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A Virginia realtor faces the loss of his license after his state association ruled that a nine-year-old posting of a Biblical verse on his personal social media account was an act of hate speech.

According to combined media reports, the Hearing Committee of the Virginia Association of Realtors (VAR) decided last week that Wilson Fauber, the owner and managing Broker at Regal Real Estate of Virginia LLC, violated its Code of Ethics and Arbitration Manual when he shared the passage from Leviticus 18:22 regarding the Old Testament view of homosexuality on his personal Facebook page. Fauber, who is also a pastor and runs Arise International Ministries, published the post was made on Feb. 13, 2015, and the complaint was initially filed by two realtors last year after Fauber unsuccessfully ran for the city council in Staunton, Virginia.

VAR determined the Biblical quote shred by Fauber violated its Standard of Practice 10-5 rule regarding “very particular types of speech that are directly connected to the protected classes of race, color, religion, sex, disability, familial status, national origin, sexual orientation or gender identity under Article 10.” VAR has another policy that states its members “are subject to disciplinary action with respect to all of their activities, except in those circumstances in which the Code of Ethics only applies to real estate-related activities by virtue of its Articles or Standards of Practice.”

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Fauber, who has been a realtor for 44 years, has never been accused of discrimination or hate speech harassment against prospective homebuyers, nor has he used his realtor-related social media pages to promote his ministry. He criticized VAR’s attempt to label him as a hate speech advocate.

“They didn’t find any dirt, but they found a scripture from Feb. 13, 2015, and they decided they were going to use that and label me as the hater,” Fauber said.

Fauber’s attorney, Michael Sylvester, questioned why VAR was penalizing Fauber for echoing a Biblical scripture.

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“He’s a minister, he runs a nonprofit Christian ministry,” Sylvester said. “It’s normal for him to express his views on these topics on his personal social media page.”

Sylvester added Fauber would appeal the ruling, arguing his First Amendment rights were being violated.

“Did any of his speech constitute hate speech or harassment speech against a protected category? Our position has been decidedly that it did not,” Sylvester said.

Photo courtesy of Wilson Fauber’s Facebook page

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