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LGBT Activist Attempts to Gain Christian's Trust. Don't Fall For It.
Photo Credit: AP

LGBT Activist Attempts to Gain Christian's Trust. Don't Fall For It.

A leading LGBT funder is targeting the Republican Party and mobilizing young millennials to advance his LGBT agenda.

Editor's Note: This post has been revised for clarity. Please note that Steve and Jackie Green and MOTB did provide some contributions for the initial Covenant Journey tours that the author of this article founded. The last contribution was June 2015, 13 months before the publication of this article.

By Mat Staver

It is not surprising that those seeking to advance the LGBT agenda would work through left-leaning organizations, but one billionaire who has his eye on millennials has begun partnering with Hobby Lobby and its Museum of the Bible.

Paul Singer has been targeting Republican candidates, lawmakers, and the Republican Party platform. Now, he is reaching out to Christian students on college campuses.

Singer has an elaborate funding and organizational scheme that appears to support Christians and gain their goodwill while at the same time working against them to advance his same-sex marriage and LGBT agenda. One of the organizations Singer heavily funds created propaganda that was published in the Washington Post by editorial board member Jonathan Capehart.

AP Photo

Purporting to show an interconnecting "enemies of equality" network, Capehart’s article is based entirely upon a chart created by Freedom for All Americans. Capehart refused to respond to multiple attempts to set the record straight. As an out homosexual who regularly appears on MSNBC, truth about LGBT issues must not matter to Capehart.

The chart and Capehart’s article depicting a vast "right-wing conspiracy" are false. The chart also makes false allegations about Liberty Counsel and the other named people and groups. But, as will be discussed below, the inclusion of Hobby Lobby raises special attention to Singer’s activities and reveals how he uses a well-known Christian organization.

Billionaire New York hedge fund manager Paul Singer and Tim Gill are behind Freedom for All Americans, which produced the propaganda. Singer and Gill, the founder of Quark, are leading financial supporters of same-sex marriage and the LGBT agenda. Singer is also behind the American Unity PAC, which works to elect pro-LGBT advocates to public office, and American Unity Fund, a 501(c)(4) lobbying organization whose mission is to advance the LGBT agenda. This group hosted a "Big Tent Brunch" at the Republican National Convention featuring Montel Williams, Bruce "Caitlyn" Jenner, elected officials, and delegates.

While Liberty Counsel and Alliance Defending Freedom were defending marriage in California, Singer financed litigation against the California Prop 8 marriage amendment and is responsible for New York Republican legislators changing their votes to support same-sex marriage in 2011.

Since the 2015 Supreme Court marriage opinion, Singer has turned his efforts to advancing LGBT rights in political party platforms, in Congress, at the local and state levels, and among millennials.

To influence young leaders, Singer has put his money behind LGBT University and he is now working to reach Christian students on college campuses. Some of the organizations he funds include Young Conservatives for the Freedom to Marry and Freedom for All Americans.

Singer, whose son is gay, is focused like a laser to advance the LGBT agenda. He generally supports Republican politics, but he also wants to enshrine same-sex marriage and the LGBT agenda into the American culture. The best way to accomplish his agenda is through the courts, legislative bodies, political candidates, and young future leaders.

While Singer declares Hobby Lobby an "enemy of equality" using Freedom for All Americans as his conduit, he entered into a close partnership with the independent 501(c)3 Museum of the Bible (MOTB) and The Philos Project.

MOTB and the Philos Project are joint partners in "Passages Israel" that began in 2016 taking Christian college students to Israel. Passages Israel is similar to Covenant Journey, which was launched by Liberty Counsel in 2014. Covenant Journey takes Christian college students who have leadership potential to Israel to strengthen their Christian faith and equip them to be goodwill ambassadors for Israel.

In 2015, Singer, through The Philos Project, offered millions of dollars to Covenant Journey, but his surrogates also wanted control of the board and the content of the program. As founder and president of Covenant Journey, I rejected Singer’s offer and refused to take a penny from him.

Cary Summers, president of MOTB, then entered into a partnership with Singer to create Passages Israel. Summers told me he wanted to reach Jewish philanthropists to gain access and favor for the museum. Singer had no interest in the museum, but Covenant Journey caught his attention. Summers proposed that MOTB and Singer fund Covenant Journey in a joint partnership. But, Singer wanted control of the Covenant Journey board and wanted to change the content of the program for millennials, and he wanted no one else involved except him and MOTB, headed by Steve Green. I could not allow Singer to take control of Covenant Journey and change the content, no matter how much money was on the table. And, believe me, the offer involved millions of dollars.

I advised Cary Summers I could not hand over our future Christian leaders to Singer and advised him not to enter into a joint partnership. He ignored the obvious warning signs, although he knew Singer was one of the top funders of the LGBT agenda and same-sex marriage, and he knew Singer's agenda would not sit well with MOTB donors. Summers thought he could cover Singer’s involvement through The Philos Project. He played with fire. Summers and Steve Green, president of Hobby Lobby and Chairman of MOTB, knowing Singer's agenda and with full knowledge of the risk, decided to partner with Singer anyway.

On the one hand, Singer can list Hobby Lobby as an "enemy of equality" while entering into a partnership with the same family in order to reach Christian leaders on college campuses. The irony is painfully obvious. But with so many organizations, even Summers thought the public could be fooled.

I would never entrust young Christian leaders to Paul Singer's agenda. If there is any conspiracy or strange bedfellows, the Washington Post would better spend its time looking into the web that Paul Singer has woven.

Singer and MOTB issued a premature press release about Covenant Journey in 2015, which I never saw beforehand and would not have approved. The statement claimed that Singer was a founding sponsor with MOTB in Covenant Journey, even though Covenant Journey was the brainchild of Liberty Counsel and Singer never provided any funding. When Singer’s offer of money in exchange for control was rejected, MOTB and Singer created Passages Israel.

On the surface, Singer's partnership with MOTB may sound harmless. But Singer's involvement is fraught with danger. With his newly-minted MOTB partnership, Singer's name is now routinely mentioned alongside the Green family and Hobby Lobby. It may look like he is a friend of our Christian youth partnering with a reputable Christian organization. And that is exactly the image Singer wants to convey. But Singer always has his eye on the goal to advance the LGBT agenda.

Singer does not hide his involvement with MOTB and the Green family. In fact, he publicizes the association, which no doubt introduces Singer's name to a new audience, including Christian college students. For the students who participate in Passages Israel, he has all their contact information. He has it all – college, address, email, cell phone, social media, academic information, special interests, and more.

In the same way Singer can call Hobby Lobby an "enemy of equality" while being in a joint partnership with MOTB, so Singer can appear one way to the young Christian leaders and then recruit them for his LGBT agenda. Parents and colleges should beware.

In January 2016, MOTB and Singer jointly launched their first student tour program to Israel. One student from Hillsdale College described how the trip impacted her, but not in a positive way.

"Going to Israel has complicated my narrative and given me more questions than answers," said 20-year old JoAnna Kroeker from Hillsdale College. Now, she said, she can no longer be "pro-Palestine or pro-Israel" and is unfortunately confused with no solutions.

On a 2016 MOTB-Singer sponsored Passages Israel trip, the itinerary included a lecture from Dr. Mustafa Abu Sway, a professor at Al-Quds University in "Jerusalem, Palestine," who raises funds for the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock, and who allegedly believes Israel should disappear. According to the Middle East Media Research Institute, the Al-Aqsa Mosque "is a steady stream of call for jihad and martyrdom, venomous attacks on Jews, Christians and other non-Muslims, and praise for al Qaeda, Islamic State and other jihadist groups." Abu Sway was the president of the Islamic Society of Boston from 1990-1992, which has been associated with a number of suspected terrorists, including the Boston Bombers. According to Middle East expert Dr. Daniel Pipes, Abu Sway is a known activist for the terrorist group Hamas. Hamas even publishes articles by Abu Sway on its website. According to the Jewish News Service, Abu Sway "is a Muslim supremacist. He believes that Muslims should wield political power over Jews and Christians in the Holy Land and in the rest of the Middle East. He also thinks Israel should disappear because the existence of a Jewish state is a theological impossibility under Islam."

Why would anyone ever bring Christian college students to Israel and subject them to a lecture from an Islamic radical who supports Jihad and the terrorist group Hamas? It is one thing to present both sides of an issue, but quite another to provide a platform for a jihadist to indoctrinate future leaders.

An alarming number of young people walk away from their Christian faith following high school, and, when this happens, they also disconnect from Israel and, in some cases, become anti-Semitic. Covenant Journey immerses students in the land of the Bible and connects them to the roots of our Christian faith. The experiential tour has a strong spiritual content. The Bible and Jesus become more real and meaningful. Their Christian faith is renewed and deepened, and the students fall in love with and become advocates for Israel.

Singer is not interested in the Christian faith of millennials, but he is focused on recruiting young leaders. Singer wants to capture the youth and enlist them in his army to change America. He wants to advance a radical LGBT agenda. That agenda is on a collision course with the faith of the Christian college students he is trying to reach. Singer has made many inroads into the Republican Party. Now he is trying to infiltrate Christian groups to reach Christian college students.

Mat Staver is Founder and Chairman of Liberty Counsel, Founder and President of Covenant Journey, and President of Christians in Defense of Israel.

TheBlaze contributor channel supports an open discourse on a range of views. The opinions expressed in this channel are solely those of each individual author.

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