The Truth About Same Sex Attraction

Steve Gershom

by Steve Gershom on February 15, 2012 · 199 comments

I’m so used to being gay and Catholic, I forget how strange that sounds.

I forget that, for some people, “homosexual” describes something like a different race, or maybe even a different gender. I forget that some Christians think I’m the worst kind of pervert (but a pervert they have to treat nicely), and some secularists think I’m the worst kind of hypocrite; the former because I’m sexually attracted to men, and the latter because I don’t do anything about it.

Read the last part again. Yes, I’m attracted to men; no, I don’t sleep with them, for the same reason that a lot of Catholics don’t sleep with people they’re not married to. But you’d be surprised how often people hear the first part (gay) and not the second (celibate) — even though the second is the only part that’s up to me.

I wrote a whole article once about what it was like to be a celibate, gay Catholic, and what was the first response in the combox? “Repent!!”

Not that everyone who finds out that I’m gay is like that. Overwhelmingly, the people I’ve told — mainly family and close friends — respond with compassion and even admiration. Usually it’s something like “I’m honored that you trust me enough to tell me this.” But even the most understanding people don’t always understand what I mean, if only because (unlike me) they haven’t had the last 14 years to figure it out, and because “I’m gay” is not a simple sentence.

I’m not very sensitive about the word “gay”, but some of us in the Gay Catholic business prefer the phrase “same-sex attraction,” or SSA. I find it more accurate than “gay” or “queer” or any of the others, just because it suggests that homosexuality is something I have rather than something I am. That’s the way I think of it. So the idea of gay culture, gay rights, gay marriage, gay anything really, is foreign to me. You might as well talk about gluten-intolerance culture, or musician’s rights.

Which is not to say that I don’t strongly identify with those parts of myself that people often conflate with being “gay.” I’m musical, I’m verbal, I’m intuitive, I have a strong aesthetic sense. But men with SSA don’t have a monopoly on those things, and the fact that I have those characteristics doesn’t mean I belong to some special culture; it means I’m myself, and not anybody else.

I also don’t mean to trivialize the experience of having SSA. Sex isn’t everything, but as anyone with any kind of sexual dysfunction knows, it’s an awful lot. Put the sexual aspect together with the other things that homosexual men and women often experience — depression, low self-esteem, loneliness, a sense (however false) of being utterly different — and you have a heavy cross.

I’ve experienced healing in every area I mentioned above, but nobody’s healing is complete this side of heaven. Loneliness can be the worst part: not the absence of friends, I’ve got those, but the effort of forging out a way to live in a society that constantly tells us that romantic love is anyone’s only shot at real happiness, and that celibacy (not to mention virginity!) is some kind of psychological disease.

And there’s the question of friendship. I love men, and I always will. That’s not weird, that’s not strange, that’s not even gay. But it’s not as simple as “look, but don’t touch” — chastity is a question of the heart and soul and emotions, as well as the groin. What do you do if your best friend turns you on? How do you learn to love another man without making him into an idol?

These questions are still present to me, but none of them are show-stoppers anymore. You deal with them, you pray and seek advice, you offer up the incidental pangs, and you get on with your life. And none of the things I deal with are unique to gay men or women. Being straight isn’t a guarantee of having a healthy, shiny, pre-integrated sexuality; it just means the whole beautiful, messy concerto is in a different key. Nobody gets to sit this one out.

To quote the YouTube campaign — you know the one, full of compassion and good intentions and muddled thinking — it does get better. If anyone had told me ten years ago what my life would be like today, maybe just showed me a video of an ordinary Tuesday evening in the life of contemporary Steve, my eyes would’ve bugged out. I never had any idea things could be this good, that I could be so confident, that I would so often feel like smiling for no particular reason.

You will be wondering how I got from there to here. There’s no quick answer. It took lots of prayer and hard work, and the love and patience of brothers, sisters, mentors, and friends. If you are looking for a good place to start — for yourself or someone you know, or just because you want to understand the whole thing better — I recommend browsing around People Can Change and Courage. I recommend picking up a copy of Fr. Harvey’s The Homosexual Person and Alan Medinger’s Growth Into Manhood. You might also try Melinda Selmys’ Sexual Authenticity and Wesley Hill’s Washed and Waiting. And of course there’s my blog.

And maybe the most important thing: you can do this, but not alone — and the Church may be your greatest ally. Maybe you don’t understand yet why the she teaches what she does; but don’t quit listening. Maybe you don’t feel Jesus’ love in the Mass; so then go more often, not less. Maybe you ran into a priest who didn’t understand; so find one who does.

Most of all, don’t accept any easy answers, from the right or from the left. The quick way is rarely the right one, and the long way around is well worth the trip.

  • Cmorzen

    Very Well put Steve. God Bless!!

  • Peter Nyikos

    This is a very well written article.  Why did it have to be introduced at the top of the Catholic Exchange home page (where nobody can overlook it) by a picture of what is presumably a homosexual, leaning forward with a look on his face that conveys nothing worth thinking about?  The whole new tabloid-style format of the CE home page is off-putting, and if CE does not move towards the style it used to have, I will stop using it as my own personal home page.

  • Steve Gershom

    Ew, a picture of a homosexual! Get it off, get it off!

  • Tommy

    Well done, Brother Steve.  I’ll be sharing your heartfelt article with many others.  May the Lord continue to bless you and keep you pure in mind, body and spirit–and me too.

  • Anonymous

    Although I can feel a bit of sympathy for this young man, I still believe he has “chosen” to be what he calls SSA. As Jesus said,”…so a man thinketh, therefore he is…” My question is why this young man would choose to have a SSA ? Being celibate also means being ”celibate” in mind as well as body.So even claiming to be a part of a group which alienates itself from Mother Church is an oxymoron. Some would argue that sexual preference is something that one is “born” with. I disagree. The word”preference” implies “choice”. I do believe psychological factors have a lot to do with this matter…but physiological, I think not !

    The author still chooses to represent himself to the world as “gay” yet says he doesn’t act upon his urges. That implies he is NOT celibate in his mind ! It is commendible that the author recognizes the need for more prayer and going to Mass. Homosexuality is a sin, no doubt… but God always loves the sinner, not the sin !

  • MrsK

    God bless you Steve.  I totally agree with you neither the “left” nor the ‘right” have all the answers.  I’m sorry some readers persist in the notion that you have chosen this.  There are so many possible external causes that attack a person’s very core being– whether it’s SSA, Depression, Alcholism . . .  Sure, there’s hope, but depending on what caused it and how ingrained it is– that battle can last a lifetime.  God bless you for speaking out.

  • Tommy

    MsM…
     
    I’m pretty sure that Jesus never uttered any words that ended in -eth!  Perhaps you need to update your Bible and incorporate some new and compassionate ways of thinking. 

    I think the jury is still out as to whether people “choose” be SSA or OSA.  We may never be sure.  Did/do you choose to be attracted to people of the opposite sex? 
     
    You said:  “The author still chooses to represent himself to the world as “gay” yet says he doesn’t act upon his urges. That implies he is NOT celibate in his mind!”

    Lastly, who is to say (or judge) that Steve and others who have a SSA are not pure in mind?  Are you just assuming that is the case for him?  I assume you represent yourself to the world as a heterosexual.  Does this imply that you are not celibate in mind?
     
    Time to check out the Catechism, paragraphs 2358 and 2359.  And put a little love in your heart.

  • Innkeeper

    As my confessor teaches, as our priest teaches in CCD & what the Church holds to be the norm…to have a thought flash into your head doesn’t make it a sin. To dwell on it is. You don’t live in Steve’s head. His mental celibacy is a matter between him & his priest. He’s aware of his failings, his foibles & his SSA…to be aware of something doesn’t mean you necessarily choose to act on it. 

    Lack of compassion is a sin too…..

  • Anonymous

    Steve… IF your article is to be taken seriously… don’t be so childish about a very “grave” matter, the mortal sin of homosexuality ! Obviously Mr. Nyikos is offended. And he has that “right” to object just as you have the “right” to speak of your experiences of dealing with this matter.

  • Bernie

    I’m sure he doesn’t want your sympathy, nor does he need it.  We do not choose to have SSA, just as you do not choose not to have it.  Having SSA is NOT a sin.  Read the Catechism of the Catholic Church,  this will enlighten you.

  • Japaul_00

    Glad you are following the Church, it not easy on any side of the coin.

  • Becky

    Thank you Steve.  Blessings to you as you follow the path and accept the struggles.  We all face struggles – they’re just different.  You are doing what God asks of all of us – to live chastely.  That be outside of Holy Matrimony for those who cannot wed according to His laws, or in marriage for those who may wed.   We all need His Grace.

  • JackP

    I too am celibate and gay, and have been that way for almost 20 years. BUT I NEVER CHOSE IT.  Who in their right mind would ever choose to be gay? Most gay people I know say that, if there was a choice, they would NEVER choose this type of life. It’s like choosing cancer.

     But please pray for us. Being homosexual is not a sin; acting on those urges is. I believe and follow the Catholic faith. Jesus came to save sinners. Where would Christ be if he were here today: with sinners.

  • Innkeeper

    You are offended by a man carrying a cross…in a trenchcoat…in the rain. O. M. G. Get a grip man. 

  • Innkeeper

    Technically ‘homosexuality’ is NOT a sin. Adultery is. Fornication is. A man–any man, who does not act on his sexual attraction, whether he be attracted to male or female—-HAS NOT SINNED! (duh)

  • DanO

    Again… ‘homosexuality’ is not a sin – “homosexual acts” are sins.  Watch the semantics!   And Steve… catching you on Catholic Exchange is great!  I’ve been following your blog for some time, and you do a great job putting my feelings into words.  Keep it up!  and Thanks!!

  • Anonymous

     Well, I don’t choose to grapple with pride, but every time I turn around I find I’m never quite “over” my prideful inclinations.
    We are all born with original sin which is manifested in temptation. Temptation is NOT a sin, but is something we must all guard against. A man or woman who is tempted by sexual sin is not guilty of sin until he/she seeks the temptation out (or purposely doesn’t avoid it) or acts upon the temptation.
    Lastly, Steve prefers to call it Same Sex Attraction, but for the sake of the reader doesn’t hyperventilate over being called gay. If you read his blog, it’s pretty clear.

  • http://www.bettybeguiles.com Hallie Lord

    Actually, the image has been changed. You missed the original image to which Steve was referring. 

  • Catholicwifeandmom

    God bless you Steve!  I wish those who are herterosexual and single would understand chastity too.

  • Catholicwifeandmom

     God bless you too!

  • Anonymous

    Thank you for your courage and your witness.

    John
    servantofcharity.blogspot.com

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_NHS4UG2ZOMGCTP4PQF5FJIY2J4 Allan

    Why do I know you are homosexual? I had no need of this information. Nobody needs this information other than those who will be personally impacted by it.

    All practicing Catholics fight a daily battle to remain or become chaste. Does it matter whether the battle is heterosexual or homosexual? There are many heterosexual people who wish they could be married, but are not, and perhaps never will be. They live lonely lives they would not have chosen, but it is their lot, and it is the means to their salvation.

    Sexual trials, like every other trial, can bring us closer to God if we accept them and act toward them as faithful Christians.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_57O3EJICVYTBV5TTHCZLPE4YTE Spiritual Warfare

    very well explained and i have people dear to me just like that…and i try to explain it to others but they don’t get it…….whether your’re ‘gay’ or ‘straight’ we all sin and commit unholy acts with others outside the commandments….it is our nature…some of us ‘choose’ to stay relatively free from sin…I applaud all sinners who try to come to repentence…”he who is without sin, cast the frist stone…Jesus

  • MrsK

    LOL On my FB share the icon is strawberry-topped pancakes.  Oh well.  Shouldn’t take that stuff too seriously.  I’m sure CE is doing its best

  • Mparks12

    Another resource:  Gerard van den Aardweg

  • M23kster

    Have you never been tempted?!  Temptation IS NOT sin.  Jesus, the God-Man, allowed Himself to be tempted.  People do not choose their temptations.  The saints have all agreed that one can be sorely and severely tempted without committing sin..  All evidence points to homosexual inclinations being rooted in events and experiences for which a person cannot be responsible.  Read the Catechism of the Catholic Church and what it has to say on the matter of homosexuality.

    Steve, bravo!  May God continue to bless you.

  • Peace551

    Who the heck would choose to be tall, blonde and beautiful??!!! You’d have to be crazy!  And I was – and could go any way I wanted.  The pressure was terrible and still is for that almighty sex act – and it nearly killed me and has left me pretty well damaged in this life – when all I really wanted was friendship and basic caring!  Very easy for someone like me to fall headlong into that morass.  If you simply supplanted me for Steve in the above article – exactly the same!  I finally discovered peace, quiet and sometimes great joy in my loneliness – especially if you really believe in the true presence of God.  I hope we all get through it!  Good luck Steve.

  • L_keebler

    May I suggest also (in Love and great compassion) that in your journey you strive to worship God alone. I know this sounds simplistic, maybe even to the point of my not being so compassionate, but it is compassionate and in fact it is the full compassion and instruction of Christ. God tells us to have no other “gods” before him and that includes ourselves which, sadly, (and in not so subtle ways) the world tells us that we are to worship ourselves. But also not to “worship” others and this I think is even harder as we learn from a very early age to (in a form) “worship” our parents and those around us. But as Paul says in 1 Corinthians 13: 11When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me.” 

    When we become physically mature to the point of puberty (and may I say even before puberty), it is easy to attach our sexuality (because we are still so young and very close to childhood) to ourselves and to others in our immaturity. But Christ tells us what to do, to “worship” God alone. To turn our hearts (and eyes) and most especially our minds to God in our thoughts and actions (and then so also, we are able to turn our Holy and Pure Love towards our brothers and sisters – and our spouse if God Wills us to the married life) but to especially not worship anything else but God alone. It is easy to “worship” other people if we are not totally “attracted” to God alone. Our attraction to God, our “worship” and “adoration” of Him ONLY, will set our hearts and minds on the narrow Way to freedom in Christ… something the world can never give us or does it even know what it is as the world is hostility to God. When we worship God alone our minds and hearts, our very beings (and so ALL of our “attractions”) are set in order because Jesus and the Father will come to dwell in our very being: John 14:23 Jesus replied, “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them. (and there are so many other scriptures about this, too many to list here). 

     

  • Anonymous

    In deference of this subject… I was merely pointing out that if one chooses to align themselves publically with being homosexual, that is still choosing. ALL sins do not need a fan club. Those with a propensity to a certain sin should examine their heart as to why they feel the need to have a public confession. Yeah… I know the rhetoric…”I want to keep “YOU” in the closet”. Ever hear of the “prayer closet” ? Your sin is between you and God… why do insist on “telling” everyone about those things which should be between you and your spiritual advisor ? I do have compassion for people who have “problems”, even those self-imposed. Sympathy btw is not a bad emotional reaction to a person’s situation…

    Bernie…you cite reading of the CCC. I do. Where in that book does it say that ANY Catholic should accept homosexuality ? I do not throw stones(I am not without sin but choose to not disclose them except to my confessor) at those(homosexuals) who claim that “God ” made them that way. Are you saying that God made a “mistake” and went against His own word when creating men and women to be “fruitful and multiply”?

    This subject has its limitations as God does love ALL sinners but ABHORS the sin.

  • Joe

    Thanks, and God Bless you. 

  • Innkeeper

    I’m quite sure that Steve could ‘be fruitful & multiply’ if he so chooses. He has, however, chosen to live a celibate life.(as all single Catholics are required to do) You seem to deny the fact that ‘homosexuality or SSA’ in  & of itself is not a sin. He’s not claimed that he either chose that lifestyle, was afflicted with that lifestyle or was born with that handicap. You wouldn’t call a child with Down’s Syndrome a mistake of God’s creation–why call Steve one. FActually–the jury is out on what creates a SSA. Does God allow it to happen in His infinite wisdom? Seems so.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/44MYO5A67IADQFR7VIYVBMWN54 A Yahoo! user

    Innkeeper: I am afraid you are incorrect, just as adultery and fornication are a sin, so is homosexuality and so are many many other sins.  To “know” (which the Church helps us to “know” through Christ) these are sins is the key to our conscience (a RIGHT conscience) and so we then are held accountable if we knowingly “act” as you say on that sin then we are guilty of committing sin and are in need of confession (repentance and forgiveness). Whether we act or do not act does not “make” a “sin” a sin, but it is THE sin by its very nature of being a sin that makes it sin.

    By the way, what is in our minds does matter as Christ referred to many times and also Paul says “by the renewing of your mind…” Yes, our thinking DOES matter. Romans 12:1 Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship. 2 Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

     

  • Sarah

    “Sexual trials, like every other trial, can bring us closer to God if we accept them and act toward them as faithful Christians.”
    I think that was exactly Steve’s point.  Praise God he has the courage to actually talk about his struggles and to give glory to God for any ability to overcome them.  

  • Veronica

    I for one am glad you write about having ssa and choosing to remain chaste. I do not struggle with ssa but with other oppressive temptations. Your self-disclosure is tremendously helpful to me in my own struggles against temptation and sin. The dynamic is exactly the same. The burden has been heavy, and your hard-won insights have been one way that Christ lifts that burden from me. So why do we need to know that you “are gay”? Well, good grief…why would we need to know that Saint Augustine was a fornicator and heretic? Why do we need to know that the woman Christ refused to stone was an adulteress? Because their witness would be completely useless if we didn’t have the background info, that’s why! Saints didn’t just suddenly get holy for no apparent reason. They had to fight for it, and so do we. Thank you, thank you, for your courage in sharing the whole story with us.

  • Leila

    Um, temptations (disordered desires) are not sins. Read the Catechism.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/44MYO5A67IADQFR7VIYVBMWN54 A Yahoo! user

    It is not that none of us sins but that we KNOW what IS the sin and RECOGNIZE it as sin, then we have a RIGHT conscience to know to avoid (the) sin and to repent of (the) sin. It is not simply “our nature” because we put off the old nature and are “new creatures in Christ”(2Cor 5:17)… so then (any) sin becomes AGAINST our nature; if we are truly His new creature filled with the Holy Spirit. Yes our flesh is weak but Christ in us (the Holy Spirit) is repulsed and repels against any sin. And so too we know “the renewing of our mind…”

    Ephesians 4:20 But you have not so learned Christ, 21 if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught by Him, as the truth is in Jesus: 22 that you put off, concerning your former conduct, the old man which grows corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, 23 and be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and that you put on the new man which was created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/44MYO5A67IADQFR7VIYVBMWN54 A Yahoo! user

    (from the Catechism of the Catholic Church)

    II. THE DEFINITION OF SIN

    1849
    Sin is an offense against reason, truth, and right conscience; it is
    failure in genuine love for God and neighbor caused by a perverse
    attachment to certain goods. It wounds the nature of man and injures
    human solidarity. It has been defined as “an utterance, a deed, or a
    desire contrary to the eternal law.
     

  • Clarice

    Chastity is a lovely thing – loving the self and the other as commanded. Take it from someone who knows. I was the original Whore of Babylonia.  Self respect takes us far. Degradation does just that – degrades. Jesus gave as one of the greatest commands to, “Love…. your self.”  :)  

  • Clarice

    Sorry Mrs, But alcoholism and depression have nothing to do with being gay in the sense of being same, attacks on core being, as you suggest here. Whatever gave you the idea I’d want to be like you ?  I don’t !! EVER !!  Your spouting utter tripe like this is what drives people in the LGBT community to disobey Christ. You would have others fail to love self. 

    THAT can then lead to alcoholism and depression and a host of other issues. 

  • Abby

    I’m so grateful to read Steve’s encouraging piece, which will be a great help to others who experience the same temptations–or other kinds of temptations. We need to know that being subject to a certain set of temptations is not a sickness unto death for the soul. Thanks, Steve, for speaking out. You’re the opposite of a scandal: instead of leading others into the sin of despair, you’re giving them reason to hope and to strive for virtue.

    Now, as for the “thank God I am not like him” people in this com box, I would like to extend my heart-felt invitation to them to go back into their closets.

  • Gtaliente

    There is a special place in Heaven for people like you and all other Gay men and women who CHOOSE to be chaste.  I cannot imagine the cross y’all bear.  I pray that God will give me the strength he has given y’all to bear my crosses.

  • MrsK

    Clarice–you’ve got issues.  I not “gay or any of that other stuff.  I am a faithful practicing Roman Catholic, married to the same wonderful man for 22 years, 4 boys who live chastely.  SSA is an illness of uncertain origins–check the Catechism and check your charity!!!!

  • MrsK

    PLEASE, PLEASE people!  Read the Catechism!!!!  Predisposition to homosexual tendencies is NOT a sin!!  It is ACTING upon them that is.  This man is being very brave to take a public stand against the Culture of Death, even as he shoulders this cross.  I can’t believe how some of you are responding.

  • Gtaliente

    You forgot to look at what the Church has to say about SSA.. With regard to homosexual inclinations, the Letter “Homosexualitatis problema” states that “Although the particular inclination of the homosexual person is not a sin, it is a more or less strong tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil; and thus the inclination itself must be seen as an objective disorder” (n. 3).

  • Madagascar

    I wish there were internet free of Americans. 

    You are such a love less society. And spread your poison everywhere. Any wonder you are the most loathed ‘nation’ on the planet. You wallow in mindless, gratuitous filth of every heterosex variation, and forever scapegoat the innocent, just as you did with your Jesus.

    Maybe if these ‘same sex attracted’ people were allowed to be loved by another human being, they’d learn to love themselves truly, and not need to call self loathing by any other name.

    Then, perhaps, there’d be no need or place for all this abject hatred that would imagine itself to fool anyone with a brain that it is anything but that. Hate, telling others how to hate.   Physician heal thyself.    

    Grow up people.  Such a dishonest masquerade by one and all here it seems. 

  • Deacon Alan

    As a celibate, straight man studying for the priesthood, I can actually relate to a lot of what you said in your article, I truly appreciate your words and the work you are doing to dispel the illusion that the only path to happiness is through romantic love. I pray for your perseverance and thank you for your courage. You sound like a very well integrated person. Our culture, both within the Church and in society at large, would benefit so much from a greater understanding and appreciation of the joys of chaste living, of the closeness and unity it fosters with our Savior and with each other.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/44MYO5A67IADQFR7VIYVBMWN54 A Yahoo! user

    MrsK: I am responding to Innkeeper who says: “Technically ‘homosexuality’ is NOT a sin. Adultery is. Fornication is.”

    So as I read your post here beneath my comment I see that you agree with me when I say homosexuality IS a sin because you say “ACTING upon them”… (is a sin).  What I don’t quite know is what you mean when you say here in your comment “I can’t believe how some of you are responding”… could you please explain? Thank you!

  • Bernie

    Please do not include all Americans in your hateful message.  The USA is the most generous country on the face of the earth. 

  • Bernie

    You seem to be missing the point.  Should we stone all who suffer from SSA?   It is my cross, I did not choose it and I don’t want it.  But I have it and I do the best I can with the help of our Lord and his saints and His Holy Church.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/44MYO5A67IADQFR7VIYVBMWN54 A Yahoo! user

     Okay, here is the Catechism too – I don’t think I said anything contrary to it…: “Homosexual persons are called to chastity. By the virtues of
    self-mastery that teach them inner freedom, at times by the support of
    disinterested friendship, by prayer and sacramental grace, they can and
    should gradually and resolutely approach Christian perfection” (CCC
    2357– 2359).