GoFundMe axes Christian rugby star’s $500k fundraiser, showing need for alternative WonderWe

Featured Image
A popular fundraising website has canceled a fundraiser for a Christian rugby player who was fired for his religious beliefs about sexual sin, making the Christian-friendly WonderWe site even more relevant to social conservatives.  
Today GoFundMe shut down a webpage soliciting donations towards the legal fees of Tongan-Australian athlete Israel Folau. Folau was dismissed by Rugby Australia (RA) in May for social media posts his critics said showed hatred for people with same-sex attractions. 
The sports star is bringing a suit against RA, arguing that their decision was motivated by religious discrimination. Folau and his wife Maria, also a professional athlete, say that they have already spent $100,000 Australian ($70,000 US) on legal fees. 
A popular fundraising website has canceled a fundraiser for a Christian rugby player who was fired for his religious beliefs about sexual sin, making the Christian-friendly WonderWe site even more relevant to social conservatives.  
Today GoFundMe shut down a webpage soliciting donations towards the legal fees of Tongan-Australian athlete Israel Folau. Folau was dismissed by Rugby Australia (RA) in May for social media posts his critics said showed hatred for people with same-sex attractions. 
The sports star is bringing a suit against RA, arguing that their decision was motivated by religious discrimination. Folau and his wife Maria, also a professional athlete, say that they have already spent $100,000 Australian ($70,000 US) on legal fees. 
The improved technologies to which he refers include peer-to-peer fundraising, video share asking, a group feature, and an organization portal, plus a zero-fee model.
While GoFundMe and other crowdfunding platforms charge 5% or more for each campaign, WonderWe’s individual fundraising campaigns are free. The only charge users see is the third-party processing fee. This means beneficiaries get to keep more of what’s raised.
According to the company’s motto: “WonderWe is about the ‘We,’ not the fee.” 
Organizations have a basic option where the standard 5% fee applies or monthly membership with no donation fee.
Users can create their own domain name for their campaign, design their campaign with their own branding using customized templates, and have multiple administrators.
People who support a cause can endorse a goal and share it through social media. Allowing people to endorse causes helps establish a campaign’s legitimacy and prevent fraud, Ismert said, and to also spread the word.
Ismert and his team are also behind the platform VolunteerMark, which offers software for scheduling and managing volunteers and creating reports about programs.
While neither product is exclusively Catholic, Ismert said, the products adhere morally and ethically to the Catechism as a guide and governance mechanism. 
This standard should appeal to anyone seeking to support well-intentioned causes, said Ismert, and many good people who are not Catholic will find these products perfect for themselves. 
“They are intended to be culturally aligned and open to Christians and all people of like mind and good will,” he told LifeSiteNews.
Israel Folau first ran afoul of LGBT activists during the run-up to Australia’s 2017 referendum on same-sex “marriage.” Rugby Australia publicly supported the campaign for same-sex “marriage,” and player Folau announced on Twitter that he did not. 
“I love and respect all people for who they are and their opinions. but personally, I will not support gay marriage,” he wrote.
In April 2018, Folau posted a humorous cartoon illustrating the difference between life as one plans it and life as God plans it. When a commentator asked him what was God’s plan for gay people, Folau replied “HELL … Unless they repent of their sins and turn to God.”
In the furor that ensued, Folau wrote a blog post entitled “I’m a Sinner Too” that explained his Christian beliefs. 
This May Rugby Australia cancelled Folau’s contract weeks after he published a poster on Instagram reading, “Warning: Drunks, Homosexuals, Adulterers, Liars, Fornicators, Thieves, Atheists, Idolators, Hell Awaits You. Repent! Only Jesus Saves.” Beside the image, he added “Those that are living in Sin will end up in hell unless you repent. Jesus Christ loves you and is giving you time to turn away from your sin and come to him.”
Folau then quoted Paul’s Letter to the Galatians, 5:19–21, writing, “Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these, adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, Envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.”
In the wake of Folau’s dismissal, Australians elected a conservative government that has pledged to work to strengthen religious freedom in the country. 

Popular posts from this blog

Ontario Catholic school board to vote on flying gay ‘pride flag’ at all board-run schools

Christian baker must make ‘wedding’ bakes for gay couples, court rules

Australia: Gay Hate tribunals are coming