
Hosted by William Branham Historical Research · EN

John Collins and Jenny McGrath examine how elitism functions inside high-control Christian movements, shaping identity, behavior, and emotional health. Drawing from lived experience in movements connected to Branhamism, YWAM, and modern charismatic systems, they explore how "chosen" language, secret knowledge, perfectionism, and performance-based faith quietly produce chronic shame, burnout, fear, and long-term psychological harm. The conversation unpacks how elite identity becomes a leash rather than freedom—reframing exhaustion as devotion, suppressing normal human limits, and stigmatizing ordinary faith as failure. This episode also addresses why stepping away is often met with social punishment, how children and young adults are especially vulnerable, and what recovery can look like when faith is disentangled from control, surveillance, and spiritual superiority. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John Collins and John McKinnon examine how religious authority can quietly shift from Christ and Scripture to a living leader, creating patterns of dependency that repeat across charismatic and restorationist movements. Using historical examples, they explore how leaders construct public personas, cultivate spiritual indispensability, and position themselves as the necessary interpreter of truth, safety, and God's will. The discussion traces how these structures form, why they persist even after leaders die, and how they reshape identity, belief, and community life. By focusing on repeatable frameworks rather than personalities, the conversation highlights how control, pride, and misplaced authority distort faith and leave lasting psychological and spiritual damage, while pointing toward healthier models rooted in Scripture rather than personalities. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John and Chino examine the immediate aftermath of Hobart Freeman's death and the moment Faith Assembly was forced to confront its most dangerous doctrine. Drawing from sermons, eyewitness accounts, and newspaper reporting, they reconstruct the night Freeman died, the unexplained delay in reporting his death, and the theological crisis that followed. The discussion exposes how absolute divine-healing claims, resurrection teaching, and leadership silence collided with reality. By tracing what leaders said, what members believed, and what was withheld, this episode explores how high-control religious systems respond when prophecy and doctrine fail at the very top. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John Collins sits down with John Garvey to trace how revival culture, charismatic theology, and imported American movements reshaped British Christianity. Together they examine the early charismatic movement in the UK, its theological weaknesses, and the subtle but lasting influence of Latter Rain ideas, prophetic culture, and worship-driven emotionalism. The conversation explores how movements like Toronto and Bethel affected British churches, why prophecy and miracle culture went largely untested, and how music became a tool for spiritual manipulation rather than discipleship. This episode challenges popular revival narratives and asks whether repentance, doctrine, and the gospel were replaced by experience, spectacle, and power. ______________________ Jon's Website: http://www.godsgoodearth.org ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

In this episode, John is joined by Brantley and Awen to examine the recurring pattern of cover-up culture inside segments of the modern charismatic movement. From Bethel to IHOPKC and beyond, they explore how appeals to mercy, "don't look back" messaging, and the so-called "Moses model" of leadership can create environments where authority becomes untouchable and victims are silenced. The conversation reflects on personal experiences, prophetic culture, and how biblical language is sometimes used to shield institutions rather than protect people. They also discuss whistleblowing in light of Scripture, the misuse of concepts like "touch not God's anointed," and the psychological dynamics that keep people compliant. This discussion addresses themes of spiritual authority, church governance, prophetic culture, abuse allegations, and the tension between forgiveness and accountability. Viewer discretion is advised due to discussion of sensitive topics. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John invites Catherine to share her story of joining the Jesus Movement in the early 1970s and becoming trapped in a nomadic, authoritarian group led by Jim Roberts. Together, they explore how radical obedience, perfectionism, and apocalyptic urgency slowly replaced faith in Christ with fear-driven loyalty to leadership. As the conversation unfolds, John and Catherine connect these patterns to broader charismatic and revivalist movements, showing how fear, isolation, and leader-mediated obedience function as tools of control. The discussion offers insight for anyone trying to understand spiritual abuse, deconstruction, and how high-control religious systems reshape belief, identity, and relationships. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John examines the Azusa Street Revival by returning to the original newspapers, social conditions, and historical context surrounding the events of 1906. Rather than defending or attacking Pentecostalism, he walks listeners through how mythology forms, why Azusa Street became elevated as a sacred origin story, and what contemporary observers actually recorded. By comparing later Pentecostal narratives with primary sources, this episode explores false prophecies, social chaos, leadership failures, and the suppression of inconvenient facts. The goal is not to dismantle faith, but to separate documented history from later legend so listeners can evaluate Azusa Street with clarity and honesty.

John and Brantley explore how music functions as one of the most powerful—and least examined—tools of influence inside charismatic and New Apostolic Reformation-aligned environments. Drawing from firsthand experience at IHOPKC and decades of worship leadership, they break down how rhythm, tempo, chord progressions, repetition, and emotional pacing shape belief, expectation, and group identity far beyond lyrics alone. The conversation examines earworms, emotional conditioning, prophetic language embedded in songs, and how worship can subtly reinforce fear, dependency, and elite identity. At the same time, the discussion distinguishes between harmful manipulation and healthy musical guidance, offering insight into how the same musical techniques can be used to comfort, ground, and restore rather than control. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John and Chino examine the final weeks of Hobart Freeman's life, the circumstances surrounding his death, and how Faith Assembly leaders responded in the aftermath. Drawing from coroner reports, medical findings, eyewitness testimony, and contemporaneous newspaper coverage, they contrast Freeman's public claims of divine healing with the documented medical realities he faced at the end of his life. The discussion explores delayed reporting of his death, alleged attempts at resuscitation, suppression of key facts, and how movements centered on a single charismatic leader often intensify, fracture, and radicalize after a failed miracle. This conversation addresses accountability, false prophecy, and why confronting documented evidence matters for survivors of high-control religious environments. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org

John and Jed examine how modern charismatic movements evolved into closed systems of authority that function like miniature theocratic states. Drawing from personal experience, historical revival movements, and recent scandals surrounding IHOP KC, they explain how unaccountable leadership, failed prophecies, and rewritten histories create environments where abuse can flourish. The conversation traces the ideological lineage from early healing revivals and Branhamism to the New Apostolic Reformation, showing how spiritual language is used to shield power, suppress dissent, and bypass accountability. This episode challenges listeners to recognize the warning signs of authoritarian religion and consider why these systems continue to repeat the same cycle of rise, collapse, and reinvention. ______________________Weaponized Religion: From Christian Identity to the NAR:Paperback: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1735160962 Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCGGZX3K ______________________- Support the channel: https://www.patreon.com/branham - Visit the website: https://william-branham.org