The NFA also seeks legal restrictions on abortion, and to change public policy on gambling and human trafficking.
The NFA's stated mission is to "advance family, freedom, and life by influencing policy, mobilizing prayer, and empowering people."
In a review of Former Nebraska Attorney General Don Stenberg's book Eavesdropping on Lucifer, NFA's executive director encouraged readers to "[overcome] forces of evil" in order to ensure "families thrive, life is cherished and religious freedom flourishes.”[5] The NFA ended their participation in Give to Lincoln Day, a local fundraising campaign, in 2023 because the campaign would have required them to agree to a nondiscrimination policy covering sexual orientation and gender identity.
[8][9][10] In an interview, Executive Director Karen Bowling shared that some critics had begun selling t-shirts that read "NFA is a Hate Group.
[21] The organization opposed a 2004 attempt to modernize Nebraska domestic assault law to use the phrase "intimate partner" to include unmarried couples.
[25] The organization opposed Nebraska's first attempt to legally prohibit discrimination against LGBT people in 1995, which they viewed as a "homosexual agenda" to silence Christian business.
[27] Firing an employee, evicting a renter, and ejecting a customer from a business for reason of sexual orientation remained legal in Lincoln until Bostock v. Clayton County prohibited employment discrimination in 2020.
[29] The NFA opposes a Lincoln ordinance extending employment and workplace protections to include sexual orientation, gender identity, and active military or veteran status.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued a fact sheet stating "claims regarding abortion 'reversal' treatment are not based on science and do not meet clinical standards.
Michael Johnston, who "helps people leave the homosexual lifestyle" gave the keynote at the Day of Family in 2000.
"[38] NFA invited Jack Phillips and Barronelle Stutzman to speak at a 2018 fundraiser[39] as exemplars of religious freedom because both had declined to provide wedding services to same-sex couples.