Wall Street Journal Mocks Christian Leader for Saying November Election Is Part of a Spiritual Battle for US

The Wall Street Journal‌ published a front-page article with a mocking tone regarding ⁢popular Christian speaker Lance Wallnau and his ⁣supporters of Donald Trump’s candidacy. The article highlighted Wallnau’s assertion that the election is a spiritual battle between‍ good and ​evil, and he equated Trump to the Biblical figure King Cyrus, who freed the Jewish people. Wallnau criticized the article for belittling his views, particularly emphasizing how the newspaper ⁢framed him in a smaller context through its imagery.

Wallnau, who has been actively ​traveling with the “Courage Tour,” aims to motivate Christians to engage in political matters. He expressed that while many evangelical leaders hesitated to support Trump in 2016, he recognized God’s influence over Trump and advocated for religious liberties in the public domain. The Journal characterized ‌Wallnau’s calls for “spiritual warfare” and his⁣ comments relating political opponents to demonic influences ‍as ⁤bizarre, suggesting readers might question the validity of such ‌claims.

Despite this portrayal, ‌Wallnau maintained‍ that the ongoing spiritual conflict around the ‌election is a significant concern for Christians, and media criticisms indicate that they are on the right track in this spiritual battle. He views these​ negative reports⁢ as a sign ⁢that believers are engaging in essential spiritual warfare for ideological alignment with God in American society.


The Wall Street Journal took an apparent mocking tone in a front-page story it published about popular Christian speaker Lance Wallnau and his fellow believers who are supporting Donald Trump’s candidacy.

The article was titled, “The Evangelicals Calling for ‘Spiritual Warfare’ to Elect Trump.”

Wallnau posted it Thursday on social media platform X with the caption, “Oh Boy. Front page of Wall Street Journal. Lincoln said: ‘I feel like the man who was tarred and feathered and ridden out of town on a rail. To the man who asked him how he liked it, he said: ‘If it wasn’t for the honor of the thing, I’d rather walk.’”

In other words, it’s nice to be honored with a front-page story, but not in this way.

Even the picture the paper chose, making him small in the framing, sent a message about how Wallnau should be viewed.

The Christian leader has been traveling the country as part of the “Courage Tour,” conducting tent meetings in swing states, along with evangelist Mario Murillo, exhorting Christians to vote and be engaged in the political life of the nation.

During the 2016 election cycle, when most other evangelical leaders were backing GOP presidential primary candidates like Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas or Dr. Ben Carson, Wallnau said he saw God’s hand on Trump and became an early supporter.

He likened the New York businessman to the ancient Persian King Cyrus.

In the Old Testament book of Isaiah, chapter 45, the prophet wrote decades before about the rise of a leader named Cyrus, a Gentile who would free the Jewish people from their Babylonian captivity around 538 B.C.

Wallnau believed that Trump, though not an evangelical, would be a great defender of religious liberty and supporter of Christians in the public square.

The Journal chronicled much of this in its story, but put it in a belittling light.

“Wallnau understands politics as a battle between the forces of good and evil, and his preaching is often infused with an apocalyptic urgency,” the outlet reported.

“Wallnau has said that ‘powers of darkness’ are influencing the presidential election and has called Vice President Kamala Harris a ‘Jezebel spirit,’ suggesting she has literally been influenced by demons. Wallnau and other leaders in the New Apostolic Reformation often call for ‘spiritual warfare’ to defeat political opponents they describe as influenced by demonic forces,” the Journal added.

“Wallnau said he understands that most people would find talk of demons to be bizarre, saying, ‘there’s no territory that’s more calculated to make us sound crazy.’ But he said the reality of disembodied spirits is well-rooted in Christian theology,” the outlet stated.

The Journal’s word choice of “disembodied spirits” suggests to the paper’s readers, “Are you really going to believe this craziness?”

The Bible does record, from Genesis to Revelation, that there is an ongoing spiritual battle taking place.

Satan, the serpent, first shows up in Genesis 3, precipitating the fall of man in the Garden of Eden, and later in the book of Job, then in ancient Israel, seeking to bring down the nation, and throughout the New Testament, opposing Jesus Christ’s ministry.

And the book of Acts tells us that Jesus “went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.”

And in the final end-times battle, Revelation says that Jesus will defeat the Antichrist’s forces, led by Satan, and he will ultimately cast him into a lake of fire.

So Wallnau is very much in the mainstream of Christian thought to say there is an ongoing spiritual battle, and that certainly appears to be manifesting in the elections in America with issues like protecting life and the traditional family dividing people into two distinct sides.

Wallnau argued on the Christian commentary show “Flashpoint” Thursday the fact that the Journal, CBS News, The Washington Post and other outlets are writing these derogatory stories is an indication believers are right over the target in the spiritual fight.

“There’s no part of America, [Christians] aren’t what they call [engaged in] ‘spiritual warfare’ to restore back in alignment with God. That’s the attack,” from the media, Wallnau said.

See Wallnau’s comments starting at 17:45 below.

“I’m just telling you, that’s what the enemy’s hearing and I think they’re actually speaking to us what God is doing,” he said.




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