We were welcomed to Idaho by a scathing editorial from this paper's editorial board titled, "Keep your religion out of our government. Dangerous activists coming to Idaho Capitol."
I don't begrudge the Statesman for what they wrote—they are well within their Constitutional right. We both exercised our rights under the same amendment. What they wrote is not so much a critique of the Let Us Worship Movement as it was a shameless plug for the LGBTQ agenda. To stand on the Bible is dangerous in the year 2023, especially when that truth conflicts with the LGTBQ agenda.
Of course, it is easy to find "faith leaders" willing to sign their name to a letter denouncing Let Us Worship. But those very same faith leaders echoed a chorus of avowed Satanists, which makes me wonder which group should examine their beliefs. Simply put, to stand for the TRUTH of the Gospel is dangerous. Fear not, for it is Truth - and ONLY THE TRUTH - that sets us free.
The Let Us Worship movement started as a response to an injustice I witnessed firsthand in my home state of California during the early stages of the Covid pandemic. Had churches in California been afforded the rights to gather, the same rights that strip clubs and bars never lost, we probably wouldn't be here today. But the government telling Believers to stay home, while strippers and bartenders could go to work, was the final straw. This birthed a movement that continues today.
FINISH READING ON SUBSTACK →https://seanfeucht.substack.com/p/0d4d67d9-c914-4bf5-a978-cb5bde7efc91