Gay Girl, Good God: The Story of Who I Was, and Who God Has Always Been
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About this ebook
In Gay Girl, Good God, author Jackie Hill Perry shares her own story, offering practical tools that helped her in the process of finding wholeness. Jackie grew up fatherless and experienced gender confusion. She embraced masculinity and homosexuality with every fiber of her being. She knew that Christians had a lot to say about all of the above. But was she supposed to change herself? How was she supposed to stop loving women, when homosexuality felt more natural to her than heterosexuality ever could?
At age nineteen, Jackie came face-to-face with what it meant to be made new. And not in a church, or through contact with Christians. God broke in and turned her heart toward Him right in her own bedroom in light of His gospel.
Read in order to understand. Read in order to hope. Or read in order, like Jackie, to be made new.
Jackie Hill Perry
Jackie Hill Perry is an author, Bible teacher, and hip-hop artist. She uses her speaking and teaching gifts to share the light of the gospel of God. Jackie is the author of Gay Girl, Good God: The Story of Who I Was and Who God Has Always Been and Holier Than Thou. She and her husband, Preston, have four children.
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Reviews for Gay Girl, Good God
141 ratings14 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a beautifully written and thoughtfully considered book that challenges the way they see God, redemption, reconciliation, and the call to discipleship. It is Gospel-centered and anchored in the hope that a same-sex attracted person can find in Christ alone. The author's genuine sharing of her experiences and the captivating flow of the paragraphs make this book a blessing to read. It is a powerful and practical read that leaves readers wiser and more knowledgeable. Overall, this book is highly recommended.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Breathtaking! Poignant truth presented in the most beautiful writing imaginable.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A wonderful read, it has convicted to not be afraid of being vulnerable with others
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great book! Everything I needed to hear. Very well thought out and well written.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Different aspect than traditionally taught in church. She shares her testimony that she was not delivered from desires but choose loving God Over loving sin. A lesson many of us can apply in different aspects of our lives
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5WOW, very touching, yet powerful read. I left wiser than when I started and I’ve gained practical knowledge that I can apply to different situations I may encounter. Thanks for sharing your story and for sharing your wisdom.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5What struck me h te most is how we are not just seeking deliverance from some particular sin, rather our whole complex being in need of being made whole, transformed to the very likeness of Him in whose image we are created.
The problem is not the individual, so-obvious, sin. It is the whole fallen man who needs the Gospel.
A captivating read.
Some other profound light bulb moment for me is that in every struggle with temptation, the bout of caving in or otherwise to sin, is not one in a vacuum. With every temptation or struggle, if you will, is the tussle of choice; to choose God or that immediate pleasure.
This puts sin in its right perspective. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Five stars are not enough to rate this book. This book is Gospel-centered, anchored in the hope that a same-sex attracted person can find in Christ alone. The author is very genuine in sharing her experiences—this book made me cry countless times! It is indeed a blessing. It is an honor to read this book and the vocabulary and the flow of the paragraph will never bore you. It is like the book is speaking to you as your long lost friend. This is worth the read!
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Ridiculous homophobic drivel. This type of book is harmful and ignorant.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5He was God. A god after my whole heart, desperate to make it new. Committed to making it like Him. In becoming Holy as He is, I would not be miraculously made into a woman that didn't like women, I'd be made into a woman that loved God more than anything. If marriage ever came or singleness called me by name, He wanted to guarantee by the work of His hands that both would be lived unto Him.
Whoa!
God's desire in my sanctification is to make me holy as He is!
This book is for both SSA men and women as well as heterosexuals.
The bottom line sin is the sin of unbelief.3 people found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I love how Jackie points her whole life to the goodness of God.
6 people found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book is beautiful. It is so wonderfully written, and thoughtfully considered in its presentation of the goodness of an almighty, loving Father. I have read few things so profoundly impacting on my own personal faith and relationship with Jesus that invite me to live in devotion to an almighty God, worthy of the highest praise. SSA or not, this book will challenge the way you see God, redemption, reconciliation, and the call to discipleship.
5 people found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I absolutely loved it. I've always loved Jackie, but now, finally having read the book, I thanked God for the gift of her life. Every generation needs people like her and I pray that God would continue to raise them up. The journey she's walked is one that many need to know about!
3 people found this helpful
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Homophobic trash why is this even on here??? Offensive and gross
9 people found this helpful
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Poet, artist and self-proclaimed former lesbian Jackie Hill Perry makes her position clear: she has overcome her desire for same-sex relationships, not through any sort of conversion therapy, but through focusing on the love of God for sinners. What is less clear, even in this Gospel Coalition-sponsored book, is if she has overcome her feelings of same-sex attraction, despite being married to a very patient man and having two children. It sounds like sexual issues are still a daily struggle.This book provides an interesting perspective on a fraught topic. I would be curious as to what LGBTQ+ people think of it.
5 people found this helpful
Book preview
Gay Girl, Good God - Jackie Hill Perry
Copyright © 2018 by Jackie Hill Perry
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America
978-1-4627-5122-8
Published by B&H Publishing Group
Nashville, Tennessee
Dewey Decimal Classification: 248.843
Subject Heading: CHRISTIAN LIFE
All Scripture is taken from the English Standard Version (ESV). ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 • 22 21 20 19 18
Dedicated to . . .
God
Preston
Eden
Mother
Santoria
Brian
Melody
Acknowledgments
Thank you, Preston, for supporting me. Thank you, Nancy, for encouraging me. Thank you, Robert, Austin, Devin, and B&H, for guiding me. Thank you, friends (you know who you are), for praying for me.
Foreword
Jackie Hill Perry and I could hardly have more disparate backgrounds.
She is a millennial; I am a Boomer. She is black, and I am white. She was raised by a single mom and disregarded by an absentee dad who had no idea how to love her. I was parented by a happily married, attentive mom and dad who adored each other and their children. Jackie is sixteen years younger than her brother and only sibling, while I have six younger brothers and sisters.
Jackie is a hip-hop artist. I have a degree in piano performance, zero sense of rhythm, and gravitate toward music written before 1910. She is a poet who uses words—with amazing deftness—to paint pictures on the canvas of the heart that are at once provocative and evocative. My speaking and writing style tends toward sequential points, neatly organized and outlined.
Jackie had her first homosexual experience when she was in high school. I don’t recall ever hearing the word homosexual or knowing anyone who identified as one, until sometime after I was out of high school. She didn’t meet Jesus till she was in her late teens; my first conscious memory is trusting Christ to save me at the age of four.
My association with Jackie has introduced me to, among other things, an expanded vocabulary. I remember, for example, the day she and I were direct messaging about a ministry she was serving with at the time. She informed me it was a pretty dope ministry.
To which I replied: Dope??
Somehow, I was unaware (as she graciously explained) that dope is a slang word for awesome or great.
(Had me confused,
I responded. Glad they’re not doing dope!
) We both had a good laugh.
Yes, ours has been an unlikely friendship. Yet, different as we are in many respects, our lives and hearts have been knit together through our common need for a Savior and the lavish grace we have both received from Christ. Beyond that, we share a love for God’s Word, and we both cherish and cling to sound doctrine as being not only true and necessary, but also beautiful and good. All of this, combined with observing her depth of discernment and wisdom and the ways God is using her bold, clear voice, has made me a cheerleader for Jackie (and her husband Preston).
In God’s providence, two of my books, Lies Women Believe and the Truth that Sets Them Free and Seeking Him (coauthored with Tim Grissom), played a significant role in Jackie’s discipleship as a young believer. In more recent years, her writing, speaking, and social media activity have been a part of my own discipleship and have deepened my love for Christ and my appreciation for the difference the gospel makes in every part and particle of our lives. So I was honored when Jackie asked if I would write a foreword for her first book.
As I read her manuscript, I found myself repeatedly interrupting my sweet husband, who was seated at my side, working on his laptop, to share with him sentences and paragraphs that had me spellbound. She sees things others don’t,
Robert said. He’s right. And she describes those things in ways most of us can’t.
I’ll admit I flinched a bit when I first heard the proposed title for this book. Gay girl
I pushed back mentally—but that’s not who she is today! Which, as I was drawn into the manuscript, I came to understand is precisely the point. Jackie is honest and raw in her depiction of who she was,
which provides the perfect backdrop to spotlight and celebrate who God has always been.
Her understanding and expression of both—her fallenness and brokenness and His redeeming love and grace—are solidly grounded in truth, as He has revealed it in His Word.
This is not a book to be skimmed or speed read, but one to be savored and pondered, as Jackie looks through the lens of Scripture and her own journey to unpack such realities as fatherlessness, abuse, same-sex attraction, identity, temptation, fighting lust with the gospel, and misconceptions of womanhood. Throughout, she points to a Savior who loves sinners and a gospel that saves, transforms, and keeps those who come to Him in repentance and faith—however similar or dissimilar their story may be from hers.
As Jackie concludes:
What God has done to my soul is worth telling because He is worth knowing. Worth seeing. Worth hearing. Worth loving, and trusting, and exalting. . . . To tell you about what God has done for my soul is to invite you into my worship.
So come and see, hear, love, trust, and exalt. Come and worship.
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth
September 2018
Introduction
I wrote this book out of love—a common word used so out of context on most days. This work is not a miscommunication of my intentions; it is a direct product of it.
Before writing it, I lived out the words. A gay girl once? Yes. Now? I am what God’s goodness will do to a soul once grace gets to it.
In saying that, I know I’ve already offended someone. I don’t assume that every hand that holds this book will agree with every black letter on the pages. There are many who, while reading, won’t understand gayness as something possible of being in the past tense. It is either who you are, or what you have never been. To this, I disagree. The only constant in this world is God. Gayness, on the other hand, can be an immovable identity only when the heart is unwilling to bow. There is more complexity to this than my modest introduction will allow. I will only encourage those hesitant to turn the page because of my particular perspective on truth to keep reading. I’ll admit that I have much more to say about gayness and God that will be a bit countercultural, but I hope will also be intriguing to the point of consideration in the grand scheme of things.
There are others who only know of the hetero love that makes a book such as this one for studying the unknown. These are the Christians (the I’ve always been straight
Christians, that is) for whom this book was also intended. I have not always loved how they’ve loved the gay community. Between the banner-painted hate and the interpersonal silence, my love for the church moved me to attempt to write something of balance—something that can make the love for which they are called to walk in, the tangible proof of what God is like.
This book, however, is not to be confused with the Scriptures themselves. It, God willing, will be of benefit to the church, but these words are not to be esteemed as being what is most important for the church. That is what the Word of God is for. This is not an appendix to the Scriptures; it is simply the telling of a story impacted by the Scriptures, with practical instruction gained by living out the Scriptures. My love for the LGBT community makes me desperate for them to know God. My love for the church makes me desperate for them to show the world God, as He is, and not as we would prefer for Him to be—this book being my efforts toward such an end. Coming out of the gay lifestyle and into a brand-new world of loving God His way is a wild life—a wildness so sufficient that it will either turn a new saint back or make them into someone better. If I were to call the experience by another adjective, I would call it hard.
A hardness much like a mountain too beat-up by the sky to climb. But even they can be moved.
For those saints, my love is a gathering up of my life, failures, victories, and everything I’ve figured out about God, edited and made into text for them to read. As they do, a deep She gets it
might well up. But even better would be a God is good,
only to be followed by an All the time!
from within. They are the demonstration of how often God saves. That there are more gay girls and boys that have been made new by a good God. For them, these words landed face-first that they may know that they are not alone.
In writing this book, I did it as myself. Meaning, I am as honest as I know how to be. I have never been one for pretense. When, as a new Christian, I was introduced to the typical nature in which some Christians speak of their lives in the loveliest terms, I refused to give in to the convenient misery of being ambiguous about the truth. If the truth is what sets us free, then why not walk in it at all times? With wisdom and love, of course, but also with the reality that truth is where freedom begins.
Finally, in this book you’re holding, every sentence is the pursuit of showing off God. Leaving this word-filled place with a developed understanding of me and a shallow revelation of God would make all of my efforts worthless. This is a book with a lot of me in it but with a whole lot more of God. He is what the soul needs for rest and what the mind needs for peace. He is the Creator God, the King of Glory, the one who, in love, sent the Christ to pay the penalty for and become the sin that we are all born with. It is the words from and about this resurrected Lamb of God that I hope will lift off the page and into the heart. This book is a lifted hand, a glad praise, a necessary hymn, a hallelujah overheard and not kept quiet. This work is my worship unto God that, with prayer, I hope will leave you saying, "God is so good!"
Jackie Hill Perry
Part 1
Who I Was
Chapter 1
2006
Jackie, you wanna be my girlfriend?" she asked me, squinting like she knew her question might be offensive.
I’d seen her before. Back in middle school, she was one of the few who didn’t hide their lesbianism in hallways, classrooms, or wherever else conversations were held. If you knew anything about her family, you knew those hips belonged to her mama. She wore her identity with a smile, a smile that sat on top of her skin, skin that looked like bronze that had sat in the sun too long. I noticed it and the body she constantly called attention to.
It was the high school dance, and we were both standing in the middle of the gym floor turned dance hall. On one side, near the entrance, you could see a group of girls too popular for kindness. They laughed like everything was an inside joke and watched all who walked past for the sole purpose of making fun of what they saw. Across from them, underneath the glare of swirling party lights were last year’s homecoming king, and all the other boys whom girls flocked to dance in front of. They were hoping that one of the boys would detach himself from his clique and ask one of them for their phone number. If she was pretty enough, he might even remember her name when he called. But for now, the boys loved the feeling of having their ego lifted on a Saturday night.
We stood in the middle of the room. I could tell she was growing impatient. I hadn’t answered her question yet or even let my body tell her what my mouth wanted to say. All I could think about was Monday, and what it would have in store for me if I said yes
to her invitation. The news wouldn’t walk but run toward every ear and fly out of every mouth that heard it—until the school no longer saw me as the girl that had a smart mouth and a timid frame but as, The gay girl.
They’d say my name like it was contagious. Like what I was would rub off on their skin, crawl inside of their little heterosexual hearts, and meddle with it until they ended up just as sick
as I