I asked him one simple question: Did you assault Sara Gonzales?
Instead of answering with a straightforward “yes” or “no” (which should be the easiest thing in the world if the answer is no), he sent me yet another long-winded reply. He accused me of “jumping around” with different accusations, even though everything I’ve raised has been consistent—focused on his pattern of sexually deviant behavior.
He claims I “just believe anything on the Internet,” but everything I’ve cited can be traced, sourced, and substantiated. The fact that he won’t outright deny the allegations—or simply say “No, I did not assault Sara”—but instead launches into endless ad hominem attacks against me, is, frankly, revealing. I’m not Sherlock Holmes, but to most reasonable people, that screams guilty. If I were falsely accused of something like that, I’d have no issue saying “no” and moving on with my day. His constant deflection suggests a troubled conscience. Ironically, he’s the one being evasive and dishonest here—not me.
From there, he spirals into a grab-bag of other accusations: calling me a Pharisee, saying I’m not a real Christian, that I’m not “reaching anyone for Christ” (screenshots below). None of it makes much sense. My goal is simple: to hold people accountable—especially those who claim the name of Christ. And the standard I’m holding him to is the same one I hold myself to. That’s the opposite of being a Pharisee.
The irony runs deep: Elijah spends his days posturing as someone who “exposes” others and holds them accountable through his journalism. Yet the moment the same light is turned on him, he dodges, deflects, projects, and lies. Even more ironic, in a recent episode with Joel Webbon, Elijah accused the broader evangelical church of failing to care about accountability. But from where I stand, the one avoiding accountability is Elijah.
Strangely enough, he even compared himself to Jesus—saying he’s like Christ when the religious leaders tried to entrap Him. In other words, he’s casting me as the Pharisee and himself as the innocent Savior. If that’s not peak narcissism—a God complex, I don’t know what is. Judge for yourself.