Miley blames exclusion of gay friends for quitting church
Singer Miley Cyrus says she gave up her faith because her gay friends weren’t accepted at the church.
During an Instagram Live chat with model Hailey Baldwin, Cyrus said she is keen to “redesign my relationship with God” after quitting church at a young age because it conflicted with her own beliefs.
“I had some gay friends in school. That is the reason why I left my church because they weren’t being accepted. They were being sent to conversion therapies. I had a hard time with me finding my sexuality, too,” Miley said.
She continued: “So, I think now you telling me that I’m allowed to redesign my relationship with God as an adult and make it how it feels most accepting to me would make me feel so less turned off by spirituality.”
Encouraging the singer to
Rapper Cardi B has a conspiracy theory: she feels that celebrities who have said that they tested positive for Covid-19 are all paid.
In a recent Instagram Live post, the Bodak Yellow hitmaker said that some of the celebrities who have tested Covid-19 positive have showed no symptoms, reports aceshowbiz.com.
While many people have claimed that Covid-19 testing is available only to the rich, the rapper thinks all these celebrities are actually being explore her “journey between you and God”, Baldwin replied: “It’s not your journey with 10 other people’s journey. It’s just yours. It’s between you and Him. I believe that Jesus is about loving people, no matter where they are in life. I’ve paid for getting tested.
“We keep seeing these basketball players say like, “Yeah, I have the coronavirus but I don’t got no symptoms’’. So how the f**k am I supposed to know when
I am supposed to get tested for it?!” she said in the video.
Cardi added: “Y’all n****s is playin’ with me. That’s my problem right there. Cause y’all not really saying what it is. And it’s like, alright, so tell me what it is and what it ain’t. I’m starting to feel like y’all n****s is payin’ n****s to say that they always had a hard time with church making people feel excluded and not accepted and making them feel like they can’t be a part of it because of what they believe in and who they love,” she said.