North Carolina pastor Charles Worley of Providence Road Baptist Church ignited a firestorm last week with his suggestion that gays and lesbians be encased behind electrified fences until they died out.
Yesterday, there was a huge protest of over 1,000 people angry at his words.
Meanwhile, from what I understand, Worley received a standing ovation from over 100 members of his church for his words. This shouldn't be surprising, seeing that members of his church actually defended his words on national television on the grounds that he was "merely" speaking the truth in "Christian love."
We are all missing the context. What Worley suggested is nothing new. In fact it has been tried. The fences may not have been all electrified but the objective was the same:
I should point out that I wanted to post other videos, but this is the tamest one I could find.
But if you want to see one of the others I rejected, go here. It's not pretty.
And may God help us all if we refuse to remember the past so much that we applaud its mistakes.
Yesterday, there was a huge protest of over 1,000 people angry at his words.
Meanwhile, from what I understand, Worley received a standing ovation from over 100 members of his church for his words. This shouldn't be surprising, seeing that members of his church actually defended his words on national television on the grounds that he was "merely" speaking the truth in "Christian love."
We are all missing the context. What Worley suggested is nothing new. In fact it has been tried. The fences may not have been all electrified but the objective was the same:
I should point out that I wanted to post other videos, but this is the tamest one I could find.
But if you want to see one of the others I rejected, go here. It's not pretty.
And may God help us all if we refuse to remember the past so much that we applaud its mistakes.
4 comments:
Do pink triangles ring a bell people?
During the 1970's I worked at a long-term private mental institution here in Texas. I knew two patients who had been put away years before by their families, simply for being gay.
Seeing them always made me want to cry at the injustice.
Never again!
Don't forget that after the war, gay men who had been in the camps were often denied liberation - they were sent to jails because they were criminals having violated Paragraph 175. Those who weren't imprisoned faced communities and families who didn't acknowledge what had happened to them. They were denied compensation offered other Holocaust survivors.
This needs to be seen far and wide.
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