Marysville Appeal-Democrat

‘He Gets Us’ Super Bowl ads reportedly have donors with ANTI-LGBTQ, anti-abortion ties

- Tribune News Service New York Daily News

The Jesus-focused “He Gets Us” ads that aired during Sunday’s Super Bowl LVII were funded in part by groups that donated sizable sums to ANTI-LGBTQ and antiaborti­on efforts, according to reports.

The ad campaign promoting Christiani­ty is part of the Servant Foundation, a nonprofit organizati­on that provided more than $50 million to the conservati­ve Christian group Alliance Defending Freedom from 2018 to 2020, the political magazine Jacobin reported.

Alliance Defending Freedom is described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a “hate group” that’s spread lies about the LGBTQ community and supported laws against LGBTQ rights, according to a 2020 article published by the law center.

Donors who support

“He Gets Us” aren’t publicly disclosed on the campaign’s website.

“Funding for the campaign comes from a diverse group of individual­s and entities with a common goal of sharing Jesus’ story authentica­lly,” a spokesman told CNN.

Hobby Lobby co-founder David Green, who has regularly supported Christian campaigns, has been vocal about his support of “He Gets Us.” In 2014, Hobby Lobby won a Supreme Court battle to allow closely held businesses to avoid a federal requiremen­t to provide contracept­ives to employees.

Green teased in

November that the “He Gets Us” ads would air during the Super Bowl.

“We’re wanting to say ‘we,’ being a lot of different people, that he gets us,” Green said during an interview with Glenn

Beck. “He understand­s all of us. He loves who we hate so I think we have to let the public know and create a movement, really.”

The “He Gets Us” website says the campaign isn’t aligned with a political party or any denominati­on of Christiani­ty. It’s “a movement to reintroduc­e people to the Jesus of the Bible,” the website says.

A separate website targeting churches and other partners shares that same sentiment, but says organizers “generally recognize the Lausanne Covenant,” a 1974 manifesto associated with evangelism.

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