Back to Ralph's Index
Although most men identify themselves as straight, some will say that they
are gay, and there are a others who would rather be called "bi."
I have trouble with these labels,
for I am not sure whether a person is talking about orientation or
actions. Instead of representing human sexuality as three separate boxes,
I believe that sexual orientation can be represented best as a color bar
(see above) which gradates from yellow (heterosexuality) on one end to red
(homosexuality) at the other.
Some men who say that they are
straight probably could have a little erotic attraction for men
under the right conditions. With the exception of people who are at the
gay end of the spectrum, most have had varying degrees of attraction
towards the opposite gender some time in their lives.
Just as surely as the color bar
has two ends, it also has a middle. I believe that a high
percentage of people occupy this middle ground. And most of
them don't even give it a second thought. A few years ago, even men
who were quite gay-oriented would marry because that was what a man was
expected to do. Orientation wasn't even discussed.
But with the present awareness of
the gay population, these same men will at least experiment with gay sex. And
gay sex is addictive. That swells the number of people that are
counted in any gay census.
Ministries under the umbrella of Exodus
International probably have their best success with people whose
orientation is toward the yellow end of the spectrum. There are some
people who feel so poorly about themselves that they will go into an
unhealthy relationship because they need a friend who will meet their
emotional needs. Unfortunately predators, gay or straight, take advantage
of such people and lure them into relationships which are more than
emotional. This adds guilt and lowers a man's self-esteem still further.
Can a marriage between a bi and a
straight work?
Most certainly!
True, some men who are gay have
married to prove that they were straight. This is not a valid reason to
marry. Such a marriage starts out on the wrong foot and has a high
risk of failure.
Of the straight population, over
half of the marriages end in divorce. (What excuse do they use for
the breakup?) And of the other half, only a few are truly happy. I know
of no evidence that gay-straight marriages cannot have at least as
high a success rate as straight-straight marriages.
The person who finds himself on
the middle ground has to make an intellectual decision to make the
marriage work. Without his veins throbbing with hormones, he has a better
chance of building the relationship on a more solid footing than the
shifting sand of sexual desire. And building on a foundation of unselfish
Christian love and mutual commitment will result in a better marriage than
the average.
A woman who marries
such a man will not have to concern herself about her husband chasing
skirts. He just isn't interested.
Top
Back to Ralph's
Index |