be saved. We trust in what He’s come to do for us, and as we put our trust in Him, that does mean that we want to follow His teachings and live in the way that He lived, as a way of responding to His death for us. If that’s the case, then actually that’s going to involve every part of our being in every area of life.
One of the things we learn as Christians is that we’re broken and that brokenness extends to every area of life. Whoever we are, we’re also sexually broken. All of us will need to reckon with what Jesus teaches us about sex and marriage, and all of us will have to come to terms with the ways we naturally fall short of that, the way our natural affections and instincts don’t automatically line up with that. The issue of following Christ has implications for every single Christian when it comes to the issue of sexuality, whether you’re attracted to men or women or both or neither, we have to submit that area of life to Jesus and learn that He is wiser than we are.
Isaac Dagneau:
I love that. It’s so good. This next question, Sam, is one that I think everyone needs to think about and come to a conclusion on, and we’d like to hear your view and we respect that view. Can someone, and you kind of already alluded to this, but can someone simultaneously be a faithful Christian, and when I say faithful Christian, I mean just the orthodox evangelical understanding of Jesus and the Bible and God, and be attracted to the same sex?
Sam Allberry:
Yes, provided we’re bringing our attractions under the rule of Christ. There are a couple of things to say on that. I think the first is that this is as much an issue for people who are attracted to the opposite sex as it is for people who are attracted to the same sex because I have yet to meet someone who is attracted to the opposite sex who didn’t need to repent at the ways in which they’re attracted to the opposite sex. Again, this is an issue that humbles all of us. So all of us have attractions and deep affections that are disordered and that need to be brought under the loving rule of Christ. If we can’t be a Christian and have brokenness in this area of life, then there’s no hope for any of us.
The other thing I’d say is we’ve always in the church made a distinction, and this is seen within Scripture as well, between temptation and sin. Jesus teaches us that we’re to pray for deliverance from temptation and forgiveness for sin. For some of us, that temptation, when it comes to sexuality, will take the form of same-sex attraction as I’ve described it. For others, it will be opposite sex attraction or something else. It might be bisexuality. All of us experience temptation. What matters is not whether we can stop the temptation but how we respond to it. Sometimes, the temptations change over time. We find that they begin to ease. But the thing that God promises us is not that our temptations will necessarily go away, but that actually He will enable us to stand under them. So can we be Christians and tempted sexually? Yes. But the key thing is that we respond to those temptations in a godly way.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. Sam, as you say that, I just have the question if someone’s listening and they do find themselves attracted to the same sex and because this issue is so heightened and it’s been in the church and all these different things, if they feel like that temptation is almost a … It makes them feel like they are sinning in a sense or they feel guilty of that temptation, what would you say to those?
Sam Allberry:
Again, I’d want to say you’re not on your own both in terms of experiencing this particular form of attraction but also more profoundly in the sense that all of us have disordered attractions. So that’s one expression of what is true of everyone. In one sense, it’s right to feel a conviction about that, that it’s not right. I wouldn’t want someone to feel as though this must mean that they are especially abhorrent to God or anything like that because actually all of us are sinful. All of us fall short of the glory of God, as Paul tells us in Romans 3. We’re all in the same boat, whatever our attractions.
There’s a sense in which the attractions of those of us who are same-sex attracted are less, they’re less natural in that sense in terms of what God has designed us for. But all of us in one sense experience attractions that are unnatural and go against God’s purposes for us. I would want to tell them that these feelings don’t exclude them. They don’t make you beyond God’s reach or it takes a bigger miracle for you to come to Christ than for anyone else. They don’t exclude you, and they don’t define you. They’re not the most significant thing about who you are. You’re much more than just this part of you.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s really good. To shift gears a bit, Sam, culture, and unfortunately the church in many ways as well has definitely emphasized sex and sexually intimate relationships as one of, if not the most serious and fruitful and fulfilling relationships there are in life and even in the church. What would you say to this idea that’s been so often preached?
Sam Allberry:
I want to partially affirm it in the sense that obviously marriage is meant to be the most intimate relationship God gives us, and one of the features of marriage and the Bible is that it’s a sexual relationship. There’s a type of intimacy there that we don’t experience in other kinds of human relationships. But what we need to be careful of is not exalting that in an unhealthy way because our culture has made sex and sexual relationships the thing that is going to give life meaning and purpose and fullness. That’s not right. We know that’s not right for lots of reasons, but chief among them is the fact that Jesus Christ was the most fully human and complete person who ever lived. And He wasn’t married. He never had sex, was never in a romantic relationship. So if we say that any of those things is essential for being a full-formed human being, then we’re saying Jesus Christ wasn’t really human.
We see that in other parts of the Bible as well. Paul was single. With both Paul and Jesus, as you look closely at their lives, you realize they were not alone. Jesus was at the end as people turned away from Him. But actually, through His ministry and also with Paul, you see a deep network of intimate relationships. In the Bible, sexual intimacy is not the only form of intimacy. It may be one of the deepest kinds, but it’s also possible to have a lot of sex and not have intimacy. Just as it’s possible to have a lot of intimacy and no sex.
The Bible elevates friendship as something that is … We put a very diminished view of friendship in our culture today, but in the Bible, a friend is someone who knows your soul. It might be someone you’re married to, but it doesn’t need to be. I always think of it in this way that if there’s a depth of intimacy that as a single person I don’t get to have. But there’s a breadth of intimacy that as a single person I can have that a married friend won’t have the capacity for. I can have a deep friendship with a whole range of people. I’ve got the capacity and time to give myself to a much wider range of friendships. It’s not the case that if you’re not having sex, your life lacks intimacy. That’s just a lie.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s good. That’s really helpful. Thank you so much, Sam, for that. We have a few minutes left, and I just wanted to tackle two more questions. One of them is this: There are some people listening who don’t struggle in this area, but they have a friend or a family member who’s maybe come to them and said that they have these feelings for another, for the same sex. How would you then encourage them and equip them at that moment?
Sam Allberry:
I think if someone shares that with you, it’s good to recognize they’re sharing something that is very personal. They’re being vulnerable with you, and I think anytime someone is doing that, whatever it is they’re disclosing, it’s good just to acknowledge that that’s … They’re placing an awful amount of trust in you. It’s interesting. One of the first times I shared that I was wrestling with this issue with a friend, the first thing my friend said was “Thank you so much for trusting me with that.” That actually just made me feel so relieved and maybe it was I’d done the right thing by telling that person. He said “That sounds like it was a hard thing for you to share, and I just want to thank you for doing that for me.” I think that’s a really good way to respond is just to thank someone for disclosing something that is that deep and personal.
The second thing is actually just to listen. Rather than swinging into what I think they “need to know mode,” actually just to find out a bit about how they’re getting on with things. So, to ask them “How long has this been an issue for you and what’s it been like and what have been the pains and the struggles with that?” The more you listen, I know this as a pastor now, the more you listen, the more you get a sense of how it is we can help this person. It may be that they need someone to just be a sounding board. It may be that they need a bit of accountability. It may be that they’re a bit confused and need a bit of clarity. It might be that they just need a friend to walk with them through this issue. Listening will help us figure that out.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s really good. Thank you so much. To finish our conversation, Sam, I’d love for you to share, and again, we have two minutes, I’d love for you to share your personal story of just being honest with yourself and with others in a global sense about your same-sex attraction but also holding fast to that biblical truth regarding sexuality. I think that’s really important because every urban city, if there’s a young adult that wants to follow Christ and they go to Vancouver and they go to different churches and they have this same-sex attraction, they’re going to have 50 percent or more of the churches are going to say you can embrace both and live that way. You on the other hand, you’re holding fast to this biblical truth. I’d love for you to share your personal story of that.
Sam Allberry:
Firstly, being honest is good for us. It doesn’t mean everyone has to be public. But it does mean that I think it’s healthy and good for there to be other people in our lives who know about what’s going on. Jesus said that the truth will set you free. He’s obviously speaking primarily of the gospel truth, but I think it applies at the more individual level too, actually. It’s just freeing to be known. It was a big blessing to me to open up to friends about this. It was actually life-changing.
In terms of what it’s like holding fast to the biblical truth on this, the key thing for us to know is that God’s Word is both clear and good. Jesus’ words are going to be hard for any Christian in some area of life. He’s honest about that. He says if anything, it’s going to feel like you’re losing a bit of life at times, but actually in the very process of doing that, we found that we’re truly receiving life. So that’s going to be the case for those of us with same-sex attraction, but it’s going to be the case for anyone on some issue.
Jesus loves us more than we love ourselves. He knows us far better than we know ourselves. He’s more committed to our ultimate joy that even we are. Therefore, it’s a no-brainer to trust Him, even if at times, His word is painful for us. My experience is actually God’s Word is good. It’s an expression of His love for us, so it’s actually good news to walk in the ways Jesus calls us to.
Isaac Dagneau:
That’s so good. Thank you so much, Sam, for taking the time to chat with us. It means a lot. If you’re listening and this conversation, it sparked your interest and you’d like to go deeper, I really would encourage you to check out livingout.org. That is the organization, the ministry that Sam shared with us at the beginning of this conversation.
Also, Sam has written a book called “Is God Anti-Gay?” He told me before the conversation that a lot of the kind of questions we’ve been talking about today and just the different issues are addressed in this book. I’ll have the links to that book to order on our episode page. Also, if you just Google search the name Sam Allberry, you’ll find articles and resources from Sam and various organizations like Desiring God and The Gospel Coalition, Ravi Zacharias ministries and so on. Anyway, Sam, it’s been so great talking with you, and I hope to have you back on the show again soon.
Sam Allberry:
It’s been great fun being with you. Thank you.
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One of Sam’s more recent books is called Is God Anti-Gay? If this week’s conversation peeked your interest, definitely get your hands on this book.