Anti-queer Christian nationalists are coming back to Seattle this weekend. To counter the hate, Lavender Rights Project (LRP), a Seattle-based transgender rights group, is organizing its own event, âLouder Than Hate: Trans & Queer Joy as Resistance.â Fifteen community organizations, including the Church Council of Greater Seattle, the Seattle LGBTQ Commission, and the NAACP Alaska Oregon Washington State Area Conference, are standing with them.
Sean Feucht, a Christian nationalist celebrity, evangelical musician, and preacher who made his name touring the US and Canada to protest COVID restrictions, is coming to Seattle just three months after a provocative anti-trans Christian nationalist rally in Cal Anderson Park ended in the Seattle Police Department arresting 23 protesters, sometimes brutally. Feucht, who has called for a nation in which âChristians are making the lawsâ and who calls âtransgenderismâ âdemonic,â originally planned to bring his âRevive in 25â rally, a tour of the nationâs âdarkest, most broken cities,â to Cal Anderson on August 30. But after last-minute talks, the city convinced organizers to move the event to Gas Works Park.
Lavender Rights Project also planned to be in Cal Anderson, but moved the event to Washington Hall in the Central District for âsafety reasons,â organizers say. Taking place at Washington Hall in the Central District on the same day and time as Feuchtâs rally, âLouder Than Hateâ will feature live performances from Black, Trans, and queer artists; offer food and music; include speeches from community organizers; and provide spaces for rest and celebration. Event organizers say moving the event indoors can help prevent any unpermitted events allied with Feucht from coming into contact with âLouder Than Hateâ attendees and their supporters. Any clashes between these groups could be disseminated by Feucht-allied groups to support their claims that Christiansâ freedoms of speech and religion are being attacked in Seattleâa content strategy Christian nationalist groups have used to effectively grow their influence across the country.Â
âWe want to gather, to be in a place that feels like home, to love on each other, to celebrate all the things that make our beautiful community in Seattle unique, and to take time to learn more about the threat that Washington is facing in these coming years,â says Jaelynn Scott, LRPâs executive director.Â
The last major public appearance of Christian nationalist groups in Seattleâwhich featured local Christian nationalist pastors Jenny Donnelly, Matt Shea, and Russell Johnson and was organized by Mayday USAâended with violence. The Seattle Police Department (SPD) pepper sprayed some zip-tied protesters before arresting them.Â
Mayor Bruce Harrell later denounced Mayday USAâs âfar-right rally,â stating that the event was designed to âprovoke a reaction by promoting beliefs that are inherently opposed to our cityâs values.â
Groups tied to the worshippers threatened to sue and/or âhold to accountâ Mayor Bruce Harrell and the City of Seattle for allegedly violating their constitutional rights, inspiring another rally, âRattle in Seattle,â outside City Hallâleading to police arresting more protesters as well as substantial right-wing and local media attention. Mayday USA announced Monday that it sued the city of Los Angeles for similar reasons.
Many Christian nationalist groups see controversy and conflict as an effective way to swell their ranks, says Jessica Johnson, an independent scholar who wrote a book about the rise and fall of Mars Hill, a Seattle-based network of megachurches that dissolved in 2015 following allegations of abuse against its co-founder and spiritual leader, Mark Driscoll.Â
Feuchtâs movement effectively produces propaganda that complements positive depictions of movement members praying together with videos of clashes with counterprotesters, Johnson says. This social media strategy can make Christian viewers who are not part of Feuchtâs movement âfeel more compelled to join forces, and to really take these kinds of actions themselves into whatever spaces they are in ⌠so that they feel compelled to be combative towards others,â she says.Â
LRP spokesperson Mataoe Aiden James Nevils says thereâs a greater chance that an outdoor event would give groups associated with Feucht âthe Fox News footage that theyâre looking for,â and the âfight that theyâre begging for.â Nevils says the organization moved the event indoors because they are concerned that Feucht may still hold an unpermitted march in Cal Anderson, despite the negotiations that moved his rally to Gas Works. After the city announced the change in venue, the eventâs Facebook page showed a planned âJesus Marchâ at Cal Anderson at 3:30. Itâs since been deleted.Â
Johnson noted that Mars Hill held a mass baptism at Gas Works during its heyday. She says both Driscollâs and Feuchtâs religious practices are attempts to âoccupyâ liberal cities. Citing Feuchtâs use of members of the Proud Boys neo-fascist militia as bodyguards at a rally in Portland, Johnson says Feucht is both anti-LGBTQ as well as intentionally masculinist as a way to elicit violence and attention.
Much like Driscoll, who resigned from his leadership role at Mars Hill following accusations that he âbulliedâ dissenting members of his church, Feucht faces allegations of âspiritual, emotional, and psychological abuseâ from former associates. Feucht has also been accused of embezzlement, and has been barred from holding rallies in eight cities in Canada, where some local governments labeled his activities as âhate speech.â Driscoll has rehabilitated his image since his downfall a decade ago, Johnson noted, saying that non-denominational groups led by a single figure lack structural forms of oversight, complicating attempts to hold figures like Driscoll and Feucht accountable.Â
Following the Mayday USA event, local community organizers, in conjunction with the cityâs LGBTQ Commission, talked with the city about how to prevent violence when Christian nationalists come to town in the future, both from far right groups and the police that often protect them. After the last rally, Seattle Police Officers Guild President Mike Solan told local radio station KTTH that violence was the outcome of putting a "peaceful group" in "Antifa land, Cal Anderson Park.â He was referring to the Christian nationalists as peaceful. LRPâs Scott says the city consulted LRP and other groups on their approach to interacting with the cityâs LGBTQ community.Â
âWhat [SPD] did was completely out of line: They pitted themselves against our community in protection of a religious extremist group,â Scott says, noting that LRP is âsupportive of those who make a decision to engage in direct action.âÂ
Direct action is clearly on the mind of whoever is putting up posters for the âWORLDâS LARGEST Kazoo Performanceâ of Chappell Roanâs âPink Pony Clubââ240 kazoos providedâduring Feuchtâs rally at Gas Works park.
Johnson, the scholar, added that Christian groups in attendance at events like âLouder Than Hateâ should prioritize broadcasting their support via social media as a way to âcounteractâ what figures like Feucht frame as âcorrectâ Christian beliefs. Â
Tara Miller, co-Executive Director of the Church Council, a 106-year-old faith-rooted community organizing group in Seattle, says the Council has been sharing its social media strategy with LRP leading up to its event. They say the Councilâs partnership with LRP is the outcome of reflecting on how to respond âwhen white Christian nationalists show up,â and reflecting on the visits of previous reactionary figures to Seattle, such as that of orange-juice-spokesperson-turned-anti-gay-rights-crusader Anita Bryant in the â70s. Theyâve been working with LRP on this event for six weeks.
âAs we've been in conversation with Lavender Rights Project, they were asking, âHow can you gather faith folks who can speak to this moment?ââ Miller says.Â
They say the Councilâs community plans to be with LRP âwherever the location is.âÂ
LRP secured city funding for its âLouder Than Hateâ event in collaboration with Dominique Stevens (an advisor to Mayor Harrell) and Councilmember Hollingsworth. The funding, granted through the Seattle Parks âRecreation for Allâ program, is exempt from the programâs typical requirement to be held in a park. âThe event will still be eligible to receive the funds even if they move to a private location,â according to a spokesperson for Mayor Harrellâs office.Â
The Mayorâs office acknowledged the âJesus Marchâ that briefly appeared on the âRevive in 25â eventâs Facebook page, but writes that organizers âhave not submitted an application to hold a march in or around Cal Anderson Park.â The Mayorâs office says it is ânot aware of a planned âJesus March.ââÂ
LRP isnât taking chances. âWe're not going to bite the hook, and we don't want to play into their game,â Scott says.







