Friendship When You Could *Like* Like Someone

I have a distinct memory in college of how disappointed a female  friend of mine was when I answered that no, I was not attracted to her.

She wasn’t trying  to initiate something romantic. And it wasn’t  because she was afraid of what a potential attraction might mean for our  friendship. I guess she just wanted to know if she was pretty. I  remember laughing heartily and pointing out to her that being same-sex  attracted didn’t mean that I was  to all people of my same sex!

Yet for many Christians like me—who experience same-sex attraction  but are seeking to faithfully follow Jesus—the question of friendship  with people who share our gender isn’t so laughable. There is a  lingering question, a posed threat: Does our potential towards forming  romantic and sexual attraction in these friendships doom them from the start?

Consider, for example, how in Christian circles we  often treat cross-gender friendships. They are certainly encouraged in  group settings—especially with the not-so-subtle goal of meeting  potential spouses. But cross-gender friendships which form away from  group settings, or form between people who are already married to  others, are much less common, and much less encouraged. There are  certainly problems to this, but there is also some  wisdom. Friendships  can naturally lead to romance.

But where, exactly, does that leave those of us who experience  same-sex attraction? If received wisdom is to usually avoid one on one  friendships where attraction may blossom, that seems to cut us off from  intimate friendship with people of our own sex. And as we’ve just  noted,  there isn’t much space for us to just form those bonds instead  with people of the other sex (and that person might form such an  attraction towards us!)

From this angle, the message to the same-sex attracted Christian: Not  only will you perhaps never marry, but maybe it’s not safe for you to  have friends of any gender either. Good luck out there!

Brothers and sisters, this is not  God’s message to us. Fearful isolation is no Christian’s inheritance.

GOOD, VERY GOOD, NOT GOOD

You might recall the procession of Creation in the opening of  Genesis. God created all things by his mere word and pronounced over  each new segment, good, good, good! What joy. Creation of humanity leads  to the blessing “very good,” a crowning moment. So we’re forced to pay  attention when God observes Adam in Genesis 2:18 and says, “It is not  good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.”

Yes, this passage is about way more than friendship (indeed, it leads  to the establishment of the first marriage). But what I want to remind  us of is that Adam had full access to God, before sin even entered the  world, and still, God said his solitude  wasn’t good. Adam was not  deficient in his relationship with God, but he was also designed for the  company of humans. And so are you and I.

Occasionally in the church we sense an implicit  message of “God is  enough, you shouldn’t need others.” So, we reason, maybe not having  friends is fine if we have Jesus. Except that even Jesus needed his  friends as he struggled in his own Garden.

The triune God exists eternally in relationship,  and our loving,  committed human relationships are a part of how we reflect him. And that  doesn’t have to mean marriage relationships, or romance, though it  could. It simply means we all need forms of human intimacy.

Yes, for the same-sex attracted Christian there’s risk involved in  developing close friendships with people of the same gender. But there’s  also a risk in not developing these friendships—that we shrivel to a  husk of ourselves due to loneliness.

A WAY OF ESCAPE

So how do we mitigate against that first risk? If it’s up to us,  friends, we’ve lost the battle against sexual temptation before we’ve  started. Eventually, like unsupervised toddlers, we break everything we  touch.

But God knows this better than we do, and has promised to supply  everything we need. Thus, since we are designed for relationship, his  Spirit will guide us and empower us for relationship, if we let him.

As a young Christian I thought it was inevitable that, if faced a  certain type of temptation, I would eventually crumble. I might make it  for a time, I reasoned, but my desires owned me. And they would assert  their rights.

But that’s not true.  Our desires are strong, but they don’t own us.  They are illegitimate masters, squatters on the land. Jesus bought us  with his own body, and he demands to take possession. Or as Paul says in  1 Corinthians 10:13, “No temptation has overtaken you that is not  common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted  beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the  way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.”

This promise is not that faithfulness is a breeze. It is a promise  that faithfulness is possible, because of God’s presence with us.  Through his Spirit, and his Word, and his people, he will give us what  we need to engage in friendship faithfully.

In Born Again This Way,  I spend time discussing more of what that means practically. But it  means at least two things that can be stated in short. First, we need to  have more than one good friend. With just one close friend, there could  be a temptation to pour into them a spousal type of love, and to subtly  substitute their company, and approval, and presence for that of God.  There is more safety and wisdom in cultivating more than one close  relationship. Second, we need to be honest. If we notice types of  attraction  forming in friendship, we need to have a safe sibling in  Christ to share that with. We’re not designed to do this alone.

Sometimes the way of escape will mean leaving a friendship. But other  times it will mean staying. I’ve had the latter situation occur, where  my attractions actually dried up and died toward that friend. There is  no perfect game plan. But there is a Perfect Friend who helps us.

YOU ARE GOD’S GIFT

Not only will God  give us what we need, but he wants to give us to  our church. Your brothers and sisters who do not experience same-sex  attraction need good friends too. And God has given you gifts and  experiences that he wants you to bless the church with! If we hole up in  fear we are robbing the church of the treasures God has invested in us.  “As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good  stewards of God's varied grace” (1 Peter 4:10).That means at least this  much: the church needs you.

We can’t pretend that same-sex attraction doesn’t present challenges  to pursuing close friendships. But in reality, all humans are sinners.  Every person brings into relationship their own sinful desires that  threaten to strangle everything good.

But God has called us to more. He saw us dead in our trespasses,  brought us to new life, and knit us into a family. And God desires to  give us everything we need to flourish in his household. Will you trust him?

This piece originally appeared on The Good Book Company Blog.