Rugby star Israel Folau tells gay people: ‘HELL AWAITS YOU’

Israel Folau of the Waratahs looks on during the round 8 Super Rugby match between the Blues and Waratahs at Eden Park on April 06, 2019 in Auckland, New Zealand.

Australian rugby international Israel Folau has used Instagram to tell gay people that “HELL AWAITS YOU.”

The 30-year-old star player posted the meme on Wednesday (April 10), just hours after Tasmania passed sweeping reforms to increase transgender rights.

The picture issues a “warning” to “drunks, homosexuals, adulterers, liars, fornicators, thieves, atheists and idolaters” that “HELL AWAITS YOU.”

Next to the message, which ends: “REPENT! ONLY JESUS SAVES,” Folau wrote: “Those that are living in Sin will end up in Hell unless you repent.

An Instagram post by Israel Folau which uses an anti-gay meme.

“Those that are living in Sin will end up in Hell unless you repent.” (izzyfolau/instagram)

“Jesus Christ loves you and is giving you time to turn away from your sin and come to him.”

On Twitter, he broke more than four months of silence to post a screenshot of a news story about Tasmania’s trans rights reform with the caption: “The devil has blinded so many people in this world, REPENT and turn away from your evil ways.

A tweet by Israel Folau which states: "The devil has blinded so many people in this world, REPENT and turn away from your evil ways."

The tweet was in response to Tasmania passing a trans rights bill. (izzyfolau/twitter)

“Turn to Jesus Christ who will set you free.”

The Instagram picture Folau used appears to originate from Bulldog Ministries, an anti-gay religious group in the US whose followers have protested Pride parades in Texas.

Israel Folau has a history of making anti-LGBT comments

Folau sparked controversy in 2017 when he came out against marriage equality and said he would vote ‘No’ in Australia’s postal vote.

Folau stood by his stance despite opposition, insisting that it did not mean he was discriminatory. He wrote on Twitter: “I love and respect all people for who they are and their opinions.”

However, just months later in April 2018, he prompted outrage by saying gay people were going to hell “unless they repent of their sins.”

“I think of it this way: you see someone who is about to walk into a hole and have the chance to save him.”

— Israel Folau

A number of other rugby players—and Riverdale star KJ Apa—condemned his comments, but Folau remained defiant, even tweeting a cryptic Bible verse about ‘persecuted’ Christians.


Rugby Australia bosses decided to take no action against the star.

And writing on sport news site Players Voice—where he is a founding contributor—Folau rejected the idea that he was a homophobe.

“I think of it this way: you see someone who is about to walk into a hole and have the chance to save him,” he said.

“He might be determined to maintain his course and doesn’t want to hear what you have to say. But if you don’t tell him the truth, as unpopular as it might be, he is going to fall into that hole. What do you do?”