Westboro Baptist Church founder Fred Phelps Sr. ‘on the edge of death’

Westboro Baptist Church founder Fred Phelps Sr. ‘on the edge of death’

No one’s going to protest against this guy’s death.

Westboro Baptist Church founder Fred Phelps Sr. has been admitted to a hospice facility and is “on the edge of death,” his estranged son revealed.

The 84-year-old preacher established the small Kansas Church in 1955 and made it a household **** by picketing funerals, public events and businesses with hateful signs attacking gay people, Jews and others.

“I’ve learned that my father, Fred Phelps Sr., pastor of the ‘God Hates F–s’ Westboro Baptist Church … is now on the edge of death at Midland Hospice in Topeka, Kansas,” son Nathan Phelps wrote on Facebook.

Steve Drain, a Westboro spokesman, confirmed Sunday that Phelps is in ill health.

“I can tell you that Fred Phelps is having some health problems,” Drain said. “He’s an old man and old people get health problems.”

In his Facebook post, Nathan Phelps, who left the Church 37 years ago, said Westboro excommunicated his father in August.

Drain declined to comment on whether Phelps has been voted out of the Church he established.

“I’m not sure how I feel about this. Terribly ironic that his devotion to god ends this way. Destroyed by the monster he made,” Nathan Phelps wrote in the post, which had been shared more than 1,000 times as of Sunday night.

“I feel sad for all the hurt he’s caused so many. I feel sad for those who will lose the grandfather and father they loved.”

Westboro members frequently protest at the funerals of American soldiers with signs bearing messages like “Thank God for dead soldiers” and “Thank God for 9/11,” claiming the deaths are divine punishment for the country’s tolerance of homosexuality.

They first attracted widespread attention by picketing the 1998 funeral of Matthew Shepard, a Wyoming college student tortured and killed in an anti-gay attack.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights nonprofit organization, has described Westboro as a hate group, and some people reacted to Nathan Phelps’ Facebook post with glee.

“Thank God he is almost dead!!! Party time!” user Victor Purchase wrote below the post.

Others preached goodwill.

“I may not have supported his lifestyle. In fact, I stand for everything his Church is against. But that doesn’t give me the right to be happy about someone dying,” wrote Corey Bartley.

The church’s sick activities inspired a federal law limiting protests at funerals for soldiers along with numerous state restrictions on picketing at funeral sites.

Just Wednesday, a federal judge upheld a Missouri law requiring protestors to stay at least 300 feet away from funeral sites.

But Westboro won a First Amendment victory in 2024 when the U.S. Supreme Court said Church members couldn’t be sued for money damages for inflicting pain on grieving families.

Read more: Westboro Baptist Church founder Fred Phelps Sr. ‘on the edge of death’ – NY Daily News

Hell will welcome him with open arms.

Another Westboro Baptist Church member abandons church

Another Westboro Baptist Church member abandons church

Another Westboro Baptist Church member abandons church | Gay Star News

Another Westboro Baptist Church member abandons church

خليجية


23-year-old Zach Phelps-Roper, a grandson of Westboro Baptist Church founder Fred Phelps, has left the Church and has spoken about how kind gay people have been to him since leaving

Zach Phelps-Roper has spoken about his decision to break away from the Westboro Baptist Church and reconnect with other family members excommunicated from the notorious anti-gay church.

23-year-old Zach moved out of the family compound on 20 February, with the help of cousins who had already left the church.

He is the fourth of his ten siblings to leave the church, now lead by his mother Shirley Phelps-Roper – the daughter of Church founder Fred Phelps

Zach told the Topeka Capital-Journal that some of his earliest memories were taking part in Church pickets as a small child, but he had begun to question his church’s teachings around his 18th birthday.

He also said his interactions with LGBTI people since leaving the Church had been a shockingly pleasant surprise.

‘After I left the Church I met some homosexual men who were very kind to me, and I was taken aback,’ Zach said.

‘I met this guy at Olive Garden one night with my sister and he offered to pay for my entire dinner and I was so taken aback… I was like, “I don’t know what to say,” so I said, “No, no, let me do that, I’ll just pay for that, I’ve got it.”’

‘It was so funny because the very next day I saw him… I went out for a very moderate drinking [session] with my friends and family and … he just came up to me and just kindly got me one of these fruity kind of drinks that I like and he just said “Here you go man,” and just walked off – he didn’t even expect a thank you.’

Zach also shed some light on his grandfather’s mentality in his final weeks and on why he may have been excommunicated by his own Church in his final days, saying he seemed to have become more moderate in his views towards the end.

‘When I was in the Church they had described him as being someone who was manipulative and had mistreated other people in the church,’ Zach said.

‘[So] I was very ambivalent, I wasn’t sure what to think of my grandpa after he passed.’