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How MyPillow guy Mike Lindell came to Jesus — and to Donald Trump


One of a series about the Fellowship Foundation, the secretive religious group that runs the National Prayer Breakfast and is popularly known as The Family. This series is based on Family documents obtained by TYT, including lists of breakfast guests and who invited them.

Perhaps as much as former President Trump himself, MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell has become the public face of the Big Lie. Like the Jan. 6 Capitol attackers, Lindell is brandishing openly theocratic, Christian beliefs to secure a Biblically based autocracy led by a man he sees as divinely anointed.

Lindell wasn’t always this way. But over the past several years, people with ties to The Family have played key roles behind the scenes in Lindell’s radicalization, religiously and politically.

Family insiders and allies, for instance, have dominated the boards of Lindell’s nonprofits. One man associated with The Family was part of Lindell’s “legal offense fund” to challenge election results.

Lindell’s faith journey often features in his speeches. As he tells it, God orchestrated a series of events that changed him from a casual Christian into the hardcore, autocratic evangelical who called for the U.S. military to install Trump in a second term.

“What gave [Lindell] the certainty he was looking for was evangelical Christianity,” one Republican operative told Politico. “He was born again.”

That religious certitude has proved infectious. A MyPillow employee told Politico, “There’s a lot of people calling and saying Mike is a disciple of God.”

Lindell’s certainty rests on his conviction that God had a hand in key moments in his life. That conviction, he explains, arose from his inability to see any other explanation for those events. He called his memoir, “What Are the Odds?”

What Lindell appears not to know, however, is the full extent of Family involvement in the events that so profoundly changed him.

Publicly, Lindell has only addressed his Family ties in relation to one incident: The 2016 National Prayer Breakfast. And even there, he elides important details that we can now fill in. He has never said, for instance, who invited him or why. 

Cue Stephen Baldwin

Lindell met actor Stephen Baldwin at a New York radio station. “I’d felt led to visit the station in early 2014, though at the time I wasn’t sure why,” Lindell wrote in his book. “Now I know it was to meet Stephen, who became like a brother to me.”

In a brief call this week, Lindell told TYT how he came to attend the 2016 prayer breakfast: “I was invited at the last minute by my friend Stephen Baldwin.” The Christian actor also attended that year’s breakfast.


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Baldwin, a Trump supporter, would be at Lindell’s side for a number of important events. But, according to an internal Family document, it was not Baldwin who invited Lindell to the breakfast; at least, not directly. (Baldwin…



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