Keep Factually independent
Whether you agree or disagree with our analysis, these conversations matter for democracy. We don't take money from political groups - even a $5 donation helps us keep it that way.
Which spiritual traditions or mentors influenced Julie Green’s work?
Executive summary
Available sources about Julie Green’s ministry describe prophetic teaching, videos and Holy Ghost–led gatherings, but they do not name specific spiritual traditions or individual mentors who influenced her work. The organization’s public pages and media emphasize prophetic Christian language — “spiritual warfare,” prayer scriptures and Holy Ghost inspiration — across Rumble playlists, ministry pages and event listings [1] [2] [3] [4].
1. What the ministry materials emphasize: prophetic, charismatic Christian language
Julie Green Ministries’ public materials repeatedly frame her work in explicitly prophetic and charismatic Christian terms: their “Prophecies” page opens with first-person prophetic addresses about “great warfare” and spiritual weapons [1], video playlists and channel descriptions carry prophetic-word themes for 2025 [2], and event listings market “Holy Ghost & Fire” gatherings that invite expectant, Spirit-led worship [3]. These elements together signal a theological orientation within the broader Pentecostal/charismatic stream of Christianity, at least in tone and practice, as reflected on the ministry’s own pages [1] [3].
2. What the sources explicitly state — and what they do not
The available pages and playlists provide multiple examples of prophetic messaging, scripture-based exhortations and calls to spiritual vigilance [1] [4]. They do not, however, identify which spiritual traditions (for example, named denominations, historical movements) or which individual mentors or teachers shaped Julie Green’s theology or prophetic practice: specific influences, teachers, seminaries, conversion narratives or mentor relationships are not mentioned in the materials provided (not found in current reporting).
3. Organizational signals that suggest likely influences
Although direct attribution is absent, the rhetorical patterns — frequent citations of Bible verses, prophetic “word” language, talk of spiritual warfare and Holy Ghost-led meetings — are characteristic of contemporary charismatic and Pentecostal ministries. The ministry’s multimedia strategy (Rumble channel, playlists, social links) and public address style align with other modern prophetic ministries that combine online video, touring events and scripture-based prophecy [2] [4]. That alignment is an inference drawn from the ministry’s self-presentation rather than a documented statement of lineage or mentorship [2] [4].
4. Media and outreach footprint: what the ministry highlights about authority
Julie Green Ministries highlights its own channels (official Rumble, Telegram, social links) and repeats organizational contact info across video descriptions, signaling institutional self-authorship of material rather than third-party endorsements or co-branded mentor relationships [4]. Event listings describe gatherings as “Holy Ghost led and inspired,” which positions spiritual authority as coming from the Holy Spirit rather than a named human mentor [3].
5. Alternative possibilities and why sources matter
It remains possible that Julie Green was influenced by particular pastors, teachers or denominational streams; such influences may appear in interviews, biographies or third-party profiles not included here. Because the current corpus includes only ministry pages, playlists and event notices, available sources do not mention any external mentors, seminaries or specific traditions beyond the general charismatic vocabulary found in the ministry’s own materials (not found in current reporting; [1]; [2]; [3]; p1_s5).
6. How to verify influences if you want to dig deeper
To establish named influences or mentors, look for extended biographical interviews, published autobiographical statements on the ministry site, denominational records, or profiles in independent reporting. The current sources point to active social channels (Rumble playlists, ministry website, social links) where additional videos or Q&A sessions might address personal history; those are the logical next places to check for explicit mentor attributions [2] [4].
Limitations and closing note: The analysis above is strictly drawn from the supplied ministry pages and playlists, which emphasize prophetic charismatic practice but do not list specific spiritual traditions or mentors who shaped Julie Green’s work; any claim beyond what those pages state is not supported by the current reporting [1] [2] [3] [4].