Virgil Walker, Sola Veritas, Jan 21, 2026
Churches once concerned themselves with the ordinary rhythms of congregational life—worship, stewardship, discipleship, and care for their people. Increasingly, they must now consider whether worship itself will be interrupted by activists who believe a sanctuary is an acceptable venue for confrontation.
That change reflects more than cultural tension. It reveals a deeper dispute over authority and a growing assumption that some institutions may be violated without consequence.
When Moral Language Loses Moral Order
Nearly everyone claims to care about justice, human dignity, and compassion for the vulnerable.
That shared language creates the appearance of moral agreement.
But agreement in vocabulary does not guarantee agreement in meaning. When words like justice and compassion are detached from moral order and lawful restraint, they become tools rather than truths. In that condition, they can justify conduct that would otherwise be recognized as plainly wrong.
Why This Was Never a Peaceful Protest
What occurred at a church in Minneapolis was widely described as a protest. That description does not hold. Protests are directed at lawmakers or institutions with the authority to enact policy. Churches do not legislate immigration law, control borders, or set enforcement priorities.
Entering a sanctuary during worship to disrupt services is therefore not advocacy. It is trespassing at best and desecration at worst. Some defenders have claimed the disruption was justified because an ICE official attended the church or someone on staff supported immigration enforcement.
Even if true, that claim changes nothing.
Under U.S. law, a peaceful protest is protected only so long as it remains lawful in location and manner. The First Amendment does not protect trespass, obstruction, intimidation, or interference with others exercising their constitutional rights.
Entering private property without consent and disrupting a worship service falls outside the legal meaning of peaceful assembly.
Calling such conduct a protest does not make it one.
Selective Courage and the Illusion of Bravery
The location of the confrontation matters.
Those who entered that church would not have attempted the same action in other religious spaces. Mosques and synagogues are not treated as stages for ideological performance—not because their beliefs are more sacred, but because consequences would follow.
Nor would this tactic be attempted in many churches in the South.
At my former church, Prays Mill Baptist Church, such an intrusion would not have gone unnoticed. The security team is trained, and many carry. Any genuine disturbance would have been addressed immediately.
This was selective courage aimed at a target perceived as safe to violate.
It was not moral bravery.
The Greater Offense: Contempt for Christ and Authority
Many have expressed outrage that children present during the service were frightened. That concern is understandable, and the fear imposed on them was wrong. But something more serious was on display.
A worship service is not a neutral gathering. It is the public acknowledgment of Christ’s lordship. To disrupt it is not merely to unsettle congregants, but to show open contempt for the authority being confessed there.
The disregard for lawful order flowed from the same impulse. Property rights were ignored. Worship was disrupted. Authority was dismissed. The protesters had already decided which authorities mattered and which could be violated without consequence.
Selective Grief and the Cost of Narrative Loyalty
The same activists readily invoke the name of Renee Good, treating her death as emblematic of injustice and moral urgency.
That urgency disappears when the narrative becomes inconvenient.
Absent from public outrage are seven victims who lost their lives at the hands of illegal immigrants:
- Laken Riley, a 22-year-old nursing student murdered while jogging
- Jocelyn Nungaray, a 12-year-old girl kidnapped and killed
- Rachel Morin, murdered by an illegal immigrant from El Salvador
- Lizbeth Medina, a 16-year-old stabbed to death
- Ruby Garcia, a 25-year-old woman shot and killed
- George Levin, a 63-year-old beaten to death
- Camillia Williams, a 52-year-old mother and grandmother killed
There were no marches on their behalf.
No church occupations.
No sustained moral urgency.
When grief is distributed according to ideological usefulness, it ceases to be compassion and becomes moral triage.
Authority Vacuums and the Promise of Impunity
This behavior did not arise in isolation.
For years, local political leaders and prosecutors have signaled—through rhetoric and selective enforcement—that certain forms of “direct action” would be tolerated. When trespass carries no penalty and intimidation is reframed as expression, escalation becomes predictable.
The activists entered the church confident that nothing would happen to them. That confidence was cultivated. That assumption may now be tested.
The United States Department of Justice has authority under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act to investigate intentional obstruction, intimidation, or interference with religious worship.
The statute applies to churches as well as clinics. Whether it will be enforced remains to be seen. But the law itself is clear.
Authority, Law, and the God Being Resisted
At its core, this controversy is not simply about immigration policy.
It is about authority.
Scripture teaches that God established nations and their boundaries (Acts 17:26). Scripture teaches that governing authorities are appointed to bear the sword against wrongdoing (Romans 13:4). Scripture also teaches ordered love—placing responsibility first in the family, then the church, then the community, and finally the nation.
That order is not cruelty.
It is moral design.
The modern protest movement functions as a rival religion—one that resents restraint and rejects any authority higher than the self. That is why the Church was targeted—not because it failed to love, but because it represents a claim that cannot be negotiated.
The Church does not exist to host ideological theater. It exists to proclaim Christ, form consciences, and submit to God’s Word.
The question now is not whether the Church will be challenged, but whether it still knows whose authority it represents.
On the surface, this looks like scapegoating.
But underlying that scapegoating are the actions of people who are not moral and religious. They have no moral standards and hate those who do have them and stand by them.