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Does the Bible have anything to say about homosexuality? Very little! Three Christian exegetes, two Catholics and a Protestant, have taken up the challenge of reading the Scriptures without taboos or prejudices, and without resorting to personal or ecclesial interpretations. Innocent Himbaza studies those accounts frequently cited in discussions about homosexuality, such as the story of Sodom (Genesis 19), the men of Guivea (Judges 19) and the love between David and Jonathan, whose story is recounted in the Book of Samuel. Adrien Schenker rereads the laws of Leviticus (18 and 20) and the rules of conduct they laid down, resituating them in their original context. In that way he is able to explain why the practice of homosexual love was forbidden under the law of Moses. Does the New Testament say anything different from the Old? Jean-Baptiste Edart studies Paul's writings on homosexual practices (Romans 1 Corinthians 6 Timothy 1), then raises a question, to what extent can the Gospel intervene in the debate? The intention of this book is not to be an ethical treatise on homosexuality, but simply to introduce some clarifications by demonstrating the Bible's influence on the subject.