In Washington Sunday, with the U.S. Capitol as a backdrop, Feucht and his fellow speakers and performers encouraged the thousands of attendees-mostly mask-less and packed closely together on a damp and dreary afternoon-to sing, shout, and dance. Feucht noted that the election was just eight days away and said he wanted the country to see Christians dancing with joy. Feucht portrays racial reconciliation as one goal of his movement, but he has denounced the Black Lives Matter movement as a “fraud” and “a dark movement with hidden agendas.” For part of the rally, Feucht shared the stage with his spiritual mentor, dominionist Lou Engle. Longtime anti-choice activist Engle made a name for himself with a series of large-scale political prayer rallies in sports stadiums-including one in California in 2008 to mobilize support for the anti-marriage-equality Proposition 8. Feucht has frequently described his attendance at Engle’s “The Call on the Mall” event in D.C. in 2000-when Feucht was 17-as a turning point in his life. Feucht and Engle believe that God orchestrated the timing of their D.C. event to come the day before the U.S. Senate is set to vote on the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, whom Engle and other dominionists have declared anointed by God to end abortion in the U.S. Earlier in the day Sunday, Engle hosted a prayer meeting on the steps of the Supreme Court. Feucht described the Barret vote as “a moment of history,” adding, “We’ve been praying for this since 1983, that God would move, that he would shift the courts that would bring a change over the death decree.” When his tour stopped in Dallas two weeks ago, participants walked to the courthouse where Roe v. Wade was first argued. Engle, who is a member of the leadership council of the pro-Trump “prophetic” network POTUS Shield, has frequently urged people to pray that God would “remove” pro-choice Supreme Court justices to give Trump an opportunity to make good on his pledge to give the religious right a Supreme Court that would overturn Roe v. Wade. https://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/sean-feucht-tour-using-high-energy-worship-to-promote-right-wing-politics-hits-dc-on-eve-of-barrett-vote/
Sean Feucht, a Christian musician running for Congress in California, attended a meeting in December organized by White, which brought about 50 Christian leaders, most of them Pentecostal, to the Oval Office. Trump asked the guests to pray for him. “It was bold, loud prayer” in the charismatic, Pentecostal style, Feucht said. “We were all praying at once, lifting our voices. It wasn’t solemn and organized. It was lively and loud. I think that he’s drawn to that." https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/02/14/trump-mocks-faith-others-his-own-religious-practices-remain-opaque/
No, two of those senators - McSally and Loeffler - were appointed to their seats rather than bring legitimately elected. McSally was appointed after losing a different Senate race, in fact.
Both are now in uphill campaigns to be elected, which is why you raced through this vote. https://t.co/Eqw3mA4Tvm - Kevin M. Kruse (@KevinMKruse) October 27, 2020
Культ в квадрате - «патриотические церкви» имени Трампа.
The new congregation is gathered in a barn in Lenoir City, Tenn., with a roof that has a 60-foot American flag painted on it. And they are praying for a Trump landslide. Standing in a circle, the dozen or so men and women, young and old, lay their hands on their pastor, Ken Peters, as he raises their requests to God. He prays that “communism and socialism and transgenderism and homosexuality and abortion will not have their way in this land.” “Yes, Lord,” someone cries. He prays that the nation’s “Christian roots” will remain, that the church of Jesus Christ will be a “restraining power.” “God, this nation is a miracle for you,” Peters continues. “You rescued us, and you gave us our independence for a purpose.” After another “amen,” the service begins with everyone’s hands raised to “Here I Am to Worship,” a popular contemporary Christian song performed in many evangelical churches. This is a Patriot Church, part of an evolving network of nondenominational start-up congregations that say they want to take the country back for God. While most White conservative Christian churches might only touch on politics around election time and otherwise choose to keep the focus during worship on God, politics and religion are inseparable here. The Tennessee congregation is one of three Patriot Churches that formed in September. The other two are near Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., and in Spokane, Wash., and Peters says he is talking with several more pastors of existing churches who want to join them. https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/10/26/trump-christian-nationalism-patriot-church/
You assholes
- Parker Molloy (@ParkerMolloy) October 27, 2020
Главный республиканец в юридической комиссии Палаты представителей - Джим Джордан, цепной пёс Трампа.
Americans don’t cower in the basement. We keep on living. https://t.co/uC1Mkl6RL2
- Rep. Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) October 26, 2020
“Let us worship” - шабаш доминионистов.
In Washington Sunday, with the U.S. Capitol as a backdrop, Feucht and his fellow speakers and performers encouraged the thousands of attendees-mostly mask-less and packed closely together on a damp and dreary afternoon-to sing, shout, and dance. Feucht noted that the election was just eight days away and said he wanted the country to see Christians dancing with joy.
Feucht portrays racial reconciliation as one goal of his movement, but he has denounced the Black Lives Matter movement as a “fraud” and “a dark movement with hidden agendas.”
For part of the rally, Feucht shared the stage with his spiritual mentor, dominionist Lou Engle. Longtime anti-choice activist Engle made a name for himself with a series of large-scale political prayer rallies in sports stadiums-including one in California in 2008 to mobilize support for the anti-marriage-equality Proposition 8. Feucht has frequently described his attendance at Engle’s “The Call on the Mall” event in D.C. in 2000-when Feucht was 17-as a turning point in his life.
Feucht and Engle believe that God orchestrated the timing of their D.C. event to come the day before the U.S. Senate is set to vote on the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, whom Engle and other dominionists have declared anointed by God to end abortion in the U.S. Earlier in the day Sunday, Engle hosted a prayer meeting on the steps of the Supreme Court.
Feucht described the Barret vote as “a moment of history,” adding, “We’ve been praying for this since 1983, that God would move, that he would shift the courts that would bring a change over the death decree.” When his tour stopped in Dallas two weeks ago, participants walked to the courthouse where Roe v. Wade was first argued.
Engle, who is a member of the leadership council of the pro-Trump “prophetic” network POTUS Shield, has frequently urged people to pray that God would “remove” pro-choice Supreme Court justices to give Trump an opportunity to make good on his pledge to give the religious right a Supreme Court that would overturn Roe v. Wade.
https://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/sean-feucht-tour-using-high-energy-worship-to-promote-right-wing-politics-hits-dc-on-eve-of-barrett-vote/
Reply
“It was bold, loud prayer” in the charismatic, Pentecostal style, Feucht said. “We were all praying at once, lifting our voices. It wasn’t solemn and organized. It was lively and loud. I think that he’s drawn to that."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/02/14/trump-mocks-faith-others-his-own-religious-practices-remain-opaque/
Thank you @realDonaldTrump for an epic time in the Oval Office the other day! Incredible moment getting to pray for you! 🙌🏼🇺🇸🙏🏽🔥 pic.twitter.com/u5zrj4T8jP
- Sean Feucht (@seanfeucht) December 10, 2019
Высокопоставленный гость на шабаше - сенатор Хоули.
Thank you for coming Senator! 🙏🏽🇺🇸 https://t.co/g2pgj2tzps
- Sean Feucht (@seanfeucht) October 26, 2020
Tens of thousands gathering tonight in peaceful worship to pray for the country - what a sight pic.twitter.com/DqlbiZy05Q
- Josh Hawley (@HawleyMO) October 26, 2020
Reply
No, two of those senators - McSally and Loeffler - were appointed to their seats rather than bring legitimately elected. McSally was appointed after losing a different Senate race, in fact.
Both are now in uphill campaigns to be elected, which is why you raced through this vote. https://t.co/Eqw3mA4Tvm
- Kevin M. Kruse (@KevinMKruse) October 27, 2020
Reply
The new congregation is gathered in a barn in Lenoir City, Tenn., with a roof that has a 60-foot American flag painted on it. And they are praying for a Trump landslide.
Standing in a circle, the dozen or so men and women, young and old, lay their hands on their pastor, Ken Peters, as he raises their requests to God.
He prays that “communism and socialism and transgenderism and homosexuality and abortion will not have their way in this land.”
“Yes, Lord,” someone cries.
He prays that the nation’s “Christian roots” will remain, that the church of Jesus Christ will be a “restraining power.”
“God, this nation is a miracle for you,” Peters continues. “You rescued us, and you gave us our independence for a purpose.”
After another “amen,” the service begins with everyone’s hands raised to “Here I Am to Worship,” a popular contemporary Christian song performed in many evangelical churches.
This is a Patriot Church, part of an evolving network of nondenominational start-up congregations that say they want to take the country back for God. While most White conservative Christian churches might only touch on politics around election time and otherwise choose to keep the focus during worship on God, politics and religion are inseparable here. The Tennessee congregation is one of three Patriot Churches that formed in September. The other two are near Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., and in Spokane, Wash., and Peters says he is talking with several more pastors of existing churches who want to join them.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2020/10/26/trump-christian-nationalism-patriot-church/
Reply
With my favorite Handmaiden of the Law. pic.twitter.com/Zger3pgiTa
- Robert P. George (@McCormickProf) October 27, 2020
Reply
Leave a comment