Bob Enyart, host of conservative Christian radio and former pastor of the Denver Bible Church, died Monday at age 62 after hiring Covid on Sept. 1.
Enyart was a staunch opponent of coronavirus vaccines and restrictions, such as mask warrants, and is the latest in a series of antivax radio hosts to die of Covid in recent weeks.
The radio host and pastor was a controversial figure because of his fierce religious beliefs that led him to relentlessly criticize the LGBT community, the pro-election movement, and public health policies.
On his Real Science Radio program, the former pastor had spoken out against the “imagined” burden of COVID-19 cases in hospitals and had offered advice on treating the Bible virus before he died.
Enyart’s friend and co-host of the show Fred Williams announced his death on Facebook on Monday in an already deleted post.
“It comes with an extremely heavy heart that my close friend and co-host of Real Science Radio has lost its battle with COVID,” Williams said.

Bob Enyart died Monday at the age of 62 after hiring Covid on September 1st

The host and pastor of the radio (L) was a controversial figure because of his fierce religious beliefs that led him to relentlessly criticize the LGBT community, the pro-election movement, and public health policies.

Enyart was a staunch opponent of vaccines and coronavirus restrictions, such as mask warrants, and is the latest in a series of anti-fax radio servers that have died from Covid in recent weeks.
Bob Enyart was one of the smartest and certainly the wisest person I have ever met. All the while being extremely kind and humble and always willing to listen and discuss anything you want.
The image of a kind, humble, open-minded man, presented by Williams, paints a very different picture from that outlined by members of the LGBT community and women’s right-wing activists.
Enyart gained notoriety in the 1990s through his television show Bob Enyart Live, in which he regularly read the obituaries of dead men who had died of AIDS, labeling them as sodomites and playing ‘Another One’. Bites The Dust ‘by Queen.
Meanwhile, Enyart’s wife, Cheryl, is also sick of what Denver’s Westword news website called “severe Covid 19 conditions,” after the couple denied firing the coronavirus.
Enyart, a notoriously vocal advocate of life, alleged in his Real Science program that scientists tested the Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines on aborted fetuses.

Enyart, a notorious vocal life advocate, claimed in his Real Science program that scientists tested the Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines on aborted fetuses

Enyart gained notoriety in the 1990s through his television show Bob Enyart Live, in which he regularly read the obituaries of dead men who had died of AIDS, labeling them as sodomites and performing “Another One Bites The Dust ”by Queen.
Reuters proved the claim to be false: “While the vaccine used laboratory-replicated fetal cells (known as fetal cell lines) during its production process, the vaccine itself does not contain any cells. fetal.
“Fetal cell lines (not fetal tissue) are sometimes used in the process of developing, confirming, or producing vaccine manufacturing, including the COVID-19 vaccine,” the report said.
In addition to his work on Real Science radio and the Denver Bible Church, Enyart served as a spokesman for the American Right to Life movement, a ruthlessly anti-abortion movement that seeks to completely abolish abortions.
In October 2020, Enyart filed a lawsuit against the mandates and restrictions of the state of Colorado that prevent congregations from gaining religious praise and won.
“We were so grateful that a federal court recognized our right to worship God, our Creator, without the government interfering,” Enyart told KMGH-TV.
“We can sing congregational singing and hope that other churches will join us in worshiping God as He calls us to do, with congregational singing and no artificial boundaries on how many can come together,” he added.
Prior to entering the life of a pastor and talk show host, Enyart designed software for Army helicopters and worked as a computer analyst for Microsoft, according to his program’s website.
His death comes days after renowned broadcaster Howard Stern teased a series of anti-vax radio presenters who died in recent weeks due to Covid.
His comments last week, in which he described his deaths as “really funny” and declared “f ***”, were made in reference to former Daytona Talk radio presenter Marc Bernier. to former Nashville radio presenter Phil Valentine, and former Newsmax broadcaster Dick Farrell.
“It’s really funny when these radios, the radio guys, are the best, they’re like they die four, four like they were bursts in the air,” he chatted.
All three presenters died of Covid or virus-related complications after publicly speaking out against the vaccines.