Home Christian News Sean Feucht is ‘Waging Biological Warfare’ Through Homeless Outreach Events, Activists Say

Sean Feucht is ‘Waging Biological Warfare’ Through Homeless Outreach Events, Activists Say

church without walls

LOS ANGELES (RNS) — Los Angeles activists are holding car caravans on Wednesday evening and New Year’s Eve to block Christian recording artist Sean Feucht from holding outreach events in two LA homeless communities, including the 54-block area of Skid Row.

Stephen “Cue” Jn-Marie — who founded the faith community known as The Row, or “The Church Without Walls,” in Skid Row — and Pete White — founder of the Los Angeles Community Action Network — are among the organizers taking part in the blockade.

In a statement Tuesday (Dec. 29), Jn-Marie and White said that “Feucht is waging biological warfare against a community he deems as defenseless.”

“He will soon find this is not the case if he chooses to continue down this path,” the statement read.

Feucht’s Dec. 30-31 events in Skid Row and Echo Park are part of his national “Let Us Worship” tour that protests COVID-19 restrictions. The two days of outreach will culminate with a New Year’s Eve celebration from 9 p.m. to midnight at the parking lot of Higher Vision Church in the city of Valencia, more than 30 miles away.

It is unclear what Feucht means by “outreach” to the homeless communities and what is planned for the events being held there. He has not responded to requests for comment by Religion News Service.

His music tour, which Feucht refers to as the #letusworship movement, has been criticized by health officials and faith leaders alike for drawing thousands of spectators and worshippers, many ignoring social distancing guidelines and health orders requiring masks.

Elena Stern, a spokeswoman with the city’s department of public works, told RNS on Dec. 22 the city had not received an application or issued a permit for any of the scheduled events. Other events held by Feucht in Seattle; Nashville, Tennessee; Washington, D.C.; and other U.S. cities have also met with opposition by local authorities and scattered counterprotests.

Feucht’s New Year’s Eve events come as Los Angeles County is experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.

Jn-Marie told RNS he sent Feucht a Facebook message on Dec. 21 to express concern about his plans to visit Skid Row. As of Dec. 29, Feucht had not responded.

Faith leaders, in a Dec. 29 Zoom call hosted by the California Poor People’s Campaign, demanded LA Mayor Eric Garcetti, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles County Board Supervisor Chair Hilda Solis take immediate action against Feucht holding the outreach events.

In a statement submitted to CBS News Los Angeles, Solis said she was concerned about the events and asked the county’s department of public health to look into this matter.

The Rev. Beth Johnson, minister at Palomar Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, criticized Feucht’s upcoming events as “exploitative.”

“For a person who purports to care for their community or for people who need religion, Sean Feucht is actually exploiting communities,” Johnson said.

For Feucht to visit Skid Row is “tantamount to abuse,” she said.

“To come into someone’s place, someone’s neighborhood where they are not able to leave, it’s like as if you are walking into somebody’s house,” Johnson added.

Jn-Marie and White said they’ve created hand-washing stations, provided hygiene products and doubled down on promoting mask-wearing. While the community welcomes food, clothing, hygiene items and any other assistance, Jn-Marie said, Skid Row doesn’t need “people to come in for a photo op.”

“We’ve worked to keep the community safe,” he said.


This article originally appeared on ReligionNews.com

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Molina most recently served as Journalist in Residence at the University of Southern California (USC) and as Equitable Cities Fellow at Next City. She has worked at The Press-Enterprise, La Prensa and OC Excelsior, and The Orange County Register. In 2018, she was named one of the 15 most influential Latina journalists by Latino Journalists of California. She has also received fellowships from the Center for Health Journalism at USC and the Institute for Justice and Journalism. Alejandra is a native Spanish speaker. She received her bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism from the University of La Verne.