'Non-binary' Anglican priest, 'making a huge difference in normalising it for children,' accused of 'grooming'



The Church of England's first so-called non-binary priest has gone beyond accepting his newly manufactured identity by "going into schools, doing assemblies and making a huge difference in normalising it for children."

A black conservative who was reportedly barred from the priesthood has suggested that this LGBT evangelization is tantamount to "grooming."

What are the details?

Bingo Allison is a 36-year-old father of three and a priest ordained in the Church of England.

Allison told the Liverpool Echo that God guided him away from the two sexes delineated in the Book of Genesis, resulting in a schism between the "strongly religious" and conservative tradition he was raised in — which, he suggested, "Some might call ... bigoted" — and a new "gender-queer" lifestyle.

Allison suggested that after encountering the term "gender-queer" seven years ago while completing his vicar training, "Everything suddenly clicked."

"I didn't know any trans people, and I think I probably met two gay people in my life," said Allison. "So it was like another planet almost to me. There were a few times when I really questioned things. But because I didn't really have the vocabulary to describe my experience, it just kind of didn't go anywhere."

With a newfound handle on the latest LGBT activist terminology, Allison claims to have revisited Genesis 1:27, in which the King James Bible and the English Standard Version both state, "So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them."

Allison said the language of "male and female" contra "men and women" struck a chord.

"It was a deepening spiritual experience, I properly felt God was guiding me into this new truth about myself," he said.

Since mentally severing gender from sex, Allison has become an activist in his own right.

The Telegraph reported that Allison uses social media to spread the word of the LGBT movement.

In February 2020, Allison posted an image to Instagram in which he was wearing a purple hairband, eyeshadow, and make-up. The caption read, "Going to church because Jesus loves sparkly eyeshadow. #girlslikeus #transisbeautiful #nonbinary #eyeshadow."

The Anglican priest's LGBT evangelization is not limited to online engagements.

"When I'm wearing my collar it lets children know that is okay and that there is a place in church and the outside world for people like me," he said.

Allison claims he has been involved with local secular LGBT youth groups, in which he seeks to "normalise" his identity.

Calvin Robinson, an Anglican trainee vicar who was reportedly barred from becoming a Church of England priest on account of his traditional views, has publicly taken issue with Allison's LGBT ministry.

In response to the Liverpool Echo article about Allison, Robinson tweeted, "'Gender-queer' seems counter-Scriptural. 'the first openly non-binary priest to be ordained in the CofE' seems like vainglory. 'The 36-year-old attends schools and assemblies ... in the hope they can inspire others who find themselves in a similar situation' seems like grooming."

\u201c@LivEchoLive \u201cgender-queer\u201d seems counter-Scriptural.\n\n\u201cthe first openly non-binary priest to be ordained in the CofE\u201d seems like vainglory.\n\n\u201cThe 36-year-old attend schools and assemblies \u2026 in the hope they can inspire others who find themselves in a similar situation\u201d seems like grooming.\u201d
— Liverpool Live (@Liverpool Live) 1672575499

Robinson's intimation that the promotion of highly-sexual concepts to school children might amount to grooming is not his only reservation about Allison's approach.

Robinson, a black conservative who has expressed antipathy for identitarian leftist groups like BLM and suggested that women should not be ordained, appears to have voiced traditional and conservative Anglicans' reservation about the ostensible co-option of the faith by LGBT activists.

According to the Telegraph, Robinson trained to be a priest for years at the University of Oxford. He was set to begin a curacy at a parish in Holborn, London. However, Bishop Jonathan Baker of Fulham turned him down for the role in February 2022.

Beside Robinson's fidelity to tradition, an email exchange between Church of England bosses indicated that his claims that Britain was not a racist country disqualified him.

Sarah Mullally, the white, female bishop of London, reportedly told Robinson, a black man, to "listen to the lived experiences of ethnic minorities."

Bishop Baker cautioned in another message: "He is very active on Twitter and has a huge following (100,000 followers!). His political agenda is I guess what you would call libertarian anti-woke, anti-identity politics, Covid-skeptical etc."

Were racial politics not a pressing matter in the church, Robinson's rejection of LGBT activist conventions and beliefs would likely have been.

Extra to internalizing critical race theory precepts, senior members of the Anglican church have similarly embraced LGBT activism, terminology, and agendas.

Steven Croft, the bishop of Oxford and senior Anglican cleric, backed same-sex "marriage" and instructed clergy that they were not only to conduct gay "marriages" for their congregation, but were also themselves able to wed a same-sex partner.

This decision runs contrary to Anglican canon law, which prohibits the blessing or marrying of gay couples.

The Church of England has also issued pastoral guidance, adopted at General Synod in 2018, delineating how to approach and accommodate transsexuals.

For Anglicans already baptized who have become transsexuals, "the House of Bishops commends the rite of Affirmation of Baptismal Faith as the central feature of any service to recognize liturgically a person's gender transition."

The guide further recommends identifying "the preference of a transgender person in respect of their name and gendered (or other) pronouns."

Extra to baptism, at least one Anglican church has transmogrified its hymns to keep up with LGBT activists' preferences.

TheBlaze reported that All Saints with Holy Trinity in Loughborough updated the words to "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen." Instead of referencing Satan as well as Christ the Savior, the church substituted in "queer and questioning" "women, who by men have been erased."

It's not only transsexual parishioners for whom the Church of England has made accommodations.

In Wales resides the church's first transsexual priest, Reverend Canon "Sarah" Jones, who suggested to ITV that God is "non-binary."

Jones said, "Look, there are different sorts of churches with different sorts of views on all sorts of things. But there are a lot more inclusive churches than you might think."

For Robinson, inclusivity in the Church of England meant his exclusion. He recently left the church to join the breakaway group Global Anglican Future Conference.

\u201cThis is Reverend Bingo Allison a trans "priest"\n\nI guess he missed the part in the Bible where God created Man & Woman.\u201d
— Sebastian Gorka DrG (@Sebastian Gorka DrG) 1672689093

VIDEO: Trans female activist furious at Sonic Drive-In workers who said 'sir' during order — now company is launching investigation



Transgender female activist Eden Torres claimed the "entire staff" at a Sonic Drive-In used the word "sir" during Torres' order — and the activist also complained of being "faced with discrimination" while at the fast-food restaurant, which apparently is in Houston.

What happened?

Torres posted a pair of videos Saturday on Twitter that captured the activist's interaction with what apparently is a management-level employee — and Torres let him have it.

The transgender woman told the manager that "your entire staff has been calling me sir" and asked him, "tell me, what we can do now?"

As the pair argued — Torres behind the wheel of a car, and the manager standing outside — Torres asked the man, "What about me looks like a 'sir' right now?"

Eden Torres at the Sonic Drive-In (Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @edentorres121)

The manager apologized, and Torres explained that Sonic staffers "saw the [masculine] name on my credit card" — which presumably led to them figuring Torres gender is male and them subsequently using the word "sir" during the ordering process.

"They were not being nice people," Torres told the manager, who soon was calling the activist "ma'am."

Torres then told the manager to "tell me what your location has done to be trans-competent because clearly they are not."

The manager didn't appear to understand that Torres was talking about gender identity as opposed to sexuality, as he seemed to tell Torres that there are "gay" workers at his restaurant — and that angered the activist.

"I'm not gay," Torres replied. "We're talking about my gender identity, not my sexuality."

Soon the activist asked the manager, "I would like you to promise me that you will stop treating trans people this way."

Finally, the manager asked Torres, "What are you?" in reference to gender identity, and Torres replied, "Why does it matter?" — and soon after, "What would you assume looking at me?"

The manager replied, "I assume that you are a man." That's when the Torres ended the conversation and the recording.

Here are the videos:

(Video part 2: #transgender #discrimination) #Trans #GirlsLikeUs #woman #women #gender #transphobia #transwoman… https://t.co/bfEHVRwE1H

— Eden Torres (@edentorres121) 1633186859.0

What did Sonic Drive-In have to say?

"Eden, we have a strict anti-discrimination policy and take this very seriously," the fast-food company replied to Torres on Twitter. "We launched an immediate investigation into the incident, and we have reached out to you via TikTok to gather more information needed to complete the investigation. Please feel free to DM us here."

It isn't clear if Torres responded directly to Sonic, but in a tweet Torres posted Tuesday, the activist said the manager should be trained instead of fired.

"The manager of this Sonic told me it's OK that I'm gay. I'm not gay. I'm trans. There is a difference between sexuality & gender identity," Torres wrote. "Clearly the manager doesn't know this. That's OK, but he can learn. Clearly I'm not the only one who had issues. Don't fire him, train him."

How did folks react to the trans female activist?

A number of observers were less than sympathetic to Torres:

  • "So the guy asks your pronouns (I thought you all wanted this); you then ask him to assume what he thinks you are (I thought you weren't supposed to do that?); and then you get pissed at the answer," one commenter said. "Literally, there was no way the guy could have won."
  • "What you want (besides attention) is to have everyone accept your make believe world where you pretend to be something you're not while the masses cheer you on for your bravery," another user declared. "Seek help. Accept reality. You'll be happier."
  • "It's nobody's job to affirm you," another commenter replied.
  • "I love how you turn the camera around thinking it will show that he's crazy for thinking you're a man but…it doesn't," another user wrote.
  • "The employee asked you what you wanted to be called. Instead of answering, you told him to assume. When he did what you asked, you got upset. You had a chance to be called what you wanted but chose not to. This guy isn't paid enough to put up with you," another commenter explained.

Anything else?

Torres on Tuesday posted the following tweets as the Sonic Drive-In incident appeared to be going viral:

There is a trans competency problem. Aggressively calling me sir as a way to negatively impact me is transphobia. T… https://t.co/tOw6VBYJAc

— Eden Torres (@edentorres121) 1633444961.0

You do realize that by me speaking up, I am putting my life at gigantic risk. I have done absolutely nothing wrong… https://t.co/sWkXBW64Zt

— Eden Torres (@edentorres121) 1633444787.0

Sonic events:1. Order 2. Employee & I have a nice interaction. 3. I hand him my card to pay & he clearly saw na… https://t.co/7IyxaXNnhX

— Eden Torres (@edentorres121) 1633443017.0