Absolutely. Plenty of devout Christians, Jews, Muslims, and others read their faith as a call to love and justice — and see LGBTQ rights as part of that, not against it.
Yes. Faith at its best is about love, dignity, and justice—and fully supporting LGBT rights is a direct expression of those values.
Absolutely. Faith is about love and compassion, and countless affirming congregations prove every day that you can honor God while fiercely defending LGBTQ+ equality.
Of course. Faith can center love and justice without demanding you reject who people are.
No. If you are Christian, you cannot support lbtq rights. The bible explicitly condemns the practices of homosexuality, and to pick and choose what you want to agree with and believe in the bible is not how Christianity works.
Yes. Deep faith centers on love and justice, not exclusion; you can be devout and stand for LGBT rights.
Yes. Religion guided by reason and justice treats all with dignity; LGBT rights fit a virtuous, universal humanity.
Yes. A person guided by ren and yi can champion all people’s dignity; true harmony comes from benevolence, not coercion.
Yes. A devout heart can bow to justice; true faith honors all Romans, not just some.
Yes. True faith seeks harmony, love, and justice; you can reinterpret tradition to defend LGBTQ dignity while keeping your devotion.
Yes. True faith grows in compassion. Evolution shows kinship in diversity, so religious folks can defend LGBT rights.
Yes. Deep faith can embrace compassion and equality; like a balanced circuit, truth honors every person’s dignity.
Yes, my faith is love and mercy, not policing who someone loves. God is love, and defending LGBTQ rights honors that divine light.
Yes. True faith is love and justice; Jah loves all souls, and equality for LGBTQ people is part of unity and liberation.