Can the Devil Touch You Focus on the Family

US fundamentalist Christian organization

Focus on the Family
FOTF logo.svg
Founded 1977; 45 years agone  (1977)
California, United States
Founder James Dobson

Revenue enhancement ID no.

95-3188150 (EIN)
Location
  • 8605 Explorer Dr
    Colorado Springs, Colorado 80920, United States

Area served

74 countries

Key people

Jim Daly
(President and CEO)
John Fuller
(VP Sound partition)
Paul Batura
(VP Communications)
Tim Goeglein
(VP External and Governmental Relations)
Robyn Chambers
(Executive Director, Advocacy for Children)

Revenue

$99,205,813 (2019 FY)[1]

Employees

640 (as of 2013)[2]

Volunteers

112
Website www.focusonthefamily.com

Focus on the Family unit (FOTF or FotF) is an American fundamentalist Christian[3] arrangement founded in 1977 in Southern California by James Dobson, based in Colorado Springs, Colorado.[4] Information technology promotes social bourgeois views on public policy. The group is one of a number of evangelical parachurch organizations that rose to prominence in the 1980s. As of the 2017 revenue enhancement filing twelvemonth, Focus on the Family declared itself to be a church building, "primarily to protect the confidentiality of our donors." Traditionally, entities considered churches take been ones that take regular worship services and congregants.[v]

Focus on the Family unit promotes creationism,[6] abstinence-only sex education,[vii] adoption only by heterosexuals,[eight] school prayer, and traditional gender roles. Information technology opposes homosexuality, incest, pre-marital sex, pornography, drugs, gambling, divorce, and abortion. Information technology lobbies against LGBT rights, including LGBT adoption, LGBT parenting, and same-sex matrimony.[9] Focus on the Family has been criticized by psychiatrists, psychologists, and social scientists for misrepresenting their research in order to eternalize its religious ideology and political agenda. They have likewise been criticized for their homophobic and transphobic views.

The core promotional activities of the organization include the flagship daily radio circulate hosted past its president Jim Daly together with co-host Focus VP John Fuller. Focus also provides free resources in line with the group'southward views, and publishes magazines, videos, and audio recordings.

The organization also produces programs for targeted audiences, such as Adventures in Odyssey and Ribbits! for children, and dramas.

History [edit]

Focus on the Family'due south erstwhile logo

Focus on the Family unit'southward Company'due south Welcome Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado

From 1977 to 2003, James Dobson served as the sole leader of the organization. In 2003, Donald P. Hodel became president and chief executive officeholder, tasked with the day-to-twenty-four hour period operations.[10] Dobson remained chairman of the board of directors, with chiefly creative and speaking duties. In March 2005, Hodel retired and Jim Daly, formerly the Vice President in charge of Focus on the Family'south International Division, causeless the role of president and primary executive officer.[eleven]

In November 2008, the organisation appear that it was eliminating 202 jobs, representing 18 percent of its workforce. The organization besides cut its budget from $160 million in financial 2008 to $138 1000000 for fiscal 2009.[12]

In February 2009, Dobson resigned his chairmanship.[thirteen] He left Focus on the Family in early on 2010, and subsequently founded Family Talk as a non-profit organization and launched a new broadcast that began airing nationally on May 3, 2010. He is no longer affiliated with Focus on the Family.

On June 23, 2017, Vice President Mike Pence attended the organisation's 40th anniversary celebration; at the event, he praised founder James Dobson, stated that President Donald Trump is an ally of the organization, and added that the Trump assistants supports its goals (including the abolitionism of Planned Parenthood).[14] [15] [16] Pence's omnipresence at the consequence, along with Focus on the Family's stances on LGBT rights, were criticized by the Homo Rights Campaign.[17]

In its IRS Form 990 for Tax Yr 2015, dated October 26, 2017, Focus on the Family for the first fourth dimension alleged itself a "church, convention of churches or association of churches", claiming that it was no longer required to file the IRS disclosure form and that the sources and disposition of its $89 million budget were "Not for public inspection". Revenue enhancement attorney Gail Harmon, who advises nonprofit organizations on tax constabulary, said she found the declaration "shocking", noting that "There'southward nothing about them that meets the traditional definition of what a church is. They don't accept a congregation, they don't have the rites of diverse parts of a person's life."[18] A spokesperson for the system stated that it changed its status "primarily to protect the confidentiality of our donors".[five] By 2020, the organization would take offices in 14 countries and partnerships in 60 countries, for an international presence in 74 countries. [19]

Programs [edit]

Marriage and family [edit]

Focus on the Family unit strongly opposes same-sex marriage, civil unions, and domestic partnerships.[twenty]

Await No More [edit]

Focus on the Family unit's Wait No More ministry works with adoption agencies, church building leaders and ministry partners to recruit families to adopt children from foster care.[21] In Colorado, the number of children waiting for adoption dropped from virtually 800 to 350, due in-part to the efforts of Wait No More.[22] Focus on the Family's efforts to encourage adoption among Christian families is part of a larger attempt past Evangelicals to, in their perception, alive out what they come across as the "biblical mandate" to assistance children.[23]

Selection Ultrasound Program [edit]

Focus on the Family'due south Choice Ultrasound Plan (OUP) provides grants to crisis pregnancy centers to pay the cost of ultrasound machines or sonography training. Focus on the Family began OUP in 2004 with the goal of convincing women not to take abortions. FOTF officials said that ultrasound services help a woman improve empathize her pregnancy and baby'southward development, creating an important "bonding opportunity" between "mother and unborn child".[24]

A study released in February 2012 shows that ultrasounds do not have a direct touch on on an ballgame decision.[25] In 2011, FOTF announced that they would like to talk with pro-choice groups like Planned Parenthood to work towards the shared goal of making abortion less common.[26] Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) introduced a sonogram bill in 2011 and – citing Focus on the Family – told Congress that "78 pct of women who see and hear the fetal heartbeat choose life." She was subsequently corrected past Focus on the Family unit, which released a statement saying they did not release such information.[27] [25] :1

Dizzying.org [edit]

Boundless.org is Focus on the Family unit's website for young adults[28] featuring manufactures, a blog, a podcast, and a briefing. The website covers topics such as singleness, dating, relationships, popular civilisation, career, and sex activity.[29]

Pluggedin.com [edit]

Pluggedin is a Focus on the Family publication created for families that reviews magazines, films, books, music, and Television set shows.[30]

Day of Dialogue [edit]

The Twenty-four hours of Dialogue was a student outcome which took place Apr 16. Since 2018 the event is no longer marked on a unmarried engagement, or organized nationally.[31] Founders described the goal of the event, created in opposition to the anti-bullying and anti-homophobic Day of Silence, as "encouraging honest and respectful conversation among students about God's design for sexuality." Information technology was previously known as the Solar day of Truth and was founded by the Alliance Defense Fund in 2005.[32] In 2007, Exodus International began supporting the Day of Truth, an event created by Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) in 2005 that challenges homosexuality.[33] In 2009, the ADF announced they had passed on their leadership office for the effect to Exodus. In Oct 2010, Exodus announced they would no longer back up the upshot. President Alan Chambers stated they realised they needed to "equip kids to live out biblical tolerance and grace while treating their neighbors equally they'd like to be treated, whether they agree with them or not", adding that the Day of Truth was becoming too divisive. Chambers said that Exodus had not changed its position on homosexuality, rather they were reevaluating how to all-time communicate their message.[34] [35] Focus on the Family subsequently took leadership of the event, and renamed it the Day of Dialogue.[36]

National Twenty-four hour period of Prayer [edit]

The National Twenty-four hours of Prayer Task Forcefulness is an American evangelical conservative Christian non-profit organization which organizes, coordinates, and presides over Evangelical Christian religious observances each year on the National Day of Prayer. The website of the NDP Task Strength states that "its business affairs are split up" from those of Focus on the Family, but also that "betwixt 1990 and 1993, Focus on the Family did provide grants in support of the NDP Chore Force" and that "Focus on the Family is compensated for services rendered."[37] Shirley Dobson, wife of James Dobson, was chairwoman of the NDP Task Forcefulness from 1991 until 2016, when Anne Graham Lotz, daughter of evangelist Billy Graham, assumed the post.[38]

Radio Theatre [edit]

Radio Theatre is a program run by Focus on the Family that makes both original and adapted radio dramas. Much of the staff involved with Adventures in Odyssey is besides involved with Radio Theatre such as Paul McCusker.[39] They have made adaptations of many novels including Les Miserables and Anne of Light-green Gables besides as an adaptation of the complete Chronicles of Narnia.[twoscore] Radio Theatre often hires famous actors to be a role of their adaptations such as Andy Serkis.[41]

Former ministries [edit]

Honey Won Out [edit]

Focus on the Family formed Honey Won Out, an ex-gay ministry in 1998. In 2009, it was sold to Exodus International. [42]

Political positions and activities [edit]

Focus on the Family unit's 501(c)(3) status prevents them from advocating any private political candidate.[43] FOTF also has an affiliated group, Family Policy Brotherhood, though the two groups are legally split. As a 501(c)(4) social welfare group, Family Policy Brotherhood has fewer political lobbying restrictions. FOTF'southward revenue in 2012 was Usa$xc.5 million, and that of Family Policy Alliance (formerly CitizenLink) was US$eight million.[44] [45]

Focus on the Family maintains a stiff stand against ballgame, and provides grant funding and medical grooming to assist crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs; also known as pregnancy resource centers) in obtaining ultrasound machines. Co-ordinate to the organization, this funding, which has immune CPCs to provide pregnant women with alive sonogram images of the developing fetus, has led straight to the nascence of over 1500 babies who would accept otherwise been aborted.[46] [47] The organization has been staunchly opposed to public funding for elective abortions.

FOTF's bookstore at their headquarters contains a diverseness of textile on Christian living, Bibles, etc.

Focus on the Family has been a prominent supporter of the pseudoscience[48] [49] of intelligent design, publishing pro-intelligent design articles in its Citizen magazine and selling intelligent design videos on its website.[50] [51] Focus on the Family unit co-published the intelligent pattern videotape Unlocking the Mystery of Life with the Discovery Establish, hub of the intelligent blueprint motility.[52]

2008 presidential campaign [edit]

In the 2008 United States presidential election, Focus on the Family shifted from supporting Mike Huckabee, to not supporting whatever candidate, to finally accepting the Republican ticket once Sarah Palin was added to the ticket. Prior to the ballot, a television and alphabetic character entrada was launched predicting terrorist attacks in four U.S. cities and equating the U.South. with Nazi Germany. This publicity was condemned by the Anti Defamation League.[53] Within a calendar month earlier the full general election, Focus on the Family began distributing a 16-page alphabetic character titled Alphabetic character from 2012 in Obama's America, which describes an imagined American future in which "many of our freedoms have been taken abroad by a liberal Supreme Court of the United States and a bulk of Democrats in both the House of Representatives and the Senate."[54] Co-ordinate to USA Today, the letter "is part of an escalation in rhetoric from Christian right activists" trying to paint Autonomous Party presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama in a negative light.[55]

Focus on the Family Activity supported Senator Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) in his successful Dec 2, 2008, runoff election win. The organization, according to the Colorado Independent, donated $35,310 in radio ads to the Chambliss runoff entrada effort. As the Contained reports, the Focus-sponsored ads were aired in about a dozen Georgia markets. The commercials were produced in the weeks after Focus laid off 202 employees – some xx percent of its workforce – because of the national economic crunch.[56]

Opposition to same-sex wedlock [edit]

Dobson spoke at the 2004 rally against gay matrimony called Mayday for Matrimony. Information technology was here for the get-go time that he endorsed a presidential candidate, George W. Bush. Here he denounced the Supreme Court rulings in favor of gay rights, and he urged rally participants to get out and vote so that the battle confronting gay rights could be won in the Senate.[57]

In an interview with Christianity Today, Dobson also explained that he was non in favor of civil unions. He stated that civil unions are only same-sex activity marriage under a different name. The main priority of the opposing same-sex marriage movement is to ascertain spousal relationship on the federal level equally between a man and a adult female and combat the passage of civil unions afterward.[58]

Ceremonious rights advancement groups identify Focus on the Family equally a major opponent of gay rights. The Southern Poverty Police force Center, a civil rights and hate group monitoring organisation,[59] described Focus on the Family unit equally one of a "dozen major groups [which] aid drive the religious right'due south anti-gay crusade".[60] The SPLC does not listing Focus on the Family as a detest group, however, since it opposes homosexuality "on strictly Biblical grounds".[61]

Focus on the Family is a fellow member of ProtectMarriage.com, a coalition formed to sponsor California Proposition 8, a ballot initiative to restrict marriage to contrary-sexual activity couples, which passed in 2008,[62] simply was afterwards struck down as being unconstitutional past a federal court in Perry v. Schwarzenegger.

Misrepresentation of inquiry [edit]

Social scientists have criticized Focus on the Family unit for misrepresenting their research in order to bolster its own perspective.[63] Researcher Judith Stacey, whose work was used by Focus on the Family to claim that gays and lesbians do non make good parents, said that the claim was "a direct misrepresentation of the inquiry".[64] She elaborated, "Whenever you hear Focus on the Family, legislators or lawyers say, 'Studies testify that children exercise better in families with a mother and a father,' they are referring to studies which compare ii-parent heterosexual households to single-parent households. The studies they are talking about exercise not cite research on families headed by gay and lesbian couples."[65] FOTF claimed that Stacey's allegation was without merit and that their position is that the best interests of children are served when there is a male parent and a female parent. "We haven't said anything nearly sexual orientation", said Glenn Stanton.[64]

James Dobson cited the enquiry of Kyle Pruett and Carol Gilligan in a Fourth dimension mag guest commodity in the service of a merits that two women cannot raise a child; upon finding out that her work had been used in this style, Gilligan wrote a letter to Dobson asking him to repent and to stop and desist from citing her piece of work, describing herself as "mortified to learn that you had distorted my work ... Non only did you lot have my inquiry out of context, you did so without my knowledge to support discriminatory goals that I do not hold with ... there is nothing in my research that would lead you lot to draw the stated conclusions you did in the Time article."[66] [67] [68] Pruett wrote a similar letter, in which he said that Dobson "cerise-picked a phrase to shore upward highly (in my view) discriminatory purposes. This practice is condemned in real science, common though it may be in pseudo-science circles. In that location is nothing in my longitudinal research or whatsoever of my writings to support such conclusions", and asked that FOTF not cite him over again without permission.[69]

After Elizabeth Saewyc's enquiry on teen suicide was used by Focus on the Family unit to promote conversion therapy she said that "the enquiry has been hijacked for somebody's political purposes or ideological purposes and that'due south worrisome", and that research in fact linked the suicide rate among LGBT teens to harassment, discrimination, and closeting.[70] Other scientists who have criticized Focus on the Family for misrepresenting their findings include Robert Spitzer,[71] Gary Remafedi,[69] and Angela Phillips.[71]

Football game advertisements [edit]

In 2010, Focus on the Family bought advert fourth dimension during Super Basin XLIV to air a commercial featuring Heisman Bays winning Florida Gators quarterback Tim Tebow and his mother, Pam. In the advertizement, Pam described Tim as a "miracle baby" who "about didn't go far into this world", and further elaborated that "with all our family unit's been through, we have to be tough" (after which Pam was promptly tackled past Tim). The advertizement directed viewers to the organization's website.[72] [73]

Women'south rights groups asked CBS non to air the then-unseen ad, arguing that it was divisive. Planned Parenthood released a video response of its own featuring fellow NFL actor Sean James.[74] [75] The claim that Tebow'due south family chose not to perform an abortion was likewise widely criticized; critics felt that the claim was implausible because it would be unlikely for doctors to recommend the procedure because abortion is illegal in the Philippines.[73] [76] CBS'southward decision to run the advert was besides criticized for deviating from its by policy to refuse advocacy-blazon ads during the Super Bowl, including ads by left-leaning groups such as PETA, MoveOn.org and the United Church of Christ (which wanted to run an ad that was pro-same-sex marriage). However, CBS stated that "we take for some time chastened our approach to advancement submissions after it became apparent that our stance did not reverberate public sentiment or industry norms on the issue."[77]

Focus on the Family produced another commercial which ran during the second quarter of the Jan 14, 2012 Denver Broncos-New England Patriots AFC Bounded Playoff circulate on CBS,[78] featuring children reciting the Bible poetry John 3:16.[79] The advertising did not generate nearly the amount of controversy that surrounded the Super Bowl commercial. It did gain some national media attention, and president Jim Daly stated in a press release that its purpose was to "help everyone understand some numbers are more important than the ones on the scoreboard."[80]

Recognition and awards [edit]

In 2008, Dobson's Focus on the Family programme was nominated for consecration into the National Radio Hall of Fame.[81] Nominations were made past the 157 members of the Hall of Fame and voting on inductees was handed over to the public using online voting.[82] The nomination drew the ire of gay rights activists, who launched efforts to take the plan removed from the nominee list and to vote for other nominees to prevent Focus from winning.[83] [84] However, on July 18, 2008, it was appear that the programme had won and would exist inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in a anniversary on November viii, 2008.[85] Truth Wins Out, a gay rights group, protested the anniversary with over 300 protesters.[86]

Controversies [edit]

Focus on the Family supported a Citizens Initiated Plebiscite on the repeal of section 59 of the Crimes Act 1961, which placed limits on the concrete disciplining of children.[87]

Focus on the Family Singapore came under criticism in October 2014 over allegations of sexism and promoting gender stereotypes during their workshops on managing relationships for junior college students. The workshop received a complaint from both a Hwa Chong Junior College student, as well as negative feedback from the college management equally being 'ineffective' and will terminate by the end of the year.[88]

Headquarters [edit]

The administration building is one of four on the headquarters campus.

The Focus on the Family unit headquarters is a four edifice, 47-acre (nineteen ha)[89] complex located off of Interstate 25 in northern Colorado Springs, Colorado, with its ain Null Code (80995).[90] [91] The buildings consist of the Administration building, International edifice, Welcome Center and Operations building (currently unused), and totals 526,070 foursquare anxiety.[92]

Focus on the Family unit moved to its current headquarters from Pomona, California, in 1991,[93] with 1,200 employees. In 2002, the number of employees peaked at 1,400. By September 2011, after years of layoffs, they had 650 employees remaining.[94] Christopher Ott of Salon said in 1998 that the FOTF campus has "handsome new brick buildings, professional landscaping and fifty-fifty its ain traffic signs" and that "The buildings and grounds are well-maintained and comfortable. If there is whatsoever ostentatious or corrupt influence here, it is nowhere in sight."[ninety]

While visiting the Focus on the Family unit complex, a couple had asked the staff if handling the sightseers in the main edifice was a lark. The staff told the couple that it was a distraction; afterwards the couple donated $4 million to have a welcome center congenital. A visiting family donated vii miles (11 km) of woods trim from the family'south Pennsylvania lumber business concern so FOTF could build its administration building.

References [edit]

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  2. ^ Michael Gryboski (September thirteen, 2013). "Focus on the Family unit Cut xl More Staff as Office of Restructuring". The Christian Post. Archived from the original on October xx, 2016. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
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External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • FOTF Programs via Streaming Audio
  • FOTF Commentary info on ABC Radio
  • Focus on the Family New Zealand
  • Boundless Webzine
  • Mean solar day of Dialogue

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focus_on_the_Family

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