A Simple Reason to Get Married: “We Were in Love”

Nate and Sara CollinsMost same-sex attracted Christians who embrace a traditional Christian sexual ethic will remain celibate. Some, however, choose to pursue marriage with someone of the opposite sex. We’ve written about such marriages on Spiritual Friendship before, and last week we invited Mike Allen to share his story. This week, we wanted to share an interview with Nate and Sara Collins that was originally done by Preston Sprinkle for his blog, Theology in the Raw.

As Nate makes clear, nobody should use this kind of story to prescribe an opposite-sex marriage for all LGB Christians. When people feel pressured to hide their orientation and enter marriage, the results can be devastating. But there are many different ways of living a life that is faithful and pleasing to God, and we want give voice to that variety. — Ron Belgau

Preston Sprinkle: Thanks, Nate and Sara, for being willing to answer some questions! Sara, we’d first love to hear from you. What did you think when Nate first told you about his sexuality?

Sara Collins: Nate told me about his same-sex attractions about three months after we started dating, and I remember telling him that I was surprised, but not surprised at the same time.  It wasn’t something I had expected to hear from him, but I knew that all of us, myself included, have life experiences that present unique challenges. Everybody has a story, and this was his.  I also had a lot of questions and fear, but I knew that I was already in love with him, and hearing about his same-sex attractions didn’t change the fact that I still wanted to be with him.

Preston: Nate, how would you describe your attraction to Sara before you two were married?

Nate Collins: When Sara and I first started dating, I really only felt the beginnings of romantic interest in her. We had been good friends for over a year, so I already knew that I enjoyed being around her and that she was an amazing person.  As we grew more intimate, first emotionally as we shared our hopes and dreams with each other, then spiritually, and then eventually physically, the seed of initial attraction I felt towards her steadily grew.  When it became clear to me that we were heading in the direction of marriage, I was scared but also excited, because I sensed that God was also uniquely preparing both of us for that moment.  By the time we were married, I hadn’t become “straight” because I still experienced same-sex attractions.  At the same time, a “one-woman” orientation had been developing within me alongside my same-sex orientation during my relationship with Sara, so marrying her felt like the most natural thing to do, and what my heart had in fact grown to long for. (Also, this might be a good place to say that I don’t identify as bisexual because I’ve never felt sexually attracted to any other woman besides Sara, and honestly can’t even imagine what that would be like.)

Preston: Why did you both proceed to get married?  What were some of your fears and some of your hopes and expectations?

Nate: I honestly don’t think our answer to the first question would be essentially any different from the answer of a straight man and woman who decide to get married.  By the time we had dated for about six months, I knew that I was in love with Sara, that I wanted to spend the rest of my life with her, and that I couldn’t imagine life otherwise.

Sara: I knew that Nate was physically attracted to me by the time we got married, so some of the fears I had had before then had already begun to go away.  Besides that, like any other young couple in love we had hopes and dreams of raising a family together and flourishing wherever God placed us.

Preston: Looking back now on ten years of marriage, what have been the greatest challenges that you’d be willing to share?

Sara: Before we got married, I remember reading something about mixed orientation marriages that said that in many ways, these marriages encounter the same general kinds of problems as two straight married people have.  Over the past ten years we’ve actually found this to be true. We’ve definitely gone through hard times and seasons of conflict, but we’ve seen other couples go through similar difficulties.

Preston: And what are some unexpected joys that you’ve experienced?

Nate: I grew up constantly praying for God to take away my same-sex attractions so I could be “normal.”  But that outlook seems so foreign today.  Perhaps it’s because the orientation has been a part of me for so long that I don’t really expect the same-sex attractions to ever leave, but I think it’s also because I’ve experienced so much joy in being fully known and loved by Sara for who I am.  Knowing that I’m God’s man for her and for our boys has been amazing, and a source of enormous peace and comfort to fall back on when times are hard and life gets stressful.

Sara: I feel like our marital friendship has only grown deeper over the years, and that makes me feel really happy and blessed. We’ve gone through difficult times like most couples, but they’ve actually strengthened our relationship and made us grow closer together.

Preston: We’d love to hear from both of you whether you would recommend a mixed orientation marriage to others. Or what type of people could enjoy such a marriage, and what type of people would you not recommend it to?

It’s kinda hard to answer this question.  First of all, many LGB people really don’t have any desire to pursue a mixed orientation marriage, and there really should be nothing strange about that. We got married for the simple reason that we were in love, but we know that this path probably isn’t one many LGB people will take. So nobody should use our story to prescribe an opposite-sex marriage for all LGB Christians. Second, although we’re quite happy with our marriage, we know that lots of families have been torn apart because one of the spouses wasn’t up-front and honest with the other about his or her orientation. When trust is broken, it can very often seem impossible to restore it, and we don’t want to minimize how painful and difficult this reality can be for couples in these situations. At the same time, we think that with humility, honesty, support (not only within the marriage, but also drawn from close, same-sex friendships outside the marriage), and consistent communication—all good things for any marriage!—mixed orientation marriage should be reconsidered as a beautiful and viable vocation for gay people. It won’t be for many, and that’s fine, but it may be for some. A non-straight orientation can make things somewhat more challenging, but not impossibly so, and not without also contributing some of its own joys. As long as the same-sex attracted individual truly loves the opposite sex partner, and neither of them are expecting marriage to be a “silver bullet” solution… because it won’t!

Preston: Thanks so much for your time and authenticity! Go ahead and leave us with some closing thoughts.

Thanks for giving us this opportunity to share our story!  We’re grateful to God for our life together, and for allowing our marriage to be something that encourages and strengthens both of us. But it’s also important to remember that while marriage can be wonderful, it’s a temporary covenant that ends at death. Moreover, God has designed ALL of us, married or single, LGB or straight, with a deep and profound need to be in loving, intimate relationship with others. It’s quite likely that the majority of LGB Christians will have no desire to be in an opposite-sex marriage. If this is the case, then married Christians have a tremendous responsibility and opportunity not only to extend community to them and to support and honor them in their unique calling, but also to receive community from them as co-partakers of life within the family of God.

Nate and Sara grew up as missionary kids in South America and Europe and met in college at Moody Bible Institute. Today, Nate is a PhD candidate in New Testament at Southern Seminary in Louisville, KY, and Sara is a small business owner. They have two young sons, and live in the rural countryside of central Kentucky. Nate can be found on the web at The Great Tradition and on Twitter: @NateCollins

17 thoughts on “A Simple Reason to Get Married: “We Were in Love”

  1. I was in a MoM for many years, have several kids. It ended in divorce. I wish we had known that we were not alone and might’ve had better support. Your story might just give those other couples the confidence to face their fears and talk about their painful secrets, to find fellowship with other believers and find success in their marriage.

    • That is definitely my hope, bryden, and part of why I find it worthwhile to be transparent and vulnerable about my experience. It’s so hard sometimes to know what “success” looks like in marriage, but all to easy to experience failure. I’m sorry for the sadness and difficulties it seems you’ve had in the past, and will pray for sweet redemption to take place some way, somehow.

  2. Thanks, Ron, for posting this insightful interview. And thanks to Nate and Sara for their candid comments. Much of what they said was similar to my own experience of being a gay man who chose an opposite-sex marriage. I could add two more reasons that were foundational to my decision…

    I am the eldest of four children. By the time I was 29, all of my siblings were married and raising children of their own. There was a certain degree of pressure from my parents (who were unaware of my issues with same-sex attraction) to get married and ‘settle down’. External pressure, although compelling, was not sufficient to tip the scales in favour of marriage. I had enough internal pressure of my own. For many years I had longed to have a wife and raise a family – not necessarily to be seen as ‘normal’, but to fulfill my God-given potential as a man, a husband and a father. My decision to begin dating the woman who eventually became my wife was made after much prayer, many conversations with friends who knew me well, and coming to a sense of peace (and submission) about moving toward marriage. Despite not knowing how it could happen, I knew that God was leading me toward it and that it would be good for me because He was in it.

    I also pursued marriage because of my inability to cope with my intense sexual desires. I Corinthians 7:9 became my primary motivation toward marriage: “But if they cannot control themselves, they should marry, for it is better to marry than to burn with passion.” To my way of thinking, this advice from the Apostle Paul applied to me as a gay man just as it would to any man.

    Now, many years later, I am single again due to the death of my wife almost four years ago, and once again I am pondering the title of this post: what reason would I have to get remarried? As before, I have two roads before me: celibacy and opposite-sex marriage. I am currently pursuing celibacy and am finding great contentment in it. At this stage of my life I no longer have the same drive to raise a family (been there, done that) but I will have to determine if I can remain self-controlled in the area of sexual desire. Thankfully God remains faithful. He will continue grant wisdom and direction when I need it.

    • Thanks for your comments, elhata, and for sharing your story. I resonated with much of what you said, especially the part about praying over the decision to pursue marriage and consulting close friends. I’m sorry for the sad loss of your wife, and will pray that God will guide you as you seek his wise plan for your life.

  3. Spiritual Friendship could present a much clearer message if it ignored stories like this. The message would be clearer, but the message would be false.

    Ron, Wes, and company: I admire your commitment to represent those of us (like myself) who pursue marriage despite strong attractions to the same sex. The more such stories get “out there”, the more unthinkable it will be for a man to marry a woman without confessing his same-sex attraction. That would be a wonderful thing.

  4. Hey guys. Thanks for being willing to speak up and be counted. My wife and I have been married for over two decades. It’s encouraging to see others also walking this same path.

  5. I’m so encourage by the maturity of these couples (Nate and his wife, Mike and his wife)

    They certainly approach marriage with eyes wide open.

    You guys are a blessing to heterosexual marriages too.

    Thanks

  6. “As Nate makes clear, nobody should use this kind of story to prescribe an opposite-sex marriage for all LGB Christians.”

    I think we have to be cautious with non-qualitive-esque statements like this. *Most* gay Christians should not – and most likely won’t – be in opposite sex marriages and those who are have to be so very very careful. The vast majority of those unions do not make it in the end. Being in love with someone of the opposite sex is not a good enough reason IMO for someone who is gay to get married to someone of the opposite sex. That said, I wish this couple all the best. 🙂

    • “The vast majority of those unions do not make it in the end.”

      Are you talking about marriages where the gay partner has been honest before the marriage? If so, where do you get your information? (Obviously, marriages predicated on a fundamental deception often end badly, but that need have nothing to do with homosexuality).

  7. I think that’s part of the problem though. There are no numbers right now to currently show us if people being upfront about their orientation before marriage fare better in this situation than those who don’t. I would expect they would, but we just don’t know. If there is evidence I don’t know about it. The fact that these marriages entail problems that extend beyond those experienced in other marriages where the attraction between members of the opposite sex is likely longstanding and established at the very least should give us pause. This and the fact that I think there are a host of reasons people might have for marriages like this that could and probably do mascarade as love, need to make us painstakingly cautious about such unions. I believe they can and should exist but for all the reasons I listed and more, they will and should be the exception and not the rule.

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