After wildfires erupted in Los Angeles County earlier this yr, a staff from the Division of Housing and City Growth descended on the wreckage. Led by HUD Secretary Scott Turner, the entourage walked by way of the rubble in Altadena, reassuring victims that the Trump administration had their again. At Turner’s request, a Christian-nationalist musician named Sean Feucht tagged alongside. “I can’t overemphasize how superb this chance is,” Feucht had posted on Instagram the day earlier than. “I’m bringing my guitar. We’re going to worship. We’re going to wish.”
Feucht has just lately turn into a MAGA famous person. He excursions the nation holding rallies that mix upbeat Christian-rock songs with sermons that tie in his right-wing political beliefs. Between praising President Donald Trump as God’s chosen one and suggesting that abortion supporters are “demons,” Feucht has repeatedly advocated for the fusion of Church and state. Throughout a efficiency in entrance of the Wisconsin statehouse in 2023, Feucht paused after a track to make a proclamation: “Yeah, we wish God in command of authorities,” he stated. “We would like God writing the legal guidelines of the land.” He has held rallies in any respect 50 state capitols, spreading comparable theocratic messages.
Feucht didn’t reply to a number of requests for remark. At instances, he has denied being a Christian nationalist, however it may be onerous to take that perspective critically. Final yr, he overtly embraced the time period at a church in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “That’s why we get known as, Properly, you’re Christian nationalists. You need the dominion to be the federal government? Sure! You need God to return and overtake the federal government? Sure! You need Christians to be the one ones? Sure, we do,” Feucht stated. “We would like God to be in command of every thing,” he continued. “We would like believers to be those writing the legal guidelines.”
Feucht has the ear of many prime Republicans. After he held a prayer gathering on the Nationwide Mall per week earlier than the 2024 presidential election, Trump personally congratulated him for “the unimaginable job” he was doing defending “spiritual liberty.” Feucht then attended Trump’s inauguration prayer service on the Nationwide Cathedral in January, the place he embraced Secretary of Protection Pete Hegseth. The very subsequent week, he posted that Home Speaker Mike Johnson had invited him to carry a worship occasion within the Capitol. Then, in April, Feucht carried out on the White Home.
Given his rallies and political connections, Feucht is “perhaps the best evangelical determine on the far proper,” Matthew D. Taylor, the senior Christian scholar on the Institute for Islamic, Christian, and Jewish Research, instructed me. He’s a giant cause Christian nationalism has extra buy now than at some other level in current historical past. In keeping with a February ballot from the Public Faith Analysis Institute, a majority of Republicans help or sympathize with Christian nationalism. They agreed with quite a lot of statements supplied by PRRI, akin to “If the U.S. strikes away from our Christian foundations, we won’t have a rustic anymore.” Final month, the Enchantment to Heaven flag—an emblem fashionable amongst Christian nationalists—was noticed flying above a D.C. authorities constructing. Feucht is pushing to carry faith and authorities into even nearer alignment.
Feucht comes from a subset of evangelical Christianity referred to as the New Apostolic Reformation, or NAR. As my colleague Stephanie McCrummen has written, “The motion has by no means been about insurance policies or modifications to the legislation; it’s at all times been in regards to the bigger aim of dismantling the establishments of secular authorities to clear the way in which for the Kingdom. It’s about God’s whole victory.” Many NAR adherents consider within the “seven-mountain mandate,” a framework that seeks to transcend ending the separation between Church and state. The aim is to finally management the “seven mountains” of up to date tradition: household, faith, schooling, media, arts and leisure, enterprise, and authorities. Feucht has endorsed the basic idea. “Why shouldn’t we be those main the way in which in all spheres of society?” he stated in a 2022 sermon. In a dialog that very same yr, Feucht referenced his need for Christian illustration in “the seven spheres of society.”
NAR has a number of high-profile leaders, however Feucht has been particularly adept at drawing outdoors consideration to the motion’s objectives. After rising to prominence throughout the early days of the coronavirus pandemic by throwing Christian-rock concert events in violation of lockdown orders, Feucht has constructed a large viewers of devotees. His fixed stream of worship occasions throughout the nation makes Christian nationalism extra accessible for the spiritual lots, as does his prolific social-media presence (he has half one million followers between Instagram and X). Feucht is linked to simply about each faction of the trendy proper, even the grassroots fringe: On one event, he enlisted a member of the Proud Boys, the sometimes-violent far-right group, as a part of his safety element. (Feucht later claimed that he wasn’t acquainted with the group.)
With Feucht’s assist, a model of the seven-mountain mandate is coming true. The Trump administration is cracking down on “anti-Christian bias” within the federal authorities, and the president has employed numerous advisers who’re linked to Christian nationalism. Underneath stress from dad and mom and lawmakers, faculties have banned lesson plans and library books associated to LGBTQ themes. Feucht shouldn’t be single-handedly liable for these wins for Christian nationalists, however his affect is simple. Feucht and Hegseth mentioned holding a prayer service contained in the Pentagon months earlier than the secretary of protection really did it. Or think about Charlie Kirk, the MAGA energy dealer who helped run the Trump marketing campaign’s youth-vote operation, after which vetted potential White Home hires. In 2020, Feucht unsuccessfully ran for Congress and was endorsed by Kirk. Inside per week of the endorsement, Kirk invoked the seven-mountain mandate at CPAC, the conservative convention. With Trump, he stated, “lastly now we have a president that understands the seven mountains of cultural affect.”
However not every thing has been going nicely for Feucht. Final month, six staffers and volunteers who labored for Feucht revealed an extended and detailed report accusing him of participating in monetary malfeasance. Feucht’s former staff declare that he withheld promised expense reimbursements from ministry volunteers, engaged in donor and payroll fraud, and embezzled nonprofit funds for private use. The allegations observe with earlier reporting by Rolling Stone and Ministry Watch, the nonprofit Christian watchdog. Each have reported on opaque monetary dealings involving his nonprofits. Citing an absence of transparency and effectivity, Ministry Watch presently offers Sean Feucht Ministries a “Donor Confidence Rating” of 19 out of 100, and encourages potential donors to “withhold giving” to the group.
Feucht hasn’t been charged with any crimes stemming from the allegations, and has denied wrongdoing. “None of these allegations are true,” Feucht stated in a video he just lately posted to YouTube. “We’re in nice standing with the IRS. We’re in nice standing with our accountants.” He later added, “We’re taking floor for Jesus, and we aren’t apologizing for that.” It’s potential Feucht’s viewers will take him at his phrase. The NAR motion is insular and unwavering in its worldview: Allegations are proof of persecution for achievement. Nonetheless, a big a part of Feucht’s energy is derived from his donors. Sooner or later, some folks may get fed up with giving him cash. “He may lose traction on the follower degree,” Taylor stated.
To date, that appears unlikely. Scandals can take down folks, however concepts are extra resilient. Kirk has continued to advocate for Christian-nationalist positions; final yr, he argued that “the separation of Church and state is nowhere within the Structure.” (It’s, actually, within the Structure—proper there within the First Modification.) Even the previously staunchly secular world of tech is changing into extra open to Christian nationalism. In October, Elon Musk held a city corridor at Feucht’s former church in Pennsylvania, and has known as himself a “cultural Christian.” Marc Andreessen and different buyers have backed a tech enclave in rural Kentucky intently affiliated with Christian nationalists. No matter what occurs to Feucht, lots of the world’s strongest folks appear to be inching nearer to what he desires.