Exodus International, a large Christian ministry that offered so-called “reparative” therapies for gay Christians, issued a series of apologies to the LGBT community and has decided to close its doors after 37 years of working with Christians “struggling with same-sex attraction.”
In a statement Wednesday, the board of directors voted unanimously to close the organization due to “a changing culture,” posting the announcement to the ministry’s website. The Orlando-based ministry’s president, Alan Chambers, offered an open apology to the LGBT community, saying he was “deeply sorry” and admitting he “omitted [his] ongoing same-sex attractions.”
In 2007, Chambers presented himself as a success story for Exodus’ methods to “cure” homosexuality. “Exodus is here for people who want an alternative to homosexuality,” he told The Associated Press. “There are thousands of people like me who have overcome this.” Last year, Chambers decided to stop endorsing the practice of “reparative therapy.”
“I was afraid to share [my feelings] as readily and easily as I do today,” Chambers said in his apology Wednesday. “They brought me tremendous shame and I hid them in the hopes they would go away. … The days of feeling shame over being human in that way are long over, and I feel free simply accepting myself as my wife and family does.”
“Please know that I am deeply sorry,” Chambers added. “I am sorry for the pain and hurt many of you have experienced. I am sorry that some of you spent years working through the shame and guilt you felt when your attractions didn’t change. I am sorry we promoted sexual orientation change efforts and reparative theories about sexual orientation that stigmatized parents.”
Related: Although discredited, gay conversion therapy remains an option for minors
Randy Roberts Potts, the grandson of televangelist faith healer Oral Roberts and a gay rights advocate, weighed in on the news.
“The status quo among this community too often involves shaming and denigrating these young people, a status quo that comes specifically from national leaders and trickles down to the thousands of pastors, youth leaders, and others in the evangelical community who deal with gay and lesbian teens on a daily basis,” Potts said in a statement to msnbc.com. “Because of this status quo, the church is often the LEAST safe place for a young gay teen to come out. Alan began to see that Exodus was merely another arm of the church and no safer for gay teens, especially in its insistence (until last year) that sexual orientation would change with enough prayer and the right amount of faith.”
Truth Wins Out, a non-profit organization that fights anti-gay religious extremism, praised Chambers’ decision to shut down Exodus International.
“We applaud and congratulate Alan Chambers for his willingness to approach this decision with honesty, integrity and authenticity,” said Truth Wins Out’s Associate Director Evan Hurst. “It takes a real man to publicly confront the people whose lives were destroyed by his organization’s work, and to take real, concrete action to begin to repair that damage, and to work to ensure that no more lives are destroyed by harmful, discredited ‘ex-gay’ therapy. We look forward to a day when we can truly consider Alan to be an ally.”









