Curtis Knapp, of New Hope Baptist Church in Seneca, Kansas, has the courage to say what all True Christians are thinking: The gays should be killed, and the government should be held accountable for doing it.
This is why our work to elect a Republican to the presidency this November is so crucial!
Meanwhile, a certain pastor Leatherman has also pondered the act of going out and murdering gays:
Knapp is among a number of religious figures who have recently spoken out against homosexuality.
North Carolina pastor Charles Worley delivered a sermon on May 13 that offered “a way to get rid of all the lesbians and queers” by corralling them behind an electrified fence and feeding them until they die out.
Maryland pastor Dennis Leatherman, responding to Worley’s comments on May 27, said that Worley was “dead wrong.”
Leatherman also said that he had considered the idea of killing homosexuals, but ultimately decided against it.
“There is a danger of reacting in the flesh, of responding not in a scriptural, spiritual way, but in a fleshly way. Kill them all. Right?” Leatherman said. “I will be very honest with you. My flesh kind of likes that idea.
I'll be honest with you, too: I really like the idea. Just like pastor Leatherman, I enjoy my nightly fantasy of smashing a queer's testicles with the butt end of a shotgun before popping the barrel in his mouth and spattering his AIDS blood all over the ground.
The idea is pleasing to any reasonable Christian, but it's a safer idea for us to simply elect officials who will handle the dirty work for us.
We punish pedophilia. We punish incest. We punish polygamy and various things,” Knapp told KTKA. “It’s only homosexuality that is lifted out as an exemption.”
Knapp argued that his sermon was rooted in Biblical verse.
“‘If there is a man who lies with a male as those who lie with a woman, both of them have committed a detestable act,’” he quoted from Leviticus 20:12. “‘They shall surely be put to death.’”
While sticking to his view, Knapp said he himself wouldn’t attack homosexuals.
“I don’t believe I should lay a finger against them,” the Kansas pastor said. “My hope is for their salvation, not for their death."
Knapp argued that his sermon was rooted in Biblical verse.
“‘If there is a man who lies with a male as those who lie with a woman, both of them have committed a detestable act,’” he quoted from Leviticus 20:12. “‘They shall surely be put to death.’”
While sticking to his view, Knapp said he himself wouldn’t attack homosexuals.
“I don’t believe I should lay a finger against them,” the Kansas pastor said. “My hope is for their salvation, not for their death."
Meanwhile, a certain pastor Leatherman has also pondered the act of going out and murdering gays:
Knapp is among a number of religious figures who have recently spoken out against homosexuality.
North Carolina pastor Charles Worley delivered a sermon on May 13 that offered “a way to get rid of all the lesbians and queers” by corralling them behind an electrified fence and feeding them until they die out.
Maryland pastor Dennis Leatherman, responding to Worley’s comments on May 27, said that Worley was “dead wrong.”
Leatherman also said that he had considered the idea of killing homosexuals, but ultimately decided against it.
“There is a danger of reacting in the flesh, of responding not in a scriptural, spiritual way, but in a fleshly way. Kill them all. Right?” Leatherman said. “I will be very honest with you. My flesh kind of likes that idea.
The idea is pleasing to any reasonable Christian, but it's a safer idea for us to simply elect officials who will handle the dirty work for us.
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