FYI: Conversion therapy network disbanding (Hope for Wholeness)
Fuck. These. People. Good riddance.
One of the nation's largest conversion therapy networks is disbanding
Hope for Wholeness, an ex-gay ministry with a presence in at least 15 states, advocated freedom from homosexuality through Jesus Christ.
Hope for Wholeness, a prominent ex-gay ministry that boasts one of the most expansive networks of conversion therapy offerings in the United States, is disbanding.
The Spartanburg, South Carolina-based organization, founded in 1999 as Truth Ministries, told members in an email Monday and obtained by NBC News that Hope for Wholeness would be closing its operations, citing the groups difficulties in retaining a director to lead their efforts.
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This is enormous for a lot of reasons, said Mathew Shurka, co-founder of the Born Perfect project, which aims to end conversion therapy in every state. Hope for Wholeness is a well-known conversion therapy organization that has cheated lots of people.
Hope for Wholeness was originally an offshoot of Exodus International, which, for decades, was the center of the ex-gay movement and had more than 120 ministries in the United States and Canada. Exodus was dissolved in 2013 after the organizations leader announced at a conference he would resign and apologized to those who spent years working through the shame and guilt when your attractions didnt change.