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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat is the 'Seven Mountains Mandate' and how is it linked to political extremism in the US?
What is the Seven Mountains Mandate and how is it linked to political extremism in the US?
Published: July 8, 2025 8:33am EDT
Vance Boelter, who allegedly shot Melissa Hortman, a Democratic Minnesota state representative, and her husband, Mark Hortman, on June 14, 2025, studied at Christ for the Nations Institute in Dallas. The group is a Bible school linked to the New Apostolic Reformation, or NAR.
The NAR is a loosely organized but influential charismatic Christian movement that shares similarities with Pentecostalism, especially in its belief that God actively communicates with believers through the Holy Spirit. Unlike traditional Pentecostalism, however, the organization emphasizes modern-day apostles and prophets as authoritative leaders tasked with transforming society and ushering in Gods kingdom on Earth. Prayer, prophecy and worship are defined not only as acts of devotion but as strategic tools for advancing believers vision of government and society.
....(snip)....
But the shooting has drawn attention to the school and the larger Christian movement it belongs to. One of the most important aspects of NAR teachings today is what is called the Seven Mountains Mandate.
The mandate calls on Christians to gain influence, or take dominion, over seven key areas of culture: religion, family, education, government, media, business and the arts. ...............................(more)
https://theconversation.com/what-is-the-seven-mountains-mandate-and-how-is-it-linked-to-political-extremism-in-the-us-260034

multigraincracker
(36,041 posts)Hotler
(13,364 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(166,920 posts)The Seven Mountain Mandate, which calls on Christians to impose fundamentalist values on all aspects of American life. The Seven Mountains Mandate is extreme RWNJ/religious bigot type theory that is scary. This idiot judge is a true RWNJ/QANON supporter.
Link to tweet
Link to tweet
https://www.mediamatters.org/qanon-conspiracy-theory/alabama-supreme-court-chief-justice-spreads-christian-nationalist-rhetoric
Enlow is a pro-Trump prophet and leading proponent of the Seven Mountain Mandate, a quasi-biblical blueprint for theocracy that asserts that Christians must impose fundamentalist values on American society by conquering the seven mountains of cultural influence in U.S. life: government, education, media, religion, family, business, and entertainment.
Enlow has also repeatedly pushed the QAnon conspiracy theory, sometimes even connecting it to the Seven Mountain Mandate. Per Right Wing Watch, Enlow has claimed that world leaders are satanic pedophiles who steal blood and do sacrifices and that there is presently no real democracy on the planet because over 90 percent of world leaders are involved in pedophilia and are being blackmailed.
On February 16, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are people, with the same rights as living children, and that a person can be held liable for destroying them, imperiling in vitro fertilization treatment in the state. In a concurring opinion, Parker quoted the Bible, suggested that Alabama had adopted a theologically based view of the sanctity of life, and said that human life cannot be wrongfully destroyed without incurring the wrath of a holy God......
Parkers ties to extreme right-wing Christian and prophetic media figures extends beyond the interview with Enlow.
Last year, Christian nationalist media figure Sean Feucht said Parker had invited him into the courts chambers for a worship session. Parker also joined a prayer call in March 2023 with supposed prophets and apostles, and he prayed that there will be a growing hunger in the judges of Alabama, and around the nation for more of God. And that they will be receptive to his moves toward restoration of the judges, so that they can play their forecast role in revival in this nation.
Maggiemayhem
(877 posts)And learned all about these evil people.
indusurb
(172 posts)My guess, not many.
Topomi
(29 posts)That's what my school teachers used to say people like that lack
Buddyzbuddy
(1,237 posts)it gets interpreted to them by somebody with an agenda.
If you don't have a large vocabulary or at least a desire to seek information about words and phrases and a knowledge of history and a bit of skepticism, the Bible can be a difficult read. I suspect that's on purpose. It is an interesting read and depending on the person reading it can be interpreted for good or evil. It's actually quite fascinating.
Bernardo de La Paz
(57,269 posts)Not every christian or non-christian of course, but almost all of evangullibles and christian dominionists.
Boomerproud
(8,874 posts)The general public is turning a blind eye to their influence. The consequences will be catastrophic.
Ping Tung
(3,154 posts)
calimary
(87,172 posts)Ping Tung
(3,154 posts)ancianita
(41,174 posts)susanr516
(1,484 posts)Promoted by R. J. Rushdoonee. Hyper Calvinistic. Basically, he believed in predestination. Mankind has no free will because God already knows the future, so we are destined to do what God has already decided. It goes by many different names, but the Seven Mountains movement is the flavor of the week.
(I am a recovering Southern Baptist. )
valleyrogue
(2,238 posts)even Francis Schaeffer thought him "clinically insane," according to his son, Frank.
Rushdoony was all about instituting Old Testament law in our secular society, with generous use of the death penalty for a variety of things. He wrote a book called Institutes of Biblical Law which his fellow crackpot disciples follow. Rushdoony was a combination of John Birch paranoia (I believe he was actually a member of the JBS), "libertarian" nuttery, and wrapped his fascistic notions in a religious cloak. Christian reconstructionism is political, not religious, complete and total heresy to those who support traditional Christianity.
Uncle Joe
(62,480 posts)Nigrum Cattus
(757 posts)Here is a Venn diagram
JHB
(37,797 posts)Seven Mountains ideology (not theology) is about seizing total power. The religious trappings are merely a self-serving smokescreen for overthrowing the nation and ruling as tyrants.
John1956PA
(4,312 posts)The presenter in the video was a former insider of the cabal.
hvn_nbr_2
(6,698 posts)Some of the articles I read about this, including the article referenced in the OP, don't ever mention where that term "seven mountains" comes from.
It is in the book of Revelation's story about the "whore of Babylon" (Rev. 17:1-19:3). The early part of chapter 17 introduces a woman who sits on a beast that has seven heads and ten horns. The woman is the whore of Babylon. Rev. 17: 9 explains that the seven heads are seven mountains (or hills, depending on the translation) that the woman sits on and that they are also seven kings about whom it tells us some additional cryptic stuff.
Several things to notice about this:
1. The author of Revelation only mentions the seven mountains in passing, but he goes on and on and on about the seven kings. The seven mountains are mostly a sidelight in this discussion, not the main point.
2. The New Apostolic Power Freaks (as I prefer to call them) apparently aspire to be the whore of Babylon since she sits on the mountains where NAPFs want to sit.
3. There is no further explanation about the seven mountains. Nothing. Nada. Not a word. The part about "religion, family, education, government, media, business and the arts"--well, that's the part the NAPFs just made up out of thin air, because those are the areas where they lust for power.
(Side note: The lust for power is one of the key aspects of my understanding of Babylon. One of these days, I'll get back to writing more of my perspectives on Revelation in the Christian Liberals and Progressive People of Faith forum, and Babylon is my next intended subject.)
AntiFascist
(13,574 posts)"modern-day apostles and prophets (are) authoritative leaders tasked with transforming society and ushering in Gods kingdom on Earth" This was the same type of cultism that fueled the rise of the 1000 year Third Reich.
Ruby the Liberal
(26,516 posts)Theme is that Christ can't return until the church conquers the world and cleans it from sin for him.
Something the televangelist crowd dreamed up to stoke the donation fires in perpetuity.
JCMach1
(28,822 posts)Hekate
(98,677 posts)JCMach1
(28,822 posts)Hekate
(98,677 posts)JCMach1
(28,822 posts)I just think of him as a rapist and pedophile.
is a shit hole state. Biggest business is prisons. And we can thank the weasel Jeff Sessions for Stephen Miller a full- blown psycho. I'm from Minnesota originally, and i loathe these heretics. Seditious bastards one and all.