Alex Pretti of Minnesota: Prophet of a New World

Alex Pretti of Minnesota: Prophet of a New World 2026-01-24T22:35:15-06:00

Alex Pretti
Alex Pretti / AI

Alex Pretti: The Prophet Whose Life Declared a New World

When John the Baptist stood in the wilderness, his voice cut through the dust and fear of his time. He spoke a phrase so dangerous that it cost him his freedom…”Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” That wasn’t just a religious slogan…it was a declaration that the world that people knew wasn’t the only world that was possible. It was the announcement that the way of fear, power and domination would be challenged and changed.

John was arrested for promoting this message. Powerful people understood that to declare another kind of world was to challenge their own. That cost him everything.

Jesus was the incarnation of such change…and carried the same message to the shadows of the region of Galilee…those places long accustomed to hardship, to systems that treated people as expendable. In Matthew 4:12-17, Jesus said it as clearly as it had ever been said, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” A new world was breaking in, and he was calling people to join the moment and experience salvation.

A Life Devoted to Healing

In Minneapolis, another voice has emerged…not from scrolls, not from a pulpit, but from the streets and from a life lived in service. His name was Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System, a man who had devoted his days to saving lives and caring for the most vulnerable amongst us.

He was also a neighbor, a son, a friend, a nature lover, someone who loved mountain biking and the outdoors, and someone whose concern for the world extended far beyond the ICU in which he served. Those who knew him described him as kindhearted, warm, and deeply committed to the ways of love and justice.

This was not a person looking for conflict. This was someone defined by compassion.

What Happened to Alex Pretti on January 24, 2026

And yet…just yesterday, surrounded by chaos, Alex Pretti stepped forward. Not with a sword. Not with a banner. Not with hate. But with the courage to record what he saw, to help those being harmed around him, to remain present in a moment many chose to avoid. Video from the scene shows him filming federal agents in an immigration enforcement operation, moving among the crowd, trying to help people who were being pepper-sprayed and pushed.

He became a witness.

Then the scene turned violent. Federal officers advanced. Agents tackled him. Pepper spray filled the air. And then…shots (pow, pow, pow, pow)…fired by a federal officer. Alex Pretti fell. He was dead.

In one moment, a life devoted to healing became the prophetic declaration of our times.

This is not a mere tragedy. It is a prophecy.

The Prophetic Message of Alex Pretti

Prophets have always been people who announce a new world by embodying it even at great cost. John the Baptist tried to call people away from the systems of power and fear in his day. Jesus embodied the message. Alex Pretti also embodied the message through his life and by the manner of his death.

He stood in the street confronting brutal enforcement not with aggression, but with compassion. He did not retreat when fear pressed in. He did not accept the idea that violence is inevitable. He believed…as prophets do…that another world is possible.

His death has sparked outrage, not just in Minneapolis but across the nation. Hundreds gathered on the streets afterward to protest and demand answers. Tear gas and stun grenades were deployed against those who dared to raise their voices, and hundreds more have taken to social media to mourn him, to tell his name, to say his life mattered.

For too many people in our society, fear has become the default response to difference. Fear of immigrants. Fear of neighborhoods we don’t understand. Fear of people whose lives look different from our own. Fear of losing comfort, status or control. But here stands the question Alex Pretti’s death asks us:

What do we fear so much that we are willing to give up our humanity?

Prophets do not merely predict outcomes. They announce them by living into them. Alex Pretti did not carry his vocation into the streets out of bravado. He carried it because he believed that the world’s systems should serve human dignity, not crush it. He believed that suffering cries out not to be ignored but to be healed.

And when he was confronted with violence, he did not respond with the same. He was not the aggressor. He was recording. He was helping. And yet, he was killed.

Some have offered explanations that center on fear: that he was armed, that he resisted officers’ attempts to disarm him, that the shooting was “self defense.” Officials say these things, and there are conflicting narratives about the moment before the shots. But the footage circulating…and the outrage it has sparked…clearly show that this was a man who posed no threat to anyone…who was shot dead in broad daylight by agents of the state.

Whatever the official story will be, this much remains clear…a life devoted to saving others, a life lived in compassion rather than fear…was cut down by the racism and corruption that is presently fueling our federal government.

And in that cutting down lies the prophet’s message:

“Repent.”

A Call to Turn Around

“Repent.”

Turn around.
Listen to what we have become.
See where fear has led us.
Change course.

Repent of hatred toward immigrants. Not because some doctrine tells you to, but because fear of the stranger has dehumanized millions and led to policies that harm real people.

Repent of the fear of your own neighbors. That fear tells us to build walls instead of community…to assume guilt instead of innocence…to default to violence instead of care.

Repent of the systems that say some lives matter more than others. This moment calls us to reject the logic that treats people as problems to be managed instead of as neighbors to be welcomed.

To a secular audience, the phrase “kingdom of heaven is at hand” can be reframed as this…a world ordered by justice, compassion, and shared humanity is possible…and it is closer than we imagine.

Alex Pretti’s life and death cry out with that message. His presence in the street was a declaration that human beings matter more than fear. His death forcefully reminds us that the world we live in now…one where violence persists, where power protects itself at all costs…is not the only world that is possible.

Alex Pretti’s Death as a Mirror We Must Face

Prophets wake us from complacency by showing us what we have stopped seeing clearly. They show us what our fear has made us blind to. Alex Pretti’s death is a mirror…it shows our society at a moment when the way we respond to difference, pain and vulnerability is at a crossroads.

So we must ask ourselves clearly:

Will we change course?
Will we refuse to let fear shape our laws, our policies, our stories about one another?
Will we build a world where compassion…not violence…is the default?
Will we say the name Alex Pretti not just as remembrance but as a call to action?

This is the moment when another world becomes imaginable…because we now have an example…an example of someone who lived and died for others.

Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.

Repent, for the realm of God is here.

Repent, for the world can be turned to right.

Not in some distant future.
Not as a distant dream.

But right here, in streets where compassion confronts fear, where a Alex Pretti’s life stands as a living prophecy, we are called to see who we truly are and to live with the same power of love that he showed.

About The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood
The Rev. Dr. Jeff Hood is a Catholic priest (Old Catholic), theologian, and nationally recognized activist based in North Little Rock, Arkansas. A spiritual advisor to death row inmates across the country, Dr. Hood has accompanied more people to their executions than any other advisor in the U.S., including the first-ever nitrogen hypoxia execution in 2024. His work sits at the intersection of justice, radical compassion, and public theology. Dr. Hood holds advanced degrees from Auburn, Emory, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, University of Alabama, Creighton, and Brite Divinity School, among others. He also earned a PhD in metaphysical theology and founded The New Theology School, where he serves as Dean and Professor of Prophetic Theology. Author of over 100 books—including the award-winning The Courage to Be Queer—Dr. Hood’s writings and activism have been featured in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, NPR, CNN, and more. A frequent collaborator with men on death row, he sees theology as a shared, liberative act. Dr. Hood has served on the leadership teams of organizations like the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty and the Fellowship of Reconciliation. His activism has earned multiple awards, including recognition from PFLAG and the Next Generation Action Network. On July 7, 2016, Dr. Hood led the Dallas protest against police brutality that ended in tragedy. His actions that night saved lives, and his story is now archived in the Dallas Public Library. A father of five, husband to Emily, and friend to the incarcerated, Dr. Hood rejects institutionalism in favor of a theology rooted in people, presence, and prophetic witness. You can read more about the author here.
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