A man lost teeth, bled on the ice, scored the winning goal—and then did something the modern age can’t stand: he refused to worship himself.
He credited his team, honored his country, and pointed to sacrifice. In a culture trained to chase personal brand and applause, that kind of posture feels almost rebellious. But it shouldn’t. It’s old-school American, and it’s deeply Christian. Not because America is the Gospel, but because the Gospel trains people to live for something higher than ego.
That’s why this episode hits harder than sports.
The moment faith and patriotism show up together—unapologetically—our media class starts sounding alarms. CNN rolls out documentaries warning about “Christian nationalism,” framing basic Christian civic engagement as an extremist movement. They do this because Christianity, when believed, creates limits. Limits on government. Limits on lust. Limits on chaos. Limits on lies. And the modern secular project can’t survive limits.
They claim “Christian nationalism” is dangerous because it supposedly threatens pluralism. But what they’re really threatened by is conviction. Because conviction produces courage, and courage produces resistance. A society with Christian memory doesn’t need permission from the state to define right and wrong.
That’s also why they do something even more revealing: they rebrand obvious spiritual and moral clarity as “radicalization.”
A widow forgiving a murderer becomes a clip used to imply Christianity is a threat. That should tell you everything about the lens. When forgiveness—one of the clearest proofs of spiritual maturity—gets presented as suspicious, it’s not journalism. It’s propaganda aimed at weakening the public respect for biblical faith.
And it isn’t only aimed at “white evangelicals,” no matter how badly some people want to pretend. The target is Christianity as a whole. Black churches, immigrant churches, rural churches, suburban churches—every church that still believes the Bible is true and binding. The goal is to pressure Christians into privatizing their faith, shrinking it down to something harmless and controllable.
But Christianity can’t be quarantined like that. Christ is Lord over every sphere—not because Christians want a forced theocracy, but because reality itself is moral. If Christians abandon public life, that void does not stay empty. It fills with something else. Usually a counterfeit religion—one built on identity, grievance, and power.
This transcript shows that counterfeit religion clearly. You see it in the obsession with “oppression Olympics,” where moral authority is measured by victim status instead of truth. Scripture acknowledges suffering, but it never commands God’s people to build identity around perpetual grievance. God calls His people redeemed, responsible, and courageous—not permanently fragile, forever offended, endlessly demanding others validate them.
Then the show lands on a second warning that should sober every American: dominance games don’t disappear; they just change costumes.
A Muslim commentator bluntly admitted what many people refuse to say out loud: highly public, disruptive demonstrations can be about asserting dominance rather than simple devotion. Whether you agree with his tone or not, the point matters: assimilation has been replaced with takeover politics. Historically, immigrants came to become American. Now too many are being encouraged to import the politics of their old world into the streets of the new one.
Meanwhile, the same cultural forces that call Christians “dangerous” treat aggressive ideological displays by other groups as “diversity.” That double standard isn’t accidental. It’s strategic. Christianity is singled out because it directly challenges the moral authority of the regime.
Finally, the episode hits the most urgent battlefield: children.
When elected officials argue that minors should have access to explicit material because it could be “educational,” that isn’t about freedom. It’s about corruption. It is adults using institutional power to normalize what parents know—instinctively and biblically—is harmful.
A society that cannot agree that children deserve protection is a society in moral freefall. If we can verify age for countless adult activities, we can verify age for explicit content. The resistance to that isn’t about practicality. It’s about ideology.
And that’s why the hockey moment mattered. It wasn’t just a goal. It was a flash of sanity—a public confession that sacrifice, loyalty, and gratitude still exist, and that the self isn’t the highest god.
America doesn’t need athletes to be perfect. It needs citizens who remember what freedom is for. Freedom isn’t the right to indulge every appetite. It’s the space to pursue what is good, true, and ordered under God.
So yes—make a big deal when someone honors country without apologizing. Make a big deal when someone refuses the religion of self. Make a big deal when Christians refuse to be shamed into silence. Not because politics saves, but because silence is how decay spreads.
And if the media calls that “dangerous,” maybe what they really fear is this: people waking up.




When Patriotism Sounds Like Faith: Why CNN Fears “Christian Nationalism” and America Needs Moral Clarity Again
How a USA Hockey win exposed the media’s war on faith, the hypocrisy of “diversity,” and why Christians must stay bold in public life