The Seven Mountain Trap
How Christian Dominionism Conditions Believers to Accept the Coming Noahide Legal System
In the United States many ministries and political groups are talking about “bringing America back to God.” They hold big rallies, pray over politicians, and celebrate moments like a president lifting a Bible in front of a church. To many Christians this looks like revival. But we must ask what kind of theology is being pushed into government. What exactly are these leaders trying to build.
The movement behind it is dominionism. It teaches that Christians must take control of government, law, education, media, business, arts and religion until society is shaped by what they call “biblical law.” This idea comes from the Seven Mountain Mandate. It tells believers that they must climb and rule seven areas of culture before God’s kingdom can be established on earth.
This constant use of the number seven is not harmless. Seven mountains. Seven spheres. Seven gates. Seven assignments. The number works quietly on the subconscious. It feels biblical, but in this context it builds a rigid system of rule, not a life of faith. It conditions Christians to accept numbered structures and legal codes instead of the Gospel. It prepares them to accept another seven part system.
The Seven Noahide Laws.
Dominionist teaching rarely focuses on Christ. The Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes, loving enemies, humility, the torn veil, the freedom of the New Covenant. These themes disappear. In their place comes talk of conquering culture, taking power, ruling government and directing society. The message pulls Christians back into an Old Testament mindset where law is central and chosen leaders hold authority.
This teaching is promoted by well known ministries. Paula White preached that Christians must rule in the government and said Trump’s presidency was part of God’s reshaping of America. Kenneth Copeland’s network hosts prophets who mix politics and spiritual language. Lance Wallnau urges Christians to conquer the seven mountains. Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point Faith movement blends aggressive politics with Christian branding. The ReAwaken America Tour mixes pastors, politicians and activists in a political revival disguised as a spiritual gathering.
They all talk about putting the Bible into government. But none explain whose interpretation of the Bible the government will enforce. Once religion enters law, someone must define doctrine. When the state defines doctrine, faith becomes a political tool. History shows that religion is always the first casualty when politics and faith merge.
This is where dominionism quietly overlaps with something else. Zionist and Chabad movements promote the Seven Noahide Laws as universal rules for all non Jews. These laws were recognized in 1991 by the United States in Public Law 102 14. Noahide organizations have spoken at the United Nations. In Israel, Rabbi Oury Cherki leads a global Noahide network. Tens of thousands already follow this system and the goal is worldwide acceptance.
These laws are not interpreted with Christian understanding. They follow rabbinic authority. Under traditional interpretation, worshiping Jesus as God is idolatry. Rabbinic texts allow the death penalty for idolatry under Noahide law. Maimonides and other major Jewish leaders taught unequal legal standards for Jews and non Jews.
Dominionists believe they are building Christian rule.
In reality they are preparing Christians to accept a legal system shaped by Zionist and rabbinic ideas. By rejecting secular protections and demanding religious law, they open the door for Noahide structure to enter.
Dominionist ministries constantly promote Israel as central to God’s plan, which makes their followers more willing to accept laws tied to Jewish tradition. Noahide leaders offer their seven laws as universal for all nations. The movements meet perfectly. One prepares minds. The other provides the system.
Dominionism wants Christians in power. Noahide law wants the world under a code tied to Moses. Both seek legal control. Both remove secular protection. Both speak of divine order instead of human freedom.
The danger is that Christians may help build a system that later judges their own faith. A system that accepts Moses but rejects Christ. A system that may treat Christian worship as idolatry. A system that uses biblical language but follows rabbinic interpretation.
A system Christians supported because they believed it would save their nation.
Christ said His kingdom is not of this world. Dominionism says it must be. Christ taught humility and grace. Dominionism teaches conquest and law. When Christians forget the Gospel, they become open to movements that hide foreign systems under Christian language.
Dominionism is the doorway. Noahide law is the framework behind it. Christians must be careful what they support, because a person can build something believing it will protect them, only to be judged by the very laws they helped create.


Not that I have read them all, but this is one of your best writings ever. Then there is theonomy, which I became somewhat fascinated by for a little while, and I have books by R.J. Rushdoony to prove it, but I realized the problems early on. At 74 years old, it has been so painful to watch the slide of the downward from when I was young, when prayer and the Bible were taken out of schools, and I don't need to go on--we all know the rot is so much deeper. Of course we can't take back the country or the west by imposing a theocracy. It's just so hard to watch the collapse. I still differ partially from you on Israel and the jews, not that I think the Israeli government is of God or that Christ will return to save aa man-made talmudic system. If and when God reaches the jews, they will cry out for His forgiveness and mercy, and they will recognize Him as their savior and the Son of God., not just a false messiah. I love Romans 11. The jews have been blinded (most of them) until the fulness of the gentiles has been brought in. Maranatha. Thank you for exposing the habbad. Long ago there was a segment on Sixty Minutes about it, as I recall.
These Christians sound a like like Christian nationalists. Are they the same? These are what general Flynn once said ",One Religion under God". To pervert American Creed : One Nation under God, with Liberty and Justice for All. It's dictatorship of theocracy. These people are determined to destroy God's Freedom and Justice for All.