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Desire: Tem­pa­tion or Sin? A Look at the Sin­ful­ness or Inno­cence of “Same-Sex Attrac­tion”

There is no small amount of dis­cus­sion over the top­ic of “same-sex attrac­tion” with­in Chris­tian­i­ty right now. The increas­ing­ly pop­u­lar stance is that hav­ing attraction—but not act­ing on it—to the same sex is not sin, and that it is unhelp­ful to call it such. Even Focus on the Fam­i­ly, his­tor­i­cal­ly con­sid­ered by many to be on the more fun­da­men­tal­ist1 end of the spec­trum, says it is not sin. In a state­ment labeled “Same-sex attrac­tion is not a sin,” they assert that “To be human is to have a dis­or­dered sex­u­al­i­ty. You do. I do. Every­one does. We all have some man­ner of sex­u­al dri­ve that com­pels us to dis­obey God’s design for sex­u­al­i­ty.” I would agree with that state­ment, and it’s some­thing we are far too slow to admit. Hence the alarm­ing rates of adul­tery, pornog­ra­phy, etc. with­in the church.

They con­tin­ue, how­ev­er, “Sex­u­al sin is giv­ing in to that desire in either mind or body. Faith­ful Chris­t­ian dis­ci­ple­ship can­not avoid temp­ta­tion, but it strives to resist and mas­ter it with God’s help. Doing so is not sin, but obe­di­ence and depen­dence upon Christ.”

This rais­es the ques­tion, where is the line between sin and temp­ta­tion, espe­cial­ly when it relates to sex­u­al­i­ty? Is there an “inno­cent” attrac­tion that exists sole­ly as a temp­ta­tion?

I want us to take the time in this arti­cle to look at what the Bible says on the issue, as well as gain a basic under­stand­ing of what temp­ta­tion and sin are. I believe the Bib­li­cal posi­tion is that same-sex attrac­tion is sin. Not sim­ply the act­ing men­tal­ly or phys­i­cal­ly upon that desire felt for some­one of the same sex, but the desire itself is sin. I don’t want to sim­ply assert that, but rather I want you to have sol­id foot­ing for say­ing why sex­u­al desire for the same sex is a sin.

Is Same-Sex Attrac­tion a Sin? Part 1

Same-sex attrac­tion is a dis­or­dered desire, a false desire, a desire con­trary to God’s design, and thus must be cat­e­go­rized as sin. At least, that is the con­tention I will seek to prove.

God made [us] male and female. “for this rea­son a man shall leave his father and moth­er, and the two shall become one flesh.” (Mk 10:6–8) Hus­bands for wives, and wives for hus­bands. To desire the inti­ma­cy that God designed for mar­riage, but with some­one of the same sex, is a per­ver­sion of God’s design. It can­not be a “good” desire. If it then is a wrong, dis­or­dered, false desire, and the fruit of that desire can­not be any­thing oth­er than wrong, dis­or­dered, and false. What oth­er option is there?

As we saw in the intro­duc­tion, Focus on the Fam­i­ly and oth­ers will say “temp­ta­tion.” What, though, is temp­ta­tion? It would seem that we should answer that ques­tion, to see if my claims are fair or not.

What is Temp­ta­tion?

Here’s a prob­lem with words, and one that is a pain for trans­la­tors to man­age: Words that are com­mon­ly used have their mean­ings sim­pli­fied in com­mon speech, and their mean­ings shift, some­times sud­den­ly and rad­i­cal­ly. That’s why I can say “inter­course,” and peo­ple jump to what used to be a euphemistic phrase, “sex­u­al inter­course,” rather than its other—and more original—definitions.2

We come to the Bible with a lot of lin­guis­tic bag­gage, and tend to inject a sim­pli­fied, and poten­tial­ly shift­ed, mean­ing into words. This is the case with “temp­ta­tion.” Temp­ta­tion, in com­mon usage, is used to mean an inter­nal or exter­nal offer to engage in wrong action, with “inter­nal” seem­ing­ly being the pre­dom­i­nant form.

The issue here is that the Bible nev­er describes it like that. Seri­ous­ly, go look up temp­ta­tion through the OT and NT. We can start to see why when we become aware that the Greek words used for “temp­ta­tion,” are the same used for “test.”

This is what I was say­ing about com­mon­ly used words. Temp­ta­tion has been so mor­phed by mod­ern, com­mon usage, that Web­ster’s has “to make tri­al of: test” as an “obso­lete” def­i­n­i­tion. Go to the 1828 edi­tion, and you will see a very dif­fer­ent word that much more close­ly aligns with Bib­li­cal Greek.

Temp­ta­tion is more than an abstract “offer to sin.” Rather, it is described as a state done to, entered into by, or inflict­ed upon some­one; a tri­al to over­come (Heb 11:17), a chal­lenge that has come upon you (1Co 7:5), or even striv­ing to bring about a result (Act 24:6).

Fur­ther, the fact that temp­ta­tion is a state, as opposed to an idea/offer, is why there’s so much descrip­tion of being “in” temp­ta­tion (Jas 1:14, Luk 22:46). In fact, let’s look at that idea for a sec­ond. In James 1:14, God says that each per­son is tempt­ed when he is lured and enticed by his own desire. In this case, we should note that desire (or we could say attrac­tion) for sin is both sep­a­rat­ed from temp­ta­tion and pre­ced­ing temp­ta­tion. The tri­al does­n’t come upon us, then we have a desire for evil. Rather, the tri­al is brought by our evil, flesh­ly desires. This descrip­tion, and oth­ers, does not show an “inter­nal… offer to engage in wrong action.” Rather, they describe a struggle—trial, test—we enter into when we enter­tain the sin­ful desires of the flesh.

This is just a sum­ma­ry of what temp­ta­tion is, not an exhaus­tive, the­o­log­i­cal break­down. Still, I hope we have enough now to answer what temp­ta­tion is:
Temp­ta­tion is a state of tri­al we find our­selves in when an out­side enti­ty attempts to entice us to sin, or when we enter­tain the sin­ful desires of our flesh. The exter­nal tri­als may be a test that proves the gen­uine­ness of our faith, or when we fail, reveals the sin still resid­ing with­in us. The tri­als we bring upon our­selves when we enter­tain the flesh will always reveal the sin resid­ing with­in us, yet may also show the gen­uine­ness of our faith when we repent of the sin that brought the tri­al upon us.

Is Same-Sex Attrac­tion a Sin? Part 2

So now, is same-sex attrac­tion a temp­ta­tion? A per­son­al desire for mem­bers of the same sex does bring about a state of temp­ta­tion, a tri­al. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, as we’ve seen, thoughts and emo­tions from with­in us that pro­duce states of temp­ta­tion are not inno­cent. It seems that the claim that same-sex attrac­tion is a temp­ta­tion is some­what true, but only in its abil­i­ty to pro­duce temp­ta­tion.

It may seem we can lay to rest our cen­tral ques­tion and say that same-sex attrac­tion is sin. If it’s not temp­ta­tion, then it’s sin, right? As I said, we want sol­id foot­ing for why it is sin, and thus far we’ve only tan­gen­tial­ly answered that ques­tion. With that said, let us define one last thing that should give us the final piece of the puz­zle.

What is Sin?

One prob­lem we cre­ate for our­selves is mis­tak­en­ly treat­ing “good” and “evil” as two dis­tinct things, as if they both exist as equals. That’s not Chris­tian­i­ty, that’s clos­er to Hin­duism, with its idea of good and bad kar­ma. Evil is not a dis­tinct thing, in the same way that “cold” or “dark” are not dis­tinct things. All three are mea­sured by their par­ent cat­e­go­ry: cold is a mea­sure of heat, dark is a mea­sure of light, and evil is a mea­sure of good/righteousness. Evil can­not exist with­out good, and evil is only known when it is mea­sured on the scale of good. Unfor­tu­nate­ly for fall­en man, the stan­dard for that scale is God, and “good” is only found at the top of the scale. All of the rest of the scale is evil, a falling short of the good. This is why Jesus can say No one is good except God alone, (Mrk 10:18) because God is good.3 It is God’s very nature that we are mea­sured by.

To sin, then, is to fail to mea­sure up to God’s stan­dard for good. This is an impos­si­ble task for fall­en man, and thus all our right­eous deeds are like a filthy gar­ment. (Is 64:6) That is to say, even our best, the things we humans would call “right­eous,” still can­not be tru­ly good. Thus, the need for Christ.

This is a huge thing to grasp, the real­i­ty of just how infest­ed by sin we are. It is only by the Holy Spir­it that we can say no to sin, our old mas­ter, yet we far too often drop the hand of our new mas­ter in favor of play­ing in the pigsty.

This is all to say that sin is any­thing that is even the most infin­i­tes­i­mal­ly small bit off from God’s stan­dard. We are not yet free from the pres­ence of sin, and will still sin, thus we must be on guard to not let it reign in [our] mor­tal bod[ies] so that [we] obey its lusts. (Rom 6:12) Oh, and speak­ing of “lusts” offered by sin, Jesus uses the same word (well the verb form) to describe a man who looks at a woman with adul­ter­ous desire. Now this is not a look at the exact usage of the Greek words for lust/desire (epithymia and epithymeō) in dif­fer­ent pas­sages, only to point out the strong con­dem­na­tion of any sort of enter­tain­ing dis­or­dered desires.

Is Same-Sex Attrac­tion a Sin? Part 3

We’ve estab­lished that same-sex attrac­tion is a dis­or­dered desire. We’ve estab­lished that it brings about temp­ta­tion, but isn’t temp­ta­tion itself. We’ve clar­i­fied what sin is. Now, I think we are safe to con­clude our jour­ney: Yes, same-sex attrac­tion is sin. It is a dis­or­dered lust of the flesh that when not struck down, will express itself as dis­obe­di­ence to God. That dis­obe­di­ent fruit may be a lust­ful attrac­tion to the same sex, abstain­ing from mar­riage despite expe­ri­enc­ing sex­u­al desires, or sim­ply a belief that you will “always have these feel­ings.”

Lust (desire) for any­one oth­er than your spouse is sin. I think it’s safe to say this fruit of same-sex attrac­tion is sin.

God makes it very clear that it is bet­ter to mar­ry than to burn with pas­sion. (1Co 7:9) To have a pull to mar­riage, fam­i­ly, and sex; but reject God’s design for those things is sin­ful. This fruit of same-sex attrac­tion is sin as well.

The idea that some­one has a fixed and per­ma­nent unwant­ed desire for the same sex is a lie. No, I don’t mean that this won’t be an area where a per­son is attacked over and over and over again. Just ask any­one who has over­come addic­tion. Our bro­ken flesh seeks to crawl back to its old sins just like a dog that returns to its vom­it. (Pro 26:11) It is a lie of the dev­il to say these feel­ings will always be there, will hold some degree of influ­ence over your thoughts or actions, and you can­not resist them at their core. We can, through the Holy Spir­it, resist the dis­ease, not just the symp­toms. This fruit of same-sex attrac­tion is sin as well.

All of the fruit is rot­ten. The tree of same-sex (or any non-mar­i­tal) attrac­tion only breeds tri­als. It is con­trary to God’s design. It is sin. Do not fall into the trap of leav­ing such a thing inside your­self, and do not fall into the trap of con­demn­ing oth­ers to a life of bur­den by telling them it is not a sin.

Not Con­dem­na­tion, but Hope

I want to end on this note: none of this is meant as con­dem­na­tion for any­one who strug­gles with a sin­ful desire for the same sex. Remem­ber, we all have sinned and fall­en short of the glo­ry of God (Rom 3:23), and even once saved we will inevitably find our­selves prac­tice[ing] the very evil that [we] do not want. (Rom 7:19) Until we see Christ face-to-face, we will strug­gle with sin, so we’re all in the same boat. How­ev­er, by God’s gra­cious prov­i­dence, we can be for­giv­en, for If we con­fess our sins, [God] is faith­ful and right­eous to for­give us our sins. (1Jo 1:9) And that tru­ly is our great­est weapon against sin: repen­tance.

Far too often in the Amer­i­can church, we treat repen­tance like a neg­a­tive thing. Sure, it would be bet­ter to not sin. If, though, in Romans 7 Paul could describe his strug­gle with sin using lan­guage sim­i­lar to how we in mod­ern times describe addic­tion, I think it’s safe to say our fight is going to be fought more than we’d like in the realm of “once we’ve sinned.” Thus, we bet­ter be com­fort­able with get­ting on our knees and cry­ing out to God. Remem­ber when a tri­al comes upon us, God will pro­vide a way of escape (1Co 10:13), but the biggest obsta­cle is our stub­born­ness. We jus­ti­fy our sins, recat­e­go­rize them, or in our arro­gance ignore them. Instead of repent­ing at the first stir­ring of sin­ful desires with­in us, we delay until the gen­tle waves turn into a vio­lent storm and we are sink­ing.

We all need to prac­tice repen­tance and turn away from our desires at their ori­gin. With that, we can have vic­to­ry over sin. If you strug­gle with aber­rant sex­u­al desire, and I’m not just talk­ing about same-sex desire, you can expe­ri­ence God’s design for mar­riage and sex­u­al­i­ty. Not just in part or reluc­tant­ly, but to the full­ness that God designed. If God can save us, the wretch­es we were, then He can enable you to live out His per­fect design for mar­riage. Will there be strug­gles? You bet, and the pre­vi­ous para­graph showed that. Yet God is good, so don’t let any­one manip­u­late you into think­ing He’s not good enough to pro­vide a way through the tri­al you face.

Want more? View our inter­view with Dr. Tom Rush on the same sub­ject.

  1. “Fun­da­men­tal­ist” is not being used as an insult ↩︎
  2. From Web­ster’s:
    2: exchange espe­cial­ly of thoughts or feel­ingsCOMMUNION
    3con­nec­tion or deal­ings between per­sons or groups ↩︎
  3. all the time ↩︎

Kyle Whitt

Kyle Whitt and his family reside in beautiful Northern Idaho where he serves his local church by leading college ministry, assisting local planting efforts, and building connections with other local churches. Kyle was formerly involved with church planting in the SBC's North American Mission Board until he removed himself and called out blatantly false teaching about the gospel.

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