During a prayer at the Pentagon on Wednesday, Pete Hegseth appeared to paraphrase "Pulp Fiction" rather than the real Ezekiel 27:17 Bible verse.
16don MSN
Did Hegseth quote fake Bible verse from Tarantino movie? Separating fact from 'Pulp Fiction'
Hegseth said the lead mission planner for an Iran war rescue operation delivered the prayer to him and told him they use it ahead of missions.
Pete Hegseth delivered a worship sermon this week that has viewers wondering if it was borrowed from the "Pulp Fiction" script.
Hegseth Accused of Quoting a ‘Fake Bible Verse’ From a Popular Tarantino Film ...
Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-CA) confronted Pete Hegseth on a fake Bible quote that the defense secretary read during a Pentagon prayer service earlier this month, which was lifted from Quentin Tarantino’s ...
On April 15, United States Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth presided over a Pentagon sermon and quoted an apparent military prayer called “CSAR 25:17,” which he claimed was inspired by Ezekiel 25:17.
Pete Hegseth’s Ezekiel 25:17 resembled the Biblical verse delivered by Samuel L. Jackson’s character in ’Pulp Fiction’ ...
Pete Hegseth sparked backlash after misquoting Ezekiel 25:17 in a rescue prayer, using a version popularized by Pulp Fiction rather than the actual Bible verse.
Okay, we feel like we've heard Ezekiel 25 17 before in Pulp ...
Opinion
'Bible Verse' Pete Hegseth Quoted During Sermon Actually Comes From Pulp Fiction, Not Scripture
A Pentagon worship service sparked controversy by using a fictional Bible verse from Pulp Fiction, raising concerns about mixing pop culture with religious practices.
A prayer delivered by US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth has courted controversy after he appeared to paraphrase a line from the cult classic movie ‘Pulp Fiction’ and presented it as a Bible verse.
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