So which is it? Do the magical Christian rituals of Mary Jo Peters and Michael Peters cure cancer, or do they not work?
If Mary Jo Peters can cure illness with Christian magic, why does she need legal disclaimers?
The Trump for President 2024 campaign lists Mary Jo Peters in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition as a “Pastor”…
…but Mary Jo Peters doesn’t run a church. Mary Jo Peters is the wife of Michael Peters, who runs a “divine healing coach” business that charges people money to sell them fake cures.
Mary Jo Peters is the wife of a faith healer. That doesn’t make her a pastor.
The faith healing business of Michael and Mary Jo Peters claims that it has cured brain cancer, uterine bleeding, joint pain, and depression through Christian religious rituals. Yet, in the fine print, Mary Jo Peters and Michael Peters make no guarantees that their faith healing cures will actual work.
The Peters write that “Neither the company nor any other party involved in creating, producing, or maintaining the site and/or any content on the site shall be liable under any circumstances for any direct, incidental, consequential, indirect, or punitive damages arising out of your access to or punitive damages arising out of your access to or use of the site.”
Donald Trump has promised his Christian supporters that he will use the power of the White House to defend and uphold their religion above all others. But what version of Christianity will that be?
Donald Trump’s Army of God: Christian Nationalism in the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition explores the culture of religious extremism, violence, intolerance, and dishonesty of the Iowa Christians who enabled Donald Trump to win the Iowa caucuses and seize the Republican Party presidential nomination in 2024.
The stories are shocking, but America cannot afford to ignore their lesson.
The Iowa Faith Leader Coalition is a radical political organization that violates the law
Let’s learn more about the radical Christian Nationalists who are members of the Iowa Faith Leader Coalition.