Members of the church preached that LGBTQ+ people should be shot in the head (Google Street View)
An independent Baptist church in Indiana, Sure Foundation Baptist Church, has doubled down on a sermon which was delivered during a men’s preaching evening that called for LGBTQ+ people to take their own lives.
On Thursday (3 July), preacher Justin Zhong shared a post on the official Facebook page for the Sure Foundation Baptist Church in Indianapolis, stating he will “not apologize for preaching the Word of God”.
“I will not apologize for stating facts. I will not negotiate with terrorists, among whom the LGBTHIV crowd is full of domestic terrorists,” Zhong wrote.
“The Bible is crystal clear that sodomites (homosexuals) deserve the death penalty carried out by a government that actually cares about the law of God. We are not to take the law into our own hands.”
The statement comes after the church was criticised for the violent homophobic language used by church members during Men’s Preaching Night, which was broadcast live on Facebook.
“We should pray for their deaths”
During a sermon entitled ‘Pray the Gay Away’, member Stephen Falco said: “You ought to blow yourself in the back of the head. You’re so disgusting.”
Falco went on to rhetorically ask: “How shall we then properly pray for gay people?”
“We should pray for their deaths, plain and simple,” he answered himself.
Another church member, reported by Newsweek as Wade Rawley, said LGBTQ+ folks should be “beaten and stomped in the mud” before they “should take a gun and blow the back of their heads off”.
The christian church called for LGBTQ+ folks to be killed (Canva)
On the church’s official website, it states under its beliefs section that the congregation “believe that
sodomy (homosexuality) is a sin and an abomination before God which God punishes with the death penalty,” adding: “No sodomite (homosexual) will be allowed to attend or join Sure Foundation Baptist Church. (Leviticus 20:13, Romans 1:19-32, Deut. 23:17-18, 1 Kings 14:24, Jude 1:7)”.
In the Facebook post defending the sermon, Zhong outlined several quotes from Bible scripture with additional commentary explaining why those quotes matter and what they mean.
“The Bible says that the sodomites (homosexuals) are filled with all unrighteousness. That’s why I believe all sodomites are capable of molesting children and committing all kinds of wickedness,” Zhong wrote.
“It is hilarious that the best thing they can say to us is that we are closet homos, because they know being a homo is filthy and vile and disgusting.”
Zhong went on to say that the Sure Foundation Baptist Church is a “Bible-believing church” whereby “whatever the Bible says, we believe it”.
“We don’t care about what the world, culture, or media think. It is funny that these so-called “faith leaders” and some “Christians” do not approve of this message. This simply shows me that they do not care about the Bible.”
He continued: “Sure Foundation Baptist Church protects children from predators. We don’t separate children from their families. We expose perverts and pedophiles. No homos will ever be allowed to attend any church services.
“Sure Foundation Baptist Church is a soulwinning powerhouse. We preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and the eternal security of the believer on a weekly basis to the lost and dying world, while all those “holier than thou” Christians let the world go to hell.”
He added: “If you are sick and tired of the woke culture or churches that do not preach the whole Bible, then you should come and check us out!”
In response to comments made by members of the Sure Foundation Baptist Church, the Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis – a fellowship of “pastors and other concerned citizens who are God-fearing people who believe injustice, racism, ageism, class-ism and sexism to be contrary to the will of God” – said: “The Concerned Clergy of Indianapolis stands firmly against the harmful rhetoric recently preached that condemned all LGBTQ individuals to hell and instructed people to stay away from them.
“Such messages are not only theologically irresponsible but pastorally dangerous.”
In a further statement emailed to Newsweek, the church stated: “The Bible puts the death penalty on the LGBTQ people.
“We as Christians must believe and preach what the Bible says.
“The reason people are so shocked about all this is not many ‘Christians’ and even ‘pastors’ actually believe the Bible.
“To be clear, we only called for the government to execute those people. We are against vigilantes.”
I am an older gay guy in a long-term wonderful relationship. My spouse and I are in our 36th year together. I love politics and news. I enjoy civil discussions and have no taboo subjects. My pronouns are he / him / his and my email is Scottiestoybox@gmail.com
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7 thoughts on “Indiana church tells LGBTQ+ people to kill themselves or face death penalty under Trump”
yet another hate group under the umbrella of religion.
Hi Suze. Once the hate was more expressed with side eyes, looks of disgust / disapproval, and petty gossip has turned very violent and ugly. These people think the Prince of Peace, the God of Love would approve of beating and killing / murder anyone. More and more there is a split in the US churches as fundamentalist churches double down with anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and hate with the NIFB going full extreme hate and violence church while an expanding number of churches become more accepting of the LGBTQ+ and people who are different living a different lifestyle. The problem is an established church under a group banner like Southern Baptist can lose their church property, have their loans called in, or lose the money built up from donations if the fundamentalist group they are leaving wants to be hateful about it, which most do as it is their thing. Hugs
I’ve got a KJV, and it doesn’t say any of that stuff. Even those verses they cite don’t say what that guy says they do. The Bible does say that God said that we shall not kill. It also says that Jesus said we should love God with all our hearts, souls, and minds, and should love our neighbors as ourselves. Also that all are our neighbors.
Guess I wouldn’t make a good Baptist. (And I know I wouldn’t. ]]]shudder[[[) I worry for these people, misleading their flocks. The Bible has words about that.
Hi Ali. I am watching Dan McClellan. He is a biblical scholar I have posted before. The reason I like his well researched opinions on the biblical writings is he doesn’t look at it through a political or ideological lens. He seems almost immune to local feelings of hate or wish to have inclusion. He has put out repeated videos on this subject and things like I posted today. He says these people force the bible into what they already believe instead of reading what is there. The Reverend Ed Trevors says much the same claiming that Jesus paid for all “sins and crimes in the bible” and that people using the bible to support hate or exclusion are not reading it with the spirit of learning, of letting it guide them to god, but with the goal of feeling the god they made in their own image supports their own bigotry and desires.
I do think these hate churches are a small minority, but they are gaining people who are already angry and want to force others to live as they do. I can not tell if the preachers in these hate churches are true beleivers in their hate or if they are scamming for money knowing that for some people hate is their strongest and most motivating emotion? I replied to Suze about what inclusive churches face when they try to split from a regressive fundamentlist conserative group association like the Southern babbtist. I keep reading of progressive churches trying to seperate who face the lost of their buildings, have their loans called in for immediant repayment, and even their saved funds taken by the umbrella group. But more and more churches are going inclusive and accepting of the LGBTQ+ and those who live a different lifestyle, but those churches don’t raise headlines like hate and threats do. Hugs
Hi Bruce. Yes I do wonder if they are true believers or just using the hate to grow their congregations for profit knowing that hate is the strongest and most motivating emotions for a lot of people. Hugs
yet another hate group under the umbrella of religion.
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Hi Suze. Once the hate was more expressed with side eyes, looks of disgust / disapproval, and petty gossip has turned very violent and ugly. These people think the Prince of Peace, the God of Love would approve of beating and killing / murder anyone. More and more there is a split in the US churches as fundamentalist churches double down with anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and hate with the NIFB going full extreme hate and violence church while an expanding number of churches become more accepting of the LGBTQ+ and people who are different living a different lifestyle. The problem is an established church under a group banner like Southern Baptist can lose their church property, have their loans called in, or lose the money built up from donations if the fundamentalist group they are leaving wants to be hateful about it, which most do as it is their thing. Hugs
LikeLiked by 1 person
Butbutbut…
I’ve got a KJV, and it doesn’t say any of that stuff. Even those verses they cite don’t say what that guy says they do. The Bible does say that God said that we shall not kill. It also says that Jesus said we should love God with all our hearts, souls, and minds, and should love our neighbors as ourselves. Also that all are our neighbors.
Guess I wouldn’t make a good Baptist. (And I know I wouldn’t. ]]]shudder[[[) I worry for these people, misleading their flocks. The Bible has words about that.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Ali. I am watching Dan McClellan. He is a biblical scholar I have posted before. The reason I like his well researched opinions on the biblical writings is he doesn’t look at it through a political or ideological lens. He seems almost immune to local feelings of hate or wish to have inclusion. He has put out repeated videos on this subject and things like I posted today. He says these people force the bible into what they already believe instead of reading what is there. The Reverend Ed Trevors says much the same claiming that Jesus paid for all “sins and crimes in the bible” and that people using the bible to support hate or exclusion are not reading it with the spirit of learning, of letting it guide them to god, but with the goal of feeling the god they made in their own image supports their own bigotry and desires.
I do think these hate churches are a small minority, but they are gaining people who are already angry and want to force others to live as they do. I can not tell if the preachers in these hate churches are true beleivers in their hate or if they are scamming for money knowing that for some people hate is their strongest and most motivating emotion? I replied to Suze about what inclusive churches face when they try to split from a regressive fundamentlist conserative group association like the Southern babbtist. I keep reading of progressive churches trying to seperate who face the lost of their buildings, have their loans called in for immediant repayment, and even their saved funds taken by the umbrella group. But more and more churches are going inclusive and accepting of the LGBTQ+ and those who live a different lifestyle, but those churches don’t raise headlines like hate and threats do. Hugs
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Oh, they’re not ‘misleading their flocks’…they’re feeding them the hate they crave.
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Yeah, well.👿
😄
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi Bruce. Yes I do wonder if they are true believers or just using the hate to grow their congregations for profit knowing that hate is the strongest and most motivating emotions for a lot of people. Hugs
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