Young man says that ‘I was born like this’ speech is a ‘lie’ of activism

by time news

The testimony of a young woman who lived in the practice of bisexuality has been reverberating in the Christian press around the world. In her account, she rejects the idea that homosexuals are “born that way” and claims that this is a “lie” used by LGBT activism.

Brittany Whyte spoke about her life before and after coming to Christ in a video posted on YouTube. She explains that if it weren’t for the transforming power of Jesus Christ, she would still be struggling with homosexual attraction and her desire for both sexes.

The young woman firmly believes that her previous struggles with same-sex attraction resulted from a manifestation of perversion caused by “spirits” that degraded her family, but that Jesus “revived” and delivered her.

She added that she believes no one can be born LGBT because all humans are “made in the image of God” as recorded in Genesis 1:27, but mused that the “confusion” and “perversion” of sin manifests itself in many different ways. .

“After knowing the truth and realizing that it’s actually a perversion that followed the family, as if this is a perverted bloodline thing. I was like ‘okay, this is not me’. And then, reading the Word too, God says that He ‘made man and woman in His image, after His likeness’. He says, ‘be fruitful and multiply,’” he declared, referencing Genesis 1:28.

Brittany added that since God commanded husbands and wives to be “fruitful and multiply,” it means that “a woman going [para a cama] with another woman” contradicts the Bible: “Even before Christ, I knew it was wrong. But it was something that was just in me. For people who say ‘I was born this way’, that’s a lie. I just have to tell you exactly how it is,” she added.

“The Lord helped me to realize that it was rooted in trauma and the generational spirits that [têm] followed the lineage. Then, however, he chooses to speak out. For me, it was homosexuality. For other people, this might be pornography. It could be, you know, adultery. But it was the same confusion and the same perversion”, contextualized Brittany.

Family

In her testimony, the young woman spoke about her upbringing and how, although her family seemed happy, she felt that her parents did not give her the attention and love through communication that she always wanted.

“The Lord had to teach me, if we don’t have love, how can we give love [aos outros]? Since I didn’t have that attention at home, I looked for it outside. I would get it from friends. […] I would give it my all. I didn’t understand the limits. I knew a lot of people and I’m sure a lot of people knew me. But I was bullied. […] The Lord helped me to realize that this really stemmed from a childhood trauma,” he said.

As a child, Whyte recalled witnessing his cousin being molested by a family member, which led her to copy the behavior by practicing what she called “child-on-child sexual abuse”: “So, around elementary and high school, when they started teaching about girls and boys and puberty and stuff like that, I wasn’t ready for that, because that led me to pornography. And I was addicted to pornography.”

From that point on, she recalls seeking acceptance in romantic relationships with other women: “I was very promiscuous,” she said, emphasizing that things got a lot worse in college.

the turnaround

Then one of her friends invited her to church for the first time. The service piqued her interest in Jesus and she began to lose interest in the things of the world: “When I came across those things I was struggling with, I was no longer acting on them. I wasn’t smoking weed. I wasn’t drinking, partying, ogling people. But I had not yet been freed from these spirits,” said the young woman.

“In October 2021, I was being traumatized by perverted thoughts,” Brittany recalled, countering that the way out came through godly counsel she received at her new church over the months, with the congregation helping her through “a inner healing process.

“The Lord freed me”, she summarized, stating that she was guided by the Holy Spirit to finally have the courage to tell her parents all the struggles she faced in her childhood and adolescence.

“Jesus is everything,” said Brittany Whyte, according to the The Christian Post. “He revived me. He is my healer. He is my husband. He is my best friend. He is my father. […] Now I call him ‘daddy’. I’m singing to Him all the time. God is my best friend.”

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