QUESTION: I am a transgendered person (ftm) and am
struggling with how this affects faith. Does the bible view being transgender
the same way as it does being gay? Sorry if this doesn't make much sense.
RESPONSE: Hi, and thanks for your brave inquiry into
this difficult topic. You make perfect
sense.
First, I admit beforehand that any response you’ll read here
will be inadequate as a final solution to the struggle you’re having. So out of the gate, I want to remind you that
while this kind of Q and A can begin (or move along) a dialogue with you and the
Christian Faith, the dialogue will need human contact at some point. This is best done in the Christian community,
where we all allow our struggles to surface in respect-filled, and trusted
relationships with fellow travelers on the Christian path. Good Christian counsel cannot be undersold as
a tool in helping to uncover all the issues involved in transgenderism, and how
it relates to faith in Jesus personally.
Of course, you already know about the culture’s voice on
this issue which has been loudly tone setting – especially in light of recent
high profile cases of transgendered persons, Caitlyn Jenner being the most
notable. The clear and consistent
message outside the church is that transgender is normal, natural, and amoral. Further, the only solution to transgender given
in the press and by most physicians is costly and invasive gender reassignment
surgery.
You’re suspecting that the Church’s response to this
issue biblically will be along similar lines as our response to the gay
debate. You're right in this way: we believe in sexual design. Christians believe the world is made by a Designer. And while we believe there are things inside of nature that do not conform to God's design, at a fundamental level Scripture teaches us to look at creation and say, "it is good."
So when we look at sex, it is right there, in the creation narrative, "male and female" - a complimentary design, which is not only said to be "very good", not only a means to "fill the earth", it is also said to reflect the communal oneness within God himself (Gen 1:27)! Our gender then, and the duality of it is intrinsically good and an unalterable part of God's design for sex. Jesus would double down on all this too, when he affirmed and summarized this design as faithful, loving, permanent and heterosexual (Matt 19:4-9).
So when we look at sex, it is right there, in the creation narrative, "male and female" - a complimentary design, which is not only said to be "very good", not only a means to "fill the earth", it is also said to reflect the communal oneness within God himself (Gen 1:27)! Our gender then, and the duality of it is intrinsically good and an unalterable part of God's design for sex. Jesus would double down on all this too, when he affirmed and summarized this design as faithful, loving, permanent and heterosexual (Matt 19:4-9).
Now, for the non-Christian, one of the reasons a multiplicity of sexual options seems reasonable is that they do NOT believe in Design. Neo-Darwinism is the lens through which we look at everything, including sex. So if you are here through a series of biological and chemical accidents without forethought, planning or design, then sex can have no inherent meaning or prescription. Thus, I'm bound only to follow my sexual feelings wherever they lead.
Well, Christians, having submitted to a Mind higher than our own, cannot go there. So the question of your spiritual walk is of utmost importance, because devotion to Jesus changes how you look at Design. Jesus does not just save the human soul, he means to bring us back into God's good creation designs. So the Christian brings their very life (including gender and sexuality) under his good leadership.
If that is true of you, then the design question has been forever settled - sex has an order to it, and a prescription. Think about Legos. You could use those however you wanted, you could throw them at people as a projectile, or try to eat them. But just looking at them, you would know, this is made for building stuff. People are given sex as a gift, and they can and do use it however they want, but you don't have to study sex very long to realize it was made for something specific.
Therefore, Christian opposition to forms of sexual expression other than faithful, heterosexual monogamy has nothing to do with hate or discomfort or lack of science training or phobias. It has to do with design.
Well, Christians, having submitted to a Mind higher than our own, cannot go there. So the question of your spiritual walk is of utmost importance, because devotion to Jesus changes how you look at Design. Jesus does not just save the human soul, he means to bring us back into God's good creation designs. So the Christian brings their very life (including gender and sexuality) under his good leadership.
If that is true of you, then the design question has been forever settled - sex has an order to it, and a prescription. Think about Legos. You could use those however you wanted, you could throw them at people as a projectile, or try to eat them. But just looking at them, you would know, this is made for building stuff. People are given sex as a gift, and they can and do use it however they want, but you don't have to study sex very long to realize it was made for something specific.
Therefore, Christian opposition to forms of sexual expression other than faithful, heterosexual monogamy has nothing to do with hate or discomfort or lack of science training or phobias. It has to do with design.
Now, the Christian transgendered person may have no
real incompatibility with “faithful, heterosexual monogamy” as God's design – they may simply wish
to live that good design for themselves by reassigning their gender. In this case, transgenderism may appear very different
than homosexuality. Surgery may seem the
answer to live out God’s good design!
Unfortunately, I think that reassigning gender is essentially an impossible wish physically, with broad and unsettling side effects, as I’ll explain below. It seeks to fix something that isn't broken (the body) by calling something fine that's actually broken (the mind). To put it in Paul's words, we should rather seek the transformation of our lives by the renewing of our minds, rather than being conformed to the world (Romans 12:1,2).
Unfortunately, I think that reassigning gender is essentially an impossible wish physically, with broad and unsettling side effects, as I’ll explain below. It seeks to fix something that isn't broken (the body) by calling something fine that's actually broken (the mind). To put it in Paul's words, we should rather seek the transformation of our lives by the renewing of our minds, rather than being conformed to the world (Romans 12:1,2).
If you have transgendered feelings, realize that no one comes to Jesus
without their mind needing to be renewed. So
your transgendered feelings do not put you in an altogether different position
than the millions of people struggling with addictions, depressions, bipolar, or anxiety
disorders. I hope you’re not offended by
the comparison with other mental illnesses.
Rather than offensive, I hope it's merely self evident: a person with a man’s body and XY chromosomal
structure will function best with a male persona IN that male body. And to have a female persona in that male
body is by definition a malfunction – a disorder.
So, is the fundamental problem in the mind (which can change),
or in the body (which cannot fundamentally change)?
But perhaps you dispute that the body cannot change. Dr. Paul R. McHugh, the former
psychiatrist-in-chief for John Hopkins Hospital and its current Distinguished
Service Professor of Psychiatry, says that sex change is “biologically impossible.” Dr. McHugh, explains that
transgender surgery is not the right solution for people who suffer a “disorder of
‘assumption’” – the notion that their maleness or femaleness is different than
what nature assigned to them biologically. Transgenderism is actually a mental illness that merits treatment, and thus people who promote sexual reassignment surgery are collaborating with and promoting a mental disorder.
He's collected studies that show the suicide
rate among transgendered people who had reassignment surgery is 20 times higher
than the suicide rate among non-transgender people! Also, Dr McHugh cites studies from Vanderbilt
University and London’s Portman Clinic of children who had expressed
transgender feelings but for whom, over time, 70%-80% “spontaneously lost those
feelings.”
The Christian view then, is that the promoters of gender
reassignment as treatment for transgenderism are doing no favors either to the
public or the transgendered by treating their gender confusion as a right in
need of defending, rather than as a mental illness that deserves compassion, understanding,
treatment and prevention.
Take for example people who are “dangerously thin” and who nevertheless
look in the mirror and see a fat person.
Their mental assumption about themselves is not in line with their
actual nature, and this constitutes a disorder, which we call anorexia. Here we CAN fix the mind in many cases, and no one thinks it's a good idea to try to fix an anorexic's body to make them feel thinner. It's probably only because sex is involved
with transgendered feelings that we don’t automatically use the exact same reasoning. (Unrestricted sexual liberty,
after all, is the idol of our times.)
For those who have had sexual reassignment surgery, most
said they were “satisfied” with the operation “but their subsequent
psycho-social adjustments were no better than those who didn’t have the
surgery.” At Hopkins Hospital they just
stopped doing sex-reassignment surgery, since producing a ‘satisfied’ but still
troubled patient seemed an inadequate reason for surgically amputating normal
organs.
With the transgendered, as with the homosexual, we have observed that if a person has
a personal desire and deep commitment to bring their feelings in line with sexual Design, great mental change is possible. No change is possible without this, so abandon all attempts at coercive change for a husband, wife or child. But change is even more probable, we believe, with the power of God in operation in the fully
surrendered Christian’s life.
However, as my ex-gay Christian friend recently told me,
they must not pretend or cover up their struggle – that will surely lead to
frustration and probably a falling away from a faith they deemed “didn’t work”.
So the end game for the Christian transgendered person is
not about Jesus “working” for them – it’s not about being happy – it’s not
about being heterosexually attracted – it’s not about having all the right
feelings – it’s not about sanctioning the feelings I do have – it’s about
holiness! The Christian doesn’t tell
Jesus how the journey will go, he accepts the privations involved in obedience
and straps in for the adventure of where Jesus and his grace will take them.
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