|
by Donnie McClurkin
View a pdf of this testimony. Copies may be distributed free of charge.
A
young boy’s mind should be on school and play, on trucks and toys and
growing up to be whatever he wants for the moment. Pre-adolescence
should be years of innocence, naiveté and blissful ignorance. When a
child is thrust into adult situations that he is not mature enough to
handle, that child will fall into a downward spiral of confusion that
is not easily reversed.
At the age of eight, I was hurled into
this spiral of confusion, violated by an instance of rape. Pandora’s
box was opened into my pre-pubescent life, and I was introduced to
adult sexuality, issues, and perversions beyond my ability to escape
without damage. On June 6,1968, a tragedy struck my family while I was
in the yard playing with my six siblings. Forgetting my responsibility
of watching my 2-year-old brother, Thomas, I left him in the un-gated
yard to cross the street to retrieve a ball. Unbeknownst to me, he was
following me. Watching from the living room window, my mother screamed
for me to get the baby. I turned around just in time to see my
baby brother struck down by a speeding car—killed with my mother
helplessly watching from the window. My mother got to him just in time
to hear his last word: “Mommy.”
My mother was devastated by the
tragic event in front of our home. My parents sent all of us
children to be cared for by our Uncle Clarence. They had no way of
knowing that he was a pedophile. That night I was sexually abused
and raped by this uncle, causing me great hurt and confusion. I
now see that this happened because he was a broken man, unhealed, with
no one to help him.
A seed had been planted—a seed of
homosexuality that I would struggle with for many years to come. I was
not born with these sexual tendencies. It was not my chromosomes
or DNA. These tendencies surfaced because I was thrust as an
8-year-old boy into my first sexual relationship with a broken man.
Before I could ever know the purpose or pleasure of a woman, have my
first date or even my first kiss – the wound was inflicted.
I received Jesus a year after the rape at the age of nine, but
the struggle was just starting. I had feelings and thoughts that
I knew were not right. I had compelling desires and attractions
that developed seemingly beyond my control. These made it
difficult to interact with my male friends or any males at all. I was
raised also in a sea of women, adding to that difficulty. My
taboo, secret homosexual desires made me shy and reclusive.
My
two escapes were music and church. At church, I could escape the
thoughts and feelings, and hear stories of how the power of God changed
others’ lives. It was another world—my world, where I felt at peace, as
if I belonged. I started playing the piano at age 11, and I was
consumed with gospel music. I did not sing that well, but loved
to sing all the same. I would listen for hours to Andrae Crouch
and the Disciples and fantasize about singing in the group.
Somehow, my perversions could not bother me there. Church was a
safe haven that seemed to remove me from the grasp of the temptation—if
only temporarily.
A Deceptive Underworld
At
13, I was sexually molested again. The seed of homosexual lust and
desire planted by my uncle was fertilized and deeply rooted with his
son’s sexual violation of me. I was told that I could not tell or
he would do much worse. In fear, I remained silent for years.
Soon
I discovered many others in my church wrestled with these problems and
wanted to be free. They had also remained silent because the
issue was taboo. Week after week, they sought deliverance from this
desire. Like me, they had been thrust into this by someone who
took advantage of them.
I wonder how it would have been if there
were someone, - anyone - who I could have confided in before this seed
took root. Instead of finding a mentor, I discovered vultures in
the church -- predatory men who attempted to take advantage of a broken
boy and his confusion. My security was invaded when other broken
men, in need of healing, revealed their secret lifestyles and
introduced me to a deceptive underworld in the church.
Singing on
Sundays after a weekend rendezvous was commonplace. I saw other
“Christians” in compromising places; yet faithfully, hypocritically and
deceptively at their posts in church as though nothing was wrong.
Brothers and sisters would look for help from these respected men and
women, but found themselves victims of the broken leaders in a vicious
cycle.
Despite this, my love for Christ continued to grow.
God sent people to my rescue to aid in my deliverance. The women
of the church ironically helped mold my masculinity, and became active
in breaking this curse. Although these older mothers did not know
exactly what I struggled with, the Holy Spirit revealed enough to them.
They
would pray with me, talk with me, and a few of them—Sister Kitty
Braizley in particular—would even teach me how to carry myself like a
man. When I wanted to sing soprano, they would say, “Get some bass in
your voice!” Or, “Men don’t sing soprano!” Sister Braizley even taught
me how to walk. If I held my hand up in a feminine way, she would hit
it and say. “Put your hands at your side. Men don’t hold their hands
like that!” While these played a part in my healing, none of these things could have helped me without my desire and determination to be whole. Change requires an individual’s sincere desire in order for it to be real and complete.
A Time to Hate
The
seed that was planted had to be first destroyed from the root and
plucked up. I had to become tired of the torment and seek a genuine
exit from the desire. I read in Ecclesiastes 3 that there is a
time to love and a time to hate. That struck me as odd because I had
never heard a sermon deal with why to, what to, who to and how to
hate. I had to learn how to actually hate the thing that was
abhorrent to God—even if it is in me.God started to deal with me
through that Scripture and show me what He meant:
1. Why to hate.
He hates the things that are purposed to destroy the ones He loves and
are against His nature and design. He created me to be a whole man and
to love one woman. Anything else is perversion of the male purpose.
2. What to hate. Whatever has been sent to confuse, delay and deny me of my purpose has to become my enemy.
3. Whom to hate.
The church tends to misdirect their emotions toward what they deem
“sin,” we condemn the person instead of the deed. We have damaged and
lost so many with our pious and sanctimonious attitudes.
Ephesians
6:12 says, “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of
this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (KJV).
Our battle is not with a person, but with the spirit that caused things
to happen through the person. I do not hate the men who sexually abused
me in my childhood, nor the predators who preyed on me in my
weakness. I hate what caused these men to do this, what infected
their minds and brought them to damage a child’s life.
4. How to hate.
Develop a “dislike” for the things that have interrupted your
happiness. See that wrong is wrong, no matter how you feel. The
appetite that has been developed through years of abuse for things that
are harmful must change. Regardless of how comfortable you have
become in these situations. I began to pray daily, especially
when the lust would stir up: “Lord, teach me how to hate what You
hate.” I would constantly recite, “Every enemy of God is an enemy of
mine.”
While my struggle continued, the more I immersed myself in
the study of the Scriptures and used those verses during my temptation,
I began to win the battle. Psalm 119:9-11 (NKJV) says: “How can a
young man cleanse his way? By taking heed according to Your word. With
my whole heart, I have sought You; Oh, let me not wander from Your
commandments! Your word I have hidden in my heart, that I might not sin
against You.” By the Power of GodI found that when I knew the
Scriptures and used them in the midst of my temptation, they gave me
strength to overcome. I do not want it to sound so simple; there
are many other things to be done to break the curse of homosexuality.
The power of Scripture did help bring me to total deliverance. The seed
was killed from its root, plucked up, and now there is a seed of
righteousness that is incorruptible.
Luke 8:11 states that the
“Word of God is a seed.” It is of the utmost importance that the
seed of His Word be planted in your heart (mind) in order for you to
maintain deliverance. When the seed is planted into a person’s heart,
if used correctly it will stop the natural cycle of sin. The Word will
multiply, grow, and bring forth fruit that will remain.
Some may
resent some statements I have made about homosexuality. I can
understand. Some have no desire to change from their lifestyle.
However, there are countless people who are discontent in this
lifestyle and want to be freed from it. They were thrust into
homosexuality by neglect, abuse and molestation. They desperately
want to live differently. For them, I write this without apology,
knowing that I have been through this and have experienced God’s power
to change my lifestyle. I believed that I was meant to be a whole
man, made for one woman, and God brought it all about. I am
delivered, and I know God can deliver others too.
--
Donnie
McClurkin, an award-winning gospel artist, pastors The Perfecting Faith
Church in Freeport, New York. He performed at the Republican
National Convention this Fall. He has several music CDs and has
published a book entitled “No Longer a Victim.” This article was used
with permission from Charisma magazine, original printed June
2002.
|