Maiden: Hundreds of protesters gathered this weekend in Maiden, North Carolina, to voice their displeasure with a pastor’s statement that gays and lesbians should be rounded up behind electric fences.
Sheriff Coy Reid estimated between 1,500 and 2,000 protestors came to the Catawba County Justice Center for a peaceful protest on Sunday. He said only two citations for noise violations were issued and there were no arrests.
The protest was organized by the Catawba Valley Citizens Against Hate in response to a Mother’s Day sermon by Pastor Charles Worley at Providence Road Baptist Church in Maiden.
“I figured a way out, a way to get rid of all the lesbians and queers, but I couldn’t get it past the Congress,” Worley said to his congregation on May 13. A video of his comments went viral on YouTube.
“Build a great big, large fence – 50 or 100 miles long – and put all the lesbians in there,” Worley said. “Fly over and drop some food. Do the same thing with the queers and the homosexuals, and have that fence electrified so they can’t get out. Feed them. And you know in a few years, they’ll die out. You know why? They can’t reproduce.”
Protestors chanted, “Love not hate,” as the lined the road outside the Justice Center, which is 12 miles from thechurch.
Oganizers of the protest said they wanted to counter what they called the pastor’s hateful words with love and stressed prior to the event that “our Peace Keepers will respond quickly and vigorously to any behavior that detracts from the peaceful, non-violent plans of this event.”
On Friday night, vandals targeted the Providence Road Baptist Church, Lt. Daryl McCarty of the Catawba County Sheriff’s office told the media. “It appears that someone tried to set the air conditioning unit on fire in retaliation about his remarks against homosexuals and lesbians from the pulpit.”
McCarty said there was “no extensive damage or anything. The incident appears to have happened on Friday night. It wasn’t a big enough fire. It only burned the cover off of some wires.”
An electric company easily repaired the damage Saturday, according to McCarty.
Sheriff Reid said trash was lit under the air conditioning unit to start the fire. The unit is up against a brick wall and he said it did not seem like the vandals were attempting to burn down the building, saying, “It appeared they were trying to disrupt the service.”
The local fire marshal and a sheriff’s deputy are investigating the fire further, Reid said.
He also noted that Worley had received death threats after his comments and his department was actively following up on them.
The church’s website has also been down, but it had described the house of worship as independent and fundamentalist. It represents a Baptist tradition self-described as “old-time religion” and the website said church members consider the 1611 King James Version of the Bible to be the “inerrant Word of God.”
The church appears to be unconnected with any broader denomination. The Southern Baptist Convention, the nation’s largest Baptist group, noted the Providence Road Baptist in Maiden is not affiliated with its 16-million member denomination and condemned the pastor’s comments.
Last week in Maiden, members of the church vigorously defended their pastor, who has been at the church for more than two decades.
Some church members, who declined to give their names, said his words had been taken out of context. “He said he would feed them!” some church members told CNN, the media referring to the Worley’s idea for rounding up gays.
Worley “takes a real firm stand on the Bible and what it says about different things,” said church member Joe Heffner. “Whether I like it or not or whether anybody else likes it.”
Another church member, who declined to give his name, said that “being gay and lesbian or homosexual is wrong according to the Bible. … It’s Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.”
The sheriff said his deputies will be paying extra attention to the church building in the wake of the vandalism and threats. The church has about 300 members, he said.
Reid, who has been with the sheriff’s department since 1979, said the area had never seen anything quite like this.
“We hope it’s over,” he said. “The protestors have had their say now, so we’re hoping it all dies down.”
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