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Evangelists at EDCO Celebrate Weather Delay and Target Attendees for Salvation

Evangelists at EDCO Celebrate weather delay & Target Attendees for Salvation

Last weekend, a group from a religious organization made their way into EDC Orlando, confronting attendees inside the festival grounds – not just outside the gates. Instagram videos and captions show the group approaching ravers, calling them “sinners,” praying for storms to shut the festival down, and celebrating weather delays as divine intervention.

Some even recorded vulnerable attendees, including one unconscious woman being carried to the medical tent. Others claimed they were “saving” ravers by cutting off their wristbands and encouraging them to leave the festival.

Who are they and where are they going

This wasn’t their first appearance at a major music event. Led by Philip Renner of Philip Renner Ministries and Shock the Darkness, the group has also visited Ultra Music Festival, Burning Man, and Coachella – labeling some as “demonic music festivals.” Their social media posts boasted claims of “602 salvations” at Ultra and over “1,493 souls won for Christ at EDC.”

What they’re saying

The viral clips captured a wide range of statements that raised eyebrows in the rave community:

Some members filmed people in medical distress while narrating that ravers were being “saved from drugs, sex before marriage, adultery, and alcohol.” Videos from the group’s leaders also framed the festival as a “devil’s playground” and encouraged attendees to leave.

Contradicting the values of rave culture

EDM culture is rooted in PLUR: Peace, Love, Unity, Respect. When behavior crosses lines of intrusion, judgment, or emotional harm, it’s fair to ask how it fits into those values.

Is it peaceful to pray and celebrate severe weather that could potentially put people in harm? Is going out of your way to go to an event – one that famously celebrates “all are welcome here” – to call attendees “sinners” showing love? Does pushing conversion over coexistence truly reflect unity? Is it respectful to target vulnerable attendees, including those in medical distress?

 

A path forward

Religious freedom absolutely belongs in our world, but boundaries matter, especially in stimulating environments with complex safety considerations.

If these groups truly want to be present at festivals, there’s a solution that respects everyone:

This approach allows them to share their message ethically without compromising festival attendees’ comfort or violating PLUR culture.

 

The rave community thrives on acceptance, expression, and collective joy while celebrating the music and diversity that brings us together. Faith and EDM culture are not mutually exclusive, but is forcing beliefs onto others or celebrating disruption and potential harm crossing a line?

How can festivals balance personal beliefs and PLUR values? Let us know what you think!

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