Pastor Doug Wilson’s Christian Empire Grows in Idaho
New campus reflects rapid growth of residents, schools, businesses

MOSCOW, Idaho (FāVS News) — On 30 acres at the edge of Moscow, Idaho, construction crews are erecting a Jeffersonian set of classical buildings arranged around a central quad, resembling a miniature University of Virginia. But this isn’t a public university. It’s the new campus for Logos School, part of the influential pastor Doug Wilson’s decadeslong effort to transform this college town into a conservative Christian redoubt.

A rendering next to construction of the new campus for Logos School in Moscow, Idaho. (Photo by Tracy Simmons)
The expansion reflects the rapid growth of Wilson’s Christ Church, which he has led for nearly 50 years. Driven by families with four to six children on average and emigration (“people were chased here by blue state governors,” Wilson said), the church has doubled in size since 2019 to about 3,000 people — roughly 10% of the population of this university town in in Idaho’s northern panhandle.
The pace has even caught Wilson off guard. The church recently completed a new church hall — next to the burgeoning Logos Quad — that seats 1,200 people. Wilson says they’ve already outgrown it.
“We didn’t anticipate it being this rapid,” he said during a recent interview at Kirker Commons, where his office is located alongside other church pastors. “We don’t know what to do with all the people. We’re scrambling.”
COVID-19 was instrumental in the Wilson boom, he believes. Not only were conservative believers disconcerted by other states’ pandemic strictures, but remote work proved to employers that location didn’t matter. Remote church services exposed more people to Christ Church.
Many asked, “Why not Idaho?” Wilson said, where conservative values and natural beauty offer its families a different quality of life. “There was a stretch there a year or two, where pretty much every Sunday at church I would meet someone who would say, ‘Well, we’re here now,’” he recalled.

Pastor Doug Wilson, left, is interviewed by Tucker Carlson. (Video screen grab)
It doesn’t hurt that Wilson’s influence extends far beyond Moscow. He has been featured on conservative talk shows, including Tucker Carlson’s. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth attends a church in Wilson’s denomination and has praised Wilson’s writings. In July, Wilson will open a new congregation in Washington, D.C., aimed at ”strategic opportunities with numerous evangelicals who will be present both in and around the Trump administration.”
For decades, Christ Church met in borrowed spaces — auto body shops, school gyms, parks. The new church hall, completed in 2024, holds three identical services on Sundays, with additional congregations meeting in downtown Moscow and in nearby Troy, with five churches in all. The growth goes beyond Sunday services. Wilson’s network includes New Saint Andrews College, with about 300 students; Canon Press publishing house; and the growing Logos School system.
Nationally, Christ Church is part of the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, which has approximately 150 congregations all across the country.
As construction continues on both the church complex and school campus, Moscow finds itself at the center of a larger American debate about the role of faith in public life — one that now reaches from small-town Idaho to the highest levels of government.
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The church hall’s street address, on Dominion Avenue, reflects Wilson’s theological vision. “I like the word and the word describes what we’re seeking to do,” Wilson said, explaining that dominion means influencing society “by means of service” rather than coercion. (The city denied Wilson’s first choice, “Logos Street.”)
Wilson’s decentralized church planting strategy is deliberate.

The new church hall for Christ Church was completed in 2024 and seats 1,200 people in Moscow, Idaho. (Photo by Tracy Simmons
“We don’t want a big Death Star church,” he said, preferring to create multiple smaller congregations that maintain “a human scale.” He’s currently planning another congregation in Potlatch — a small town about 18 miles outside of Moscow — to serve families who moved to outlying communities after the influx of newcomers overwhelmed Moscow’s real estate market.
The new campus and continued church planting, Wilson said, are necessary to serve a growing population. With 40% of his congregation under age 14, he anticipates practical needs ahead. “All those kids are going to have to go to school somewhere,” he said. “All of them are going to have to marry somebody.”
That reality drives demand not just for more churches, but for expanded educational infrastructure. Logos School currently serves 750 students from kindergarten through high school. The new campus will house grades 7-12, while the existing elementary school will operate at its current separate location in town, creating what Wilson describes as a district model.
Moscow’s public school district serves approximately 2,397 students.
Wilson’s approach emphasizes what he calls “entrepreneurial” Christianity. Church members operate multiple businesses throughout Moscow’s downtown. Wilson describes this as “dominion” — influencing society through service rather than coercion.
“We don’t direct them, but we do teach our people that they should be entrepreneurial. They should be service oriented. They should do good work,” Wilson explained.
The church’s business network helps fund its expansion. Wilson said individual members, not the church itself, own the downtown businesses, maintaining what he calls “sphere sovereignty” — separate roles for church, family and civil government.

Joann Muneta speaks during a community event in Moscow, Idaho. (Photo by Tracy Simmons)
Not everyone welcomes the growth. Joann Muneta, who has lived in Moscow for 65 years and chairs the Latah County Human Rights Task Force, said Wilson undercounts the number of newcomers. “Are they counting all the children?” she asked. And though she doesn’t notice the growth locally, she acknowledges seeing “quite a few Kirker” businesses on Main Street.
Nonetheless, Muneta said, “Christ Church can own every brick on Main Street, but they won’t own the soul of Moscow.”
She has helped organize three community events in response to Wilson’s influence, drawing hundreds of residents concerned about the church’s impact. Muneta emphasizes the events aren’t “an anti-Wilson campaign” but rather “a pro-community campaign” focused on building bridges and unity.
She said new alliances are forming between faith communities and human rights groups. The events have created momentum around a simple question residents keep asking: “What can I do?”
Wilson is aware of the community’s unease. “There is a certain element of the community that’s hostile no matter what we do,” he said.
Muneta’s advocacy crystallized during the pandemic. While other faith communities formed mutual aid associations to help vulnerable residents, which includes Muneta and her late husband, she said, Wilson organized protests against lockdown measures, leading to arrests that gained national attention.
“Here we were in a situation where people are dying and people are getting sick, and the hospitals are full,” Muneta said, but Wilson “felt that the government was trying to find out how much power they could wield.”
The church-planting efforts outside Moscow have faced legal challenges. In 2022, Christ Church began holding services in Troy after outgrowing its existing space and being unable to find rental options. When the church sought a conditional use permit to operate in Troy’s commercial district, the city denied the permit, citing a public that was “heavily against” it and that the “great majority of city residents” opposed granting approval.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed suit alleging religious discrimination, noting that Troy allows nonreligious assemblies like clubs, museums and art galleries in the same zoning district. The federal lawsuit argues the denial was based on “discriminatory animus” rather than legitimate zoning concerns, pointing to local residents’ written and verbal comments reflecting what federal officials describe as a rejection of the church’s beliefs.
But in Moscow, the construction timeline remains aggressive. The first phase of the Logos campus must be completed by fall 2025 to accommodate the growing student body, Wilson said. Additional phases will add three more buildings and a gymnasium to complete the “academic village.”
Attempts to reach Logos School Superintendent Matt Whitling for comment were unsuccessful.

People amble through a farmer’s market in Moscow, Idaho, in 2015. (Photo by Jeremy Segrott/Creative Commons)
For Muneta and other longtime residents, the rapid changes represent a test of Moscow’s character. Despite national attention that “saddens me greatly, because this is a fantastic community,” she remains optimistic about local resistance to Wilson’s influence.
“It’s a very peaceful, loving, inclusive community,” Muneta said. “They don’t want to fight” — even as Wilson’s movement, with its “Sword and Shovel” bookstore and “Fight and Build” New Saint Andrews T-shirts, projects a more combative message.
Wilson, for his part, sees the growth as validation of his half-century project. “The engine that drives it is preaching the gospel, preaching out of the Bible,” he said.
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