Gay pastor atlanta

OUR VISIONARY LEADERSHIP 

Bishop Oliver Clyde Allen, III, is a religious trailblazer, storyteller, human rights advocate,  an international and community public figure and entrepreneur. Bishop O.C. Allen is the  Senior Pastor and Founder of The Vision Cathedral of Atlanta known as “The Vision  Church”. The Vision Church has 3 campuses, The Vision Church of Atlanta, Vision  Church of Raleigh, Vision Church of Los Angeles and Vision Church of Nashville. He is  the founder and Presiding Bishop of the United Progressive Pentecostal Fellowship  of Churches (UPPC), a progressive Christian and inclusive religious organization which  oversees senior pastors, ministers, churches and faith-based organizations throughout  the United States and abroad. He also is a Commissioner on the Atlanta Human Rights  Commission.  

In 2015, Bishop Allen was appointed by President Barak Obama to the Presidential  Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS (PACHA). In 2016, he was appointed the Southeastern  Chair of the DNC-LGBT Advisory Board and a co-chair of the DNC LGBTQ Policy  Group. He has served as the National Ambassador and consultant for the NAACP –  Black Church/HIV Initiative. Bishop

Atlanta queer-friendly Black church is source of solace for LGBTQ youths: 'I stare over and watch my people'

“I was at my lowest point, like, I was absolutely suicidal when I walked into” Vision, she said. “The internalized negativity had just taken over. I didn’t want to be alive anymore. I didn’t comprehend a way out, because I hated myself, because that’s what I was taught, to detest a person who was gay.”

The South Georgia native described her upbringing in a “very Christian” Black evangelical abode, where family members like her mother, her uncle and a grandfather often stepped up to the pulpit as pastors. 

“My mother was in labor with me on a pew at church. She had to leave church to go have me,” she said, adding that from the ages of 18 to 24, she ventured outside her family’s church to attend six to eight other churches.

At each church, McKinney became skilled at code-switching. She swapped her slacks for skirts and left no questions start when it came to her sexuality. But at Vision, McKinney said, she no longer feels compelled to pretzel herself into a category to acquire favor.

“I can actually be myself,” she said. “I can go to church and sit next to my wife and no one

Bishop Eddie Long

Bishop Eddie Long pastors a huge church near Atlanta. He's also one of the most homophobic black ministers in America.

LITHONIA, Ga. — “Men can look attractive when they are dirty,” writes Bishop Eddie Lengthy in his 1997 book I Don’t Want Delilah, I Desire You! “We see sweating, unclean, hardworking men on television all the time and we utter to one another, ‘There’s a macho guy.’”

Despite this affinity for sweaty, macho men, Long is one of the most virulently homophobic black leaders in the religiously based anti-gay movement. His book, subtitled What a Girl Needs to Know, What a Man Needs to Understand, appeared in the midst of a roaring growth period for Long’s New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, Ga., near Atlanta. During the mid-’90s, it swelled to over 18,000 congregation members, men and women who worship in a multimillion-dollar complex that’s the size of most major universities, spread out on 240 acres of land.

Much of what appears in I Don’t Desire Delilah was espoused in the videotaped “Back to the Future” sermon Long gave when his church was still small.

Georgia Megachurch Pastor Reveals He's Gay

Nov. 2, 2010— -- The pastor of a Georgia megachurch with thousands of followers, who was twice married and is a father of four, is speaking out about his recent decision to publicly declare he is gay.

"I comprehend a lot of straight people consider orientation is a choice. I need to tell you that it is not," Jim Swilley said in a video shot in the nondenominational megachuch Swilley founded 25 years ago.

Though Swilley said coming out was a verdict he's struggled with since childhood, he made the announcement last month not for personal reasons -- he said he hopes to save lives.

The 52-year-old founder of Church in the Now in Conyers, Ga., said he's coming out to aide stem the recent tide of lgbtq+ suicides in America and won't be swayed by some hateful messages that have been written about him online.

"To think about saving a teenager, yeah, I'll risk my reputation for that," he told ABC News' Atlanta affiliate WSB-TV before before tearing up. "As a father, thinking about your 16-, 17-year-old killing themselves."

Online, those hateful messages have been drowned out by an out