A recent Closeup billboard celebrating LGBT love drew sharp criticism from the "Jesus and Me Ministry," which called for its removal via a Facebook post. The ministry framed the ad as promoting sin and undermining biblical values, arguing that corporate marketing should prioritize moral guidance over societal trends.
But let’s be clear: seeing a romantic image of two men is not a moral failing, and it will not “convert” straight people. Our society is already heteronormative and patriarchal, saturated with countless depictions of heterosexual love and romance. Yet gay people still exist. The idea that LGBT visibility can somehow corrupt others is baseless fear-mongering. Love does not work like a contagion.
Consider the logic being applied: if seeing two men in love could make someone gay, then by the same token, seeing straight couples everywhere should make everyone straight. That’s absurd, isn't it? Humans are not defined by advertisements or billboards. They are defined by identity, experience, and personal understanding. Visibility is not moral decay. It is representation.
The backlash against Closeup reflects a broader struggle between public morality dictated by a religious few and personal freedoms in a pluralistic society. In countries like ours, where heteronormativity dominates cultural narratives, LGBT people still continue to exist and thrive. They should have the right to exist and love freely in a shared world, especially when they cause no harm.
The ministry’s claim that such advertising “advances a worldview” or “shapes hearts, minds, beliefs, and values” is less about protecting morality and more about policing who gets to exist visibly in public space. Using scripture to enforce moral panic is cherry-picking at its most cynical. Christians who genuinely follow the Bible would find abundant verses emphasizing love, compassion, and restraint from judgment.
For instance, Jesus reminds us in John 8:7, “He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.”
1 John 4:8 teaches, “Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.”
And Ephesians 4:32 underscores kindness: “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.”
Why is it that only select verses that fuel your prejudice are considered in discussions like this? Short answer: You don't really care about moral guidance. You care about policing who gets to be seen and respected in this world.
Those who weaponize scripture to justify bigotry ignore the call to love and understanding, elevating judgment and fear over empathy. Being gay is not a sin, nor does it harm others. It is not comparable to lies, theft, murder, or adultery. It does not threaten public morality, family values, or societal order. The only threat comes from those claiming moral authority to limit visibility, expression, or recognition of marginalized communities. Beliefs held by one group do not become universal standards. If someone believes being gay is a sin, they can choose not to be gay. But they cannot dictate the lives of others.
Advertising love, in all its forms, should never be labeled “sinful.” Society benefits when messages of acceptance, equality, and human dignity are normalized. A billboard featuring gay couples does not erode society. It reminds us that love, in its purest form, transcends gender, prejudice, and outdated moral policing.
In short? Gay love is not the threat. Your bigotry is. The choice is ours. Embrace understanding, or cling to fear masquerading as faith.