Tuesday, April 28, 2026

The Great Image and the Limits of Power

 There's a saying that's been turning over in my mind:

"Force is predictable in what it destroys… but unpredictable in what it creates."

You can see it in the headlines. You can see it in history, but friend, you can also see it—plain as day—in the Word of God.

The Dream That Still Speaks

In the Book of Daniel, King Nebuchadnezzar had a dream of a great image—a towering statue made of different materials.

Daniel, by the Spirit of God, gave the interpretation:

  • Head of gold — Babylon
  • Chest of silver — Medo-Persia
  • Belly and thighs of brass — Greece
  • Legs of iron — Rome
  • Feet of iron mixed with clay — divided kingdoms

Now, every one of those kingdoms rose by power.

Every one of them expanded by force.

And every one of them—listen now—fell despite it.

Power that is temporary-highlighting the fleeting nature of human authority-reminds us that only God's kingdom endures. Babylon conquered the world of its day—but it did not endure.

Persia ruled with authority—but it was replaced.

Greece spread its influence far and wide—but it fractured.

Rome dominated like iron—but even iron breaks in time.

And then we come to the final stage:

Feet of iron mixed with clay.

This is not strength—it is instability.

This is not unity—it is division.

Many understand this to represent a final arrangement of nations—often described as ten kingdoms—loosely joined, yet unable to hold together truly.

Strong in appearance…

weak in reality.

The Failure of Human Government

Friend, if you want to understand the world today, you don't have to look far.

We have powerful nations…

advanced systems…

global influence…

And yet:

  • Wars continue
  • Peace is fragile
  • Division is everywhere
  • Problems multiply faster than solutions

Why?

Because human government cannot solve the problem of the human heart.

You can pass laws—but you cannot make men righteous.

You can enforce order, but you cannot create peace within.

You can unite people on paper—but not in spirit.

The image in Daniel shows us plainly:

Human systems grow more complex… but not more stable.

The Pattern Has Not Changed

The names have changed.

The borders have shifted.

The technology has advanced.

But man?

Man is the same.

"The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be…" (Ecclesiastes 1:9, KJV)

We still trust power.

We still believe force will fix what is broken.

We still think that if we get the right leaders, the right systems, the right structure, everything will be made right.

But history—and Scripture—say otherwise.

The Stone Cut Without Hands

Now here is the part many forget.

In that same vision, Daniel saw something else:

A stone…

cut without hands…

that struck the image, breaking it into pieces.

"And the stone that smote the image became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth." — Daniel 2:35 (KJV)

That stone was not artificial.

It did not rise by force.

It did not come through political power.

It represents the kingdom of God.

The Only Lasting Peace

Daniel makes it clear:

"And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed…" — Daniel 2:44 (KJV)

Friend, hear this plainly:

Man will not bring lasting peace.

Governments will not solve humanity's deepest problems.

Power will not produce righteousness.

Only the Lord can do that.

And one day—He will.

When Christ Returns

The world is searching:

  • for stability
  • for peace
  • for justice
  • for answers

But it keeps looking to systems that cannot deliver.

The Bible points us forward—not to another empire—but to a King.

When Jesus Christ returns:

  • He will not negotiate peace—He will establish it
  • He will not manage the division—He will end it
  • He will not patch broken systems—He will replace them

"Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end…" (Isaiah 9:7, KJV)

Final Thought

You are seeing something that Scripture has declared all along:

Force can build kingdoms…

But it cannot sustain them.

What man creates by power…

time, division, and the human heart will eventually tear apart.

But there is a kingdom coming—

not built by hands…

not sustained by force…

not broken by time.

And when that kingdom comes through Christ's return-

Peace will finally be more than a hope.

It will be a reality.

—Ramblings of a Country Preacher

Force or the Heart?

There’s a question being whispered—and sometimes shouted—in our land:

“Why not just strike harder? Why not force Iran to submit?”

But I want to speak plainly, as a country preacher who has watched both Scripture and history unfold:

You can force a nation to bow…

But you cannot force people to believe.

What Force Produces

Force can do many things:

  • It can destroy cities
  • It can remove leaders
  • It can silence opposition—for a season

But force also produces something else:

  • Resentment
  • Resistance
  • And often a deeper hatred that lasts generations

We have seen this before in the Vietnam War, the Iraq War, and the War in Afghanistan.

We removed governments.

We won battles.

But we did not win hearts.

And in the end, the struggle remained.

What Is Happening Quietly in Iran

Now here’s something the world doesn’t talk about nearly enough.

While bombs and politics dominate the headlines…

something quiet—and powerful—is happening beneath the surface in Iran.

  • Many researchers say Iran has one of the fastest-growing Christian movements in the world (Religion Unplugged)
  • Estimates suggest hundreds of thousands to over a million Iranians have turned to Christ (Wikipedia)
  • Some ministries even report millions of converts, though numbers are debated (Baptist Press)

But here’s the key:

This is not happening in public churches.

This is not happening through political pressure.

It is happening in homes… in secret… at great personal cost.

And yet—

It continues to grow.

Why This Matters

Think about this carefully:

Christianity in Iran is not growing because of force…

It is growing despite force.

No army is spreading it.

No government is enforcing it.

It is spreading because hearts are being changed.

That ought to tell us something.

What If We Chose a Different Way?

Now you asked a powerful question:

What if instead of bombing a nation… we supported the movement of people coming to Christ?

Let’s be honest and balanced:

  • Governments cannot officially “promote” conversion in another nation without causing backlash
  • Outside pressure can sometimes harm underground believers by drawing attention to them

But spiritually speaking, this truth still stands:

The only change that lasts is heart change.

You can overthrow a regime in a day…

But you cannot build peace without transforming the people.

The Biblical Pattern

God has already shown us His method:

“Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the LORD of hosts.” — Zechariah 4:6 (KJV)

“A new heart also will I give you…” — Ezekiel 36:26 (KJV)

Jesus did not conquer Rome with armies.

He changed the world by changing men.

And today, in a place as closed and controlled as Iran—

He is still doing the same thing.

Quietly.

Powerfully.

One heart at a time.

A Sobering Truth

If a nation is bombed into submission:

  • You may gain control
  • But you will also plant seeds of bitterness

If hearts are changed:

  • You gain something far greater than control
  • You gain peace that does not need to be enforced

Final Thought

Friend, hear this clearly:

Bombs can change governments.

Only God can change hearts.

And right now, in one of the hardest places on earth—

He is doing what no military power ever could.

He is changing hearts.

And that…

It is the only victory that lasts.