Monday 21 February 2022

Luciferian Boldness: Ram Gava Kaggwa founds first Pentecostal gay church in Uganda: Adonai Inclusive Christian Ministries: I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist

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My Analysis

As born again Christians, we have the obligation to love gays because they were created in the image of God. We are supposed to condemn all violence against LBTIQ persons. However, homosexuality is an abomination before God just like incest, adultery and bestiality. Homosexuality is a socialized phenomena and not a natural condition. It is due to nurture and not nature. This means that human beings can be delivered out it. Homosexuality is condemned in the word of God and therefore no homosexual will ever see heaven. God is not okay with Gay pastors and church ministers like   Ram Gava Kaggwa. His will is that they repent and forsake gayism. It is not okay to be an homosexual. It is a spiritual tragedy brought about by a rebellious luciferic generation.  

 Ram Gava (@RamGava1) / Twitter

Ram Gava Kaggwa founds first Pentecostal gay  church in Uganda: Adonai Inclusive Christian Ministries: I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist

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https://www.facebook.com/kaggwa.ramathanlarry 

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I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist. Romans 8:1

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I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist. Romans 8:1

 PASTOR RAM GAVA SHARES ABOUT THE GENESIS AND MISSION OF ADONAI MINISTRIES |  Kuchu Times

I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist. Romans 8:1

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I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist. Romans 8:1

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 I’m a Spirit filled Pastor, human rights defender and an LGBTIQ+ activist. Romans 8:1

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Religious leaders in Uganda vow: We’ll include LGBTIQ people

https://76crimes.com/2021/10/16/religious-leaders-in-uganda-vow-well-include-lgbtiq-people/

Joto La Jiwe

More than 35 religious leaders in Uganda have vowed to preach, practice, and promote inclusivity in their places of worship, saying that exclusion has done harm to minority populations like the LGBTIQ community.

The leaders made the pledge during a religious inclusivity workshop organized last month by the East Africa Visual Artists (EAVA) in Kampala under the theme “I Am Free In Faith, Say No To Religious-Based Homophobia.”

 

 Some of the participants at the inclusivity meeting in Kampala recently. (Photo courtesy East Africa Visual Artists)

The workshop is part of a series or activities being conducted by EAVA with support from Arcus LGBTI+ to combat religious-based homophobia in Uganda.

Vincent Kyabayinze, Executive Director of EAVA, says it’s time to have frank discussions with affirming religious leaders regarding the fate of LGBTIQ persons in the Church.

“The decision to engage religious leaders on this matter is deliberate because of the influence that they command in society,” says Kyabayinze. He says homophobic religious leaders are driven by ignorance and hate.

“No informed and honest religious leader can stand on a pulpit and preach death to LGBT persons,” he adds.

One of the reasons why EAVA is teaming up with affirming religious leaders is to dispel false assertions that to be LGBTIQ is unholy.

 

 Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, the pioneer LGBT-welcoming Anglican church minister in Uganda, at the EAVA workshop. (Photo courtesy of EAVA)

On the contrary, some religious leaders, including Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, who works with the Charismatic Church of Uganda and the Episcopal Church of the United States, say that to be LGBT is human and normal.

“LGBT or not, we are all children of God created in His own image” Senyonjo says. He says there is no place for homophobia in the Holy Scriptures.

Senyonjo lauded EAVA for taking the campaign to religious leaders, asking “If religious leaders do not preach inclusivity, then who will?”

Pastor Ram Gava of the Adonai International Ministries says his Church has embraced inclusivity and opened its doors to all God’s people, regardless of their religion, gender identity, sexuality and status in society.

“This workshop organized by EAVA has further strengthened my resolve never to exclude anyone because he or she or they are LGBT”, Gava says.

When it opened its doors to LGBT persons, Adonai International Ministries witnessed a steady increase in its congregation at its church in Entebbe.

 

 One of the participants signs a pledge to create safer and inclusive spaces for LGBTIQ people in Uganda and on the African continent. (Photo courtesy of EAVA)

“This reveals how thirsty these people were for spiritual healing and empowerment,” Gava says.

For those who are unable to attend physical services due to distance or personal safety reasons, the Church has started weekly Zoom services.

Pastor Simon Mpinga of The Family of Affirming Ministries (TFAM) Uganda told his fellow religious leaders that they should unite to include not to exclude.

“Whenever we meet as church leaders, let us ask ourselves; how do we reach out to those who have been left out? As a pastor, I refuse to be part of a plot to destroy humanity. Let us be inclusive,” Mpinga says.

 

Faith leaders urge African churches to welcome LGBTQ people

https://76crimes.com/2021/09/01/faith-leaders-urge-african-churches-to-welcome-lgbtq-people/

LGBTQ-affirming faith leaders from the United States and Uganda, meeting in an online conference this summer, called on churches in Africa to open their doors to LGBTQ persons.

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By Joto la Jiwe

The conference was organised by the Adonai International Ministries (AIM), a Uganda-based LGBTQI church,

The upbeat gathering on July 15 brought together LGBTQ-affirming religious leaders, LGBTQI persons, human rights defenders and activists from all over the globe to discuss how religious advocacy work can address the challenges affecting the LGBTQ persons in Africa, where religion and culture are used as a tool to silence their voices and encourage human rights violations.

Fr. James Martin from the United States urged the world to pray for all those who work in African countries and in African churches to show God’s love to LGBTQ people. The Jesuit priest is one of the best-known Catholic advocates for LGBTQ dignity.

“It is time to drop the ministry of condemnation and take on the ministry of love and grace,” Martin says. “We are all children of God.”

Following the 2017 publication of his book Building a Bridge: How the Catholic Church and the LGBT Community Can Enter into a Relationship of Respect, Compassion, and Sensitivity, Martin has spoken at events worldwide — and even to Pope Francis — about advocating for more compassionate treatment of the Catholic Church’s LGBTQ community.

Pastor Ram Gava, the conference convener and head of AIM, explained why religious tolerance and advocacy matters to LGBTQI persons in Africa.

“Religious advocacy is significant to addressing the challenges affecting LGBTQ persons in Africa. Let’s make the Church a home for everyone by opening widely the Church gates for the LGBTQ persons to have their right to worship exercised,” Gava says.

He says he is a living testimony of an LGBTQI person who found peace and love in the Church.

Pastor Ram Gava. (File photo)

“I have been there and I have overcome. I’m sure sure you too can. Due to my sexuality, many took me to be sick in mind. I was given lots of provoking names. I was rejected by family and friends. I’m sharing this to help somebody going through what I went through. Though I was depressed and oppressed, at the time when I was about to give up on life, God’s voice that spoke to my heart, that voice I heard within me that was so soft and tender that asked me to look onto Him alone, saved my life from death.

“I was saved for a purpose to share love to the depressed and oppressed LGBTQ persons who are rejected and condemned by society and church, termed as sinners.

“With much confidence I want to say to all my LGBTQ brothers and sisters, we are loved, accepted and welcomed to God’s kingdom. Give no time to any message of hate and believe a message that says you are important, loved and good enough.

“Don’t give up on yourself, your God understands you and He celebrates your existence. Don’t be troubled. Believe in God. Don’t accept to live in fear of punishment. Come and find rest in Him. Adonai International Ministries-AIM is opening its doors widely for you to come, seek and find rest in the Lord,” Gava says.

US-based Bishop Joseph Tolton, the executive director of The Fellowship Global or TFG. (Photo courtesy of TFG)

Bishop Joseph Tolton, executive director of The Fellowship Global (TFG) based in the United States, also spoke at the conference. Tolton designed TFG primarily to provide pastoral care for LGBTI people and progressive communities of faith in hostile climates around the world. They have established partnerships and social justice groups in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Cote d’Ivoire, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Asia.

He says that whatever life LGBTQI people are living, hard or easy, they should preach love and keep doing good.

Stan JR Zerkowski from the LGBTQI Ministry Diocese of Lexington in the US urged the LGBTQI community in Africa to keep praying, trusting and serving God’s people.

“There will be a break through. We are praying for you and with you,” Zerkowski said.

John Victor Muwonge, a participant from Uganda, called upon the LGBTQI community to unite and be willing to engage with those who want to learn more about the community.

“The devil thrives on weakness and ignorance,” Muwonge says. He says many people hate LGBTQI persons because they do not know them.

Pastor Simon Anthony addresses the Kuchu Memorial Day service in Kampala in 2020. Kasha Nabagesera and LGBT community leaders stand beside him. (Photo courtesy of UhspaUganda)

The cooperation with American Christian ministries on acceptance of LGBTQI people is a radical shift from the work of previous American Christian endeavours in Uganda, which sought to demonize LGBTQI people.

Notoriously, the American anti-gay church leader Scott Lively promoted homophobia in Uganda and helped push the “Kill the Gays” bill that in its original form would have seen the death penalty enforced against gay people. The bill was first introduced in 2009 and passed into law in 2014, before being struck down by the Constitutional Court of Uganda on procedural grounds. Lively’s influence on local homophobic churches has also been cited in frustrating the fight against HIV/AIDS among LGBT people.