Ed Vitagliano
AFA Journal news editor
September 2004 – While organizations like the American Psychological Association (APA) are throwing their considerable weight behind the homosexual movement, a handful of notable members of the mental health field are countering with the truth about sexual orientation.
One of those professionals is Dr. Warren Throckmorton, director of college counseling and an associate professor of psychology at Grove City College, a private Christian college in Pennsylvania.
His research on the possibility of changing sexual orientation was published in the June 2002 issue of Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, an official publication of the APA.
The subject of changing sexual orientation is an issue Throckmorton emphasizes in his counseling and teaching. “I’ve seen people change, people I’ve interviewed and even my own clients,” Throckmorton told AFA Journal. “I remember one of my clients, who is no longer gay, said to me, ‘Tell them that I exist.’”
And that’s exactly what Throckmorton has been doing. He recently released a new video, I Do Exist!, which tells the stories of five ex-homosexuals who now boldly proclaim that people can change.
I Do Exist! opens with “man-on-the-street” interviews, as average Americans answer the question, “Can homosexuals change?” Former “gay” man Noe Gutierrez, Jr., then begins explaining how he began the process of change. Gutierrez is so sincere and transparent that he draws the viewer into his story.
Also featured are the testimonies of former lesbians Sarah Lipp, Joann Highley, and Cheryl Quinlan, as well as former homosexual Greg Quinlan. All present a message of hope that will encourage those struggling with same-sex attractions.
Supplementing the ex-gay testimonies are interviews with Throckmorton himself, Dr. Mark Yarhouse of the Regent University Department of Psychology, and Dr. Robert Spitzer, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University.
In 1973, Spitzer was one of the men who was instrumental in getting the American Psychiatric Association to officially remove homosexuality from its catalog of mental illnesses. He has since come to the conclusion that some homosexuals can change their sexual orientation, and last year released the results of a study to that effect.
Both the American Psychological Association and the American Psychiatric Association – along with almost every other major mental health organization – have been forcefully promoting the homosexual agenda in recent decades.
Throckmorton said it isn’t science that is driving that promotion. “It’s just old fashioned politics. All of these professional [mental health] organizations have official gay and lesbian groups within them that have an agenda,” he said. “They believe that homosexuality is simply another variant of human sexuality, and they have a vested interest in making sure the organization keeps promoting that view.”
A case in point, he said, was when the American Psychological Association adopted a resolution at its annual convention in July, advocating the legalization of same-sex marriage. The resolution was steeped in scientific language.
However, Throckmorton said, the members of the committee that put forth the resolution were all homosexuals. He said, “How objective could [the committee] be? There was almost no discussion [of opposing viewpoints.] The council representatives simply voted, and it was all done internally.”
He said the resolution was “a political consensus, not a scientific consensus.”
Such actions seem to make Throckmorton even more determined to publicize a message of hope. “I feel these [ex-gay] folks are marginalized,” he said. “They are afraid to talk in the church because they don’t want to be viewed as gay, and they don’t want to talk to people in the mental health profession because they won’t be believed.”
I Do Exist! is a powerful way to get out the message that homosexuals can change. It is compelling and informative, and helps to explain the process by which some people come to experience same-sex attractions, act on those attractions, and enter the homosexual lifestyle.
The film also makes recommendations concerning the role of church and schools in providing help to those who are experiencing same sex attractions but do not want to take on a “gay” identity.
The video would be a great tool in helping religious leaders, counselors and church members understand the complexities surrounding this controversal issue. This is especially needful because, Throckmorton said, the homosexual lifestyle is prominently displayed in our culture.
“There is an incessant drumbeat of emphasis on sexuality in our culture. More and more people are defining themselves in terms of sexuality,” he said. “And kids are labeling themselves as gay or lesbian earlier in life than ever before.”
Throckmorton has also produced a CD entitled The Truth Comes Out, which contains testimonies from ex-homosexuals, information about sexual orientation from Throckmorton, and some selections of contemporary Christian music.
“There are already a lot of books on the market about these issues, and so we thought there was a need for an alternative media approach to help parents, pastors, and teachers who are dealing with young people who were questioning their sexual feelings,” he said.
“And the CD and DVD were accessible to kids,” he added, who might not read a book but who might listen to a CD or watch a DVD.