Evergreen International, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in Salt Lake City, Utah, whose stated mission is to assist "people who want to diminish same-sex attractions and overcome homosexual behavior". It adheres to Christian and particularly Mormon teaching, but is independent of the LDS Church. The organization believes this task can be accomplished with the help of Jesus and, in some cases, psychological counseling. Evergreen was founded in 1989 as a grassroots organization by eleven ex-gay men who were seeking to deal with their homosexuality in ways congruent to the teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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"Evergreen does not advocate any particular form of therapy," [1] but does provide suggestions on how to choose a therapist and information on individual and group therapy. Evergreen states that some people have lessened their same sex attractions by utilizing the following therapies: gender wholeness therapy, reparative therapy, reorientation therapy and re-education therapy.[2] While some of these therapies offer to eliminate same-sex attractions, Evergreen makes clear that "therapy will likely not be a cure in the sense of erasing all homosexual feelings."[2] The LDS church has stated that it does not have a position on "scientific questions" such as the cause of homosexuality.[3] Evergreen follows this stance.
Evergreen claims success in diminishing same-sex attractions and overcoming homosexual behavior.[4][5] As many as 40% of Evergreen members are in heterosexual marriages.[6] Dr. Warren Throckmorton reviewed Understanding the meaning of change for married Latter-Day Saint men with histories of homosexual activity by J. W. Robinson. Robinson interviewed seven heterosexually married men who had been through Evergreen and previously identified as gay. They believe that they have had a spiritual transformation which changed their orientation. They also claimed that they were no longer troubled by feeling different or rejected by heterosexual men, emotional attraction to men, sexual attraction to men, feeling bad about same-sex desires, social isolation, or compulsive sexual thoughts and behaviors. Robinson found that their change came from a new understanding that prior same-sex attractions did not require them to be gay.[7]
Although functioning independently of any church, Evergreen is religiously based around the teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Though not affiliated with the church, the organization sustains the teachings of the church without reservation or exception. Evergreen has one or more emeritus general authority on its board of trustees, and teaches its principles to Latter-day Saints, and ecclesiastical leaders through working with the church as well as hosting firesides (informal gatherings of church members at night), workshops, and an annual conference.
On September 19, 2009, Bruce C. Hafen, a general authority of the LDS church, spoke at Evergreen's annual conference,[8] which was held at the Joseph Smith Memorial Building in Salt Lake, a property owned by the LDS Church.[9]