A former lesbian thanks AFA American Family Association
Editor’s note: This testimony and the advice given in the adjacent sidebar are from a letter sent to AFA, addressed to AFA Chairman Don Wildmon. At the request of the woman involved, her real name has been changed.
I wish to share with you a little of my testimony. I am 27 years old and
lived as a lesbian for almost 10 years. Six years ago I was delivered from that
sin by the grace of God and now live as a consecrated heterosexual, pursuing the
sanctification which I know I will not fully receive until I meet my Savior
face-to-face.
When I was 11 years old and again at age 14, I was raped by two different "best
friends." They were both female, and the experiences were something that have
hindered my trust in women to this day.
These two incidents definitely impacted the way I viewed myself and put the idea
into my head that I was a lesbian. At the time I didn’t have any guys liking me
and didn’t have any feelings for guys.
When this happened at age 14, I confided [about the rapes] to a school
counselor, who then gave me a telephone number for an organization in the city
for sexual minority youth and transsexuals. She said that this group would have
the answers that I was looking for. [When I went to the group] I told them how I
felt and they gave me the label to identify myself: "lesbian."
I got fully involved in the lifestyle. From the time I was 14 until the time I
was 19 years old, I slept with over 25 women. I was also part of an organization
that targeted youth between ages 14 and 21, that taught us not to question our
homosexuality. For us [gay and lesbian] kids, it was more like a club than
anything else. When I was there, there were about 50 to 60 kids that met
regularly. It was a "safe place" for us to find a same-sex partner. In other
words, we were all sleeping with each other.
We were encouraged to "live our lives with pride," meaning we were encouraged by
this organization to "come out" in our schools and fight for our rights as
homosexuals. We demanded our equality by taking our same-sex partners to school
dances, gearing class assignments around the propaganda, and making public
displays of affection. I was gladly forbidden to attend my prom because I wanted
to take my girlfriend. This was all OK because it was done in the name of gay
rights.
When I was 20, I became distressed over my life. Something was missing. My
steady girlfriend and I had just split up because she was physically, mentally
and emotionally abusive.
Following the breakup, I wanted to kill myself. At 1:00 a.m. I slipped out my
friend’s back door and said, "God, help me." It was the second most powerful
prayer in my life, even though I did not know Him, and was a blatant sinner, and
I did not even know that speaking those words was a prayer.
Yet He heard me, and He answered that prayer. You see, right after praying it, I
got into my car with the intent of crashing it and killing myself. I
intentionally wrecked at more than 60 miles per hour on a 25-mile-an-hour curve.
My car flipped three times and wedged between two trees, upside down. I climbed
out of the car without a scratch on me. The police, the emergency medical
workers, and the fireman on the scene were all baffled because I should have
been dead. My car, which should have been totaled, had one dent on the roof
where it hit a mailbox. When they pushed the car over onto its wheels it ran
perfectly as if nothing ever happened. Still, I did not believe it was God
because I did not believe in that kind of stuff.
I continued in the lesbian lifestyle. I began dating a girl whose mother was the
pastor of a church and started going with this girl to church, where I started
hearing the word of God. A number of things began to happen which made me begin
to believe that God might be real. I even asked Jesus to forgive me of my sins,
and promised God I would quit smoking, drinking, and having sex with women. I
broke up with that girl because I believed that God disapproved. Eventually I
left that church.
I prayed and asked God to bring me to a new local church where I could dwell on
Him. He did. At the new church, I met with the youth pastor and told him
everything. He and his wife took me in and mentored me, and they impacted my
life beyond anyone else in my entire life. They loved me for who I was, and I’d
never had anything like that. In 1999, I took Jesus Christ as my Lord and
Savior.
For four years I struggled, going back and forth, at times reverting back to my
thought patterns concerning women. I was also beginning to develop feelings for
men, and that was really scary. But God was healing me. Part of my struggle was
that, while I knew God had forgiven me, I hadn’t forgiven myself.
My deliverance did not come the way I wanted it. I wanted instant results, but
this took years, and to be frank, I am still healing in some areas. Today I live
my life in pursuit of my calling. Not to be what the world has made me, but to
be what He has made me, to seek Him, and follow Him to the ends of my days.
I never thought I would be at this point. My heart’s desire is to be married and
to have children of my own. That’s all I want out of life. I want to be a mother
and be there to support my husband.
That is all I have to say. Thank you for your time and I hope this letter
somehow encouraged you. Keep up your good work.
