Oh, Canada…
Pastor Arrested For Refusing To Apologize For Protesting Drag Storytime
December 08, 2025
By PNW Staff
Reprinted from Prophecy News Watch
There’s a moment in every society when the debate stops being about policy and starts becoming about power — when people are no longer merely asked to obey the law, but to publicly confess that their beliefs are wrong. Canada crossed that line this week with the arrest of Pastor Derek Reimer.
Reimer’s “crime” wasn’t violence. It wasn’t vandalism. It wasn’t even disrupting a drag story event — something he has been accused of before. His arrest came because he refused to comply with a court order demanding that he write a letter apologizing for his personal beliefs about drag queens and LGBT ideology. Not for illegal conduct. Not for threats. But for refusing to recant his convictions.
Think about that: A pastor was taken into custody not for something he did, but for something he refused to say.
The Punishment Is the Point
Reimer has been an outspoken critic of drag events being hosted for children in public libraries. Whether one agrees with him or not, the idea that a pastor would stand up and object to sexualized performance culture being presented to kids is hardly a leap. In fact, many parents silently share his concern but are afraid to voice it.
Reimer wasn’t. He didn’t sit quietly as drag queens became the new “storytime ambassadors” in taxpayer-funded spaces. He spoke up. Loudly. And for that, he was told by a judge that he must apologize — not for the method, but for the message.
He refused.
Why? Because to apologize would be to declare that historic Christian teaching on gender, sexuality, and moral boundaries is “harmful,” “hateful,” or “wrong.” Reimer could no more apologize for that than apologize for believing the sky is blue. The apology wasn’t restorative. It was ideological.
It was a demand for a public surrender.
Was He Wrong?
That’s the question Canadians are now wrestling with — and they should.
Was Derek Reimer wrong to believe that drag culture is inappropriate for children?
Was he wrong to think that a man is a man, a woman is a woman, and that God’s design is good?
Was he wrong to hold the same views that Christians, Jews, and Muslims have held for thousands of years?
Or is the real issue that his beliefs no longer align with the new cultural creed — one that insists affirmation equals love, and disagreement equals hate?
Canada has increasingly blurred the line between disapproval and discrimination, between dissent and “harm.” The result is predictable: traditional religious convictions are now treated as threats to public safety. Biblical teaching is now framed as “hate.” And moral disagreement is viewed as dangerous extremism.
Reimer didn’t start that trend. But he’s paying the price for refusing to bow to it.
A Society That Compels Speech Is Not Free
Freedom of speech includes the right not to speak — the right to refrain from uttering words you do not believe. Compelled speech is a hallmark of authoritarian regimes, not liberal democracies.
A government that can force a pastor to apologize for his beliefs can just as easily force a teacher, a parent, or a child to do the same.
Today it was Derek Reimer. Tomorrow it may be anyone who refuses to stand, salute, and affirm the latest ideological dogma.
Canada is no longer simply restricting actions; it is now policing thought — and demanding proof of repentance from those who dissent.
The Bigger Picture: A Warning for Every Christian
What happened to Pastor Reimer is not just about one arrest. It’s a glimpse of the future if Christians remain silent.
If a pastor can be jailed for refusing to renounce biblical truth, what message does that send to every church, every parent, every young believer navigating a culture that insists “affirm us or be punished”?
This case is the logical conclusion of a society that treats Christian ethics as bigotry, biblical anthropology as hate, and parental concern as extremism.
The question now is not whether the state will punish dissent — it already has.
The question is: Will the Church still speak? Will Christians still stand?
A Final Word of Thanks to a Pastor Who Refused to Fold
Whether one agrees with his tone or tactics, Pastor Derek Reimer displayed something rare in our age: courage. He refused to write words he did not believe. He refused to bow to the state’s demand that he label biblical conviction as harmful. He refused to pretend that drag queens reading to children is normal, wholesome, or morally neutral.
He refused to lie.
And for that — for truth spoken in a time of cultural coercion — he is being punished.
Canada may not realize it yet, but Derek Reimer’s arrest is a line in the sand. It reveals that the battle for free speech, parental rights, and religious liberty is no longer theoretical. It’s happening now, in plain sight.
And the Church must decide whether it will whisper in fear — or speak with boldness.
Pastor Reimer chose the latter. May more have the courage to do the same.

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