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.

  • Veronica

    Oh bull roar. You’re a fine one to accuse others while your own hatred for us burns. Keep YOUR poison to yourself then. For our part, we will continue to support each other in our common human struggle to fully say YES! to “our” Jesus…to choose to love others and ourselves, to be chaste, to reject “mindless, gratuitous filth,” to embrace Christian teachings, to refuse to hate! We even choose to pray for you and to hope for your ultimate happiness (and we hope for ours, as well) in heaven with God forever–because Jesus teaches us to love those who hate us. And we do. I want to go to heaven so I can love forever; and I want to meet you there face to face as we worship our Holy God. I am going to beg God to teach both you and me about love, because I will rejoice to discover we both made it to heaven; but neither one of us will miss the other if either one of us goes to hell, where hatred truly burns forever.

  • MrsK

    OK–I think we just have some miscommunication.  Homosexuality is not a sin.  Homosexual behavior is. When Innkeeper says ‘homosexuality’ I do not take it that he (or she) is implying acting upon it.

  • Bth

    I am not gay but I have always had a strong sex desire in a single life. I like you have come to terms with it. Not withou struggle, but sex isn’t everything and I can offer up my weakness as suffering to Jesus.  I have been chaste for ten years with God’s help. Unchaste desire is never an easy burden to carry.  God Bless 

  • Martha

    I am single and heterosexual and I understand very well how hard it is to be chaste, especially when one is young. Due to different circumstances, I never met the right man to marry though I would love to have been married. I prayed for it but it never happened so I had to struggle with trying to keep chaste just like Steve is doing. It is not easy but I appreciate reading about a person who has this cross whether gay or straight. Not everybody’s life turns out the traditional way like most people so we do not all fit in a one sized package. I became Catholic years ago and found more compassion there, especially in reading the lives of the saints and how they coped with crosses in life. I appreciate reading Steve’s article and I thank him.

  • Bernie

    God bless you Jack,  what you have said is so true.  I am 73 years old and I have had SSA for as long as I can remember.  It is the last thing I would choose.  I would be completely lost if it weren’t for Christs’ church and our hope of salvation, which the church teaches.

  • Bernie

    Amen MrsK

  • Sagwaaus

    Praise God. But what does he think of making same sex marriage legal? Would he get married then and not be Chaste? And I have always wondered does the gay community have a different set of 10 Commandments?

  • Joypace

    God bless you – you are a light and are leading others to a good life.  Continue on, in love and charity, to help others! May God’s face shine upon you! You aer doing a lovely job for Christ! Many blessings.

  • L_keebler

    Just so there is no miscommunication, what I think you are saying is then, that BEING a homosexual is not a sin… but homosexuality IS a sin and it is so by the very nature of (the) sin. That is why the CC says: “are called to chastity” and “resolutely approach Christian perfection”: “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).

  • MsMesuggah

    Bernie…with all due respect, I have never thrown a stone or urged others to do so regarding homosexuals. You ask me to understand something the RCC even considers “objectively disordered”, CCC 2358. I do have compassion for those who cannot partake in the Sacrament of Marriage and how does one address the issue of homosexuality with sensitivity ?  I would surmise the answer would be “live and let live”. But abdication of a moral responsibility and looking the other way is just as sinful. My response to Steve’s blog was based on ignorance regarding the origin of SSA.But in Truth I ask forgiveness of what may have been construed by a jury of my peers(humans) as being hate motivated. It was not my intention. I am sensitive as I have issues myself which are delicate in nature. 

    The reason for this response is that I have reasoned myself into a proverbial corner so to speak. I will always try to love ALL people regardless of their inherent/learned differences but still find it somewhat confusing regarding SSA(thought process) vs. committing homosexual acts. I am in NO way wanting to be the “thought” police I know that Steve tried to explain something regarding this matter but as they say..”it is above my head and below my knees”. I reason that I am not meant to know, but I am bound to uphold the CCC. I am faithful to the Magisterium which also cites in CCC2358 that I must accept this issue with respect,compassion and sensitivity. I pray that God gives me the wisdom to keep silent when I do not fully comprehend but when I do, to ALWAYS speak with respect, compassion and sensitivity.

    Sincerely,
    Michelle

  • MsMesuggah

    Innkeeper…

    .with all due respect, I have never thrown a stone or urged others to do so regarding homosexuals. You ask me to understand something the RCC even considers “objectively disordered”, CCC 2358. I do have compassion for those who cannot partake in the Sacrament of Marriage and how does one address the issue of homosexuality with sensitivity ?  I would surmise the answer would be “live and let live”. But abdication of a moral responsibility and looking the other way is just as sinful. My response to Steve’s blog was based on ignorance regarding the origin of SSA.But in Truth I ask forgiveness of what may have been construed by a jury of my peers(humans) as being hate motivated. It was not my intention. I am sensitive as I have issues myself which are delicate in nature. The reason for this response is that I have reasoned myself into a proverbial corner so to speak. I will always try to love ALL people regardless of their inherent/learned differences but still find it somewhat confusing regarding SSA(thought process) vs. committing homosexual acts. I am in NO way wanting to be the “thought” police I know that Steve tried to explain something regarding this matter but as they say..”it is above my head and below my knees”. I reason that I am not meant to know, but I am bound to uphold the CCC. I am faithful to the Magisterium which also cites in CCC2358 that I must accept this issue with respect,compassion and sensitivity. I pray that God gives me the wisdom to keep silent when I do not fully comprehend but when I do, to ALWAYS speak with respect, compassion and sensitivity.Sincerely,Michelle 

  • Nicholasdec6

    Why use “gay” term? That is a political one. Besides, why define your whole being by your sexual attractions? That is so secular!

  • Nicholasdec6

    Ever read the works of Dr. Richard FitzGibbons and Leanne Payne on same-sex attraction?

  • Dr, Jim K

    Do You know that there is a subject in neuro science  that during embryo and fetal development called  “SEXUAL DIMORPHISM” ? It means that during in-utero development that there is an area in the brain that is detectable that signifies that the resultant indivlidual will have the body of one sex and the mental and emotioan desires of the opposite sex.I am an older retired doctor and just recently learned this while I was studying neuroscience to update myself since it was htought that my wife had a stroke and a personality change. The title above was one of the presentations in about a 1/2 hour lecture. My youngest brother acted effeminate, since I could remember. He grew up, got a couple masters degress and worked in sociology. He ws killed via a suicidal gunshot. He worked with me for awhile, until I moved back home. I often wonder, if knowing what I know now if ther was anything different tha I could have done. I often think of the terrible stersses in society and with himself that he had to live with. I am straight & lived celibate until I married. I think of the stigma for the persons of both sexes with this innate situation. I always respected the persons so designated & since I loved my brother and respected my patients, straight or otherwise,- by otherwise I mean feeling differently and struggling with these opposite characteristics & emotions for a lifetime. I was am am stlil compassionate about things. I don’t know how to say  more, but wonder why this isn’t better known so help to cope with this is  directed properly, to make someone bearing this truama know that this is an inborn feeling better treatment to be  oneself would be available
    I wish that  I  could do more.

  • Laurie

    We live in a fallen world. We battle every kind of sin. This is our journey. We Christians must believe in the power of deliverance, the power of Christ’s redemption won for us through his death on the cross. We understand this intellectually perhaps, but do not recognize the real power. Seize the redeeming power of the Precious Blood or Our Lord who makes all things new. And may I recommend for everyone John Paul II’s Theology of the Body. If it is too hard to read, and for many it is, there are enough books out there explaining it. This teaching insight is the greatest legacy of Pope JPII. Praying for you Steve.

  • John

    Read the life of St Gemma Galgani, an inspiration to people with difficulties, isolation, all transformed. See the St GG website (Catholic mystics). 

  • Anonymous

    God bless you all…if I had SSA, I would hope to be as wise and I don’t want to say comfortable (because it’s never that, I don’t think)…but able to live chastely is a challenge for anyone these days and getting harder…

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

     Madagascar, surely you meant to post your message on the Hate America message board. It really does not make sense posting it here.

  • Jessica

    He’s actually written in great depth on his blog about how he doesn’t define himself by his sexuality. Having said that, by having the courage to share his struggles publicly he is helping those who also struggle with SSA to lead a chaste, God-centered life. He’s a modern day hero, to my mind.

  • Chie

    I have always had the exact same idea that gays and lesbians can be celibate and fulfilled but you provided the crystal clear words that speak not only to the intellect but more importantly, to the soul.  All of us are called by God to fulfill the role He prepared for us and its up to us to discern what that is to glorify God in our lives. God bless you and may your tribe increase!!

  • Lee

    There are many singles who understand chastity and are coming to a deeper understanding of this in our own lives.

  • Janet

    Praise God for the honesty and witness of this man and all celibate SSA men and women who speak the truth. My heart goes out to them because I am can only imagine how great is their suffering.  To be misunderstood by the majority takes you to the foot of the cross and this is a lonely place.  The ministry of Fr. Harvey and others like him is desparately needed. I continue to pray that God will raise up heroic men and women of SSA who can minister to teens who are flirting with a gay lifestyle.

     Based on my experience as a nurse who cared for aids patients and did research there are a variety of factors that can contribute to SSA including natrual born temperment combined with envirnomental factors such as serious parenting issues or having been molested at a young age, although this is not always the case.  Most who suffer from this disorder are victims not sinners.

    The more our society turns away from Christ, the more this disorder increases in the world. Bottom line in all the cases I have witnessed sin has played a role in causing the SSA but the person with SSA is not the sinner.

    Today the problem grows more serious as the culture of death is teaching young people that gay marriage is an alternate lifesstyle. SSA can be indoctrinated and teens who would not normally be SSA can fall into bondage of SSA through acting upon temptations or exposing themselves to occultism and poor choices.
    I know a young man who played a homosexual part in a very dark play at his highschool. The play had no redeeming value. He broke up with his girlfriend and now struggles with SSA.
    Research is still being done but there is alot we know about this disorder.
    I invite all those who feel like they know the root cause of their SSA to go back to any bad memories and invite Christ into the memory. Ask him what he thinks about the memory and ask him to heal it. If you can find a Catholic Church with an adoration chapel that would be the best place to do this. No better place than to be with Jesus the physcian.
    May God BLess all who suffer from SSA and may he convert the hearts of all those who lack Christian charity toward those who suffer this cross.

  • Guest

     just consenting one single thought of homosexual lust or approval thereof is a mortal sin and opens the door to SSA.  It creates some of the worst soul ties around, and is worse than any drug.  You could be 5 and make the mistake, and then the Enemy can lay claim to you.  Like any other problem, it can be the result of ancestral sin, among them obviously apostasy (they forgot about God so he forgot about them and let them fall prey to shameful vices, you know the lines).  some of the worst hells are for sodomites.  it is a singularly cruel predicament.  Read St. Peter Damian for some real on this ugly problem.  While it is possible to get out, few ever do… so get cracking.  Plus God can do anything.

  • Cochrane Jl3

    Wow. Thanks for sharing your story. God Bless you.
     

  • Peter Nyikos

     Steve, that comment from you is most unlike the thoughtful article you wrote.  You chose to focus on one phrase of what I wrote while ignoring the real point of my message. 

    I really like the picture that has replaced the original one. It really suits the content of your article, and if I had seen it, I would not even have posted to this page.  Instead I would have complained in the page with the article about the huckster, which still has a big garish picture attached to it, right on the front page, where no one can miss it. That picture  is the other main thing I had in mind when I complained about the “tabloid” look of the new CE home page.

    So, did you choose the new picture for your article?  or the old one? or both?

  • Navynurseprac

    God Bless You for the strength to write this article and for the tenacity to fight to live a pure life.  I am married but my husband has a chronic illness, so I also live a chaste life.  It is only through Mary that I can be faithful. Just know how much you are loved by God and by His Mother.  God Bless You.

  • Mike

    I find it hard to believe that God “forgets” the children and grandchildren of apostates.  Read Ezekial.  St. Pau;l in his letter to the Romans refers to the results of turning away from the truth (and free and chosen act) and worshiping the creature rather than the creator.  Consenting to ANY thought of sexual lust is mortal sin, when the consent is full and given with true freedom and full awareness of the gravity of consenting to the thought or desire in question. 

     What is the authority for claiming “some of the worst hells are for sodomites”?  There are four sins that cry out to God for vengeance:  Murdering the innocent; Opressing the poor; Depriving the laborer of his just wage; AND The Sin of Sodom.  This last was tradtionally seen as applying to ther gross misuses of the sexual function; contraception in marriage particularly.  And how do you know “few” ever get out of the homosexual life?  Are there stat’s based on surveys?  As you yourself write, “God can do anything”. 

  • Proudtobecatholic

    I LOVED your article! Thank you so much for writing it!
    God bless!

  • Martha

    I think you are being harsh. It takes greater virtue for a person who has a strong temptation but resists it than for a person who is older and has a lower drive and is not really tempted much. God never forgets anyone. It is we who may forget Him but He is always there to help us if we would just let Him. Harsh judgment can lead someone to despair and is not good to put anyone in that mode. We do not know for sure that for some people there can be a hormone problem or maybe the mother took hormones that could have influenced a person to be gay in some cases. It is the actions that determine things not just being something or being tempted to do something. I think lust is bad for anyone regardless of orientation. I also think it is very hard for people who married the wrong person and are living to regret it. I would rather be single any day than to be in a bad marriage. We need to help each other by showing compassion and understanding, however, not accepting sinful actions as OK. We must pray for each other and be the best friends we can possibly be.
    Martha

  • Pingback: Homosexuality and Sin | Truth Crisis

  • Hopeyg

    Thank you for sharing this

  • John

    Excellent post, Veronica!
    I always felt that one’s ‘gay’ perception was a ‘moot point’ if they remained celibate but your observations shed ligt on that view!

  • Catholicmama

    Steve, I read your beautiful article with tears in my eyes!  You are a blessing!  I am a mom of a son with SSA.  He just recently told us and it has been very hard to deal with, this is not something I grew up with accepting.  We have a wonderful parish priest who repeated many times that our son is “fearfully and wonderfully made”, and that he will always be welcome at church.  I hope that my son gets to the point in life that you are Steve as I know he has been struggling for years and was very afraid to tell us.  It is articles like yours that give me peace and hope and I pray it will do the same for my son!  God Bless You!

  • Drjillthorne

    I am a doctoral level psychologist & Catholic believer. I request a reference to the retired MD’s “sexual dimorphism” data. There is no firm data indicating a biological “root” to this tendency. Masculinity, femininity, & the direction of desire (homo, hetero, both) have been studied (hormones, hypothalamus, in utero gender development processes). We just don’t know. I personally feel some people have been born with an inclination, some have the struggle due to trauma, and some a mixture. Thankfully, God knows all of our hearts better than we know ourselves. And he calls us to obedience in all things and loves us.

  • Cinarc

    I find this article senseless. It is akin to me stating I am an adulteress wife who does not cheat on her husband. What does make sense is that we are all tempted to sin in a myriad of ways but one does not always act upon our desires. Its called Fallen human nature. Grace and the sacraments keep me from sinning. Praise God!

  • Kathleen Nurt

    I applaud your courage to continue to be faithful to the Church and your depth of understanding of why She teaches what She does.  I am a mother of a thriteen  year old and am finding that the gender roles are even more ambiguous than when I was growing up  back in the 70′s and 80′s.  It was definitely a factor.  As girls/women are encouraged to be more agressive it changes the roles of boys/men.  This may only be a part of the cultural explosion of outward homosexual interest.  I by no means am expert but trying to do as you suggest not settle for the qucik pat answersthat we hear so much of these days.  There is more to it.  God bless you on your journey and if we do not gain the company of one another in this life I look forward to it in the next.

  • Veronica

    A “moot point” is exactly right, and the perfect shorthand to express what took me a lot longer to say.

  • Indwardsmind10637

    If you believe you were born a homosexual, that God made you to be that way, how can you believe it’s a sin to act on the way He made you? Isn’t it more of a sin to deny a part of yourself that God specifically gave to you? I admire your faith and your ability to have the self control, but in my opinion your denying a part of yourself that God wouldn’t have given to you if He thought it disgusting, sinful, of un-Christian-like. 

  • Mandi Ward

    is more of a sin than acting on the way He made you. (Sorry that was incomplete, had to finish my thought in a reply) God bless you!

  • Dr, Jim K

    The sexual Dimorphism that is now noted by neuroscience data leaves open a lot of philosophical and ethical thought. I truly believe that  a person with these mixed feelings , so innate to them, to remain chaste as a heterosexual individual spite of prejudices through early life, but then the question arises as adulthood approaches-THEN WHAT ?
    I don’t have an answer for that and wish I did.
    Dr. Jim K

  • http://www.facebook.com/BCLVH.72 Ben Hennessy

    If God made you gay and wants you to only have marital sex then God is for gay marriage. If the Catholic church is against gay marriage then clearly the Catholic establishment doesn’t care about you like God does. Find someone to spend your life with, God wants you to be happy even if man-made dogma says it’s wrong.

  • http://www.facebook.com/BCLVH.72 Ben Hennessy

    Ever seen a couple with Opposite Sex Attraction that really are just perfect for each other? The Catholic church says you don’t deserve that. That’s a lie. What did you do wrong that says you should be miserable and lonely? It’s a free country, live your life, and don’t give a f*** what other people say. You’re not harming ANYONE, especially not yourself.

  • http://www.facebook.com/BCLVH.72 Ben Hennessy

    Love is never a sin.

  • http://youngandcatholic.net Mary Lane

    Hey Ben,

    Your argument would make more sense if the Catholic Church taught that everyone in the world was called to marriage (or even that marriage is the most preferable vocation).  But the Church esteems consecrated celibacy.  Many people in the Church (not just people who are attracted to the same sex) choose to remain celibate (priests, nuns, consecrated virgins, etc).  So no, just because God does not want people to have extra-marital sex and also allowed someone to be gay does not necessitate that God is for same-sex marriage.

    But you’re right.  God does want “Steve” to be happy.  Amen to that!

  • http://youngandcatholic.net Mary Lane

    Amen!  I think “Steve” would agree with you.

  • Brian Pasley

    Thank you.

  • Mike

    Yeah, like Madagascar is such a tolerant society and friendly to same sex attracted people.  I’m Canadian but am really offended by your generalizations about Americans; there’s 300,000,000 of them!  You really think they’re all identical?!!  I find Americans in general to be gracious and friendly people and I always enjoy my visits to their great country.  No human society is perfect but when it comes to choosing who you want as the world’s premier superpower and you consider the choices, who would you want? – Russia?  It has yet to ooficially face up to the murder of an estimated 20 or more million people by the old Soviet regime and is even now hardly a stirling example of a free and open society.  China perhaps?  Sure, at  least there not only does the State monitor all communication and repress human rights, the organs of executed criminals even get harvested (according to some disturbing reports) and are put to some good use.  That’s real progress!  Or how about some united Moslem power with Sharia “law”?  Then we can look forward to theives having their hands amputated and homosexuals being executed.  Hmmm, I think I’ll vote for the US

  • Christopher

    I’m Catholic and Gay, and totally not celibate. He made me this way, and he’s the only one I have to answer to in the end. That’s all that matters.

  • Tara

    Steve,
    Thank you for posting such a real and raw article.  Your words struck me like lightening. I can honestly say its given me the strength I needed to face another day.  

  • Guest

    Madagascar, I’d just like to remind you that being American does not make you Catholic. Catholicism began in Israel and spread to Rome, from which it spread even farther – even to Africa. America is actually one of the last places the Church spread to. To say “your Jesus” and imply he is American is just strange. Perhaps you have valid concerns about Americans (I don’t know if you do, your above message doesn’t seem like it), but even so, they don’t really seem to apply to a Catholic issue.