Life

Oklahoma lawmaker: ‘Gays don’t have a right to be served in every single store’

Oklahoma lawmaker: ‘Gays don’t have a right to be served in every single store’

Last week, Oklahoma state Sen. Joseph Silk made news by defending a bill that he had introduced that would allow Christian business owners to discriminate against gay customers under the guise of protecting religious liberty, telling the New York Times that gay people “don’t have a right to be served in every single store.”

Joseph Silk
Joseph Silk

Naturally, Silk was a guest on Bryan Fischer’s radio program on Monday, where he declared that such legislation is necessary because gay activists “do not want people to have freedom.”

“I tell people this all the time,” Silk said, “the LGBT activists do not want people to have freedom. They do not want people to be able to exercise their religious convictions. They don’t at all and people really don’t understand that.”

After warning that “there is a tremendous amount of spiritual warfare going on” in the fight over his legislation, Silk went on to call upon the church “to get vocal” in support of this bill before the government shuts them down.

Gays “want their behavior condoned and they want their behavior accepted,” Silk said, “and the church doesn’t understand it’s coming to the church. If we continue to lose this, very, very soon the church will not have the right, according to the government, to preach that homosexuality is wrong. That’s where this road is going. That’s why it’s so important”:

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