While many in the MAGA movement profess Christianity, a closer look reveals a disturbing overlap with New Age eschatology and postmillennial dominionism—beliefs that Jesus’ return is not near, but that humanity is heading into a “golden age” of enlightenment and justice.
This worldview aligns more with the Age of Aquarius than the imminent rapture described in Scripture.
| MAGA / QAnon Beliefs | New Age / Occult Beliefs |
|---|---|
| A coming “Great Awakening” | A coming age of higher consciousness |
| Secret “white hats” battling deep darkness | Hidden ascended masters battling lower energies |
| Global wealth transfer to the “good” | Age of enlightenment brings abundance and harmony |
| A messianic return through political movement | A spiritual messiah ushering a golden age |
| “Trust the Plan” as divine strategy | “The Plan” in Bailey’s writings for global spiritual rule |
What many don’t realize is that New Agers have openly embraced the Q movement, interpreting “The Storm” as a cleansing of planetary karma.
Terms like:
are used across both Q circles and New Age communities. Many MAGA spiritual leaders are quoting New Age channeled prophecies alongside Scripture—without discerning the source.
MAGA-linked dominionists believe the Church will conquer the seven mountains of culture before Jesus returns. This:
The result is a political religion that seeks to reclaim the Earth for Christ—but without Christ. It elevates man’s systems over God’s sovereign timeline and blinds many to the reality that Jesus is coming soon—and judgment follows.
The pre-tribulation rapture is not a fantasy or myth. It is a coming reality that will shake the world. The groundwork laid by Alice Bailey, the occult, and New Age leaders has formed a powerful lie—one that aligns perfectly with end-time prophecy.
When it happens, the world will be told:
“They were taken by aliens for their own good.”
Don’t believe it.
The Church wasn’t taken by aliens. She was taken by her Bridegroom.
“Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things…” — Luke 21:36
Johnny Enlow is one of the most visible prophetic voices associated with the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) and the Seven Mountain Mandate. Often labeled a “prophet,” he has gained wide influence in charismatic and patriotic Christian circles—particularly around the 2020 U.S. election, the MAGA movement, and QAnon-related prophecy.
Yet a closer look at his eschatology and spiritual language reveals that his worldview increasingly aligns with New Age philosophy and stands in stark contradiction to the clear teachings of Scripture.
Enlow teaches a form of dominionist postmillennialism, which claims that Christians will take over the seven spheres of culture (government, media, arts, education, business, family, religion) before Christ returns.
He has stated:
“We are in the kingdom age, and Jesus is not coming back until we take the mountains.”
This is diametrically opposed to what Scripture teaches:
Enlow’s vocabulary often mirrors New Age terminology, including:
These are not biblical terms. They originate from Gnostic and occult traditions that focus on secret knowledge, personal empowerment, and spiritual evolution.
Enlow has openly connected his prophecies to QAnon, claiming that God is using the movement as part of His divine plan to expose evil and bring justice.
He refers to “white hats,” “military operations,” and “the plan” to cleanse society of deep corruption. This exactly mirrors New Age and QAnon conspirituality—a fusion of esoteric awakening with political revolution.
The Bible warns about false prophets in the last days:
“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine… and they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.” — 2 Timothy 4:3–4
Rather than preparing believers for the imminent rapture and judgment of the world, Enlow teaches that:
This directly contradicts key prophetic passages like Matthew 24, 2 Thessalonians 2, and Revelation 6–19.
When you compare Johnny Enlow’s theology to:
You find that his gospel is no longer the gospel of the kingdom Jesus preached. It is a blended gospel—part Christian terminology, part occult mysticism, part nationalistic idolatry.
Our hope is not in reclaiming earthly power. Our hope is:
“…to wait for His Son from heaven… even Jesus, which delivered us from the wrath to come.” — 1 Thessalonians 1:10
Reject mystical deception. Reject political messianism. Reject prophets who speak visions from their own hearts (Jeremiah 23:16).
Cling to the Word. Cling to the cross. Cling to the soon-coming King.