Protesters with pride signs face

After Sunday, July 13 The leaders of the Indianapolis church laughed, and protesters held the rainbow signs in front of their building.

Surre Surre Foundation Baptist Church, located in the shopping center shop near Lafayette Road and West 30th Street, has recently received attention to their Anti-LGBTQ+ reports for congregations. A sermon on the Internet, Lay Peacher, encouraged members to pray for the death of the LGBTQ+ community. Protesters on 13 July Had its own message to the Church.

“In their presence,” Cass Jackson told Indystar, who helped to organize a protest. “Why they do not believe that Christ will agree.”

Jackson said the protest was a way to communicate with the Church, including others, that church leaders could continue their hatred, but they would continue to appear and would be joyful.

Really Foundation Baptist Church continued its Sunday worship

The original video of a sermon shared earlier this month on the Internet, LGBTQ+found as “evil” and “crap”.

“There is nothing good to be proud that you are (slur),” said Stephen Falco, a member of the church through a sermon published on YouTube. “You should blow yourself at the back of your head. You’re so crazy.”

Since then, the video of the video has removed a video to violate the terms of the provision of services.

The independent church of the fundamentalist doubled its message in a report shared by Facebook on July 3, where she said she did not apologize. Evangelist Justin Zhong and the Church has since made a sermon in which the latest coverage and attention the Church received.

“Why do these (slur) want to burn us, bomb this church and kill us?” Zhong preached in a video posted on the Church Facebook page on July 11th. “Because we testify that their work is bad. My question is why the small band supermarket church makes news all over the world? Because God’s Word has power.”

On Sunday, protesters said they did not want to meet violence to meet the Church. They do not intend to change congregans about LGBTQ+ persons, but they say they want to say clearly that they will emphasize the nobleman of the church.

“I know the truth is that these people really hate when other people are happy because they are not,” Jackson said. “And, unfortunately, were indoctrined to the cult of the yard.”

Really foundation Baptist Church: The Indianapolis Church doubles the pride sermon on the damage to the LGBTQs for the damage

Zhong’s Indystar said he was not surprised by the protest, but the church continued his service without permission on Sunday morning. In the church, which was 2024. Opened the door, has about 35 people who visit the church on average every week.

By quoting a book of acts, he compared the protest with people and cities, outraged in the Bible, when the Apostles proclaimed the truth. Zhong said protesters are upset because God’s word reveals that their work is bad.

Other faith groups, LGBTQ+ lawyers reject the hatred of hate

Concerned Indianapolis clergy rejected the Church’s message with a Bible poem, saying that the gospel is intended for everyone and should not be used as a condemnation. A group of clergy said that the black church, born in the Tigle of oppression, must never imitate the spirit of exclusion itself, which once rejected its community.

“We are called to be a platform for separated, not prejudice,” the report said. Standing for dignity, inclusion and justice to all people, the group said it rejects the idea of LGBTQ+ persons beyond God’s access, grace or repurchase.

David Caudill, with the equality of Equality Indiana, said he was urged to see other leaders of Indianapolis faith in condemning the church’s sermon.

“When you have this type of hatred and brutal language, it can encourage someone to use those words and feel protected to go and perform violent action against our community,” Caudil said.

Protesters gather in 2025. On Sunday, July 13, not to find the Foundation at the Baptist Church near Lafayette Road and West 30th Street Indianapolis. The LGBTQ+ community supporters gathered to protest after the church was presented with a sermon, promoting death of those identified as LGBTQ+.

Jade Jackson is an Indianapolis star reporter. You can send her email. Email email By email [email protected] and follow it x, formerly Twitter @iamiadejackson. Alexandria Burris, an Indicar investigation journalist, reported the previous one of the article.

This article initially appeared in Indianapolis Star: “Pride Protest” erupts after the Church LGBTQs people call the creep “

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