Pride Month was in June, and Michael Brown brought his usual anti-LGBT hatred to the fore yet again. Brown complained at the beginning of the month in his June 5 WorldNetDaily column:
It’s June, and that means that everywhere you turn, you’ll be confronted with LGBTQ+ flags and banners and memes and displays. But rather than get frustrated by this constant, in your face display, let’s turn it into a call for prayer.
That’s why I posted on June 3, “Every time you see a Pride flag or display this month, let it be a reminder to pray for the mercy of God to touch all those who identify as LGBTQ+ and for them to experience the same repentance and forgiveness and transformation that you have received as a follower of Jesus.”
Prayer is our greatest spiritual weapon and the most powerful expression of our love. Prayer prevails. As S.D. Gordon said, “Prayer is striking the winning blow. Service is gathering up the results.”
Brown then touted a film with a lot of anti-LGBT content:
I encourage you to take the time to watch an amazing documentary produced by American Family Studios titled “In His Image.” (Trust me on this. You will be really blessed when you watch.)
I had the privilege of hosting this powerful film, which not only features great, practical, theological discussion on the meaning of male and female and of God’s plan for humanity. It also features powerful testimonies from ex-gays and ex-trans individuals, two of whom had trans-related surgeries in the past.
That’s how committed they were to transitioning, and that’s how radically God intervened in their lives.
I would especially draw your attention to the story of Laura Beth Perry (now happily married, and officially Laura Perry Smalts), since prayer played a major role in her own salvation and transformation, as you’ll see when you watch “In His Image.”
Let this also be an encouragement to every family member, friend and loved one of someone who identifies as somewhere on the LGBTQ+ spectrum. As you continue to show them Christlike love and kindness, never forget the power of prayer.
We really do serve a prayer-answering God, and while He will not infringe on our freedom of choice, He really does know how to change hearts and minds.
So, every time you see that Pride flag or a Pride meme, use it as a reminder to pray for an outpouring of God’s transforming, saving mercy on all those who fly under that hijacked rainbow.
It is time for a wonderful harvest of souls! May the churches be ready to receive them with love and truth.
After Pride Month ended, Brown served up more hate in his July 3 column — starting, of course, with his usual faux compassion:
As a follower of Jesus, I believe in treating every human being with civility and grace. And to be quite specific, I believe in loving my LGBTQ+ neighbor as myself. At the same time, because I care for the greater good of society and believe that God’s ways are best, I oppose many of the goals of LGBTQ+ activism. That’s why I was glad to see a much-more diminished version of Pride Month in 2024. The pushback, which I have been expecting for years, continues to grow.
Fervently cheering LGBT people being erased from society is not an example of “civility and grace.” He continued to undercut that purported compassion by cheering that others hate LGBT people as much as he does:
Last year, things were so over the top and in your face that the longtime gay ally Piers Morgan asked, “Have we gone rainbow crazy or is Pride Month more important than patriotism?” And in response to a challenge from a gay comedian, Morgan answered, “I’m not triggered by a rainbow flag. I’m triggered by the fact that everywhere that I go for a month everything has to be a rainbow flag.”
Last year, things got so extreme with Target’s “tuck” bathing suits for males who identified as females (including children) that Joe Rogan commented, “When I go to Target, I don’t wanna see like [expletive] tuck pants. They’re designed to help you tuck your [expletive]. Like, hey, that’s not normal.”
Last year we were also in the thick of the Bud Light boycott, with Rogan calling the so-called “transgender influencer” Dylan Mulvaney “a confused person.” As for Kid Rock, he let his gun do the talking (before adding some choice expletives).
Already, by the end of last year, Kid Rock had softened his stance, saying that Bud “‘deserved a black eye and they got one’ for the partnership with Dylan Mulvaney, but then added he’s over the boycott. ‘So, do I want to hold their head underwater and drown them because they made a mistake? No, I think they got the message.'”
It would be hard to miss a message that cost you more than 1 billion dollars.
Target got the message, too.
Brown did not explain why companies need to be punished financially for sharing in his hate. Iinstead, he concluded:
It’s hard to argue with reality.
And so, the pushback continues to gain ground as radical activism continues to lose steam and more and more Americans, regular people who are not bigots or haters, are saying, “Enough already.”
Brown is lying. If you’re trying to destroy a company for insufficiently hating LGBT people, you are very much a bigot and a hater.