
longtime publisher of Venus magazine, became a Christian and gave her magazine a new mission "to encourage, educate and assist those who desire to leave a life of homosexuality."She adds: "Our ultimate mission is to win souls for Christ, and to do so by showing love to all God's people."In his column, Glatze doesn't mince words, calling homosexual sex purely "lust-based," meaning it can never fully satisfy."It's a neurotic process rather than a natural, normal one," he writes. "Normal is normal-and has been called normal for a reason."In 2005, Glatze was featured in a panel with Judy Shepard, mother of slain homosexual Matthew Shepard, at the prestigious JFK Jr. Forum at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government."It was after viewing my words on a videotape of that 'performance,'" he writes, "that I began to seriously doubt what I was doing with my life and influence.""Knowing no one who I could approach with my questions and my doubts, I turned to God," he says. "I'd developed a growing relationship with God, thanks to a debilitating bout with intestinal cramps caused by the upset stomach-inducing behaviors I'd been engaged in."Toward the end of his time with Young Gay America,Glatze said, colleagues began to notice he was going through some kind of religious experience.Just before leaving, not fully realizing what he was doing, he wrote on his office computer his thoughts, ending with the declaration:"Homosexuality is death, and I choose life.""I was so nervous, it was like I wasn't even writing it myself," he said.Inexplicably, he told WND, he left the words on the screen for others to see."People who looked at it were stunned; they thought it was crazy," he said.But he left his co-workers wondering about where he stood, never having fully explained his decision to step down.Looking back on his old lifestyle, Glatze told WND whenever he had a sense that he was doing something wrong,"I would I just attribute it to, 'that's just the way life is.'""If ever I were to question anything, [my colleagues] would say, 'You're such an idealist.'"Glatze said he thought opponents of homosexual activism were "mean and crazy, and they wanted to hurt me.""I thought they were out to get me," he said."They made me really, really mad-and scared, I think.I wanted them to go away."Glatze said he couldn't allow himself to think they were sincere in their beliefs.But he now has deep respect for a Christian aunt who disapproved of his lifestyle.She "was never judgmental, but always firm," he said.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=56481
As in the days of Noah....