With the ongoing change in the cultural landscape, there has been a resurgence of high-profile Christian faith professions, among them include Russell Brand and Nala Ray. Nala was formerly a top earner on Only Fans, the infamous, democratized porn site. While there are scoffers for many repentant sinners, especially those of greater scandal, there is no shortage of red flags regarding this one.
For starters, her baptism was a spontaneous baptism at the seeker-sensitive Fearless Church, so it was without proper pastoral review. There were also questions regarding the sordid gain she received from selling pornography, of which she gave away a portion of her clothes and has claimed to have been left broke from the taxes, which there is a stereotype that OF girls owing money to the IRS. However, the simps she sold herself to were not defrauded, so they are not entitled to financial restitution.
The next area of concern has been her behavior over the past year, which, while many might contend that sanctification is a slow process, certain behaviors are quite inexcusable. For starters, her attire is still rather promiscuous, but worse was her Instagram baking video, which had overt sexual overtones. It was not about baking cinnamon rolls but instead selling sex with clothes on. As stated at the time, being an e-thot with clothes on is not sanctification. Her previous sinful lifestyle was not so much about sexual pleasure but rather seeking attention and validation.
Other notable occurrences has been her two interviews with Michael Knowles and her subsequent returns to the Whatever podcast, where she debated Andrew Wilson, who while being extremely belligerent, did reveal her spiritual immaturity and lack of theological knowledge, which is concerning since her backstory is that her father was a (disgraced) pastor. Her husband is also theologically questionable, as can be exhibited from his TikTok in which he espoused the theory that the 2024 solar eclipse had prophetic significance.
In 2025, both Nala Ray and Jordan Giordano have launched The Anointed Pathway as a means to monetize their services. The website offers 14 courses, each of which centered around marriage, loneliness, anxiety, and porn addiction. It further brands itself overtly as a Christian ministry.
All of the courses cost $15 except for “From Lust To Life 75 Day Porn Free Course” which is listed at $49.99. After a year of marriage, what insight could they possibly have that they can pass on to others as a service? Better yet, how is a former porn-star the right person to advise young men on overcoming porn addiction? That would be like doing an AA meeting at a bar or going to a drug dealer to overcome a heroin addiction. Fleecing a guy $50 for a porn addiction program helmed by a man and his former prostitute wife is something else.
Apart from selling sex, Nala has no marketable skills. She cannot get a real job, so she has created this grift to monetize her Christian audience, offering counsel which should be free and which she is wholly unqualified to provide. Quite frankly, being an e-celebrity is more glamorous than working 9-5, which is why they pursue this internet monetization scheme. Unlike the porn, this is defrauding people who actually need help. Another aspect of this website is that it is a conduit for Nala to be booked as a speaker for churches, conferences, and other events. Gaining access to the speaker circuit is the real money maker for The Anointed Pathway.
Plainly stated, this is a grift. Nala once stated that she wants to help other women avoid going into the porn industry while still being influencers, but the problem is that female influencers are invariably selling sex online and they get elevated because of beauty. The GOP has a roster of whores who peddled their looks to get into Congress. Conservative Inc. props up e-girls over actual right-wing men, which is functionally using eye candy to pacify the movement from being potent. Riley Gaines loses to a man and proceeds to milk that fame for a career in conservative media. A woman can become famous for talking about hypothetically fellating a man. There is no sublimating the worldly incentives, and the world does not need more e-girls, Christian or non-Christian.
There is a major problem with the idea of women claiming Christ to absolve themselves of social consequences. A feminized church largely enables many of these behaviors, and there are many in the church who would advise single men to pursue such women with a high body count, something they themselves are unlikely to do. Red-pill types might refer to Christians as “Christ-cucks” because of the gullibility towards these types of conversions, and it ultimately feeds into the narratives that surround Andrew Tate.
After a year of fruit, the veracity of Nala’s conversion remains dubious, and she has a clear lack of influences in her life that are discipling her, which would include her simp husband. Her continued reliance on validation-seeking behavior and social media attention stunts lends credence to the doubters. To make matters worse, her trajectory is one geared not towards enriching herself off of simps, but seeker-sensitive churches and financially unwise Christians.




