Jack Posobiec joined Beni Rae Harmony at the 53rd annual March for Life in Washington, DC on Friday and the two discussed that in modern-day America, becoming a Christian is the rebellious thing to do. "It almost feels like, in a way, that becoming Christian is an act of rebellion now," Posobiec said.
"When you're younger, you want to rebel against the culture, right? So it's almost like to be a rebel, actually is to be Christian and pro-life. It's not just political. People have to understand that the March for Life is very spiritual."
They were standing in a crowd of high school and college students who had all come out in near-freezing temperatures to call for an end to abortion in America. "They can finally be part of something," Harmony said.
"This is the rebellion," Harmony went on, "and I think that there's no better rebellion than a Christian one."
"That's the best kind of trouble," Posobiec said. "I love getting into this kind of trouble, I will get in as much trouble on this hill that's possible because at the end of the day, this isn't about answering ot the leaders of this world, this isn't about answering to the culture, Hollywood, Bad Bunny, the NFL, all that nonsense. It's about answering to the Lord."
He spoke about Vice President JD Vance's attendance at the March and noted that what he wants to see is "that return to God. That return to Christ, putting Christ at the center, because we can talk about policy all day long... but there's actually something that you can do first that sets everything in place.
"Because if you put God at the center, if you put Christ at the center, like Charlie [Kirk] wanted, then it all falls into place. You realize: we do have to protect pre-born babies, we do have to protect marriage, we do have to protect all of these things that we want to make our society better.
"Why are we so screwed up?" He asked. "Why do we have more access to information and access to things than ever and yet we're miserable? Why? It's because people realize this is what they're missing. They're missing God, they're missing Christ. And if you put that meaning at the center of your life, everything else falls into place."
Harmony concurred, saying that when her friends are depressed, she encourages them to seek prayer, to read their Gospels. "It takes so much faith to not believe," Harmony said.
Posobiec later noted that he had attended an event at his son's school that morning where his son read the Gospel at his school's prayer service. He was proud of his son and said, "Where you find one of us," meaning one of his family, "you will hear the Gospel proclaimed. This is what we do. This is our culture. This has always been our culture.
"You will not take this from us. You will never take that from us. We will teach that to our children, and our children will teach that to their children, and we will continue to do so no matter what is thrown at us, no matter what the world tries to say, no matter what the world tries to tell us is good and right and true.
"We reject your lies," he went on to say. "We reject your demonic insults. Would you reject all of it? We stand with Christ, the King." Posobiec has been attending the March for Life for 30 years.




