March 24, 2025
This Good Friday, we’re organizing a unique kind of blood drive—one made up entirely of unvaccinated donors offering blood into the general supply.
It’s happening on April 18th, and it’s more than a logistical effort. It’s a spiritual one. It’s a declaration of love and a call to healing.
🧬 Why the Distinction Matters
The introduction of mRNA technology into the human bloodstream—through COVID-19 vaccines and other gene therapies—has raised important ethical, scientific, and spiritual questions. While the broader public may still be learning about these developments, many individuals who’ve declined mRNA-based injections have done so out of a desire to preserve their genetic integrity—to remain “unaltered,” in a world rapidly embracing synthetic and transhuman interventions.
But here’s the problem: blood donation systems don’t distinguish between mRNA-injected and non-injected donors. There is no labeling, no separation, no informed consent for recipients. This will change, but it takes time that emergencies don’t wait for.
💉 Why Unvaccinated Blood?
Many of us who refused the gene therapy product called the COVID-19 vaccine were disgraced, bankrupted, ostracized, and heartbroken—not just by media narratives, but by friends, family, coworkers, and even strangers. We were accused of being selfish, ignorant, dangerous. Some of us lost jobs. Others lost relationships. Still others lost everything.
And yet, many of us stood firm. Not out of rebellion, but out of conviction—to protect what we believed to be sacred: the human genome as God created it, and the integrity of our bodies and blood.
Now, years later, the data is emerging, and it’s abundantly clear: the vaccinated need unvaccinated blood just as desperately as we do. The health effects of the mRNA injections are undeniable—causing myocarditis, immune dysregulation, fertility disruptions, and even increased mortality in the young and healthy.
But this blood drive is not a told-you-so moment.
It’s a Good Friday moment.
✝️ Why We’re Donating Anyway
Even as many still cling to the belief that the injections were good, necessary, or even virtuous—we give.
Even as the systems that oppressed us remain unrepentant—we give.
We donate—not to prove a point—but as an act of unconditional love and sacrifice. As a picture of what Christ did for us on the cross. While we were still sinners… He shed His blood for us.
We are choosing to let go of the transgressions committed against us, to release bitterness, to heal broken hearts, and to love our enemies—not with words, but with something far more powerful:
Our blood.
🧬 Why Your Blood Matters
If you are one of the few who resisted the pressure, who said no to gene therapy, your blood carries a legacy that is now rare, valuable, and deeply needed.
It can give peace of mind to patients who are also trying to avoid synthetic mRNA products
It can support future research, registries, and a more transparent, ethical blood system
And it can serve as a living witness of grace in a world desperate for it
Imagine if you were in an accident and needed blood sooner than you could arrange for an unvaccinated donor… If we, the covid-19 unvaccinated, donate our blood, we will dilute the supply and increase the likelihood of receiving an mRNA injection- free blood transfusion.
🌿 How to Participate in Good Friday Blood Drives
Contact a local blood bank and ask how to donate during the week of April 14-18.
Join a clean blood registry
Host a donation event with your community or church
Connect with us at impactreconciliation.care to stay informed, get involved, and support our ongoing work
Share this message with others who resisted and are looking for a way to give back
“God… gave us the ministry of reconciliation.” — 2 Corinthians 5:18
Let us be ministers of reconciliation today, not with pride or bitterness, but with blood.
Because Christ shed His blood for our transgressions—even before we knew we needed forgiveness.
Will you do the same?
This isn’t just a donation—it’s a declaration.
That healing is possible.
That truth and love can co-exist.
That we can be reconciled, even when the world says we should stay divided.