In a sermon blasting
President Obama for his same-sex marriage support, Pastor Charles L.
Worley of Providence Road Baptist Church in Maiden, North Carolina,
offered a novel — and horrific — solution to the so-called gay scourge:
build an electric fence and let "lesbians, queers and homosexuals"
starve to death.
"I figured a way to get rid of all the lesbians
and queers," he says in his sermon, delivered on May 13. "Build a great,
big, large fence — 150 or 100 mile long — put all the lesbians in
there... Do the same thing for the queers and the homosexuals and have
that fence electrified so they can't get out… And you know what, in a
few years, they'll die." Worley fails to understand that gay people are
born, not made, and that there would just be more LGBT folk coming down
the line.
He also that if he's asked who he'll vote for, he'll reply, "I'm not going to vote for a baby killer and a homosexual lover."
The
not-so-holy man concludes, "God have mercy. It makes me pukin' sick to
think about — I don't even whether or not to say this in the pulpit —
can you imagine kissing some man?"
Throughout the sermon, many of his congregants can be heard calling out "Amen."
Religion & GLBT Community
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Homosexuality: Why Perceptions Are Changing
by Craig L. Adams
March 28, 2012
A recent post by Riley Case entitled “THE PRACTICE OF HOMOSEXUALITY AND GENERAL CONFERENCE: WHAT IS AT STAKE” illustrates the anxiety of many conservative United Methodist Christians over the issue of homosexuality as it arises again at the denomination’s General Conference (April 24 - May 4 in Tampa, Florida). He writes . . . (read the entire post)
Monday, August 22, 2011
Gays Are Us: Why LGBT Equality Is Not a “White” Issue
By Rev. Dr. Dennis W. Wiley | August 17, 2011
At last month’s 102nd annual convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a historic workshop focused on overcoming homophobia within the black community. As an African American, heterosexual, male pastor of a traditionally black Baptist church in the inner city of Washington, D.C., I was glad to see this legendary organization take this small but important step in its increasingly inclusive perspective on civil rights.
Read the entire article. . .
Wednesday, June 01, 2011
Believe Out Loud: A Million Christians for LGBT Equality
Determined to give voice to the millions of Christians who believe in equal rights for all, including the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) community, Believe Out Loud is launching a campaign to get one million Christians to break the silence and join the burgeoning chorus for full LGBT equality in the church.
Progressive Christians across numerous denominations believe that Jesus' message of justice, compassion and love compels them to be fully welcoming of all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity. Now is the time to speak up and remind the world that it is possible to be Christian AND believe in LGBT inclusion. This Mother's Day, Believe Out Loud is inviting mothers and children everywhere to break the silence.
www.believeoutloud.com
Thursday, March 24, 2011
America's churches can change the world
By Alejandro Gonzalez, USA TODAY
Black History Month set me to thinking about America's churches. Some led the struggle for civil rights. Others lined up on the wrong side. In the 1970s, a phrase was coined by historian John Lee Eighmy to explain why so many white Southern churches got it wrong: Churches in Cultural Captivity. Turns out my fellow Southern Baptists — my own family included — were Southern first and Baptist second.
But has the problem of religious organizations being co-opted or compromised by the broader secular culture gone away? And is it limited by geography or political boundaries?
Continue . . .
Black History Month set me to thinking about America's churches. Some led the struggle for civil rights. Others lined up on the wrong side. In the 1970s, a phrase was coined by historian John Lee Eighmy to explain why so many white Southern churches got it wrong: Churches in Cultural Captivity. Turns out my fellow Southern Baptists — my own family included — were Southern first and Baptist second.
But has the problem of religious organizations being co-opted or compromised by the broader secular culture gone away? And is it limited by geography or political boundaries?
Continue . . .
In Civil War, the Bible became a weapon
By Suzy Parker, USA TODAY (02/28/2011)
The Bible is too often invoked in today's political battles, just as it was employed during the Civil War, which erupted 150 years ago.
While previous anniversaries of this conflict rekindled old Yankee-Rebel debates about who had better soldiers and greater generals, times have changed and this anniversary is likely to be different. It offers a chance to re-examine crucial events and beliefs from new angles. As a minister, I am fascinated to reflect on how the Bible was used — and misused — to fuel the Civil War.
continue . . .
The Bible is too often invoked in today's political battles, just as it was employed during the Civil War, which erupted 150 years ago.
While previous anniversaries of this conflict rekindled old Yankee-Rebel debates about who had better soldiers and greater generals, times have changed and this anniversary is likely to be different. It offers a chance to re-examine crucial events and beliefs from new angles. As a minister, I am fascinated to reflect on how the Bible was used — and misused — to fuel the Civil War.
continue . . .
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
LGBT Bible Study at Foundry United Methodist Church

If you or others at your congregation are considering the start of an LGBT focused Bible (or Torah or text, etc) study, check out this new video clip from Foundry UMC, a reconciling Methodist church based in Washington DC.
GLBT Bible Study in Washington, D.C. from Bree Tracey on Vimeo.
Out In Scripture - 2/14/2011
Out In Scripture - 3/16/2011
Monday, November 15, 2010
How Religion Is Killing Our Most Vulnerable Youth
By Bishop Gene Robinson
An increasingly popular bumper sticker reads, "Guns Don't Kill People—RELIGION Kills People!" In light of recent events I would add religion kills young people: gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender young people.
Perhaps not directly, though. And religion is certainly not the only source of anti-gay sentiment in the culture. But it's hard to deny that religious voices denouncing LGBT people contribute to the atmosphere in which violence against LGBT people and bullying of LGBT youth can flourish.
Read more . . .
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