At Saturday’s event, attended by a few hundred — with perhaps as many protesters waving signs and shouting beyond a fence line — Feucht led a band in Christian rock songs, interspersed with speeches about saving Seattle.
Outside the rally — which was sparsely attended compared with the large park space that had been fenced off for it — protesters blew airhorns and kazoos and chanted through bullhorns that the rally’s conservative Christian message was not welcome in Seattle.
Some waved pride flags and carried signs saying “conversion therapy for transphobes,” “protect trans youth” and “Jesus taught love, not hate.”
A couple also held up signs at the rear of the concert crowd accusing Feucht of profiteering off his rallies. Whistleblowers who used to work for his ministries have publicly accused him of mismanaging finances and hiding how he has spent millions of dollars, according to Christianity Today.