AITA for not taking in my nephew after he got kicked out of his house for being gay?

The man at the center of this story insists the issue was never about sexuality. When his 17-year-old nephew was kicked out by deeply religious parents after coming out as gay, the expectation from others felt automatic: of course the uncle would step in. Instead, he said no, and his reasoning caught many people off guard.

For years, the nephew had relentlessly insulted the uncle’s girlfriend, mocking her weight and humiliating her at family gatherings. When the girlfriend still chose compassion and invited the teen into their home anyway, the situation escalated into shouting, tears, and a decision that left the internet sharply divided. Was this about protecting someone he loved, or did he turn his back on a vulnerable child when it mattered most?

AITA for not taking in my nephew after he got kicked out of his house for being gay?

He began by explaining his background and strained relationship with religion.

Let me start this off by saying that I (38m) am not h__ophobic at all and that him (my nephew 17m) being gay has nothing to do with why I...

And I would also suggest everyone to read the full story. So I come from a very conservative family. We were basically raised with the bible, going to church every...

My family is very close-minded, not just my parents but also my extended family, the roots run deep. I knew early on that all that religious stuff wasn’t for me...

Eventually I was able to get a scholarship for college and left the state to begin my life free from religion. My parents were very disappointed in me the first...

Eventually they kinda got over it as they were losing me in the progress to get me to become christian again. I was threatening them with never speaking to them...

Now I am the oldest of 2, my sister (f35) being 3 years younger. My sister has always been the perfect christian girl, the christian life was made for her...

She got married with her husband when she was 18 and soon after became pregnant. She then gave birth to the nephew that this post is about. Let’s call him...

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Because I live a few hours away from the rest of my family, I don’t see them very often. But we do try to always get together when there is...

(Christmis, a birthday, a job promotion, … you know, basic life celebrations and all that). During college I met my girlfriend, she is an amazing person. Let’s call her Sarah....

Distance from family didn’t mean distance from past behavior.

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But Steve doesn't seem to think so. Oh no, ever since he was 10 years old he has been an absolute d__k to her. He always calls her names and...

Even now 7 years later he is still making these comments at every get together with the family or whenever he sees us. Now Sarah isn’t exactly skinny and has...

But she works very hard to get it under control and follows diets and sports and just does her very best. But still Steve is extremely mean to her but...

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When I told my sister and eventually even my parents about it, they all wouldn't believe me and told me and Sarah that we were just being dramatic.

Because he always acts like the perfect christian boy in front of his parents and grandparents. Well it turned out he isn’t such a perfect christian boy after all.

A month ago my sister found him having s__ with a guy from his school when he thought his parents would be home late for the night. After he got...

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The fallout was immediate and brutal.

Now my sister and her husband were not okay with this at all. And basically immediately kicked him out, allowing him to grab a few bags and get out.

Lucky for him he has a car and he drove to my parents, who wouldn’t take him in as they are too very h__ophobic. I found out about this the...

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I was kinda taken aback by this and this was the last thing I was expected to hear first thing in the morning when she called me. I told Sarah...

I was like absolutely not as he has always been a complete d__k to us and while it is very sad that he is being kicked out for something as...

What happened next stunned him after he came home from work.

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When I got back I saw Steve's car in the driveway and I was instantly furious. I went inside and there he was, sitting on our couch talking to Sarah.

I immediately demanded an explanation and Sarah explained that she texted Steve after I left and told him that he could live with us until he found another place to...

I was about to explode, thinking that this little s__t who has done nothing good for us ever in his life was about to live with us. So I kicked...

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He had already brought in some bags so I picked them up and went outside to put them next to his car. This started a screaming match between me and...

She said that I couldn’t possibly do this to him as he is just a child. But I didn’t care. He has never said a kind word about her, called...

laughed at her weight, … I truly couldn’t even believe she would want him to stay with us. But Steve listened to me, he went outside.

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The confrontation ended with him forcing the teen back out.

He started crying and begging me to let him stay as he has nowhere else to go. I didn’t care. I went inside and closed the door, standing in front...

I hated myself for standing in her way but I just couldn’t move. She had cried so many times over Steve’s comments and now she wants to help him. She...

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That night we talked and screamed for hours about this, with her calling me the a__hole for doing this to Steve.. So am I the a__hole for not letting my...

This situation sits at the crossroads of trauma, responsibility, and unresolved resentment. On one side, the uncle feels justified in protecting his partner from someone who caused years of emotional harm. On the other, the nephew is a minor suddenly abandoned by every adult meant to keep him safe.

Psychologist Dr. John Gottman has said, “Compassion does not require forgetting harm, but it does require seeing the whole person.” The nephew’s behavior didn’t come from nowhere. Growing up in a hostile, fear-based environment often leads teens to lash out where they feel safest, even when it’s deeply unfair.

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That said, protecting a partner doesn’t mean removing her agency. Several commenters focused less on the refusal itself and more on the moment he physically blocked his girlfriend from acting on her own decision. That shift changed the moral weight of the situation for many readers.

A more balanced path may have involved boundaries instead of rejection. Temporary shelter with clear conditions, an apology, and accountability could have addressed safety while still offering support. This story shows how quickly unresolved pain can override compassion, even when everyone involved believes they’re doing the right thing.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users criticized the uncle for focusing on past insults over present danger.

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SpecialistAfter511 − He’s a minor. Sarah gets it. Yeah he was d__k but this that he is experiencing right now can be life and death. Where could he possibly go?

SamuelVimesTrained − Call CPS - steve still is a minor. . right? Parents are so very christian they believe abuse is the right thing to do. .

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Edited to add: I think you may have overreacted in haste. First - by accepting him in your house, you could have provided him a chance to apologize and make...

Second by giving him a place to stay, you prove to these 'christians' that you accept people as they are, you know, as god made them. Third - if Sarah,...

SHE was Steves main target if she is more forgiving than your average family member should you not look to her for guidance instead of acting like a (beep) ?

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Fastness2000 − Dude! Be the bigger person here. The kid has been an a__hole, raised by assholes. But he’s just learnt a horrendous lesson about life and your wife sounds...

Maybe you will learn to love him, maybe he will be gone in a short time but you won’t regret helping him- even if he’s a little s__t. No one...

CuriosityKilldTheNat − He’s a child. Is he a good person? Maybe not. Because he is a teenager and they’re all selfish little shits. They grow out of it.

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Plus look at his upbringing! Imagine always knowing you were gay in THAT family! I’m not justifying his disgusting behaviour, but he’s a kid. Your partner is being the grown...

She is clearly a wonderful person, but she is also being mature. This kid has no one. He’s going to be completely alone. And you’re happy to watch that?

All you needed to do was set some ground rules. 1. You apologise for everything you’ve ever said. 2. If you make another comment, laugh, ridicule, even smirk about her...

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3. You get a job so you can contribute. 4. You go to school on time everyday and graduate etc, etc, etc… This isn’t hard. It’s being a decent person....

Amelia_Rosewood − He’s a minor, whom was abandoned by his parents, grandparents & now uncle…. . because he’s a teenager with an attitude problem.

Minors kicked out & ostracized from family typically go at the very least 1 or 3 ways especially if lgbtq+: S__ trade, drugs & alcohol, and of course many/most will...

Could you not have laid down the law & conditions of his cohabitation? Why don’t you report your foster to Fncs? It’s typical yes for many “christians” to disown their...

However as he is a minor they essentially abandoned their child. They could go to prison for that. You need to get him back & at the very least help...

You do realize it’s highly likely that Sarah’s gesture may stop stem his option of her, right? Teenagers say a lot of stupid s***. My sister & I were at...

5-6 years ago I cut off contact, by her request back then we could barely be in the same room 5 minutes without turning the atmosphere into an Armageddon, now...

She has & still says less then proper things, but I know she’s trying. Please give him a chance at least long enough to get him help…. As for your...

Christianity follows The teachings of JC, HE, NEVER said anything at all against the community, not a single solitary thing. His apostles etc harboured some issues & interpreters the teachings...

Most of that nonsense, was old testiment. Which was eradicated long ago. Conservative Christian’s need to get with the program, you want to follow the bible to the extreme fine,...

By biblical standards, you may want to remind her that according to that she’s not allowed to wear anything except dresses, must never cut her hair short,

must have no job, give up her degrees, open her legs without question, use no birth control & never speak without permission from the man/men that legally own her.

Until she/they are willing to do that & all the other nonsense, they need to get off her high horse. I’m so absolutely sick & tired of extremist Christian’s playing...

card every time someone does something they don’t like while they themselves had likely broken half a dozen sims about every hour or so. Almost everything is considered a sin.

The whole premise of JC’s teachings was love, consideration, humility, peaceful freedom & mercy. Bigotry is the exact opposite of all that. That’s not Christianity, that’s satanism.

So yes, you shooing away your nephew whom needed your help, despite his nonsense was very wrong. Your reasons are understandable, but he’s a minor, your nephew,

disowned & homeless whom you tossed away because of some hurtful words. Even if my nephew or niece said horrible things to me, I sure as heck would try to...

Others focused on how he treated his girlfriend during the argument.

Wolvengirla88 − He was 10 making comments about someone’s weight. Clearly learned that from his family.

merchillio − Sarah is the one who texted him, she’s the one he insulted and she still thought it was more important to take him in.

(Probably because she understood it’s a learned behaviour and being away from the parent will allow him to deconstruct it) You are being offended on her behalf while telling you...

rixtape − I get that you think you're protecting your wife here, but by refusing to listen to her and (checks post) *physically preventing her* from deciding her position for...

you're being pretty dang manipulative and controlling. If she told you she didn't feel comfortable helping nephew, that would be one thing,

but you're not even giving her the chance to have any input on the situation; you're dictating to her how you will both go about it, with zero discussion. For...

Earl_Aive − If i was with someone and they physically stopped me from doing anything i would absolutely walk out of the relationship, you claim your doing this "for her"...

Dnashotgun − YTA. For someone who claims the whole religious thing wasn't for you, you sure are acting like your wife is your property to be told what to do

A smaller group saw fault on all sides.

yesimreadytorumble − reposting this time and time again won’t change what people have been saying on your two other posts

[Reddit User] − YTA and your sister is a monster. Any parent who would throw their child out is not fit to be a parent. The only NTA here is...

“With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion. ” ― Steven Weinberg

Morrolan_V − ESH Literally everyone. OP, you suck for not listening to Sarah, who is really the injured party here, and at least having a conversation with her about her

(amazingly generous) impulse to take in nephew. You also suck for acting in a rage, rather than having a calm conversation with Sarah and nephew.

Sarah sucks (least) for unilaterally inviting nephew to stay when she knew OP was not OK with it. Nephew sucks (second least) for being an a__hole to Sarah and OP,

then having the nerve to show up and expect to be taken in. Obviously rest of family suck as they are h__ophobic assholes showing their "Christian values".

morticiaRed − So lemme get this straight OP. ... your nephew, while living in a likely abusive household and living in fear of being outed, lashed out at your girlfriend.

And then when his family abandoned him, you decided to then punish him for outbursts as a kid by also abandoning him. ... and abusing your girlfriend, who is okay...

CptKUSSCryAllTheTime − You should listen to your wife.

This story forced readers to wrestle with competing truths: a teen caused real harm, yet faced extreme rejection at a vulnerable age. While many understood the uncle’s anger, far more questioned whether refusing help crossed a line, especially when his partner was willing to forgive. The debate wasn’t just about one decision, but about how much past pain should matter when someone has nowhere else to go. What would you have done in his place?

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