A church rallied together to block homophobic protesters.

The First Congregational Church of Geneva in suburban Chicago has had protestors before because of their acceptance of LGBTQ people. It was such a problem that they set up an email list of church members who wanted to be notified if the protestors showed up again.

One day earlier this month, church member Colin Campbell went to the church and saw seven protestors who were distributing anti-LGBT pamphlets that said “Love kills pride.”

“I was hopeful this group wouldn’t show up again,” Campbell said. “I walked over to see who they were and they were asking me if I was a follower of Jesus Christ and gave me a flier that said, ‘Love Kills Pride.’ I said, ‘Thank you very much’ and walked away and called my wife.”

She emailed the list and people showed up to counter-protest.

“Within about five minutes, people started showing up,” Campbell said. “Within about 30 minutes, there were probably 50 people there.”

Church member Carolyn Fabian – who created the “Got love?” signs for the church – got the message when she was at a concert at another church and sprang into action.

“I never anticipated this level of support,” Fabian said.

The Kane County Chronicle spoke with Aaron Viland, the protestor who made the “Love Kills Pride” fliers. He said that they weren’t a part of any church or organized group – they are just a group of friends who hate LGBT people and protest for discrimination in their spare time.

“Most of them were not really open to having conversations,” Viland said about the First Congregational Church of Geneva members, as if conservative Christians have historically been open to conversations about accepting LGBT people.

He complained that the counter-protestors were chanting “Love wins” so loud that he couldn’t have “good discussions” with congregants.

In the end, love actually won. “[The protestors] were right at the first step and I was trying to figure out how to push them back, and these guys just made a wall and were chanting, ‘Love wins,’ and they backed off all the way to the grass, and we were able to get people into the church OK,” Fabian said. “It was fantastic.”

The United Church of Christ is a mainline Protestant denomination with around 5000 member congregations. The national church is known for its liberal views on civil rights, LGBT equality, and women’s liberation.