Smoke, Lies & Offerings: Inside Sean Feucht’s Dangerous Christian Nationalist Grift Tour Through Canada
The MAGA missionary came to Canada to start a religious culture war for Trump —and maybe to launder some more money for Jesus while he's at it.
July 27, 2025
Sean Feucht is a dangerous Evangelical Christian Nationalist who came to Canada to start a Holy War that his Rapis/Felo US President can use to punish Canada and distract from his deep involvement in Epstein’s Child rape trafficking ring.
Let’s find out why, and what happened this week, together.
“Let Us Worship”? More like Let Us Profit, Polarize, and Play the Victim—Sean Feucht’s Canadian propaganda tour is a masterclass in MAGA grift, spiritual gaslighting, and faux martyrdom.
Who TF is Sean Feucht?
First, Sean Feucht isn’t just a long-haired worship singer with a savior complex—he’s a full-blown MAGA missionary, a Christian nationalist operative, and a one-man Joel Osteen starter kit with more real estate than theological consistency.
A former Bethel Church worship leader turned far-right influencer, Feucht built his career turning praise music into political warfare. He praises Trump as “God’s chosen one,” calls abortion advocates “demonic,” and preaches a Dominionist gospel where the church should control the state. Think Hillsong, but with fascist vibes and a merch table.
He’s held White House worship rallies under Trump, run for Congress as a Republican, and travels with a spiritual militia of anti-maskers, gun bros, and conspiracy kooks. And now? He’s targeting Canada as his next stage for the MAGA revival theater. He has a long history of embezzling (stealing) money from his ministry and thriving donations, and has compiled a MASSIVE real estate portfolio from all of that sweet religious financial fraud. He was also excommunicated from his church, and several pastors have signed letters demanding to know “what happened to all the money Sean.
We’ll get to all that and more here.
Explainer: What Is Evangelical Christian Nationalism—and Why Is It So Dangerous?
Let’s break this down clearly, because Sean Feucht is just one symptom of a much deeper, darker movement.
Evangelical Christian Nationalists don’t just believe in Jesus—they believe they’re his soldiers. To them, this isn’t about faith or personal salvation. It’s about conquest. They believe their mission is to reinstall Jesus as the head of government and make every law in the land conform to their narrow reading of the Bible.
This isn’t a metaphor. It’s the explicit goal of the Christian nationalist movement: abolish the separation of church and state and replace democracy with “God’s kingdom on Earth.” Think: ISIS with a cross instead of a black flag.
Heaven or Bust: The Evangelical Cult Economy
Evangelicalism—especially in its extremist, MAGA-baptized form—is less a religion and more a cult-like business model. Its entire structure revolves around tithing: giving 10% (or more) of your income to the church. Why? Because giving = salvation. And salvation = escape.
Escape from what? This world. Evangelicals are taught to hate it here.
They’re taught this life is meaningless, broken, and only a test—a cosmic waiting room. Their real goal? An afterlife where they’ll sit beside Jesus in their ideal 30-year-old bodies, floating in the clouds for eternity. It sounds absurd until you realize millions of people build their entire lives—and political choices—around this fantasy.
I know, because I used to be one.
Give More, Live Forever
To earn that “forever pass,” they’re told they must become “warriors for Christ.” That means obeying church authority, hating the right people (LGBTQ+, women with autonomy, Muslims, “liberals”), and giving every spare dime to the cause.
And that is where the grift begins.
Evangelical churches are a breeding ground for grifters, conmen, and political operatives who prey on the vulnerable. They promise healing prayers for $500 “seed offerings.” They sell $99 “breakthrough anointing oils.” They install themselves as prophets and apostles, claim to hear directly from God, and rake in donations from the poor, the sick, the desperate.
These aren’t just churches. They’re political vehicles and money machines, converting pain into power and donations into domination.
The Cult Playbook: Control the Poor, Fund the Rich
Christian nationalism is a clever operation:
Recruit the poor.
Radicalize them.
Tell them God wants them broke, obedient, and ready to fight.
Use their money to wage holy war for the rich.
That’s why MAGA clings to Evangelical voters. They’re already conditioned to believe suffering is holy, obedience is sacred, and democracy is optional if it interferes with God’s law.
Sean Feucht, Paula White, Greg Locke, Kenneth Copeland—they’re not spiritual leaders. They’re war profiteers in a religious costume, building armies from the disenfranchised, bankrolling power with tithe dollars, and telling their followers to die for a kingdom that doesn’t exist.
Canada Tour: Banned, Fined, and Full of It
Feucht rolled into Canada this summer like a one-man spiritual convoy. His “Let Us Worship – Revive in 25” tour was billed as a cross-country celebration of Christian revival. In reality? It was a political stunt, donation drive, and merch-laden circus act aimed at painting Canada as an anti-Christian dystopia.
But Canadians weren’t buying what he was selling.
🎤 Cities that told Sean to shove it:
Halifax (permit revoked)
Charlottetown (cancelled)
Moncton (denied)
Gatineau (blocked)
Quebec City (shut down)
Vaughan (scrapped)
Even Parks Canada pulled his event permit for “public safety concerns.”
And that’s when Sean did what all Christian Nationalist grifters do best: he played the victim.
Montreal Meltdown: The Smoke Bomb Heard 'Round MAGA
After getting bounced from Quebec City, Feucht found a sympathetic Montreal church—Ministerios Restauración—to host a last-minute concert on July 25.
The problem? He didn’t have a permit. The City warned him not to go forward. He did it anyway because martyrdom looks great on Instagram and it’s an easy in for “please donate to help save the tour” bullshit.
During the show, protesters gathered outside. Then, mid-performance, someone set off a smoke bomb inside the church. Sean’s camp said it was an “attack” by “radical activists.” But with no ID, no video evidence, and a history of performative victimhood, and first-hand accounts of Sean’s “team” setting off the smoke bombs themselves, let’s just say he did it because he did.
Oh, and Sean said he was “fire bombed,” which is a trigger for his followers and necessary for Trump to start a holy culture war. Gaslighting for Jesus and MAGA is a thing. And it was a total fucking lie.
The fallout?
The church was fined $2,500 for violating city bylaws.
One man was arrested for obstruction.
Feucht filmed himself twirling smoke canisters like a Pentecostal Batman and posted, “No bigger scandal in Canada.”
Cue the MAGA violins.
The Real Agenda: MAGA Messaging, Canadian Propaganda, and Trump’s Playbook
This tour was never just about Jesus. It was about weaponizing worship to manufacture a persecution narrative.
Feucht’s team orchestrated a PR script: Plan events. Get banned. Claim censorship. Stage victimhood. Ask for donations. Rinse. Repeat. MAGA. PLAYBOOK.
Why? Because MAGA desperately needs new villains—and “’anti-Christian Canada'” plays beautifully with Trump’s evangelical base. When the fentanyl lies and tariff tantrums didn’t work, Sean was sent to kickstart a culture war. The smoke bomb in Montreal? MAGA gold. Expect Trump to cite it as proof Christians need to “liberate” Canada by November. His evangelical flying monkeys didn’t disappoint.
I cleared that up with Sean on Twitter yesterday, and his brain-dead evangelical flying monkeys didn’t disappoint.
Show Me the Money: “Free” Concerts, Fat Offerings & Fake Transparency
Here’s the kicker: these concerts aren’t free. They’re donation traps wrapped in hymnals.
Buckets are passed.
Merch is sold.
Crypto and stock donations are accepted.
The man even has a QR code for Jesus.
But where does the money go?
According to five former senior leaders from Feucht’s own ministries—including Burn 24-7, Light a Candle, and Let Us Worship—the answer is: Sean’s personal wealth empire.
The Receipts:
Revenue jumped from $283,526 to $5.3M in one year (2020).
Feucht’s ministries were reclassified as “churches” to avoid IRS disclosures.
He owns at least 10 personal and ministry-funded properties in California, Montana, Pennsylvania, and Washington, D.C.
A $3.45M parsonage in San Juan Capistrano.
A $1M Montana cabin he rents back to his own ministry.
And seven rental units in PA.
Whistleblowers FROM HIS OWN FAKE MINISTRY say Feucht:
Used ministry cards for personal expenses.
Diverted donations to personal accounts.
Underpaid or didn’t pay staff.
Falsely reported having “no volunteers.”
Exaggerated attendance numbers to pump donation asks.
One insider said he was called a “fascist” and “communist” by Sean when he asked to see financials. Another said, “I felt used and discarded once I began raising questions.”
MinistryWatch, an independent watchdog, gave Feucht’s operations:
❌ Transparency Grade: F
🚨 Donor Confidence Score: 19/100
⚠️ Recommendation: Withhold Giving
Still think these are just “free worship nights”?
Faith Hijacked, Gospel for Sale
What makes Sean Feucht dangerous isn’t just his politics or his grift—it’s his fusion of the two. He’s part rockstar, part propagandist, and part televangelist—wrapped in a Jesus flag and dipped in MAGA Kool-Aid.
His brand of Christianity isn’t about love, humility, or community—it’s about dominion, division, and dollar signs. He’s a Bethel-bred, Instagram-filtered spiritual entrepreneur treating worship like a business model and persecution like a brand strategy.
And that’s exactly why he’s welcome at Mar-a-Lago—and not in Montreal.
Canada Stood Tall—and That Matters
When six cities across Eastern Canada canceled Sean Feucht’s shows, it wasn’t about “silencing Christians.” It was about refusing to host a dangerous Christian nationalist with a pattern of disinformation, homophobia, and financial abuse.
Canada didn’t cancel worship—it rejected extremism masquerading as faith.
(OK STATAN”S SON!!! LOLOLOL)
This isn’t about religion. It’s about protecting democracy from zealots who exploit belief for power and profit.
Feucht didn’t find revival in Quebec. He found resistance. And you better believe he’ll be spinning it for fundraising fodder until the next tour, while giving his pedophile rapist president (yes, Sean and his GOD support a rapist pedophile President) cannon fodder in his inane war against Canada.
Bottom Line: This Ain’t Worship. It’s a Grift.
Let’s call Sean Feucht what he is:
A MAGA missionary.
A Christian nationalist influencer.
A serial liar.
A prosperity gospel crook.
And a walking cautionary tale.
He came to Canada to spark a fire. Instead, he exposed his own smoke and mirrors.
So the next time he claims he’s just here to “worship,” remember: Jesus flipped tables. Sean passes buckets for himself and his rapist pedophile President.
Because he’s a fraud. A religious conman. That’s why MAGA exists. That’s what the Evangelical cult is - the last refuge from criminals and conmen, rapists and pedophiles.
Always remember that.











This guy comes into Canada and preaches against our constitution, then he says we are anti-Christian. We are not anti any religion, but we are anti bullshit, and this guy is full of it! Sean Feucht is just a hater, grifting vulnerable people, stealing their money, and moving to the next town while preaching hate. Canadians don't buy it, we don't need any American coming here to spread their hate, and they can all stay home if they can't respect our country and the values we hold! The majority of Canadians are sick of America trying to tell us how to live, what we do, how we respect others, and how we value our differences; it is none of their business, and they need to stay the eff home! I have no nice left in me for these hateful people!
With a history like that, why on earth was he allowed in the country at all?? Toss his thieving, lying ass out.