“My Muslim friends say they pray to God, and they’re not saved,” she warns. “There’s one way.” Not coincidentally, it turns out that Wyllie believes the only right way to be religious, and the only right way to be a Christian, is Wyllie’s way.
Wyllie also warns people to beware of witches, and advises her followers to smash the crystals of witches in order to break their power. “Smash their sacred stones,” she says.
If you believe that witches and their magical stones are the number one problem America is facing right now, then following Kelly Wyllie and her presidential candidate Donald Trump will be an appropriate choice for you.
If you believe, on the other hand, that it isn’t the government’s business to tell Americans to follow any particular religious path, Donald Trump’s campaign is not for you.
Kelly Wyllie has no medical experience. She used to be a teacher at the Johnston Community School District, but that was a while ago. Neither is she a scientist, in biology, chemistry or any other scientific field related to the practice of medicine.
This inexperience has not stopped Wyllie from declaring that she has discovered a single cure for a huge range of diseases and medical problems. All you have to do to get better, Wyllie says, is believe in Jesus.
Wyllie tells her followers that there’s no need for medical treatment, because Jesus took away all infirmities and diseases two thousand years ago.
This includes plagues, Wyllie says. So, what about the bubonic plague that swept Christian Europe hundreds of years ago?
Wyllie isn’t clear about this. Does she believe that the bubonic plague was an illusion that didn’t really exist, or does she think that the millions of Christians who were killed by the bubonic plague just didn’t believe in Jesus enough?
According to Wyllie, Jesus also took away broken bones two thousand years ago. Nonetheless, huge numbers of Christians break a bone every year. How is that possible, if Jesus removed broken bones from reality?
Wyllie doesn’t appear to have thought these issues through. She simply believes that diseases such as “fiber myalgia” and cancer were removed from the Earth long ago. She cites verses from the Gospel of Matthew and the Book of Isaiah as proof, as if that settles the matter.
Consider what it would mean for this spiritual approach to medicine to gain control of the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health, if Kelly Wyllie’s political ally Donald Trump gains control of the White House. Actually, you don’t need to guess about what would happen. The disastrous mismanagement of the COVID-19 response of Donald Trump was perfectly in line with Wyllie’s faith-based practice of magical medicine. Donald Trump told people to drink bleach and take horse medicines while lying to the American people about his own severe case of COVID-19 and interfering with a reasonable, scientific approach to the pandemic.
Kelly Wyllie is busy finding ways to make money with religion, patching together different consulting gigs as a Christian chaplain for hire.
Wyllie works with Marketplace Chaplains USA as someone who is hired to go into businesses and talk to people about Christianity.
Wyllie also has a YouTube video channel on which she instructs other Christians about the right way to be Christian, and talks about how simply being religious isn’t good enough.
Other people, Wyllie says, are getting religion wrong. She offers help them get on what she says is the right path.
Donald Trump’s Army of God: Christian Nationalism in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition is a new book about the alarming truth of militant Christian Nationalism hidden behind the innocuous label of “faith” in Iowa politics.
The book examines the extremist Christian Nationalist ideology, grounded in details about the beliefs and actions of 317 actual Christian Nationalists who are working to undermine democracy across the state of Iowa.
The radicalization of the Iowa Christians profiled in this book enables us to understand the motivations and methods within the Christian Nationalism that exerts an increasing toxic influence in American political culture.
The Iowa Faith Leader Coalition is a radical political organization that violates the law
Let’s make it our business to become aware of the radical preachers who are members of the Coalition.