I’ll be honest: as a Christian and a conservative, I had never even heard of Sean Feucht until Canada’s far-left media decided to make him their latest target. If it weren’t for their determination to control the narrative, his name would never have crossed my radar.
Quebec City Cancels Sean Feucht Concert
Quebec City has become the latest Canadian city to cancel a concert by Sean Feucht, a Christian musician, missionary, and author who has gained a following in the U.S. through his “Revive in 25” tour.
Feucht—who ran unsuccessfully as a Republican congressional candidate in 2020—has been outspoken on issues such as abortion, critical race theory, and the LGBTQ+ movement. His free concert, scheduled to take place at ExpoCité, was abruptly cancelled after city officials claimed that the promoter failed to disclose the presence of a “controversial artist” in the booking contract.
This follows a string of cancellations across Canada:
- Halifax: Parks Canada revoked a permit for a show at a historic site.
- Charlottetown and Moncton: Local authorities also revoked his scheduled performances.
- Feucht still plans to play in Ottawa, Toronto, and later Western Canada.
Quebec City councillors and activist groups celebrated the cancellation, claiming the event would have “divided communities.” Transition Québec’s Jackie Smith issued a statement saying:
“The city should not make its spaces available to propaganda groups that insult our communities and seek to divide us on the basis of our identities. We don’t want this hatred in our neighbourhoods.”
My Take: The Fragility of the Secular Left
Here’s the truth: censorship has become the default tool of Canada’s far-left. They no longer debate ideas—they ban them. They are so fragile that the mere presence of a Christian musician is treated as a threat to “public safety.”
As a Christian, I find this deeply troubling. If the West collapses, Christians need to remember what life looks like in cultures that normalize censorship. We will be running and hiding because nearly every culture—outside of free, Christian-inspired nations—believes in controlling speech.
Why Censorship Backfires
Censorship never eliminates bad ideas. It buries them, where they grow unchecked. History has proven this repeatedly. Consider how speech restrictions in pre-war Germany allowed resentment to fester in silence, eventually giving rise to Hitler.
When you suppress speech, you suppress education. I know more about the LGBTQ+ movement today than I ever wanted to—not because I sought it out, but because it’s been forced into every corner of public life. And yet, do I hate gay people? No. I see homosexuality as a sin, just like every other sin. Christians sin daily. That does not mean I support censorship or persecution.
The Bigger Problem
Secularism has taken over Canadian culture, and even many “Christians” have allowed faith to take a back seat to politics. Canada now views faith as dangerous and political ideology as virtuous.
And so, in 2025, a Christian musician is deplatformed because his ideas offend someone. This is what happens when a culture elevates fragile feelings above freedom.
Why Hate Speech Laws Are Dangerous
I oppose hate speech laws because they slow down the learning process. Instead of confronting bad ideas, these laws bury them. They prevent us from asking uncomfortable questions and, most importantly, from challenging wrong ideas with truth.
In Canadian schools today, rather than focusing on history, economics, and the root causes of prejudice, we are busy pushing ideological agendas. The irony is that racism, like every form of bigotry, is a socialist construct. Socialism thrives on division, categorizing people by race, class, or gender. Remove open debate and you remove the only effective weapon against this toxic thinking.
Final Word
Sean Feucht’s music tour is not the problem. Canada’s inability to tolerate free expression is the real issue.
In a free society, ideas are debated, not banned. When speech is silenced, division grows deeper.
Consider making Jesus Christ your Lord and Savior today.