vocation for single gay people?
Firstly, everyone is called to act in life/faith of prayer. That is a singular vocation everyone has. Namely a Devotion.
Saint Mary Magdalene, who was under both her sins and the evil menacing spirits that poisoned her. She had a heart. Consider her “struggles.” Especially when the Pharisee asked Jesus, “Do you know what sort of woman this is?” The woman had to face sexual desires as that’s what her life had been spent doing. But when she “listened” to Christ (as we see her now at the feet of Christ listening.) Her heart experienced conversion when she cried with tears and wiped the feet of Christ before the Pharisee. Pretty brave woman at that time. Women were being stoned, just like the one caught in adultery. Saint Mary Magdalene was one brave woman and soul.
So is there a specific enterprise/vocation for someone who identifies him or herself as LGBT? That would mean, is there a vocation for LGBT in the Church?
If people who are constantly battling that in their lives, do not act nor allow, nor encourage, neither entice, nor confirm anyone in that lifestyle or behavior. Which would detract from the Sacraments and oppose God/Christ Himself. Then as people who bear the wounds of that attraction just as Christ bore the wounds suffered from sin, then that would be a vocation. As a warning, showing people their wounds. Carrying their Cross. No less people who are in Alcoholics anonymous have a vocation. They do not encourage people to drink alcohol as they have an addiction. It’s similar, but not the same. The weight of same-sex attraction or gender dysphoria is a huge Cross people carry. The power of sin in their hearts. The fall from the Garden. And suffering and abuse, and trauma that many (but not all) have suffered through life. Especially when many of them were small children.
In this life, we carry a Cross. But in once we are in God’s Kingdom and Glory, in His Love, we will no longer carry those burdens. Those wounds will be gone. And no more. All the abuse, trauma, and turmoil on one’s life, vanishes.
LGBT, in and of itself, is not a vocation to encourage people in that frame of mind. Nor to encourage them to act/believe to be that way. There’s no inclusive identity to being that way. But there is the inclusiveness all souls are called to in Communion with Christ, in the Sacrament, and in act of Holy Penance.
People in LGBT are sinners, just as everyone else is. LGBT is a strange attachment to people. It’s a disorder. The orientation is confusing to both the soul, body, and will. It seems undefeatable. And therefore today’s culture creates an inclusive identity to accept it as normal. Which it isn’t Because it was not that way in the beginning.