🌎 Resumen en español · traducción automática
Un video viral de una dramatización de la Escuela Bíblica de Vacaciones en la Iglesia Bautista Mt. Olivet en Lexington ha generado debate intenso, mostrando a hombres en trajes militares simulando disparar contra una persona mientras niños cantan "Blow him up", lo que el pastor Dewayne Walker dice representa "matar al diablo" pero que grupos como Moms Demand Action califican como "perturbador" y abuso del espacio seguro de la iglesia. En Reddit, residentes cuestionan la afirmación del pastor sobre "desinformación" argumentando que el video documentado muestra exactamente lo que sucedió, mientras que otros expresan shock por el evento ocurrido en Lexington.
Traducción y resumen generados por IA a partir del artículo en inglés. Puede contener errores; consulte el texto original.
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Residents are clashing over a vacation Bible school performance at Mt. Olivet Baptist Church that has drawn intense scrutiny. A video of a Vacation Bible School dramatization at the church has gone viral, drawing objections over its violent imagery. The scene was part of an event called “Commandos for Christ” at the church’s vacation Bible school for children. The video shows men in military-style costumes marching down the center aisle and pretending to open fire on a person in a black outfit on the steps to the altar, with children heard chanting: “Take him out. Blow him up.”
On Reddit, one thread disputes the pastor’s claim that the video represents “misinformation.” Residents ask: how can documented video footage be misinformation when it shows exactly what happened? Another discussion reflects dismay, with commenters expressing shock at the event occurring in Lexington. Pastor Dewayne Walker said the scene was part of an event called “Commandos for Christ,” that the actors were “killing the devil,” and that “misinformation” is spreading about the skit. However, at least one person on social media claimed without evidence the skit depicted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents killing an immigrant, with nothing to support that assertion. The viral video drew criticism in part from Kentucky’s Moms Demand Action chapter, with a statement characterizing the clip as “unbelievably disturbing” and calling the skit “an appalling abuse” of the church as a safe space for children.
In a separate thread, residents offered largely critical views on U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell. On February 20, 2025, McConnell announced he would not run for an eighth Senate term in 2026 and would retire from politics after increasing concerns about his health and ability to continue serving. The post noted a moderator had previously locked a similar discussion. Reddit comments emphasize frustration with age and mental capacity, citing his long tenure and influence over the Senate.
On homelessness, a resident sparked pushback after posting to shame someone for filming homeless individuals for social media mockery. The original poster received criticism for the approach—several commenters suggested directly addressing the person rather than posting to strangers online. One replied that the post itself contained language calling homeless people a “nuisance,” undercutting the moral stance. Lexington’s 2025 count identified 925 people experiencing homelessness, a 12.1 percent increase from 2024, though counts vary depending on methodology.
Finally, residents discussed a potential parking lot scam at the lot across from Corto Lima restaurant. One person reported paying for parking but receiving no receipt, then getting hit with a $58.30 unpaid fine that could escalate to $125. Several commenters flagged it as an apparent scam, pointing to similar schemes in other cities. The parking company allegedly refused to accept a bank statement as proof of payment, demanding “respect.” Commenters advised disputing the charge with the bank and consulting the state attorney general’s office.
This roundup was generated by AI (claude-haiku-4-5-20251001) from public discussion on the r/Lexington community forum, with facts checked and context added via web search. Reddit usernames are never used; commenters are referred to generically.



