in

Colorado Pastor’s Prayer Goes Viral!

>> Continued From the Previous Page <<

Most people might have complained, demanded a refund, or sent her away frustrated. But Pastor Seiwert did something that changed the entire night.

Rather than meet her mistake with anger, he looked her in the eye and responded with grace.

Trump Survivor Coin

“Don’t you, for one second, feel bad,” Seiwert told her. “We love you and Jesus loves you. And we hope you have a great night.”

But the story didn’t end with kind words. The pastor turned a routine delivery into a powerful moment of faith that is now moving millions around the country.

Calling his wife and three daughters out to the front porch, Pastor Seiwert placed his hands gently on Suzanna’s shoulders. Together, this family prayed over a woman they had never met before.

The moment, captured by their Ring camera, was raw, real, and deeply moving.

“Jesus, we thank you for Suzanna, and Lord, I thank you that we crossed paths tonight,” Seiwert prayed. “In fact, Lord, she’s more important than any of these orders tonight because you matter to her. She matters to us.”

He continued, “Lord, I just pray you would bless her. I pray that you would open the windows of heaven over her and bring any healing she needs to her body in the name of Jesus, any financial need to her, Lord – and God, that she would encounter you and live for you and follow you [with] everything she has, in Jesus’ name. Amen.”

It lasted less than two minutes. But it’s already touched hearts across the world.

The footage made its way online—and exploded.

Within days, the video soared past 5 million views and over half a million likes on Instagram alone. Thousands flooded the comments with messages of hope, gratitude, and faith.

“This brought tears to my eyes. God bless that family,” one viewer wrote, echoing what many felt.

Speaking to Fox News Digital, Pastor Seiwert explained, “I really felt the love of God” for Suzanna and “wanted to do anything I could to relieve any pressure and anxiety she was feeling.” He added, “I didn’t want her to experience just our family’s love, I wanted her to experience God’s love too.”

In a culture where videos of people screaming at service workers go viral for entertainment, this moment stood out like a light in the darkness.

The Seiwerts didn’t stop at prayer. After connecting with Suzanna again, they launched a GoFundMe campaign to help ease her financial burdens. Their modest $25,000 goal was shattered in less than 48 hours.

“So many people are commenting on how it brought them to tears,” Pastor Seiwert said. “There are many people who simply just need love.”

This wasn’t a publicity stunt. There were no celebrities, no politicians, no grand speeches. Just ordinary Americans choosing compassion over complaint.

What made this moment go viral isn’t complicated.

It wasn’t about a big church, or politics, or trending hashtags. It was about one family living out the faith they profess.

“We love. We point to Jesus,” Pastor Seiwert explained. “It’s often the small moments that we have huge opportunities to reach a broken and hurting world.”

At a time when elites tell us America is too divided to heal, one pizza delivery and one prayer showed the opposite.

The Seiwerts are preparing to move to Wichita, Kansas, later this year to launch a new church, Harvest House. After this viral moment, it’s safe to say their message of hope has already found a massive audience.

Pastor Seiwert said he’s learned to “trust his feelings of compassion for a stranger”, recognizing each encounter as “an opportunity to shine our light and help someone experience love.”

And that’s what’s so powerful here: no legislation, no social engineering—just kindness.

This story isn’t just about a pastor, a delivery driver, or a viral video. It’s about the America many of us still believe in: where people help their neighbors, where mistakes are met with grace, and where faith still changes lives.

While political leaders spend fortunes trying to convince us we’re broken beyond repair, a simple moment on a Colorado porch proved otherwise.

Because sometimes, all it takes to remind a nation of its heart is one prayer… and a pizza delivery.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Car That Runs FOREVER? It’s a Toyota

169-Year Sporting Tradition Faces the AXE