Sean Feucht is having problems getting through his Revive 25 tour through the Great White North. At least six Canadian cities have declared the worship leader 'persona non grata' over his biblical Christianity.
A Hispanic church in Montreal, Quebec, agreed to have a worship service with Feucht in its own building. Protesters showed up. Several came into the church and released a couple smoke bombs.
The police did nothing to the protesters but fined the church $2,500 because it did not get a government permit to hold the service in its own building.
Alberta Pastor Artur Pawlowski says that he's held services with Feucht and that he speaks the truth, but he's not antagonistic.
“They're using this to shut down religious liberties, actually, any liberty, if you think about it: freedom of expression, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly, all of those,” Pawlowski states.

Pawlowski has also come into conflict with Canadian government, which he calls communist.
“I was fined for giving free goods and services when we feed the homeless. I was fined by having a cross. I was fined for standing when we were feeding the poor. I received over $10,000 multiple times for having offensive signage; it said 'Jesus loves you.' I was told that the name of Jesus is offensive,” says Pawlowski.
He says the good news is that, although the Canadian government is, according to him, a dictatorship, young Canadians are growing tired of the woke authorities which have been in power for decades.
“They're getting sick of it. So, there is hope. They are looking at this left agenda, and it's being shoved through their throats, and they're being sick of it,” Pawlowski concludes.