Note: I have previously addressed this topic and I wanted to talk on some other points with this issue here. As before, I always want to be very careful in discussing topics in general and particularly controversial ones. Thus, I'll reiterate what I said previously as a precursor. This piece is largely based in response to reading an excellent article from Christianity Today addressing this topic.
Yarhouse, Mark. “Understanding the Transgender Phenomenon.” ChristianityToday.com, Christianity Today, 8 June 2015, www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2015/july-august/understanding-transgender-gender-dysphoria.html. Accessed 24 Sept. 2017
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I wanted to offer my thoughts here on a topic that has become of great public scrutiny and debate in America in recent years. It is one that (pun intended) engenders strong emotions on either side of things. As always, I hope to be gracious in talking about sensitive matters and always remember that there are always sinners behind the sin and I am just as sinful and in need of grace as anyone else. I also want to be very clear about what I am discussing here and what I am not saying here. I want to talk about the subject of transgenderism and a Christian response to it. One of the clearest verses in The Bible about this issue is found in Deuteronomy 22:5, wherein The Lord forbids men from wearing women's clothing and women from wearing men's clothing. I think any Christian struggling with these sexual identity questions must consider this verse, along with Jesus' words in Matthew 19, wherein He reiterates Genesis 1:26-27, wherein God made people male and female. God has put His design in place and I don't think it is our place to tamper with it.
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I think
society assigns certain qualities and tasks suited to particular sexes and that
may be part of the problem. If a boy is interested in learning how to sew or
pursue dance as a career (for example), he may get told those are somehow
"feminine" pursuits. If a girl is interested in playing football for
her school or working as a barber or car mechanic, she might get told those are
somehow "masculine" pursuits. (And girls generally get the label
"tomboy". Interesting how there doesn't seem to be a
"tomgirl" equivalent- boys just usually get the label of
"gay" instead.)
I personally think boys and girls
and men and women should be free to engage in whatever pursuits they are
interested in doing. As for the cross-dressing angle, that may come from a
natural curiosity about the opposite sex. I have heard some transgender
people refer to their feelings as being like in clothes that don't fit- some
sort of discomfort with who they are. Of course, I am not sure how those
feelings manifest themselves for individual transgender people- I suppose
everyone has different experiences though, as the article indicates.
How does this mesh with Colossians
3:1-4 and Galatians 2:20 and 2 Corinthians 5:17 for a Christian though? If my
identity is in Christ and no one else and nothing else- then does anything else
matter? If there's no Jew or Greek or slave or free or male or female in
Christ- but rather we are all one in Him (Galatians 3:28)- then maybe that is
the answer. We focus on our identity in Christ and not in anything else,
despite what our feelings may tell us. I know there are numerous times my
feelings would have me identifying more with a hellbound sinner than a
Heavenbound redeemed child of God, but I don't trust my feelings because I know
they're fickle and often lie. I put my faith and trust in the facts of God's
Word and His love for me instead and I trust that when I obeyed Romans 10:9 and
confessed Christ as Lord and Saviour and decided to follow Him, He is faithful
to do what He said He would do.
And I believe we are all
called to endure as followers of Christ. (Philippians 3:14 speaks to this- Yes,
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. That word "do"
there is better translated as "endure"- especially when read in the
context of the rest of the chapter- and the context of the letter itself,
written from a Philippian prison.)
Hebrews 12:1-3- Let's fix our eyes on Jesus and set aside every sin that so
easily entangles us and run the race with endurance. (See also 2 Timothy
2:10-12, 2 Corinthians 1:6, Hebrews 13:12-14, Revelation 14:12)
We do this even if it means it feels
that we have to deny our feelings and yes, even our selves in order to do it.
That's exactly what Jesus called us to do- deny ourselves, take up our crosses
and follow Him. (Luke 9:23) And don't forget that in
addressing transgender people, we must always greet them with both lenses of
integrity and compassion, as the article talked about. Because, as 1
Corinthians 13 tells us, Love endures all things. And Jesus said we must love
one another. (John 13:34-35)
To clarify my stance on
sexual ethics regarding homosexuality, which I mention because it often gets brought up alongside transgenderism even though the two are not necessarily related- yes, I do believe The Bible condemns all homosexual relationships,
loving and committed or otherwise. (Genesis 1-3, [particularly Genesis 1:26-27
and Genesis 2:24], Leviticus 18:22, Leviticus 20:13, Romans 1, 1 Corinthians
6:9-11, 1 Timothy 1:8-10, Matthew 5:17-20 and Matthew 5:27-32, Matthew 19,
among others.)
One interesting thing to point out with this- "loving and committed"
is a phrase often used to describe marriage and well it should be. People argue
that same sex unions can be of the same descriptors. However, I don't know that
whether a relationship is of a monogamous nature is the only determinant of
whether it's right. People can also be loving and committed to worshiping and
serving money, but that is the sin of idolatry and Jesus says you can't serve
both money and God. (Matthew 6:24) The reason for this relationship being a sin
is not about the level of love and commitment; rather, it's about the object of
desire. We should have that kind of love for God alone. Indeed, the love of
money is the root of all kinds of evil, as 1 Timothy 6:10 tells us.
Another point to consider is the meaning of the word "love" itself.
The Bible defines God as love in 1 John 4:8. He is the One who sets the
standard for what love really is- in fact, we only love because He first loved
us. (1 John 4:19) God's nature is complementarian within the Triune Godhead.
God The Father, God The Son Jesus Christ and God The Holy Spirit- Three in One.
(John 17 and Genesis 1 and others still speak to this.) God made human beings
in His image- male and female He created them. Males and females model that
image of complementarianism and are made to follow in the pattern He set in
place. "For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united
to his wife and the two shall become one flesh." (Genesis 2:24, which
Jesus quoted in Matthew 19)
Of course, 1 Corinthians 13, a
passage often quoted at weddings, gives us insight into the nature of love as
well. One key verse here tells us that love does not delight in evil, but
rejoices with The Truth. (see 1 Corinthians 13:6) Jesus said He is The Way, The
Truth and The Life- No man comes to The Father but by Him. (John 14:6) God is
Love. (1 John 4:8) There is complete harmony within the Godhead, thus Love
rejoices with The Truth. Jesus said if we love Him, we will obey Him. (John
14:15) Jesus upheld the model of human sexuality as one man and one woman
united in holy matrimony for life. Any other sexual union outside of that model
is sin. Any form of homosexual relationship is sin, as The Bible plainly
declares in 1 Corinthians 6:9-11. (Note too that this whole chapter and the
previous one deals with sexual immorality, so it's keeping in that context.)
And if nature itself teaches us
that it's a shame for men to have long hair (1 Corinthians 11:14), then I think
nature can also teach us the order God has designed for sexuality, as
procreation only works one way- between a man and a woman united in marriage.
(Which is in keeping with Romans 1, which also tells us that nature reveals the
existence of God to us; the heavens declare His glory, as Psalms 19 says.)
What do we say to those
struggling with such things? If they are in Christ, they are a new creature-
the old has gone and the new has come! (2 Corinthians 5:17) Our identity is
found solely in Christ- He lives in us now. (Colossians 3:1-4, Galatians 2:20)
Though God made us to be perfect and we sinned and went in search of many
schemes (Ecclesiastes 7:29), Jesus came to pay for all sins through His death
on the cross and Resurrection. When we put faith in Him, we have salvation from
sin and hell and instead an eternity with Christ in Heaven! And Jesus came to
give us life- and life abundant. (John 10:10) I believe He helps us live that
life abundant in the here and now, though this life is surely beset with
trials and troubles. That suffering comes with being human because of the curse
of sin in the world, but it also comes with being a Christ follower, as it's
something Jesus promised we would have when we follow Him. (Just see Matthew 5
for one such reference and John 15:18 and Matthew 10:22)
Jesus speaks to the plight of
eunuchs in Matthew 19 as well, and I think intersex people and all who struggle
with gender dysphoria and homosexuality could fall in that category. There is a
word there for them too and God loves them as He loves all people and has a
good plan in mind for their lives as well. (Psalms 138:8, John 3:16, 2 Peter
3:8-9, 2 Corinthians 1:3-7 and 12:1-10, Philippians 4:1-14)
But we also know that we can
take heart because Jesus has overcome the world! (John 16:33) We have the
victory in Him! And one day, we will have complete deliverance from these
bodies that still stray into sin at times- one day we will be completely healed
forever in our new bodies in Heaven! (see 1 Corinthians 15 and Revelation
21-22)
Until that time comes, we must continue to love as Jesus loves- love God first
with all we've got and love our neighbours as ourselves and speak The Truth in
Love as we preach The Gospel to all people! (Matthew 22:34-40, Ephesians 4:15,
Matthew 28:18-20)