For those concerned about the administration and the emergence of Christian nationalism, the Pentagon chiefs service was a step in an unsettling direction.
Why Pete Hegseth leading a Christian prayer service at the Pentagon is so problematic -
apple.news/A7FaFSEY0RIS...
— (@oc88.bsky.social) 2025-05-22T20:13:21.055Z
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/pete-hegseth-leading-christian-prayer-service-pentagon-problematic-rcna208582
A couple of weeks later, for example, Attorney General Pam Bondi convened a meeting of a task force charged with eradicating anti-Christian bias within federal agencies. The Washington Post reported at the time,
Even before the groups inaugural meeting, critics have assailed its mission as a bald attempt by government to elevate one faith over others and to rewrite recent history under the guise of protecting religious freedoms.
The critics obviously had a point. After all, the attorney general and her colleagues didnt say they were focused on perceived anti-religion bias within the government; they focused only on perceived anti-Christian bias within the government. The Trumps task force clearly had a faith-specific focus.
Among those joining Bondi for the inaugural meeting of the group was Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who, it turns out, held a related event one month later. The New York Times reported:
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth led a Christian prayer service in the Pentagons auditorium on Wednesday morning, during working hours, in which President Trump was praised as a divinely appointed leader. The event, billed as the Secretary of Defense Christian Prayer & Worship Service, was standing room only and ran for about 30 minutes, with Brooks Potteiger, the pastor of Mr. Hegseths church in Tennessee, as the main speaker.
This was not a one-time gathering:
The Times report added that the beleaguered Pentagon chief said that he wants these prayer services to become monthly events......
Imagine being a Jewish service member, for example, hoping to stay on the secretarys good side, and perhaps even looking for an upcoming promotion, and the pressure that person felt when told about Hegseths invitation.
As for Potteiger, the pastor of Hegseths church in Tennessee, the Times quoted the reverends Trump-specific comments at the Pentagon.
In his sermon, the pastor said,
We pray for our leaders who you have sovereignly appointed for President Trump, thank you for the way that you have used him to bring stability and moral clarity to our land. And we pray that you would continue to protect him, bless him, give him great wisdom. ... We pray that you would surround him with faithful counselors who fear your name and love your precepts.
For those concerned about the administration and
the emergence of Christian nationalism, this was a step in an unsettling direction.