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Michael Glatze with Matthew Shepard's mother, Judy
Shepard (Harvard University photo)
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July 06, 2007 - By Art Moore
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com
He was a rising star in the "gay rights"
movement, but Michael Glatze now declares not only has he given
up activism – he's no longer a homosexual.
Glatze – who had become a frequent media
source as founding editor of Young Gay America magazine – tells
the story of his transformation in an
exclusive column published today by WND.
Although Glatze cut himself off from the
homosexual community about a year and a half ago, he says the
column likely will surprise some people.
"This will actually be news to anybody I
used to relate to," he told WND.
The radical change in his life, Glatze
recalls, began with inner "promptings" he now attributes to God.
"I hope I can share my story," he said. "I
feel strongly God has put me here for a reason. Even in the
darkest days of late-night parties, substance abuse and all
kinds of things – when I felt like, 'Why am I here, what am I
doing?' – there was always a voice there.
"I didn't know what to call it, or if I
could trust it, but it said 'hold on.'"
Glatze said he became aware of homosexual
feelings at about the age of 14 and publicly declared himself
"gay" at age 20. Finally, after a decade in which his leadership
role in the homosexual activist world grew – but alongside it, a
mysterious inner conflict – he says he finally was "liberated."
In fact, he writes in his WND column
today, "'coming out' from under the influence of the homosexual
mindset was the most liberating, beautiful and astonishing thing
I've ever experienced in my entire life."
Before "coming out" in his column today,
Glatze contacted WND Managing Editor David Kupelian after
reading his book, "The
Marketing of Evil, which Glatze said "has given me so much
help in my process of healing from the profound influences of
evil in our current society."
"There is nothing that would give me more
pleasure," he wrote to Kupelian, "than to say the Truth about
'homosexuality' and atone for my sins in that regard."
Glatze's transformation calls to mind that
of another prominent "gay" magazine publisher who also has
renounced her former lifestyle. Lesbian activist Charlene
Cothran, 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."
After becoming editor of Young Gay America
magazine at age 22, Glatze received numerous awards and
recognition, including the National Role Model Award from the
major homosexual-rights organization Equality Forum. Media
gravitated toward him, leading to appearances on PBS television
and MSNBC and quotes in a cover story in Time magazine called "The
Battle Over Gay Teens."
He produced, with the help of PBS
affiliates and Equality Forum, the first major documentary film
to address homosexual teen suicide, "Jim In Bold," which toured
the world and received numerous "best in festival" awards. Young
Gay America's photo exhibit, telling the story of young people
across North America, toured Europe, Canada and parts of the
U.S.
Time, Oct. 10, 2006,"Battle over Gay
Teens" quotes Glatze as expert.
In 2004, Glatze moved from San Francisco
to Halifax in eastern Canada where his partner, Young Gay
America magazine's publisher, had family. The magazine, he said,
sought to provide a "virtuous counterpart" to the other
newsstand media aimed at homosexual youth.
But Glatze contends "the truth was, YGA
was as damaging as anything else out there, just not overtly
pornographic, so more 'respected.'"
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.
Read Michael Glatze's WND column today, "How a 'gay rights'
leader became straight" |