Is carrie underwood gay

Carrie Underwood 'Creating Confusion' for Christian Millennials With Gay Marriage Support: AFA

By Stoyan Zaimov, Christian Post Reporter

The conservative American Family Association says region music star Carrie Underwood, who recently performed at the three-day Passion 2017 conference at the Georgia Dome, is creating confusion among Christian millennials due to her assist for gay marriage.

The annual conference, hosted by Pastor Louie Giglio, founder of the Passion Movement and head of Passion City Church in Atlanta, welcomed 55,000 youths from 90 countries and all 50 states. 

The event featured renowned Christian speakers, such as Christine Caine, Beth Moore, John Piper, Levi Lusko and Francis Chan, among others. Artists who led worship included the Passion Band, Chris Tomlin, Crowder, Matt Redman, Christy Nockels and Hillsong UNITED.

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Underwood, who has written numerous songs about her Christian faith, united the stage to perform her smash "Something in the Water" on the first day of the conference.

AFA Execut

Carrie Underwood Is Letting Her Queer Fans Down By Carrying out At Trump’s Inauguration

Carrie Underwood has all the proponents of a queer icon: great hair, a glamorous wardrobe and a song catalogue you can’t assist but belt on karaoke. After taking a public stance in support of gay marriage support in 2012 (a depressingly risky transfer for a land music star with a largely conservative fanbase back then), she cemented her place among the musical greats of queer history. And yet now, she’s made the one decision that could take her firmly out of favour with the Queer community: she’s acting at Donald Trump’s inauguration tonight.

Underwood will take the stage to perform America the Beautiful, telling Yahoo she feels ‘honoured’ to be a part of the ceremony. ‘I love our country,’ she said. ‘I am humbled to answer the summon at a period when we must all come together in the essence of unity and looking to the future.’

Underwood didn’t publicly support any political party during the election and has previously said that she stays out of talking about politics because not all of her opinions are relayed with the necessary nuance.

‘I feel favor more people aim to pin me places politically,’

Carrie Underwood Comes Out in Support of Marriage Equality 

By Brittny Drye

The darling of country melody and American Idol alum Carrie Underwood has officially become a straight ally for marriage equality.

During an interview with U.K.’s The Independent, the award-winning artist says, “As a married person myself, I don’t know what it’s like to be told I can’t marry somebody I like, and want to marry. I can’t imagine how that must feel. I definitely think we should all have the right to love, and love publicly, the people that we desire to love.”

Of course, she’s risking receiving a wrath from her conservative fan base. “Our church is gay friendly,” she says of her and hockey player husband Mike Fisher’s Sunday routine. “Above all, God wanted us to love others. It’s not about setting rules, or [saying] ‘everyone has to be appreciate me.’ No. We’re all other . That’s what makes us unique. We have to love each other and get on with each other. It’s not up to me to judge anybody.”

The proclamation comes in the stir of the blond beaut

Carrie Underwood and the 'gay friendly' Christians

I'll concede it. When I identify out some actor, singer, or novelist I love is a liberal and/or supports what I fight, I'm a little displeased. And I'm disappointed a lot. Even if I try not to concern, I care. But what bothers me most is when Christians, well acknowledged or obscure, openly accept what God condemns and sound as if they've never cracked open a Bible.

In an interview with TheIndependent published last Saturday, Carrie Underwood, professing Christian, country singer, and star of the show Soul Surfer (I'm not a youth pastor, but I play one on TV.) came out in favor of redefining the word "marriage" to encompass two people of the same sex. While Underwood doesn't say, "I help same-sex marriage," the implication is clear:

"As a married person myself, I don't know what it's like to be told I can't wed somebody I love, and want to marry. I can't imagine how that must feel. I definitely think we should all have the right to love, and love publicly, the people that we want to love."

So it's that plain. Two men should hold the right to redefine not a mere synonyms but an entire institution and call themselves "m