Greg Quinlan's Story
Former Homosexual a Pro-family Lobbyist
By Clem Boyd Focus on the Family "Citizen" magazine state insert August 1998

Quinlan speaking with Representative Jay Hottinger (R) sponsor of Ohio"s Defense of Marriage Bill
Greg Quinlan is out and proud. Out of the gay lifestyle and proud of
it, that is. This is the story of his escape. Greg's mom was a
born-again Christian who married an atheist with an attitude. That's
where the trouble began My dad identified with Archie Bunker in
every way," Greg explained. "The only difference was Archie had some
mixed-up belief in God and wasn't violent. My dad was violent. And
in an abusive situation usually one kid is the abused one, and I was
it."
Mom still took the kids to church~Greg, his brother and two sisters.
"I knew the Scripture and liked going to church," he said. But at
age 10, a neighbor boy introduced Greg to sex. His double life had
begun. "But I kept going to church and playing the Christian role,"
he said. "Growing up as a teen, I was interested in sex with other
men only because of that introduction," he added. "I've known
thousands of homosexuals and I've never met someone who was not
introduced to sex at an early age, generally with the same sex.
At age 23 Greg made his sexual behavior public, "blowing the doors
off the closet," as he describes it. He had many sexual encounters,
visited gay bathhouses all across the state, was a regular patron of
porn shops and lived the party life within gay social circles. "I'm
HIV-negative but it's just a miracle I'm not infected," he admitted.
As a registered nurse, Greg began taking care of AIDS patients when
the crisis hit the Dayton-area in the mid 80s. He took these men to
the doctor and cared for them at home. "Then this guy I was dating
invited me to a dinner in Columbus in 1986, the Human Rights
Campaign Fund (HRCF) reception," he recalled. "That's how I was
introduced to gay politics, at age 28."
Two years later he started an HRCF branch in Dayton. "HRCF is the
largest gay and lesbian political organization in the country,
chiefly responsible for securing AIDS research money from the
federal government," Greg said. "I raised several thousand dollars
out of Dayton and really got involved because of the AIDS project.
But in all my work with HRCE I was trying to justify being in the
lifestyle, because I was miserable."

Gregory Quinlan testifies before Ohio House Commitee
Having grown up in church and still possessing a good knowledge of
the Bible, Greg was often asked by friends to do their eulogies. So
he ended up speaking at funerals and reading Scriptures. "There was
the Lord's hook," Greg commented. "Like it says in Scripture, Train
up a child in the way he should go and when he is old, he will not
depart from it'," he offered, quoting from Proverbs 22:6.
So the Lord was beginning to draw Greg to himself But it took an
event of worldwide importance to really shake, him out of his sinful
stupor.
"It was 1989 and I was watching the wall in Berlin fall on
television," he remembered. "One of the Scriptures I learned in
church was Matthew 24:14, And this gospel of the kingdom will be
preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then
the end will come.' It was like somebody pressed a button on the
recorder in the back of mind, this verse just kept sounding off in
my head. "I
thought at the time, 'Communism has fallen, that's over a billion
people (with access to the Gospel), the Lord is coming back.' This
was another way the Lord got to me.
At the time Greg was a Medicare review nurse and traveled all over
the state. "I knew where all the bathhouses were. I knew the
location of every porn shop in the state. I was still pretty active
but the Lord was working on me. Greg started listening to Christian
radio and watching Christian TV shows. "I had this hunger and
craving," he recalled. "I missed the hymns, the music and the
worship. Even while I was in the gay lifestyle I made a point of
going to church on Easter Sunday. I still had that hunger to be
satisfied, to worship the
Lord. It was still there after all those years.
He was watching the 700 Club and TBN several months before his
conversion. One show featured a number of former homosexuals who had
left the gay lifestyle. "I watched intently~ partly making fin,
partly wishing it was true," Greg said. "I thought, 'Can it happen
to me?' I was really miserable." Friends and acquaintances began
asking Greg to start an Ohio Log Cabin society, the name for the gay
and lesbian coalition in the Republican Party. He never did. It was
Thanksgiving weekend, 1993 and he decided to call TBN.
"You know I had been on TV, radio and in newspapers (as a homosexual
activist)," Greg said. "I was not ashamed of being a homosexual and
talking about the AIDS crisis. I'd go to Washington D.C. two to
three times a year to lobby Capitol Hill. But I had a lot of trouble
telling this guy what my problem was. I was suddenly ashamed of
being gay. I wasn't happy about it."
Greg fought through his angst and finally revealed his problem He
said a prayer over the phone and accepted Jesus Christ as his savior
that very night "There were no bells or whistles but I slept that
night he said. "There was peace.
Greg's decision resulted in a sudden and abrupt turn in his life. He
got into church immediately changed his telephone number stopped
hanging out at gay bars and discontinued his volunteer nursing with
the Dayton Area AIDS Task Force. "I stopped cold turkey doing
anything in the gay lifestyle," he said.
But stopping the wrong behavior was merely the first step. One
Sunday a guest preacher at church had a special message for Greg.
Her sermon had convicted him sharply and he had gone forward to the
altar where he was crying uncontrollably.
"She told me, 'Son, there's a call on your life'," he related. "She
told me some things only God could tell her, that what the devil had
trained me to do God was going to use for his glory." Shortly after
this event the director of Ohio Christian Coalition called Greg
looking for help. He worked there four years and a year ago last
March left to start the Pro-Family Network.
PFN's goal is to place a pro-family lobbyist in every state capitol,
someone to address conservative Christian issues, such as an Ohio
bill to establish a commission on Youth and Suicide, that is beyond
the scope of organizations like Right to Life. They have
accomplished that goal in nine states so far.
"As a grass roots lobbyist I went to Capitol Hill for the lunatic left," Greg said. "HRCF trained me how to do it and a year later I was using my training for the other side. The Lord turned it all around."
