Why ‘Gay Christian’ Should Never Have Existed cover art

Why ‘Gay Christian’ Should Never Have Existed

Why ‘Gay Christian’ Should Never Have Existed

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Let’s talk about who gets to name you. We step into a charged topic—sexuality, identity, and Christian discipleship—with a slow pace, a gentle tone, and uncompromising clarity. No culture-war posturing, no cheap shots, just an honest wrestle with Scripture, the language of new creation, and the cost of following Jesus when desire runs deep.

We begin by separating what often gets fused: attraction from behavior, temptation from sin, struggle from identity, and pastoral care from theological affirmation. From 2 Corinthians 5 and Galatians 2, we explore how Christianity doesn’t stack labels on top of faith but replaces them through death and resurrection. If identity flows from belonging, not feeling, then Christ holds the naming rights. That reframes the phrase “gay Christian,” not as a slur or denial of experience, but as a theological category the church cannot affirm without bending the gospel’s aim—transformation, not management.

We also address authority. The long-running debate over clergy and sexuality ultimately asks whether Scripture can still say no, especially to leaders. The church has never claimed sinlessness for overseers, only submission to Christ and His Word. Without that anchor, discipleship thins into slogans. Yet we refuse to ignore church failures: mocking, exclusion, and silence where presence was needed. Repentance is due. Real love tells the truth and stays at the table, honoring believers who carry a costly obedience rather than lowering the bar to make pain disappear.

You’ll hear a hopeful call that spans every struggle: you can wrestle, stumble, and rise again, but you cannot refuse transformation and call that faithfulness. The gospel does not say fix yourself first, or come and stay the same—it says come, die, and be raised. If that stirs questions or pushback, good. Pull up a chair, bring your story, and help us keep truth and love together. If this challenged or encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can join the conversation.

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