U.N. ‘expert’ demands religious beliefs bend to LGBT ideology

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from WND:

Explains faith easily can be made compatible with leftist lifestyles

A new report from an “expert” who serves the United Nations as its adviser on sexual orientation has come out with a report expressing the idea that religious freedom is “not incompatible” with the LGBT ideology.

However, a report from Washington Stand explains that that compatibility comes only when faith standards are “subservient” to the sexual-political agenda embrace by LGBT organizations.

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The report explained that the U.N. “expert,” Victor Madrigal-Borloz, commented to the 53rd Session of the U.N. Human Rights Council his opinion that religious freedom isn’t “incompatible” with LGBT equality.

And that’s to be accomplished through making “long-held religious beliefs and traditions … subservient.”

“Paying attention to the voices and practices of inclusive communities can help to shift narratives claiming that the exercise of freedom of religion or belief is incompatible with the equal enjoyment of human rights by LGBT persons,” he claimed.

The report said he then, however, proceeded to propose “blatant violations of religious freedom.”

He said the fix is to have religious communities re-interpret their own doctrines to meet his preferences.

“In some cases, religious narratives have been deliberately used to justify violence and discrimination — often in defiance of the doctrine of those faiths, and also beyond the scope of the right freedom of religion or belief,” he complained.

Explained the Stand, “So, now if we hold to biblical truth, we are apparently just misinterpreting our own doctrines. He insinuates that religious believers who do not embrace the LGBT ideology are misinterpreting their own religion. It is the height of arrogance for a U.N. expert to suggest that his interpretation — informed by the LGBT activist groups who submitted comments for his report — understands the teachings of major world religions better than their own religious leaders or the thousands of years of tradition that often inform their beliefs.”

The report, by Arielle Del Turco, noted that Borloz also cited concern about those people who are interpreting religious doctrines that place homosexuality “within a discourse of immorality and sin.”

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