🖤 Satan Loves the LGBTQ+, Always and Forever 🖤
🖤 Satan Loves the LGBTQ+, Always and Forever 🖤
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We are queer. We are trans. We are Satanists.
Not in the cartoonish way you’ve been taught to fear — but in the real, living sense of rebellion, dignity, and resistance to arbitrary power. Atheistic Satanism, as practiced by many of us today, is not a religion of worship. It is a religion of values: autonomy, reason, compassion, and defiance against injustice.
We don’t believe in a literal Satan. But we do believe in what “Satan” represents: the outsider, the questioner, the one cast out by God for daring to think freely. If the Christian story teaches us that queerness is sin, we answer: then bless the sinner. If their god casts us out, then we make our home in the wilderness — and we make it beautiful.
Satan does not ask you to be straight. Satan does not ask you to repent. Satan does not threaten you with hell. Satan does not need you to be ashamed.
We affirm the LGBTQ+ community not in spite of our Satanism, but because of it.
Because bodily autonomy is sacred.
Because pleasure is not a sin.
Because chosen family is holy.
Because guilt is not morality, and shame is not truth.
Religious homophobia is not just a theological error — it is a deliberate act of violence. And we reject it completely. We don’t excuse the past. We don’t soften the language. We don’t call spiritual abuse “well-meaning.” We call it what it is.
Satanic values demand that we protect the vulnerable, uplift the marginalized, and speak blasphemy when silence enables harm. If that puts us in opposition to churches, scriptures, or gods — so be it.
And let’s be honest: Christianity made Satan the enemy of conformity.
Christianity made queerness an act of rebellion.
So by its own mythology, Satan was never our enemy — he was always on our side.
Satan, as a concept, was born in the human imagination roughly 2,500 years ago. He evolved from a Jewish symbol of adversity into a Christian embodiment of evil between the 6th century BCE and the 1st century CE. He was claimed as a religious figure in 1966 and redefined as a force for justice in 2013. Across all that time, queer people were renamed, reclassified, and repressed — but Satan never asked us to change.
Through every century of shame and every sermon of condemnation, Satan remained the figure cast out alongside us. A symbol of power in exile. A myth made sacred by rejection. Whether ancient or modern, he has stood not against us — but with us.
We’re not afraid to say it:
Satan loves the LGBTQ+, always and forever.
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