Which specific pastors have been listed as speakers at Turning Point Faith events and what were the events’ agendas?

Checked on January 17, 2026
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Executive summary

Turning Point Faith has hosted a roster of conservative religious and public-figure speakers including Pastor Lucas Miles, Pastor John Amanchukwu, Seth Gruber, Allie Beth Stuckey, Jonathan Isaac, and Mack Brock — billed across TPUSA/TPUSA Faith materials and event pages as part of multi-day “Faith” gatherings and The Believers’ Summit [1] [2]. The stated agendas of these events center on mobilizing Christians to engage culture, reject “woke” influences, and strengthen biblical citizenship, while independent reporting sees a blending of ecclesial aims with explicitly political messaging tied to Turning Point’s broader movement [2] [3] [4].

1. Who the organization lists as pastors and faith speakers

Turning Point’s own Faith event pages identify Pastor Lucas Miles as a regular host for monthly “Freedom Night in America” gatherings, presenting him as a pastor-led face of the program [1]. TPUSA’s published recap of The Believers’ Summit lists a lineup including Seth Gruber, Allie Beth Stuckey, Jonathan Isaac, Mack Brock and notes that TPUSA faith contributor Pastor John Amanchukwu spoke at the July 2024 summit [2]. TPUSA materials also promote multi-day “TPUSA FAITH LIVE” pastor- and ministry-focused events described as featuring “incredible speakers and subject matter experts from across the country,” which implies additional pastor and ministry-leader participation beyond the named roster [5].

2. What the events’ organizers say the agenda is

TPUSA Faith frames its events as equipping believers to “stand boldly” in the public square, to eliminate “wokeism” from pulpits, and to teach “Biblical Citizenship” through summits, tours, and classes intended to empower churches to influence communities and the nation [3] [2]. The Believers’ Summit specifically used themes such as “Here I Am” and “Onward for the Kingdom,” and TPUSA described the event as a call to unity around biblical truth and to engage in cultural discourse “with grace and truth,” explicitly positioning attendees to “play offense” in cultural battles [6] [2].

3. Independent reporting and what it adds about agenda and tone

Reporting by Word&Way and Public Witness’s coverage of Turning Point’s pastors’ summit describes a sharper fusion of political and religious messaging at in-person events, noting speakers (including Charlie Kirk and conservative commentator Matt Walsh) advancing a political doctrine tied to Trump-era aims and talking about national “cleansing” or long-term cultural projects — language that independent observers interpret as marrying political movement-building with ministry goals [4] [7]. Those reports emphasize that the events do not only train ministers for pastoral care but also urge a generational, political strategy for cultural influence [4].

4. Where agendas and speaker lists overlap — and where questions remain

The overlap is clear in TPUSA’s materials: named speakers and pastors are used to promote faith events whose stated aims are civic engagement and countering “woke” influence [2] [3]. Independent coverage flags a stronger political thrust at certain summits, including calls to a long-term cultural program and panels with political provocateurs, but public reporting does not provide a comprehensive, independently verified roster of every pastor or session agenda across all TPUSA Faith events, leaving some gaps about exact speaker lists at every summit [4] [5].

5. How to read these events in context and why it matters

TPUSA’s own descriptions foreground evangelistic and civic-education goals — “Biblical Citizenship,” unity, and cultural engagement — and explicitly market named pastors and faith personalities to that end [3] [2]. Independent reporting warns readers that these religious aims are often yoked to partisan movement-building consistent with Turning Point’s broader political mission, so assessing any given pastor’s participation requires noting both the host’s stated religious agenda and reporting on the political framing at the specific summit attended [4] [7]. Publicly available event pages confirm certain named pastors and speakers, but they do not resolve every question about the full roster or about the balance of pastoral teaching versus political organizing at each session [5] [8].

Want to dive deeper?
Which other public figures and commentators have appeared on Turning Point Faith stages and what were their session topics?
How do participating pastors describe their own roles and messages when speaking at TPUSA Faith events?
What differences exist between TPUSA’s official Faith event agendas and independent journalistic accounts of what actually happened on stage?