Let’s be clear — “pastor Dawn,” isn’t a pastor. Not really, because she isn’t a Christian. Really, she isn’t. If she were, she would be born anew, would not rebel in such a manner as she does against God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, and the inerrant, infallible, unchangeable, eternal, living, and active word of God.
Do you truly believe that Jesus recognizes her as one of His own?
I’m not judging where she will spend eternity. That is for God and Jesus. As long as God graces her, has mercy on her, and blesses her with breath she can repent.
I am judging, as the word of God instructs us, to know, divide, discern what is true and what is false. What is sound or unsound. What is in the Scriptures, and what has been made up by man or woman.
Progressive heresy, progressive theology, progressive ideology, and progressive doctrines are not Christian. Not even close. Let’s stop calling, speaking, writing, and addressing those who preach, adhere to, and follow such as they are and stop calling them Christians.
They are wolves in sheep’s clothing. Read Matthew 7. Past the first verse. Keep reading.
See Jude 1:4.
For starters.
Deny Jesus’ words, you’ve denied Jesus, denied God. Rebelled in such arrogance. Loving the world more than loving the Lord and His ways and word.
Read on…
Ken Pullen, Thursday, October 16th, 2025
Pastor Condemns ‘Great Commission’ As Tool Of White Supremacy
October 15, 2025
By PNW Staff
Reprinted from Prophecy News Watch
In a stunning act of defiance, Rev. Dawn of Holy Cross Lutheran Church in Ontario, Canada, has publicly declared that she refuses to read or acknowledge Jesus’ Great Commission–the very command that defines the Christian faith. She claims that the words of Christ in Matthew 28:18-20, in which He calls His followers to “go and make disciples of all nations,” are tools of oppression used to justify colonization, racism, and the subjugation of non-Christian peoples. In her words, the Great Commission “enforces white supremacy.”
Let us speak plainly: this claim is not only biblically false but spiritually dangerous. It is the inversion of truth itself.
The Great Commission is not a tool of empire–it is the heartbeat of redemption. Jesus did not speak as a European conqueror; He spoke as the crucified Savior of the world. He did not issue a political decree; He gave a divine mandate to bring hope, freedom, and eternal life to every nation. To reduce His words to a sociological tool of oppression is to commit the very sin of which Rev. Dawn accuses others–it is to remake God’s truth in the image of human ideology.
Christ’s command to “make disciples of all nations” is not about cultural domination. It is about salvation. It is the declaration that every human being, regardless of race, tribe, or language, is loved by God and invited into His kingdom. The Great Commission does not erase identity–it restores it. It does not destroy culture–it redeems it. Wherever the gospel has gone in truth, it has uplifted the poor, liberated the enslaved, honored the dignity of women and children, and replaced despair with hope.
Yes, history shows that men have misused Scripture to justify conquest. But their abuse does not nullify the truth. The Bible has inspired the abolition of slavery, the rise of hospitals and education, and the moral foundations of human rights. The problem is never with the Word of God–it is with those who twist it to suit their pride.
To reject the Great Commission because some have distorted it is like refusing medicine because others have misused it. The church’s mission was never meant to expand earthly kingdoms, but to call hearts into the Kingdom of Heaven. When Christ said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me,” He was not empowering nations to conquer, but commanding believers to serve, teach, and baptize in His love.
Rev. Dawn’s accusation that Jesus’ words can be used to encourage racism betrays a shocking ignorance of Scripture itself. Christ’s ministry broke every racial and cultural barrier of His time. He spoke to the Samaritan woman, healed the Roman centurion’s servant, and praised the faith of a Canaanite mother. At Pentecost, the Holy Spirit fell upon believers from every nation under heaven. The gospel’s power has always been universal.
To call the Great Commission a basis of support for “white supremacy” is to forget that it began in the Middle East, spread to Africa, Asia, and beyond long before Europe even heard the name of Christ. Today, the majority of Christians are not white, not Western, and not colonial. The modern church thrives most vibrantly in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. The Great Commission has never been about the color of skin–it has always been about the condition of the soul.
In rejecting Jesus’ final command, Rev. Dawn does not stand against racism; she stands against the very words of Christ. She may believe she is acting in compassion, but she has traded truth for ideology. To deny the Great Commission is to deny the heart of Christianity itself–the call to love others enough to tell them the truth that saves.
The church does not need to apologize for sharing the gospel. It needs to repent for ever failing to share it. The world’s greatest need is not less evangelism but more of it–evangelism rooted in humility, mercy, and the power of the cross.
For it is not the Great Commission that enforces feelings of supremacy–it is sin. And only the message of Jesus Christ has the power to set us free from both.

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