Culture Christian group is ‘luring’ students with free pizza at lunch, Clovis parents say - “They’re basically luring in kids that are under 18, that are still trying to find themselves and are still trying to explore.”

BY LAURA S. DIAZ
UPDATED MARCH 21, 2024 10:23 AM

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Clovis Unified School District headquarters at Sunnyside and Herndon avenues is seen in this Bee file photo. JOHN WALKER Fresno Bee file

Some Clovis parents say a Christian group is trying to indoctrinate their children during lunchtime, lured to pray and talk about Jesus Christ by being offered free pizza.

Three parents with children attending Reyburn Intermediate and Clovis East High schools said their children were offered free pizza to go to the lecture hall in groups of three to five during their lunch period. Upon arrival, parents said a representative from the Fellowship of Christian Athletes meets with students. After praying and hearing about Christianity, parents said students then receive their free pizza in yellow boxes.

“I feel that they’re doing wrong,” one parent with a student at Clovis East told The Fresno Bee. “They’re basically luring in kids that are under 18, that are still trying to find themselves and are still trying to explore.”

The parents who spoke to The Bee asked to remain anonymous, fearing retaliation against them or their children. They also said they were not notified via email, text, permission slip or asked for their consent for the FCA to approach their children.

“Back in my days when I was a high school student, to join any kind of club I needed my parents to sign a permission slip for me to attend,” one Clovis East parent said. “I am upset that they actually do have that kind of club there without parents’ consent.”

Some parents also pointed out that they do not practice Christianity at home, but they are religious and believe in different doctrines. They questioned if their children’s school allows other religions to conduct their activities on school grounds, and wondered why their underage children were being exposed to a religion they don’t practice at home in this manner.

Another parent, who has a student at Reyburn Intermediate, said their child learned about the free pizza at the lecture hall through the morning’s school-wide announcements. The parent said the child recalled an adult — not a student — leading an opening prayer and then talking about accepting God, repenting their sins and the relationship between Jesus and athletes. This parent also said their child wasn’t allowed to use their phone during the session.

“They’re using pizza as a way to get children in,” one of the parents said.

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Clovis East High School, photographed Thursday, Dec. 7, 2023 in Clovis. ERIC PAUL ZAMORA ezamora@fresnobee.com

Clovis Unified’s spokesperson Kelly Avants said the FCA can meet with students during school hours through its affiliated student-led club on campus. She said that there are 40-plus student clubs at Clovis East, including the fishing, gay-straight alliance and Sikh clubs. Avants said the FCA is operating in accordance with the district’s student clubs policies.

All Clovis Unified clubs must have faculty advisors, she said, who are responsible for supervising students and observing that school rules are followed. Faculty advisors can also request information about club activities be added to school announcements.

These announcements include information about club field trips and meetings. If club meetings are scheduled during lunch time, Avants said some information about if/what food would be provided can also be shared so students know if they need to get lunch before going to a club’s meeting.

Avants also said any student club can arrange guest speakers on topics that pertain to the purpose of the club, and these guests are vetted by faculty advisors to ensure school rules and procedures are followed.

The Fellowship of Christian Athletes is among the non-district groups that petitioned to reserve Clovis Unified School District facilities during the 2023-2024 school year. In September, the district’s board voted to cancel all reservations from outside groups — including the FCA — because too many were crowding out regular student activities during school days, the district said.

This board decision came after a Clovis parent — who is also an LGBTQ+ community advocate — said his petition to host an inclusive reading hour after school was ignored for 11 months. He questioned the district about it’s facilities reservation practices.

The FCA is an international Christian organization focused on empowering coaches and athletes to know and grow in Christ and lead others to do the same, according to its Central California chapter’s website.

The organization asks students to conform to, affirm and embrace its Sexual Purity Statement. According to federal court files, it states:
  • The appropriate place for sexual expression is in the context of a marriage relationship, according to the Bible.
  • The biblical description of marriage is one man and one woman in a lifelong commitment.
  • The FCA’s desire is to encourage individuals to trust in Jesus and turn away from any impure lifestyle.
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Balloons are formed into the shape of a Christian cross at a Fellowship of Christian Athletes event in Oakhurst. BRIAN WILKINSON Sierra Star file photo

Because of the FCA’s beliefs in heterosexual marriage, two members of the organization sued the San Jose Unified School District after the FCA was denied recognition under the district’s nondiscrimination policies, which forbade discrimination based on sexual orientation, according to the League of Women Voters’ report about the case.

After three years of legal procedures, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in FCA’s favor, requiring the district to recognize the group even if it would potentially exclude LGBTQ+ students.

The Bee called and emailed Ron Nelson, the FCA Central California’s multi-area director, at his contact information listed by the FCA online and did not receive a response as of Wednesday evening.

A third Clovis East parent with several children attending Reyburn and Clovis East said they understand how some families can agree with what FCA preaches, yet, they would have liked to be informed by the schools about their presence and interactions with students at lunch, just like they are notified of meetings happening on campus.

“I do believe that everybody should have a religion because when you do, I feel like you’re more in line with life, maybe with your spiritual self,” the parent said. “But I feel you still need parents’ consent for this because kids don’t understand or know what it is.”

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“I feel that they’re doing wrong,” one parent with a student at Clovis East told The Fresno Bee. “They’re basically luring in kids that are under 18, that are still trying to find themselves and are still trying to explore.”
But brainwashing them to cut their dicks off isn't interfering with "finding themselves" and "trying to explore"?

I guess as long as you don't offer pizza any form of child indoctrination is a-okay. :story:
 
Some Clovis parents say a Christian group is trying to indoctrinate their children during lunchtime, lured to pray and talk about Jesus Christ by being offered free pizza.
Christians have been using free food and charity to gain converts since Jesus and his disciples were wandering the shores of the Dead Sea, this isn't something new.

In Italy they probably offered free pizza for that matter. It wasn't called pizza back then (word dates to the 9th century AD) but would've been its ancestor, a flatbread topped with pecorino cheese and herbs and baked in the oven.
 
After three years of legal procedures, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in FCA’s favor, requiring the district to recognize the group even if it would potentially exclude LGBTQ+ students.
But it doesn't exclude "LGBTQ+" students. A vast majority of students, probably all of them, aren't married. Therefore the prohibition on whoring applies equally ro normal children and grooming victims.
 
But brainwashing them to cut their dicks off isn't interfering with "finding themselves" and "trying to explore"?

I guess as long as you don't offer pizza any form of child indoctrination is a-okay. :story:
It's always bad when some cookey group lures children without the knowledge of parents. JEBUS IS KAGHN sects are slightly better really.
 
Back when I was in college I would go to shit like this just for the free food. Christian, Buddhist, commie, it didn't matter as long as I got a meal that wasn't top fucking ramen. These guys are smart about it though, you do the thing and then you get the food. I would just show up, grab food, and leave without listening to whatever they were trying to sell me.
 
In the 20th century, before any other school I'd ever heard of had a gay club, I attended a boarding school (it was selective and close to free) where the cafeteria food was pretty dismal. Clubs were underfunded by design, and most club meetings were bring your own snacks.

But one club always had pizza and soda with its meetings, every time. The Gay-Straight Alliance. They'd show you movies about teenagers exploring their homosexuality while stuffing you full of warm food, and all you had to do was hang out with a big group of gay and trans teenagers. The school also had a boy transition into a crude facsimile of a girl, and given a separate dorm room (in a group of rooms which were otherwise all-female and where boys were allowed only with a shocking amount of red tape) so he could "live as a girl" for a year before starting hormones.

This stuff was far, far out there back in the day. The only way they got away with it was that kids weren't being supervised by parents and anyone who mentioned that it was super weird the gay club always had food (free hot food was so motivating to the students that it was a huge running joke at the school) was told they were being bigoted and repeating myths about gays all being pedophiles. In the words of one Bart Simpson, what an odd thing to say.
 
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