A viral video is circulating on X that captures something you rarely see in public: raw, unfiltered testimony of a genuine conversion.
The creator, who built a significant following on OnlyFans after turning 18, announced this week that she has left the platform entirely — not for better money, not for a bigger audience, but because she says she encountered Jesus Christ.
🔥🚨BREAKING: Former Only Fans creator who made millions of dollars has given her life to Jesus Christ and deleted her account. pic.twitter.com/ndVuioSXvn
— Dom Lucre | Breaker of Narratives (@dom_lucre) March 7, 2026
“I don’t want to quit social media because I feel like I can use my platform for really good,” she says in the video. “I’ve been off of OnlyFans for about a month now.”
What follows is not the polished, performative Christianity of celebrity converts. It’s something messier and more real — a young woman grappling with the weight of what she says happened to her.
She describes the moment of her conversion with striking specificity: “I had a supernatural peace come over me. I had visions from him of how he saw me, how God sees me and how he sees you and how much he loves me and how much he loves you.”
The experience, she says, broke her attachments to “my image, and my identity, and my body, and myself, and my addictions that I didn’t think were like addictions, my phone, alcohol, like all these things broke. They literally broke, and I had never felt more free in my entire life.”
The aftermath was immediate and visible. She deleted over half her Instagram posts. She threw away half her closet — clothes she says she felt “conviction” about. The OnlyFans account that had generated significant income was shut down.
She’s candid about not having it all figured out. “I don’t know exactly what this means for me and what this means for my content and what this means for the rest of my life, but I am excited.”
The response has been predictably polarized. Supporters see a genuine work of grace. Critics have accused her of orchestrating the conversion for attention — a narrative she directly addresses.
“There’s such a big narrative that it was a plan for me to make money in sinful ways and then repent,” she says. “I don’t think anyone really plans to give their life to God. If I was truly concerned about the money I was making, I would have stayed where I was at and just continued to make money because that would have been the easiest thing to do.”
She’s clear about what motivated the change: “Me giving my life to Jesus was not to make my life better, it was to die to myself because I realized what he did for me and I felt his love and I felt his presence that is just so beyond anything we can comprehend.”
Whether you believe her account of supernatural visions or view it through a more skeptical lens, the economic reality is undeniable. She walked away from a lucrative career in adult content — the kind of decision that doesn’t make sense unless something fundamental has shifted.
For Christians, the video is a reminder that conversion doesn’t require a polished testimony or a perfect past. For critics, it’s a phenomenon worth understanding — why the message of Christianity continues to draw people away from the most profitable paths our culture offers.
Either way, she’s asking the same question that confronts everyone who claims a dramatic change: Will it last? Time will tell. But for now, she’s walking in a direction that costs her something — and that alone makes her worth listening to.
Stay informed. Stay free.