That assumption is precisely what predators exploit. The secular casting couch usually offers fame or a role. The Christian variant offers something more insidious: spiritual validation.
By J. Reynolds
Victims face a unique double-bind. If they speak out against a producer or casting director, they are not just accused of being “difficult to work with” (the secular curse). They are accused of being , of grieving the Holy Spirit , or of “touching the Lord’s anointed.” CHRISTIAN-BACKROOM-CASTING-COUCH
This trust gap is the foundation of the Christian backroom. Unlike secular Hollywood, where agents, unions, and gossip blogs act as a system of checks and balances, the Christian media ecosystem relies on “spiritual authority” and reputation. When a young actress walks into a hotel room-turned-casting office at a Christian film festival, she leaves her secular defenses at the door. She assumes the man behind the desk—often a pastor, a producer of God’s Not Dead 3 , or a worship leader—shares her values. That assumption is precisely what predators exploit