Did Jesus Speak About Homosexuality? A Clear Christian Answer

Jesus did not use the modern word homosexuality, but that does not mean he was silent on the issue. The real question is not whether Jesus used a later English term. The real question is whether Jesus condemned the kind of behavior that the Bible identifies as sin. 

The answer is yes. Jesus spoke against sexual immorality in general, and that includes every form of sexual sin, not just the ones modern people happen to dislike.

This matters because sin is not defined by public opinion, personal preference, or modern language. Sin is defined by God. Human beings do not get to vote on what is holy and what is not. If God calls something sinful, then it is sinful, whether the culture approves of it or not. 

Long before the word homosexuality existed, the Old Testament already prohibited the acts that people today place under that label. Jesus did not come to cancel the moral law of God. He upheld it and condemned sexual immorality as a category. That means he condemned all sexual conduct that stands against the will of God.

This rule applies equally to everyone. Jesus did not condemn only one group of people while excusing others. He condemned all sexual sin. That includes adultery, fornication, lust, and every other form of sexual immorality, whether committed by heterosexuals or homosexuals. 

The standard does not change depending on who commits the act. That is one of the strongest points Christians must hold firmly. Sexual sin is not sinful because of the identity a person claims. It is sinful because it violates the word of God.

In that sense, asking “Did Jesus speak about homosexuality?” is like asking, “Did Jesus speak about heterosexual immorality?” He did not use either modern label, but he clearly spoke against sexual immorality, and that covers both. The principle is universal. The command is universal. The moral standard is universal.

So yes, Jesus did speak about homosexuality, not by using a modern term, but by condemning the broader category that includes it. He also spoke against heterosexual sexual sin by the same standard. That is the Christian position. 

One rule, one moral law, one holy God, and one truth that does not bend to changing language or changing times.

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