The battle for your mind continues. Once again, the establishment media, also known as the Global Media Syndicate, is smearing conservative Christians. As Christians, we aren’t surprised, but we must call this what it is and stand honoring God’s truth. The enemy has always uses deception to twist truth and turn the world against those who stand for righteousness. Always has, always will until Christ returns.
“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Ephesians 6:12).
Criminalizing Conscience
This latest media narrative is being used to paint all Christians who hold to biblical authority as dangerous. We understand it’s a part of the broader strategy to redefine and smear the true and living faith as a public threat.
In the case of Vance Boelter; as Collins(watch video below) states plainly (14:03–14:40),
“This is not conservative Christianity. This is a person who has been radicalized.”
What’s Happening?
Despite headlines claiming Vance Boelter is/was “conservative Christian,” the truth is far more troubling and far more deceptive. It reaches all the way to the heretical Office of Faith—an interfaith, ecumenical initiative now embedded across every federal agency, fronted in part by Paula White, Donald Trump’s spiritual advisor. White’s influence has helped repackage dominionist cult theology as mainstream Christianity, masking false teachings under the banner of patriotism and revival. As John Collins explains in his interview with Dr. Steven Hassan, Boelter was not a biblical believer, but a radicalized follower of doctrines rooted in the cult of William Branham—a movement that blends apocalyptic prophecy, authoritarianism, and counterfeit spirituality. (see Paula White’s Direct Connection to Vance Boelter’s Belief System below).
The media’s attempt to frame Boelter as representative of conservative Christianity is not just dishonest—it’s strategic. It fits a growing pattern: use isolated acts of violence to portray all Christian conservatives as latent extremists.
Boelte studied at Christ for the Nations Institute, an institution founded by Gordon Lindsay, who was William Branham’s campaign manager and a foundational architect of the Voice of Healing movement. Lindsay helped build the doctrinal infrastructure that later became the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR)—a sprawling network of self-proclaimed apostles and prophets who promote Kingdom Now theology and the Seven Mountain Mandate. These teachings are not biblical. They substitute divine sovereignty with human conquest, proclaiming that Christians must take dominion over key societal institutions—government, media, education, and more—to usher in Christ’s return. Boelte’s ideological formation was shaped by this dominionist cult theology, not by Scripture.
As Collins reveals (10:59–11:27), this network was designed from the beginning to unify charismatic leaders under a shared set of political and spiritual goals. It was never a revival, it was a movement to control both church and state under self-anointed authority figures. Collins further explains that Boelte’s spiritual lineage descends from Branham through Lindsay, straight into the NAR pipeline—alongside public figures like Paula White, Trump’s spiritual advisor, who claims prophetic authority and promotes the same dominionist agenda.
It must be said plainly and with sincere concern: the establishment of a White House "Faith Office" under figures like Paula White is not evidence of biblical faith being "back on the agenda." It is evidence of apostasy being mainstreamed under the guise of Christianity. True faith involves repentance, humility, and obedience to God’s Word, not merely using religious language for political ends (Matthew 7:21). In Jeremiah 7, God rebuked His people for trusting in the presence of religious symbols while their hearts remained rebellious. We are repeating that error if we celebrate political gestures toward “faith” without discernment.
White’s longstanding ties to the prosperity gospel, New Apostolic Reformation circles, and dominionist theology should raise red flags for discerning Christians. Her influence has helped mask globalist spiritual convergence as Christian revival. She regularly speaks of destiny and personal power, aligning perfectly with SDG-compatible “transformative spirituality” a dangerous counterfeit of biblical discipleship.
Paula White’s Direct Connection to Vance Boelter’s Belief System
Institutional Connection: Christ for the Nations Institute
Vance Boelter was trained at Christ for the Nations Institute (CFNI) in Texas.
Christ for the Nations was founded by Gordon Lindsay, the former campaign manager and close associate of William Branham, the father of the Message cult.
Gordon Lindsay helped create the doctrinal foundation of the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR)—a framework built around self-declared apostles, prophecy, dominionism, and "restoring the church to power."
CFNI promoted and certified “deliverance ministers” and laid the early infrastructure for what would become the modern Seven Mountain Mandate theology.
📌 Paula White has partnered with, spoken at, and endorsed leaders and ministries directly tied to CFNI’s doctrinal legacy. She shares and amplifies the same NAR-aligned teachings that emerged from CFNI’s roots.
Doctrinal Agreement: NAR and Dominion Theology
Both Boelter and White adhere to Kingdom Now theology, a belief that Christians must seize influence over seven key societal “mountains” (government, media, education, religion, economy, family, and arts) to establish God’s kingdom on earth before Christ returns. Also known as 7MM (Seven Mountain Mandate)
Paula White regularly promotes prophetic decrees, spiritual warfare rhetoric, and "territorial advancement of the Kingdom," aligning directly with the ideology that Boelter adopted through his exposure to CFNI/NAR teachings.
🔥 In 2019, Paula White publicly stated she was “cleansing the White House of demonic forces” and proclaimed the U.S. government as a tool of spiritual conquest which is clear dominionist language.
🧠 This same theology is what Collins and Hassan describe as a psychologically radicalizing framework that convinces followers like Boelter that violent or extreme action is a divine mandate.
Prophetic Self-Authorization
Boelter’s ideology came from a tradition where leaders claimed personal revelation as ultimate authority, rooted in Branham's teaching that the "Spirit" could override Scripture.
Paula White teaches a similar model of self-ordained spiritual authority, often bypassing Scripture to deliver “prophetic words,” “mandates,” and calls to action. She has claimed direct communication with God regarding national policy, elections, and enemies of the church.
Trump Affiliation and Shared Platforms
Paula White became Trump’s spiritual advisor, using her platform to mobilize NAR-style networks and dominionist voices across the country.
Vance Boelter, as noted in the interview, was also a vocal Trump supporter who believed his actions were God-ordained and that political enemies were “baby killers”—a mindset shaped by the same militant spiritual-political fusion.
🔁 In short: Boelter wasn’t copying biblical Christianity, he was echoing the prophetic dominionist rhetoric promoted by figures like Paula White.
Paula White and Vance Luther Boelter share:
A common theological source (Branham → Lindsay → CFNI → NAR).
A shared belief in Seven Mountain-style dominionism. (7MM)
A practice of bypassing Scripture through private revelation.
A language of divine mandate, which can justify extreme actions.
A strategic fusion of spirituality and politics in support of authoritarian goals.
These are not fringe overlaps, they are direct ideological connections. And it is precisely this counterfeit faith that both radicalized Boelter and is being repackaged as revival by figures like Paula White.
When the press labels Boelter as a “Christian conservative,” they’re not just making a mistake, they’re executing a script. They’re exploiting a tragedy to delegitimize an entire demographic, casting suspicion on anyone who holds to biblical authority, traditional values, or allegiance to Christ above the state. It’s narrative warfare, and it works by exploiting the public’s ignorance of theological nuance.
True Christians must not only reject the false teachings of the NAR, they must also expose the lies being told about what it means to follow Christ. What Boelter believed was not biblical. What the media is doing with his story is not truth.
The next phase will be the criminalization of conscience disguised as public safety.
Thank you for your time and attention.
Soli Deo Glora.
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