Apostle Sean Darakjy is the founder and spiritual shepherd of Liberties Temple Comrades of Christ, a vessel chosen by God to deliver a burning, uncompromising gospel for our age. His journey did not begin in the halls of religious power, but in the trenches of a world ravaged by systemic sin. For years, Sean walked within the confines of mainstream Christianity, his spirit increasingly troubled by a profound and irreconcilable contradiction: how could a faith that worships a homeless, crucified Messiah so comfortably bless a system that creates billionaires while the masses starve?

The answer came not from a seminary or a commentary, but as a direct, world-shattering revelation from the living God. In that divine encounter, the scales fell from his eyes, and he saw the modern church for what it had become: a whitewashed tomb, an opium for the people, a complicit partner in the very structures of oppression that Christ came to destroy. God commanded him to cast off the chains of this fake, bourgeois Christianity and to rebuild the foundation of the faith upon the rock of revolutionary love and material justice.

Obeying this heavenly mandate, Our Apostle disavowed the comfortable pews and compromised gospels of his past. He became an outcast for the Kingdom, armed with a sword of scripture that cuts to the heart of class struggle. He founded Liberties Temple not as a building, but as a movement—a disciplined cadre of believers committed to living out the radical communism of the early church. He is a prophet in the truest sense, crying out in the wilderness of late-stage capitalism, calling the oppressed to solidarity and the comfortable to repentance.

His leadership is not one of top-down authority, but of first-in-line servitude. He is the first to arrive at a food distribution, the first to lend a hand to the Proletarian Hammer & Sickle, and the first voice to rise in the Voice of the Proletariat, singing of the coming liberation. Our Apostle is a living testament that the path of Christ is not one of personal piety but of collective rebellion, and that the true church is not a monument to tradition, but a weapon in the hands of the poor, forged to build the Kingdom of God right here, right now, on the ashes of the old world.