What makes the LGBTQ PRIDE March demonic?
1. PRIDE March costume parade is clearly of the devil
PRIDE March costumes are colorful, but they also come naked, and some with devil-themed costumes. Red horns and red capes are common, while others go to length by dressing up as a “gay Jesus.”
It is also common to see two men or two women kiss as they parade their sins in full view.
Isaiah 3:9
The look on their faces testifies against them, and like Sodom, they flaunt their sin. They do not conceal it. Woe to them, for they have brought evil on themselves.
MILITANT LGBTQ ATTACKS CHRISTIANS.
2. PRIDE March mock God
Insulting God’s rainbow
The rainbow reflects God’s glory and graciousness. Because of man’s wickedness, God sent rain for the first time on earth to flood and drown them (Genesis 6:5-12). God created the rainbow as a symbol of His covenant, a sign of His mercy towards Noah’s family and future descendants.
Today, instead of representing God’s glory, the rainbow color represents sodomy, an abomination before God. (Leviticus 20:13)
Instead of representing God’s glory, the rainbow color represents sodomy.
Mocking the nuclear family
The LGBTQ PRIDE organization advocates a new movement which is to “Protect Trans Kids.” They are also redefining the nuclear family to do away with the sacred union between a husband and a wife while calling mothers “birthing persons” to mean men can also give birth.
In short, they are mocking God’s design for the family.
Even the youngest members of our AstraZeneca family came out to the #pridemarch to show their support for the LGBTQIA+ community. #Stonewall50 #Pride pic.twitter.com/AmiDADCrwc
— AstraZenecaUS (@AstraZenecaUS) July 2, 2019
3. LGBTQ members of the Satanic Temple are more than half
In 2019, The Satanic Temple (TST) co-founder Lucien Greaves said, “More than 50% of our membership is LGBTQ, and that is a “conservative estimate.” The gay magazine Attitude first reported his remarks, but the post was removed around November 2022.
In 2022, TST joined the Pride march in Tyler, Texas. They offered “unbaptisms” for $10 with an inverted cross painted on the forehead and a certificate. The unbaptism was “intended to provide bodily liberation and catharsis to those who have been subjected to unwanted religious indoctrination.” [Newsweek]