Christ was about love, remember?

Defiant Faith Meets the Open Society
A free society starts with a simple promise: every person, regardless of origin, gender, or identity, has the right to live with dignity and pursue their own version of happiness.
This promise was not always fulfilled. At first, enslaved people faced segregation and systemic injustice. Then, the Civil Rights Movement pushed forward, step by step, toward justice.
Women fought to be seen, respected, and safe in the workplace — and that fight still continues. Each step forward faced resistance from those who clung to the past.
The Voice of Pride and the Shadow of Hate
In the last 40 years, the LGBTQ+ community has found its voice. The right to self-definition, to reject imposed gender norms, to exist with pride — these victories reflect a maturing democracy.
But every advance triggers a reaction. Hatred always finds a costume: supremacism, moral panic, legal exclusion, culture wars. And too often, it hides behind the name of Christ.
Christ Was Love, Not Hate
Today, many voices claim that America must be a “Christian nation.” That narrative ignores the country’s constitutional foundations as a secular republic built on freedom of religion.
What these voices call “Christian values” rarely include Christ’s central message:
- Love your neighbor as yourself.
- Love the fallen. Love the outsider.
- Love that dignifies, rather than punishes.
Christ never preached hate. Christ was love.
That is why this campaign speaks loud and clear:
Christ Was About Love, Remember?
It is not just a question. It is a challenge. It is a boundary.
This Is Not Ideology. This Is America.
The spirit of this campaign carries no political agenda. It echoes the soul of the Declaration of Independence: all human beings are created equal, endowed with unalienable rights — life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
- That is not partisan.
- That is America at its best.
- That is the promise that made this country a global example.
When we defend the dignity of all — women, children, immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, racial minorities, the vulnerable — we honor that promise.
We are not spreading ideology.
We are keeping the word we gave the world.
We are honoring the love we claim to believe in.
Join the Movement and Share
Unholy101 stands for the freedom to love, the dignity to exist, and the courage to protect the open society.
