A strange new narrative is taking hold in our cultural conversation: prominent adult entertainers are now claiming that God blesses their work, and the media is treating those claims like ordinary human-interest fare. From Sophie Rain — the OnlyFans creator who said the Lord is “very forgiving” while touting multimillion-dollar earnings — to British star Lily Phillips, who publicly recorded a rebaptism while insisting she won’t leave the industry, these stories are everywhere.
Let’s call this what it is: moral relativism dressed up as spiritual insight. There is nothing noble about an industry that monetizes intimacy and fuels addictions; arguing that God approves is not theology so much as an attempt to sanitize a lucrative business model. Conservatives should not be silent while society rewrites the language of sin into the language of branding and self-justification.
Take Sophie Rain, who has openly celebrated staggering earnings and defended her choices by invoking faith — telling reporters “the Lord’s very forgiving” and later rejecting a proposed 50 percent “sin tax” on OnlyFans income as an assault on her agency. Her posture isn’t humility; it’s entitlement, and the insistence that wealth equals divine favor is a dangerous, corrosive gospel in a free country.
Then there’s Lily Phillips, who filmed her rebaptism and announced she would not step away from adult entertainment — even as she openly embraces social positions at odds with traditional Christian teaching. The footage and interviews left many believers rightly skeptical: conversion used as a marketing angle is a cynical bid for attention, yet the cultural establishment applauds the spectacle rather than asking hard questions.
This is part of a larger trend: institutions and media platforms normalize vice while attacking anyone who objects as prudish or hateful. If we want healthy families and stable communities, we must resist the idea that public affirmation and fat bank accounts automatically translate to spiritual legitimacy. The choice to glorify commerce over character has consequences — especially for young men and women who are being told that selling themselves is empowerment.
Patriots and parents should respond with clarity and conviction, not performative outrage. Support policies that strengthen families, expand honest economic opportunities for women, and protect minors from sexualized platforms; hold the media accountable for promoting narratives that celebrate degradation. We can be compassionate toward sinners while refusing to endorse sin as sanctified — and we must make that distinction loudly, because the future of our culture depends on it.
