In our families and in our churches, we are far too often late to the conversation about sexuality with our teenagers, and reactionary once we speak up. This should not be the case. The kitchen table and living room are perhaps the best places for this discussion, and the church is called to equip its people to follow Christ and make disciples within our culture.
We must talk about the issues—homosexuality, same-sex attraction, gender fluidity, pornography, and sexual immorality—and we must do so clearly and compassionately. Within our cultural climate we cannot retreat out of fear or remain silent out of ignorance in either the home or the church. Now is the time to engage. Now is the time for honest answers to hard questions. Now is the time to listen well and speak truth in love. Now is the time to address the issues of sexuality with our teenagers.
The issue of sexuality is closely connected to the trustworthiness of the Bible for many teenagers. Too many teenagers are not grounded in the Bible enough to discuss a biblical response to the issue, and the Bible does not function in an authoritative way in their life.
Kevin DeYoung is right: “The challenge before the church is to convince ourselves as much as anyone that believing the Bible does not make us bigots, just as reflecting the times does not make us relevant”.1
This challenge means two things:
While there are many important and essential things we need to teach teenagers about gender and sexuality, it is imperative that we learn to listen well. We must be invested and involved in the lives of students so that we have the opportunity to listen. When it comes to discussing issues of sexuality—especially homosexuality and gender issues—make sure to learn the stories of students who are struggling with these issues or have friends who are. Many teenagers fear being labeled judgemental or intolerant, especially when they have friends who identify as homosexual or as transgender. We need to hear this struggle and speak directly to it with grace and truth. We must then create spaces where students are not only receiving God’s word but discussing their lives and applying God’s word to specific areas of it.
This topic cannot be addressed in a sermon series and then put on the shelf. It must be addressed faithfully as we teach through the Bible in our ministries. It must also be addressed personally through discipleship relationships. In the home, parents must be equipped with resources to discuss these issues with their children around the dinner table.
In light of our current cultural climate, many teenagers will likely take a soft stance on these issues and maybe even disagree with the clear teaching of God’s word, especially when it comes to its political aspects (i.e. same-sex marriage). While we cannot compromise the consistent biblical witness about God’s design for gender or sexuality, we must also not cut off conversation with students the first time they push back against it. Like all areas of discipleship, we must commit to patiently walking with teenagers as they come to know and grow up into Christ. But please don’t misunderstand: this is not an agreeing to disagree position.
Whatever we do, regardless of the issue we are addressing, we cannot shift our focus from the hope of the gospel. Following Christ is hard and it will entail holding unpopular positions within our culture. We should not only make the gospel clear in our teaching, we should show why the gospel is really good news. We should be showing the worth of Jesus in the way we live and what we teach. We should highlight the joy of knowing and being known by our Redeemer. We should show how the gospel really is good news to the lives of teenagers in our culture. The gospel is good news for all people regardless of age, gender, race, or sexuality.
The gospel holds out a better way for teenagers in the midst of our hyper-sexualized world. Now is the time to press into God’s word, draw near to our neighbours, and speak and live with compassion and without compromise as we address the issues of sexuality with our teenagers.
1. Kevin DeYoung, What Does the Bible Really Teach about Homosexuality?, Crossway, Wheaton, 2015, p. 143. ↩