Hi, I kinda joined this forum for some answers. To start I've been raised as a Christian and have no problems with it or anything. I do stray sometimes but I do believe in God with all my heart. I usually ramble btw. But my relationship with my dad isn't that great if you're wondering. But, I've come to term with my bisexuality, but I'm afraid of not inheriting the kingdom of Heaven and I don't understand why I won't.
I am bisexual. I've been out for about 10 years and it used to be that nearly all of my friends were bisexual or lesbian women and my two long-term relationships have been with women. I'm comfortable being bisexual.
However, there are some things that I had to compromise when I became a Christian.
First off, you need to understand that committing a mortal sin means going directly against God's Law, it means rejecting God and desiring damnation instead. Sex outside of marriage is a mortal sin, homosexual sex is especially grievous. However, you need to understand that it's not the
temptation to do something which is sinful, even Jesus was tempted but did not sin, rather sin is the
choice to commit an
act -- even a fantasy in your head -- which is sinful. If you don't have a free choice to do something or not, it is not a mortal sin. For example, if you have a dirty dream that's not your choice about what to dream and it's much different than, say, watching pornography or having sex. Mortal sin requires a
choice to go against God's law.
No one is damned because they are tempted to do something. Sometimes I would really like to cuss out a customer who is particularly rude, but I bite my tongue and try not to dwell on it. I consciously
fight that desire, which is different than actually yelling at the person or muttering something under your breath. You can see a cute guy and you make a choice whether to dwell on that, fantasize about it, or you can make a choice not to and to go about your business. Is it hard? Certainly. Even this morning there was this girl on the bus who was really cute and I wanted to talk to her but I didn't. It's hard sometimes.
I mean being bisexual doesn't pull me away from God, if anything being accepted by him would bring me closer to him.
God accepts you. God doesn't make mistakes and He certainly allowed you to have homosexual attractions. Does that mean you should act on them? No. But that is an
action, it doesn't effect you as a
person. You are not your sexual orientation.
And I try to look at both sides of the argument and I pray everyday for help, but in my heart I don't see what's wrong with it. I mean I understand that gay sex can be sinning because it's the defiling of the body God gave you and the temple of God since that's what the body is, but that I could live without. I mean if it's love, how can it be wrong? And people say that we were meant to procreate and fill the world with people, but if that was so, why is it sinning to have sex outside of marriage?
Sex is ordered towards the procreation of children, which can only be done best within the context of a healthy marriage. Sex outside of marriage, therefore, is a violation of the Natural Law. Masturbation, homosexuality, bestiality, etc. are also in violation of the Natural Law because they have a faulty
object.
Pleasure is merely a side-effect of sexuality. To have sex solely because it feels good is not using God's gifts properly and therefore is sinning -- that is why contraception and homosexuality are sins.
A celibate homosexual relationship is not a solution because it is still disordered. Anyway, it would still be intentionally putting yourself in the temptation to sin by sex and making out (which intentionally excites lust), the same reason why long-term dating relationships among heterosexual couples can be sinful. I certainly am not one of those people who will say that homosexual couples do not love each other (as my parents told me as a teenager), I know that I loved my ex-fiancee very deeply. But I also loved my former best friend very deeply, like a sister, and for that matter I love my sister (well, one of them

) very deeply. Love is love and is good, but there is also disordered love, love which is corrupted. A pedophile might love a little girl, but it's not a proper, healthy love. Likewise, a romantic love between two people of the same sex is not a proper, healthy love. But that doesn't mean two people can't love each other in a Platonic, brotherly or sisterly way. But if two people of the same sex love each other in a romantic way, that is disordered, the same way as if I had romantic feelings for my (theoretical) brother.
The proper definition of "love" is not a feeling, but an act of the will. The love we talk about as Christians is the Latin word
caritas or Greek
αγάπη (
agape). It is a higher love, it is not in the emotions but rather it is a spiritual love, in the will. It is like when my ex-fiancee broke up with me with the ridiculously cliche, "I love you but I'm not
in love with you" and I'm thinking, "Who cares? Emotions are fickle things, it's commitment that matters." It's the
will that matters in love, not the emotion. And if we truly love a person, we desire what is best for them and are not blinded by our own desires and emotions. What is best is never to be in a homosexual relationship, friendship sure, but not a romantic relationship, that is disordered. If we love God, we want what God wants and that is purity, chastity and devotion to Him alone. If a man loves his wife, he should never love her for her sake or for his own sake, but only for God's sake. Since homosexuality is contrary both to Natural Law, which we can understand on our own, and explicitly spelled out in Scripture, we know for certain it is impossible to be going against God's commandment but doing so for love of Him. If we love God, we must obey Him, this is the principle rule of life.
And my basis for that is that from one book there are hundreds if not thousands of religions with some disagreeing with the other and the fact that the Bible may be biased, and my basis on that is that people can change things.
You don't need the Bible to know that homosexuality is contrary to the purpose of sexuality. You simply can see that sex make babies and that homosexual sex can never make a baby. We mate to reproduce. To act against that and to elevate pleasure to the end and purpose of sexuality is confused and illogical. It is contrary to the Natural Law and is therefore a sin.
There are thousands of Christian religions. Our purpose is not to create some sort of amalgamation of all of them or to sculpt our own but rather to make our choice and determine which is true. It is true that some denominations are becoming more and more pro-homosexual, but are they being logical or attempting to placate people and improve their standing in society by saying that popular sins aren't really sins? Where do their interests really lie?
This is not the place to work on that but I want to say that many people from work and even my family was surprised to hear that I was leaving The Episcopal Church for the Catholic Church (my mother was raised Catholic, my father Lutheran, they go to a Methodist church now; I was introduced to Anglicanism through friends so it's a whole amalgam) even as The Episcopal Church was becoming more and more pro-homosexual. They said, "Don't you want to be somewhere where they will 'accept' you?", "Don't you know the Catholic Church hates gays?", etc. I said simply, "I see no point in choosing my religion based on what I want to do; rather, it only makes sense to find out which religion is true and then live my life based on that." If I invent my own religion, it is not bigger than me, and there is no point because it would be all relative. Find which is objectively true and hold fast to that, conform your life to what God wants, don't invent an image of God based on what you want, that is idolatry and a farce.
Keep seeking God.