Megyn Kelly’s platform is doing what the mainstream won’t: reminding Americans that faith still matters in public life. In a recent clip she hosted a spirited conversation with Jack Posobiec about the power of prayer, storytelling, and the cultural consequences when an entire political movement severs itself from spiritual conviction. Conservatives should be grateful someone with Megyn’s reach is willing to put faith back on the table instead of pretending religion is merely a private hobby.
Jack Posobiec, a rough-and-ready fighter for conservative causes, made the blunt point many of us feel: prayer is the first, most powerful tool and story is the second. He argued that conservatives have the infrastructure to tell moral stories that move hearts and minds — if we bother to use it — and that prayer should ground our strategy, not be an afterthought. That observation cuts straight through the smug technocracy of the left and their belief that policy alone can make people better.
What’s happening on the left is not accidental; it’s the predictable result of decades of turning God into a footnote while elevating materialism and identity politics into a new religion. When you replace soul-shaping institutions with government programs and celebrity virtue-signaling, you hollow out meaning and discipline, and then wonder why families and communities collapse. Megyn and Posobiec were right to call this out — it’s no wonder the left feels so angry and unanchored when its greatest suit, moral authority, has been pawned off for power.
The media will scold anyone who mentions God as if faith were a scandal rather than the glue of civilization, but conservatives must stop apologizing for our beliefs. Instead of ceding the moral narrative to progressives, we should lean harder into churches, schools, and civic groups that teach character and sacrifice. That’s not nostalgia — it’s a strategy for national survival.
Megyn’s conversation with Posobiec also highlighted an important tactical truth: stories change people. The left understands narrative power and uses it mercilessly through Hollywood, woke education, and big tech. If conservatives want to win hearts and preserve a free, ordered society, we must master storytelling that blends truth with beauty, conviction with compassion, and yes, faith with courage.
There will be critics who sneer at Posobiec’s bluntness and at Megyn’s willingness to bring God into politics, but criticism from the secular elite is a badge of honor. Real leadership means risking ridicule to say what our neighbors are thinking in private: that an America without faith is an America adrift. We don’t need permission from the cultural gatekeepers to rebuild institutions that produce thriving families and decent citizens.
This moment is a call to arms for everyday patriots: go back to your churches, tell your children the old stories, and stop outsourcing morality to the latest policy paper. The left will keep trying to strip faith from public life because they know what happens when a people reembrace God — they become harder to manipulate and easier to govern themselves. Megyn Kelly and Jack Posobiec were right to put that argument forward; now it’s on us to live it.