They Chant “No Kings.” What They Really Mean Is “No Christ.”
They said they were protesting Trump. They’re really protesting God.
This isn’t just political commentary—it’s a spiritual autopsy of our age.
They finally got off the couch.
Their government checks stopped. The DoorDash driver quit showing up. The Wi-Fi glitched.
So, in a moment of patriotic cosplay, the blue-haired revolutionaries grabbed their Soros-sponsored stipends, printed fresh cardboard signs, and took to the streets shouting, “No more Trump! No kings!”
If irony had a heartbeat, it would’ve flatlined right there.
Because the same people screaming “No Kings” demand the power to rule over everything God created—life in the womb, gender, family, and truth itself.
“They don’t hate kings; they just want the throne.”
A Manufactured Rebellion
The New York Times called it the “No Kings Protest.”
2,600 rallies. 50 states.
The usual alphabet soup of activist organizations—Indivisible, MoveOn, and the rest of the professional outrage industry—funded and choreographed every move.
This wasn’t the will of the people.
It was the will of the puppet-masters.
While normal Americans went to work, paid bills, and raised children, this crowd took a break from self-pity long enough to pretend they were fighting tyranny.
What they were really fighting was reality.
They’re not rebelling against Trump; they’re rebelling against order itself—
against the borders God established,
against the created differences between man and woman,
against parental authority,
against justice that requires truth.
They call it liberation.
Scripture calls it lawlessness.
What You’re Really Watching
These protests aren’t political; they’re theological.
What looks like activism is actually liturgy—a public worship service for a new religion that deifies self and despises submission.
Every sign, every chant, every slogan is a creed:
We will define good and evil for ourselves.
They shout “No Kings” because they cannot tolerate accountability.
They’re not rejecting a president. They’re rejecting a Creator.
“No King” Is the Oldest Lie in the Book
The cry of “No Kings!” didn’t start in Times Square.
It started in Eden.
When the serpent whispered, “You shall be as gods,” the human heart declared war on divine rule.
“In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
— Judges 21:25
That’s not progress.
That’s decay dressed as freedom.
Every rebellion since—French, sexual, or progressive—has marched under the same banner:
We will not have this Man to rule over us.
That’s what the crowd really means.
Not “No King Trump.”
No King Christ.
The Parody of Freedom
Watch closely and you’ll see the parody.
They chant about equality while dividing the world by race and grievance.
They preach “love” while hating anyone who disagrees.
They wave American flags while rejecting the moral foundation that built the nation.
“They want the benefits of a kingdom without the burden of a King.”
But there’s a law older than democracy and stronger than protest.
It’s written into the bones of creation: Christ reigns.
You can deny it, defy it, or despise it—but you can’t escape it.
“The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together, against the LORD and against His Anointed.”
— Psalm 2
And God’s response?
“He who sits in the heavens laughs.”
He isn’t threatened by cardboard signs or choreographed outrage.
He reigns.
Discernment Lens
When you see the next wave of protests, look deeper.
When you see rage in the streets, ask: What authority are they resisting?
When a movement cries for justice, ask: Whose definition of justice?
When the mob shouts “freedom,” ask: Freedom from what—or from whom?
That’s how Christians read culture through Scripture instead of social media.
The Silence of the Church
The tragedy isn’t that pagans act like pagans.
The tragedy is that many churches have gone silent.
While the streets shout “No Kings,” pulpits whisper about self-esteem.
The world doesn’t need a softer sermon; it needs a Savior who reigns.
It’s time for the Church to recover its courage.
Not to echo the culture—but to expose it.
No King but Christ
Our forefathers once used that phrase—“No King but Christ.”
It wasn’t a cry of rebellion but of submission.
They weren’t rejecting authority; they were acknowledging the highest one.
Today, that banner still stands—but few are willing to lift it.
The Church must.
We are not citizens of chaos.
We are sons and daughters of the Kingdom.
We don’t chant “No Kings.” We confess “One King.”
We don’t reject order. We live under divine order.
We don’t follow feelings. We follow truth.
When the mob shouts “No Kings,” our answer must be clear:
There is one King—and His name is Jesus Christ.
The Final Word
The rebellion of man always ends the same way—
in ashes, confusion, and regret.
The mob imagines itself free, but it’s bound by sin.
They think they’re tearing down tyranny, but they’re bowing to a crueler master—self.
Every knee will bow. Every tongue will confess.
“On His robe and on His thigh He has a name written, King of kings and Lord of lords.”
— Revelation 19:16
The only question is when.
Let them march. Let them rage. Let them shout at heaven until their throats bleed.
The King still sits enthroned.
His crown is not up for vote.
His Word is not up for amendment.
His reign will not be recalled.
So don’t scroll past the madness and shrug.
Teach your children who the true King is.
Pray for pastors to preach with courage.
Refuse to bow to the cultural mob.
This is our moment to stand beneath one banner:
No King but Christ.
If this helped you see today’s rebellion more clearly, share it.
Together, let’s remind the world that freedom is found only under the rule of the King of Kings.
Thank you for reading. You’re reading today’s free edition of Sola Veritas. I publish here daily to give you biblical clarity in a collapsing world. If you want to go deeper, receiving weekly intel briefings, equipping tools, behind-the-scenes access, and live Inner Circle roundtables—join the Sola Veritas Inner Circle. Free keeps you informed. Paid equips you for battle.


I recently heard Vernon McGee (Thru the Bible Ministries) talking about the decline of civilizations, all throughout history, which he says happen in three stages. (1) Spiritual apostasy. (2) Moral awfulness. (3) Anarchy. I find myself pondering where we are on this spectrum. And also how do we followers of Christ remain faithful and live in such a time.
Dragged the 'No Kings' darkness out into the lbiblical ight with this Virgil. So appreciate your boldness and clarity.