Today, a deep wound was carved into the soul of our nation.
The United States Supreme Court has declared that transgender Americans — people who have pledged their lives to defend this country, to protect our freedoms, and to stand under the same flag — are not worthy of belonging to the family they serve. They have been cast aside, not for their actions, but for their identity.
We are left to ask: What would Jesus do?
Would He turn away the brave, the faithful, the marginalized? Or would He wrap them in love, dignity, and divine protection?
Mr. Trump and the judges who claim the mantle of Christianity have instead betrayed its most sacred commandment: to love thy neighbor as thyself. They have weaponized faith to wound the very children of God they should have protected.
Today is not just a legal decision — it is a spiritual failing. And we must speak, we must rise, we must remember: God does not abandon His children. Neither will we.
We are all Children of the Same Universe
Cosmic Seeds: Eunuchs, Intersex (Hermaphrodites), Transgender Identities, and the Long Evolution of the Humanoid Form
Human diversity—especially in terms of gender, sex, and identity—has often been treated as a deviation from a norm. But what if the norm was never fixed to begin with? What if the presence of eunuchs, hermaphroditic individuals, and transgender people is not an exception, but an echo—one that stretches back not just millennia, but to the very origins of sentient life on Earth?
Let’s consider a thought experiment.
Imagine that somewhere between 120,000 and 200,000 years ago, as early Homo sapiens wandered in small bands across Africa, humanoid life was already being observed—or perhaps even seeded—by intelligent entities not of this world. These visitors—cosmic nomads, bioengineers, or time-displaced architects—didn’t come to conquer but to influence. Perhaps they nudged evolution subtly, introducing concepts of gender multiplicity, reproductive variance, and intellectual self-awareness into the hominin genome.
The genetic variations we now call intersex conditions, the capacity for gender transition, and the social roles of eunuchs may not simply be evolutionary quirks—they may be artifacts of ancient, intentional design, embedded to promote adaptability, cooperation, and spiritual nuance.
Over millennia, societies began forming myths, assigning roles. Eunuchs became priests, guardians, advisors—perhaps because their androgyny echoed something sacred or alien in the memory of humankind. Intersex individuals, once revered in some early cultures, later became misunderstood as rigid binary systems took root. Transgender people, embodying transitions of both body and identity, may represent something even deeper: the primordial fluidity of being that predates written language, theology, or law.
1860 image of someone with both sets of genitals, Image from Wikipedia
Even Matthew 19:12 hints at this cosmic memory: “There are eunuchs who were born that way… made that way by others… and those who choose…” It’s as if the verse touches on all layers—biology, social constructs, and spiritual calling.
Now, add to this the enigmatic imagery across ancient cultures—elongated skulls in Peru, hybrid deities in Mesopotamia, the Dogon’s star-knowledge in Mali, or the androgynous divine beings carved into Indian temples. These are not merely symbols of faith—they might be dim recollections of those who walked among early humans, perhaps guiding them through bursts of insight, mutation, and myth.
Could the variability in human form—sex, gender, expression—be part of an intentional evolutionary design spanning eons and galaxies?
We may never prove it, but the continuity of fluid human identities across time, continents, and civilizations suggests that our understanding of “normal” is historically recent, biologically limited, and cosmically naive.
Rather than anomalies, eunuchs, hermaphrodites, and transgender people might be living archives of a far greater story—one that stretches beyond Earth, beyond time, and possibly beyond the gods we created to explain it all.
1. Widespread Occurrence of Same-Sex Behavior
The “Against Nature?” exhibition highlighted that over 1,500 animal species, encompassing mammals such as giraffes, dolphins, penguins, whales, ducks, and bonobos, engage in same-sex behaviors. This challenges the notion that such behaviors are unnatural or rare. WIRED
2. Evolutionary Perspectives
Research indicates that SSSB is not randomly distributed across mammalian lineages but is particularly prevalent in certain clades, especially primates. Ancestral reconstructions suggest that SSSB may have evolved multiple times and could play adaptive roles in maintaining social relationships and mitigating conflict.
3. Homosexual Behavior in Sheep
In domestic sheep, approximately 8% of rams exhibit same-sex sexual preferences, often preferring other males over females. This behavior is linked to the size of a specific area in the anterior hypothalamus, a brain region associated with sexual preference.
4. Underreporting of Same-Sex Behavior
Despite its widespread occurrence, SSSB is often underreported in scientific literature. A survey revealed that while 76.7% of researchers observed SSSB in their study species, only 48.2% collected data on it, and just 18.5% published findings. This suggests a publication bias against anecdotal evidence.
- Books:
- Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity by Bruce Bagemihl – A comprehensive exploration of same-sex behaviors across animal species.
- The Animal Homosexuality Reader edited by David P. Barash and Judith Eve Lipton – A collection of essays examining the biological and social aspects of animal homosexuality.
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- Articles:
- “When Flipper Met Flipper” – An article discussing the exhibition at the Oslo museum and its implications.
- “Museum exhibition shows gay animal kingdom” – An overview of the “Against Nature?” exhibition and its findings.
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- Research Studies: