Last Sunday at Cities Church in St. Paul, a pack of Antifa activists barged into the sanctuary, interrupted worship, and chanted anti-ICE slogans while congregants sat confused or walked out. Their target was a pastor they accused of being a field ICE director. That’s all it took to justify turning a church service into a circus.
And while the Department of Justice is investigating the incident under the FACE Act—which prohibits interfering with religious services—some Minnesota leaders aren’t just excusing the behavior. They’re celebrating it.
“Leigh” Finke, a transvestite state representative (and by the way, this is what a state being handed over to Satan looks like), took to Facebook to compare the church invasion to the 1989 ACT UP protest in St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
He called the Cities Church action a form of “moral resistance,” praised the disruption on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and openly called for more of the same:
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“They must continue until ICE is out of our state.”

In other words, storm more churches.
Let’s be clear. These people see themselves as revolutionaries. They speak like footnotes from a freshman sociology textbook. But they don’t resemble anything close to the brave civil rights pioneers they constantly invoke.
They’re not doing anything useful for civil rights or actual justice. They’re shouting down pastors mid-prayer and accusing churches of fascism because someone in the pews might believe in law and order.
It’s childishness. It’s what happens when a generation raised on self-expression and TikTok activism believes that every moment of discomfort is oppression. They aren’t storming Normandy. They’re throwing tantrums because mom said it’s time for bed.
Meanwhile, actual Christians are left cleaning up the mess—literally and spiritually.
There’s a reason Scripture warns about calling evil good and good evil. When elected officials start cheering for the trespassing of churches in the name of “justice,” you’re not looking at a movement of peace. You’re looking at a movement untethered from reality, morality, and basic decency.
And if you think this ends with just one church, you haven’t been paying attention.






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