Religious and cultural frameworks profoundly shape how LGBTQ+ identities are understood, experienced, and expressed. There is enormous diversity both between and within religious traditions. Generalizations about "what religion X says" almost always oversimplify active debates, dissenting traditions, and evolving interpretations.
The Christianity entry below is more detailed than the others, reflecting the volume of documented denominational affirming/non-affirming positions in the predominantly Western, Christian-heritage sources this guide draws on, not a judgment that it matters more. Every tradition named here contains its own internal debates and affirming movements.
Christianity
Non-affirming: Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox, many Baptist, Evangelical, and Pentecostal denominations teach that same-sex acts are sinful.
Affirming traditions include:
- Metropolitan Community Churches (MCC, founded 1968) - specifically for LGBTQ+ people
- Episcopal/Anglican - formally affirming; first openly gay bishop (Gene Robinson) consecrated 2003
- United Church of Christ (UCC) - affirming since 1985
- ELCA (Lutheran) - affirming of same-sex marriage since 2009
- Presbyterian Church (USA) - affirming since 2015
- Quakers - long history of inclusion; British Quakers performing same-sex marriages since 2009
Islam
Traditional Islamic jurisprudence across all major schools prohibits same-sex acts. A growing movement of LGBTQ+ Muslims and affirming scholars argues for more inclusive readings, emphasizing mercy and historical context. Inclusive spaces include mosques such as Ibn Ruschd-Goethe mosque in Berlin.
Judaism
Orthodox maintains traditional prohibitions; Conservative affirming of gay rabbis since 2006; Reform fully affirming since 1996; Reconstructionist and Renewal fully affirming.
Hinduism
Ancient texts including the Kama Sutra acknowledge same-sex acts; Hijra community has deep roots in Hindu religious practice. Colonial British law imposed anti-homosexuality legislation; India decriminalized same-sex relations in 2018.
Buddhism
No central doctrine prohibiting same-sex love; emphasis on non-harm (ahimsa). In a Pew Research survey, 88% of American Buddhists supported social acceptance of homosexuality - the highest of any religious group studied (Pew Religious Landscape Study, 2014; figures are now over a decade old and may have shifted). Acceptance varies significantly by culture and tradition.
Indigenous Spiritual Traditions
Many Indigenous cultures worldwide have traditional frameworks for gender diversity that predate Western LGBTQ+ categories and embed gender-variant roles in spiritual and cultural life:
- Two-Spirit (various Indigenous nations, North America): People embodying both masculine and feminine spiritual qualities held sacred ceremonial, healing, and social roles in many nations. European colonialism violently suppressed these traditions. The modern Two-Spirit identity reclaims this heritage. (See full entry under Two-Spirit.)
- Māhū (Native Hawaiian / Polynesian): Revered as spiritual intermediaries, teachers, and cultural knowledge-keepers. (See full entry under Māhū.)
- Bissu (Bugis, Indonesia): One of five recognized Bugis genders, holding sacred priestly roles in Bugis cosmology.
- Hijra (South Asia): Hold ceremonial blessing roles at births and weddings with roots in Hindu and Sufi traditions. (See full entry under Hijra.)
Key principle: Indigenous spiritual traditions around gender diversity are not simply pre-modern equivalents of Western LGBTQ+ categories. They are embedded in specific cosmologies, kinship systems, and cultural obligations. Non-Indigenous people adopting these identities or frameworks constitutes cultural appropriation. These traditions belong to living Indigenous communities, not to global queer culture broadly.
Cultural Variation
- Collectivist cultures - family honor and collective expectations may take priority; coming out may be experienced as a betrayal of family rather than personal liberation
- "Don't ask, don't tell" norms - in many cultures same-sex relationships are tolerated privately but not publicly named; the Western coming out model doesn't translate universally
- Colonial legacies - many anti-sodomy laws worldwide are direct inheritances of British colonial law; claims that homosexuality is "un-African" or "un-Indian" are historically inaccurate - colonial Christianity was the import