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What is Holy Sexuality?

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April 28, 2021
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Christopher Yuan delves into the meaning of holy sexuality as prescribed in the Scriptures: chastity in singleness or faithfulness in marriage. Yuan explains chastity is more than just abstinence. It’s about holiness and wholeness. While faithfulness includes being faithful emotionally and physically, there’s more to that, too. Hear Yuan explain how Christians find their identity in Christ, not sex.

Show Notes and Resources

LISTEN: Christopher Yuan and his mother, Angela, talk about the way God slowly and patiently drew Christopher to Jesus Christ.
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About the Guest

Christopher Yuan

Dr. Christopher Yuan has taught the Bible at Moody Bible Institute for over ten years and his speaking ministry on faith and sexuality has reached five continents. He speaks at conferences, on college campuses, and in churches. He has co-authored with his mother their memoir (now in seven languages), Out of a Far Country: A Gay Son’s Journey to God, A Broken Mother’s Search for Hope and he is also the author of Giving a Voice to the Voiceless. Christopher graduated from Moody Bible Institute in 2005, Wheaton College Graduate School in 2007 with a Master of Arts in Biblical Exegesis and received his doctorate of ministry in 2014 from Bethel Seminary. Dr. Yuan’s newest book, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel: Sex, Desire, and Relationships Shaped by God’s Grand Story, was named 2020 Book of the Year for Social Issues by Outreach Magazine.

About the Host

Photo of Dave & Ann Wilson

Dave & Ann Wilson

Dave and Ann Wilson are hosts of FamilyLife Today®, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program. Dave and Ann have been married for more than 38 years and have spent the last 33 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® marriage getaway since 1993 and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country. Cofounders of Kensington Church—a national, multicampus church that hosts more than 14,000 visitors every weekend—the Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released book Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019). Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as chaplain for 33 years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active alongside Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small-group leader, and mentor to countless wives of professional athletes. The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.

Episode Transcript

Bob: This is FamilyLife Today for Wednesday, April 28th. Our hosts are Dave and Ann Wilson; I’m Bob Lepine. You can find us online at FamilyLifeToday.com. When you think about human sexuality, is your thinking shaped more by what you read in the Bible or what you’re reading online? We’re going to talk more about that today with Christopher Yuan. Stay tuned.

Bob: And welcome to FamilyLife Today. Thanks for joining us. You guys served for more than three decades in local church ministry. I’m guessing, during that time, you saw the issue we’re going to be talking about today—sexuality and gender issues—move from something that was kind of on the back burner to something that was front and center, something where people were confused about how to respond, about how to demonstrate kindness and grace and compassion, while still holding to the truth as they interact with other people around these kinds of issues.

Dave: In 1990, when we started, I don’t remember a single conversation about this topic. I really don’t—not that it wasn’t important—it just wasn’t at the forefront of people’s minds like it is today. I can’t go a week now—in the last eight, nine, ten years—

Bob: Wow.

Dave: —without discussions about this—good ones/really needed discussions; but people coming to our church, on weekends, wanting to know: “What is your view on homosexuality? What is your stance?”

Bob: What are wives and moms—what’s the conversation like with them?

Ann: I was just going to say, in the past five years, I can’t even tell you how many moms are coming up to me, desperate. Kids are coming to their parents—especially, their moms—saying: “Help me. I don’t know what to do, and this is who I am.” The moms are coming to me saying: “Help us.

Bob: Right.

Ann: “As a church, what are we saying? How do we help our kids?”

Bob: Well, we have, here, a book. Let me just read what Rosaria Butterfield said about this book—and Rosaria has been a guest on FamilyLife Today—she said, “You’re holding in your hands the most important humanly-composed book about biblical sexuality and godly living for our times.”

Dave: Wow.

Bob: We’ve got the guy who wrote that book with us today. He is back—Christopher Yuan—welcome back to FamilyLife Today.

Christopher: Oh, thanks, Bob, for having me back.

Bob: What a nice thing for her to say about this book.

Christopher: I couldn’t believe it. I’m humbled, and she is an incredible friend. I call her my “big sis.” She calls my mom and dad, “Mom and Dad”; so we are truly brothers and sisters in Christ.

Bob: This is your second book.

Christopher: Yes.

Bob: Your first book is a memoir; and the last time you were here, we unpacked your story; your mom was with us. In fact, I’d just say to our listeners, “If you haven’t heard Christopher’s story, go to FamilyLifeToday.com and listen to the podcast of your story.” It’s a remarkable story that took you from dental school to drug dealing—

Christopher: Yes.

Bob: —to prison—

Christopher: Yes.

Bob: —and along the way, same-sex attraction. You were living in the gay lifestyle. In prison, you started reading the Bible. God gets a hold of your life. You get out of prison. It was funny—you said, “I got out of prison,” and you “wound up as a student at Moody Bible Institute.”

 

Christopher: Yes!

Bob: Everybody was complaining about the rules; and you went, “Hey, the rules are great!” [Laughter]

Christopher: “What rules?!” [Laughter]

Bob: “I can leave my room when I want to.”

Christopher: —“anytime,”—that’s right; that’s right.

Bob: This book, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel, is moving away from memoir and moving into: “Let’s grapple with what the Bible has to say about this issue.” A lot of prayer/a lot of blood, sweat, and tears, went into writing this book.

Christopher: Yes; yes, essentially, my first book—which I think was really unique, written from a mother and a prodigal; you know, not many stories are out there helping mothers to see, “This is what my kid is thinking,”—but I introduced this concept, toward the end of my book—that I just used this phrase, “holy sexuality.” I just introduced that concept, so this was in 2011 that my first book came out.

Since then, I knew I had to flesh that concept out. It took all this time to do that. Essentially, my book is a theology of sexuality—not to scare people away with theology—because we think, “I’m not a theologian.” But actually, that’s not true; we are all theologians. If we are a Christian/if we have any knowledge of God—essentially, theology is knowledge of God—then, we are theologians; so that was my hope with this new book.

Dave: I’ll add this: as I read it—yes; it’s full of theology/it’s very grounded in theology—but it’s very practical. Read it, because it isn’t just theology; it’s the foundation you have to have. I want to make sure you define holy sexuality; but then, “How do you live it out?” Let’s go there.

Christopher: I had this amazing theology professor my first year at Moody; and he told us: “Bad theology leads to apathy. Good theology compels you into action.” That’s why I want to give people good theology—that you can’t sit on your seat anymore/you can’t sit on your rear anymore—you have to go and do the work of God.

Essentially, holy sexuality is this: it is two paths—either chastity in singleness or faithfulness in marriage—that completely, and accurately, and precisely tells us how we all should live.

Bob: Now, when you say, “chastity in singleness,” that encompasses, not just our behavior—

Christopher: That’s right.

Bob: —but that encompasses how we approach our thought life. It’s bigger than just: “What are your actions?”; right?

Christopher: That’s right. I explain it more, and I fill those words in a little bit; but why did I use “chastity”? Why did I use “singleness”? Why “faithfulness”? Why “marriage”? Chastity—it’s more than just abstinence—abstaining is just not doing something. God doesn’t give us a call of “No.” That’s why I like chastity; chastity is about purity, holiness, wholeness, faithfulness. That’s why I like that word, chastity, much better than just merely not doing something.

Singleness, which is the state of being unmarried—not necessarily a vocation, or a calling, or whatever—which maybe some are—but I minister to too many people, who are unmarried, who say, “I didn’t choose this.” That’s why I chose “singleness.”

Faithfulness—I’m open to marriage; so if God provides for me a woman to marry, I don’t want to just be, you know: ‘You’re the only woman that I’m going to be sexually intimate with. You’re the only woman I’m going…’”—no; it’s going to mean much more than that; right? As a single man, I don’t have that experience; but I know that that’s what I want to commit to. It is being faithful to her—not only physically—emotionally, relationally, spiritually—I’m committed to her. That’s why I chose that word, “faithfulness,” as opposed to just other words.

Bob: We often talk about the fact that keeping your vows in marriage doesn’t mean just staying married, because you vowed more than that. When you’re talking about faithfulness, you’re saying: “Sexual intimacy is not just about exclusivity. It’s about more than that.”

Christopher: That’s right.

Bob: Yes.

Christopher: That’s right.

Bob: Let me jump back to singleness; because we’ve got folks, who are wondering, “What should my sexuality look like—

Ann: Right; I’m—

Bob: —“in that season when I’m single?”

Ann: —I’m listening to those words and: “This is a high bar.” Like especially in today’s culture, you’re setting a high bar. What does that look like?

 

Christopher: Yes; well, I mean, I think we need to, first, realize that we have to distinguish ourselves from the world; because the world is really saying, “Your sexuality should delight you, and it should define you.” I look at God’s Word, and it’s like: “No! Christ should delight me; Christ should define me,”—that’s the big difference.

I don’t want to sound trite or just make it sound like I’m just making it overly simplistic; it’s not! I mean, but if we look at—you know, since the Reformation—the reformers talking about union with Christ. I like to see that—how pastors and people in seminaries and our teachers are coming back to that and helping us to really understand what that means—I see that as that is our identity in Christ.

We need to first recognize how that is incorrect—the world’s thinking about—“We need sex.” People talking about like this abstinence-only program. There is one congresswoman that even said that, not only is that unfair, it’s cruel. Really?!—to not have sex; that’s cruel?! So we need to resist that.

But again, how we live should not simply be a “No.” There has to be much more to what God is really compelling us to. We need to realize that God has given us affection, and these affections for relationship are real. I’m not saying, though, that I think our desire to have non-sexual, non-romantic desires are part of our sexuality. I don’t think they are; because if we go that route, then that would make everyone at this table gay, or bi-, or whatever; right? My mother has a best friend, a sister in the Lord, that she desires to be close with. That then doesn’t make her a lesbian.

Instead of just saying, “How do we deal with our sexuality?” I think, “How do we deal with our desires for intimacy?” That intimacy could be physical; that intimacy could be relational, etc.; and that, to me, points us to the true family, which is the church. That was one of my goals with writing my book.

Any author, when they write a book, they don’t want to just write another book and just add something in that kind of someone has already said. What I kind of felt lacking in many of the previous books on homosexuality was this absence of the local church. They are talking about: “We need to do this,” “We need to do that,”—and good things—or even talking about the biblical texts and ethics—you know, “Is it right?” or “Is it wrong?”—how clearly Scripture says that same-sex relationships are not God’s will.

Then, there was this missing piece of the church because, for me, the church was a key part of my growth, and my healing, and my freedom. Without that, there isn’t any because—yes, like I said before, union with Christ; that’s everything—but then, we focus so much just upon kind of just the person of Jesus Christ that we, then, forget about the body of Christ. You can’t love Christ without loving the body of Christ.

Bob: And when you say the church is vital here, you’re not saying, “You really need to make sure you attend, you know, a couple of services—

Christopher: Right.

Bob: —“in a month.” You’re talking about active engagement with biblical community.

Christopher: Yes; and discipleship. Actually, that’s how I ended my book—discipleship. Anyone in ministry—they talk about discipleship—but when I look at how discipleship is done, I don’t see it done the way that the Bible tells us to. Discipleship is not a support group—not to say that support groups are not helpful; I think they are—but support groups are not meant to replace discipleship.

The context in which discipleship is meant to occur is the body of Christ, which means having headship/which means having someone speaking into your life. Like me and my best friend—that’s not discipleship—that’s friendship; you know, that can be accountability—but God has provided us the body of Christ, with pastors and leaders, who are to be our spiritual shepherds to guide us in that. Unfortunately, I see that kind of as a missing link/almost an afterthought in what—sometimes, in this conversation. That’s why I want to kind of infuse that back into the conversation.

Dave: Yet, so many people, I think—as a pastor, I’m always thinking of the person that’s not coming to my church or any church—so the unchurched single guy/married guy—you name it—out there, who my perspective would be—and this is how I thought before I ever got to be part of a Christ-centered community church—I thought, “The last place I want to go to think about my sexuality—

Christopher: Yes.

Dave: —“is church.

Christopher: Yes.

Dave: “I know what they think.

Christopher: Right.

Dave: “I know their theology,”—whether I did or not, I thought I did—“and I know what the people there are like.” So everything you’re saying right now, I’m thinking, “Well, the average guy is like, ‘I’m not going there.’”

Christopher: Right.

Dave: Because when you even say the word, “holy sexuality,” I know what it means—if I’m an unchurched guy—“It means no sex—ever.

Christopher: Right; yes.

Dave: “And those Christians never do have sex. If they do, it’s only for reproduction.”

Christopher: “Sex is bad.”

Dave: Right; exactly. You already talked about it—it’s got to be more than a “No.” Talk to that guy, who is like, “Why would I even want to know—

Ann: —and woman.

Dave: —“church”—yes; unchurched person, who has got a mindset like so many people, who listen to the culture, thinking: “This is my identity. Why would I go anywhere that combines holy, which means God,—

Christopher: Yes.

Dave: —“and sexuality together? How can that be a good thing?”

Christopher: This is why I want us to make the first thing the first thing. If I had a guy that I’m talking to, who doesn’t know Christ—and he’s wrestling with his sexuality, whether it’s heterosexual promiscuity or whether it’s same-sex relationships—whatever it is; you know, those things that aren’t blessed by God—especially, if it’s heterosexual promiscuity or even, maybe, he’s committed to his girlfriend alone; but they are not married—so these aren’t things that are blessed by God.

If I know that they’re not a Christian, I’m not really going to address the sexuality. They might come at me and have these questions: “Well, what do you think about sex before marriage?” “What do you think about same-sex marriage?” I’m going to say: “Let’s put that on a back-burner, and let’s focus on the first thing; and that is, ‘Is there even a God?’”—because, honestly, why does it matter what God thinks if you don’t even believe in God; right? [Laughter]

Dave: Right.

Ann: Right.

Christopher: “So let’s go to the first thing.” This is why I think, as a Christian, sometimes, we forfeit our responsibility to preach and share the gospel. We push it into the hands of the church and the pastor, like: “I want my neighbor to know Christ, so I invited him to church.” Well, great; but have you invited him into your home and shared the gospel?”—or at least, I’m not saying you need to just hit people over the head; I mean,—

Bob: —“tell them your story.”

Christopher: Yes; right. I mean, like Rosaria Butterfield—

Bob: Right.


Dave: Right.

Christopher: —Pastor Smith—he knew how hardheaded she was, and I’m saying that because I know her really well.

Bob: Right.

Christopher: And she needed to be just softened. You need to live the gospel before you preach the gospel.

Bob: Right.

Christopher: I think we need to make the first thing first: it’s faith in Christ. As Rosaria says so well: “I was not saved out of homosexuality; I was saved out of unbelief.”

With a guy, who does not know Christ, I’m just going to live the gospel—invite him into my life, and wait for those God-moments to, then, be able to share the gospel. Then, once God begins working in that person’s life, and the Holy Spirit is indwelling in that person and changing, then we’re able to address these other issues; because they have/their mind has gone from darkened understanding to be enlightened in Christ.

Bob: I’ve shared this story before, but it’s because it had such a profound impact on me the first time I heard it. Tim Keller, who was the pastor for years at Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York—in his early years there, he said, whenever he’d get done preaching—he’d say, “Amen”; and all these New Yorkers would flood forward and say, “I’ve got a question for you.”

He said: “One Sunday, a woman comes forward—and there is a whole crowd around me—and she says, ‘I have a question for you.’ She says, ‘I’ve been coming here for three or four weeks. I’m thinking I might want to join the church.’ She said: ‘I’m a lesbian. Would I have to give up my lesbian relationship to be a member here at the church?’” Here he is—in front of the firing squad; right?—with that question. Everybody turns and looks at the pastor in New York and says, “How are you going to answer this one?”

It was brilliant; he said, “I think you’re asking the wrong question.” She said, “What do you mean?” He said: “Well, I think you need to be asking the question: ‘Who do you think Jesus is; and do you believe He is who we have been saying He is and who we believe He is?’ If you don’t, then there’s no sense in joining the church. If you do, that’s going have implications for every area of your life—not just your sexuality—every area of your life; but if He is who we say He is, you don’t have any other option than to surrender to Him.”

Christopher: That’s right.

Bob: I thought, “Boy, you talk about diffusing a bomb.”

Christopher: Yes.

Bob: But he did the same thing you’re talking about, saying—somebody comes in and says: “I want to know about this question,” or “…that question.” You say, “Let’s just pull back and say: ‘What do you believe about God?’ ‘Who do you believe Jesus is?’ ‘What do you think this is all about?’”

Christopher: Yes; I mean—it’s taking, you know, Jesus’ words: “If anyone will come after Me…” I mean, that’s all of us—

Bob: Yes.

Christopher: —that’s not just some.

Bob: “Anyone” in the Greek means anyone; right?

Christopher: Anyone; right. [Laughter] It doesn’t mean just pastors, just missionaries, just church leaders—“…anyone would come after Me,”—he/she—“must”——that’s “must”—

Bob: Yes.

Christopher: —not sort of/not maybe—“must deny himself, pick up his cross, and follow Me.” Even the “…carry your cross,” Luke adds “daily.”

I think we’ve misunderstood that. We think carry our cross is “carry this burden”: “Okay; my boss—he’s just/he’s an unbeliever—and he’s just so hard on me. I’m just—I just have to carry my cross, and I just have to grit and bear it.”

The cross is probably the most gruesome form of death anyone could ever experience—that is what we are supposed to carry—that’s the symbol of that, so we need to die. I don’t know how else to sanitize that, but it is about just death to self so that Christ can live in us. That’s/to me, that’s a glorious thing; because I know what I’m capable of, and I want Christ to be living in me.

Ann: So let’s say/let’s get down to some practical things. Let’s say I have my son, or my daughter, or my friend, or a coworker come up and tell me, “I have same-sex attraction,” or “I’ve been living a lifestyle that the church wouldn’t accept.” What’s the best response?—you know, because everybody is like: “I don’t want to say the wrong thing,” “I don’t want to…” When you think about—if somebody is carrying that cross—

Christopher: Yes.

Ann: —they are having these desires, and they are not knowing what to do, but they do want to follow Jesus. Are you saying the best thing we can do is to love them/to love them to Christ?

Christopher: Well, so, okay; first—yes, it is love. I kind of begin in my book, though, kind of tweaking that statement a little bit; because the world says, “Love is love is love”; right?—you know—“We just need to love—

Ann: —“and accept.”

Christopher: —“the gay community. The Christians—what you’re doing—you’re not loving.”

My point, actually, is that I don’t find issue that we need to be more loving. I believe we need to know what that love is grounded in. All love is grounded in truth. If you have the wrong truth, you will have the wrong love. If you have the correct truth, you will have the correct form. If you have God’s truth, you will, then, be able to love as God loves.

If you have a loved one that comes to you and confides with you/opens up, I suggest the first thing is to thank them—“Thank you,”—and say: “You know what? I know how hard it was for you to open up to me. Thank you for trusting me. Thank you for opening up to me. Tell me more.”

One thing you don’t want to do, as a parent, is say that—“Thank you,” and they’ll say, “I love you,”—don’t follow that up, right at that moment—, with “but…”

Bob: Yes.

Christopher: The reason—and I’m not saying that you don’t believe that anymore—I’m just saying, for that moment, just listen. Save that “…but…” for later; because if you say that “..but…” at that moment, you’ve just erased what you’ve just said.

Bob: That’s right.

Christopher: You better have more conversations after that; because then, you can talk about—and honestly, I can almost guarantee—if you are living for Christ, if you’re in God’s Word, and you’re growing in Christ—they know what you believe. But what they are questioning is whether you’re going to accept them or not.

Bob: Yes; we’re going to talk more about these kind of interactions as we continue our conversation this week. You deal with this in the book, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel.

I just keep coming back, guys, to what is at the heart of what we’ve talked about today—pretty simple—chastity in singleness; faithfulness in marriage. We live in a culture, today, that just says: “That’s crazy. That’s not how you think or act.”

Dave: I would add, “It is simple; it’s not easy.”


Bob: Yes.


Dave: It’s actually simple and very profound in terms of how to live it out. I love the clarity of the simplicity of it—but/and I’m looking forward to talking more about: “Okay, what does that actually look like to live out?”—because is not easy.

Bob: Right.

Dave: That doesn’t mean it’s bad. It means it’s worth pursuing, because it’s a high bar that’s worth living for.

Bob: Well, when you’ve got a book here that—again, I’m going to come back to what Rosaria Butterfield said: “The most important humanly-composed book about biblical sexuality and godly living for our times,”—that’s worth getting a copy of and spending some time reading.

Dave: I mean, that—she said it’s right up there with the Bible.

Bob: She—[Laughter]

Christopher: Well, I don’t know about that.

Dave: It’s like: “Wow!”

Bob: Yes, yes; it’s pretty significant, and it is a great book; although, I wouldn’t put it at the Bible level. We’ve got copies of Christopher’s book, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel. It’s available in our FamilyLife Today Resource Center. You can order it from us, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or call to order at 1-800-FL-TODAY. Again, the title of the book, Holy Sexuality and the Gospel: Sex, Desire, and Relationships Shaped by God’s Grand Story by our guest today, Christopher Yuan. You can go to FamilyLifeToday.com to order for your copy online; or call to order at 1-800-358-6329; that’s 1-800-“F” as in family, “L” as in life, and then the word, “TODAY.”

 

We hear from so many of you, regularly, about how important it is for us to have these kinds of conversations to help all of us think wisely, biblically, compassionately on subjects like this. We just want to say, “Thank you,” to the listeners who make these kinds of conversations possible for all of us—those of you who are regular Legacy Partners, who donate monthly to support FamilyLife Today, and those of you who make an occasional contribution from time to time—every donation we receive helps extend the reach of this ministry, making it possible for us to regularly interact with more people, more often, around important subjects like this.

So thank you for your part if you are, not only a listener, but also a supporter of this ministry. On behalf of your fellow listeners, those who have benefited from our conversation today, thank you for this investment. And if you are a regular listener, and you’ve never made a donation to support FamilyLife Today, today’s a great day to join the team and pay it forward to make FamilyLife Today possible for others. You can donate, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com; or you can call 1-800-FL-TODAY to donate.

When you do, we’d like to say, “Thank you,” by sending you two books from our friends Matt and Lisa Jacobson. We talked about them earlier this week. The books—100 Ways To Love Your Husband; 100 Ways To Love Your Wife—very practical ways we can express our love for one another. The books are our thank-you gift to you when you make a donation today, again, online, at FamilyLifeToday.com or by calling 1-800-FL-TODAY. Thanks, in advance, for your support; and we hope you enjoy the books and find them helpful in your marriage.

And we hope you can join us, again, tomorrow when we’re going to talk about how critical it is for us to understand the reality of our identity in Christ/our identity as children of God as we deal with all kinds of temptations, including sexual temptation. Christopher Yuan will be with us, again, tomorrow. I hope you can be with us as well.

I want to thank our engineer today, Keith Lynch. We got some help from Bruce Goff and our entire broadcast production team. On behalf of our hosts, Dave and Ann Wilson, I’m Bob Lepine. We will see you back next time for another edition of FamilyLife Today.

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