![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Such readers will find Hill to be an honest, gracious, and emphatic travelling companion. monogamous male/female marriage or, in Hill’s case, celibacy). Hill’s primary audience is those, like himself, who are attracted to the same sex and are seeking to live out the historic Christian sexual ethic (i.e. ![]() The title of the book reflects Hill’s sense of identity as well as his ongoing struggle: Washed (forgiven and spiritually cleansed) and Waiting (groaning and persevering with a thorn in the flesh until the day when “there will be no more homosexuality”). This book is Hill’s labor to provide for others the voice for which he had been looking. By puberty he could no longer avoid the fact that he had "a steady, strong, unremitting, exclusive sexual attraction to persons of the same sex." Try as he did, he could find precious few writers that put into words some of the confusion, sorrow, triumph, grief and joy of the struggle to live faithfully before Christ with homosexual desires. Even as a child, Wesley Hill remembers being drawn to other males in some vaguely confusing way. ![]()
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