Tuesday, April 28, 2026

When Politics Becomes Our Hope Instead of Christ

 I want to address the comments regarding my position on the Israel/US conflict with Iran, which I believe is misguided. Some people think that I support Iran; let me clarify: I do not support Islam, Judaism, or Zionist Christians. My allegiance is solely with Christ.


In recent days, there have been those—friends, good people, fellow believers—who feel I am wrong because I do not fully support the Israel/United States war against Iran. Some have spoken plainly, others quietly. But the message is the same: “If you are not with this, you are siding with the enemy.”

That is a heavy charge.

And it reveals something deeper than politics—it reveals where many have placed their hope.

A Troubled Heart in a Divided Time

I want to say this plainly: I love my country. I pray for its leaders. I honor those who serve and sacrifice. But I cannot, and I will not, give to any government or any leader what belongs to Christ alone.

The pressure today is not just to have an opinion, but to have the right opinion, or be labeled disloyal.

Yet the Word of God speaks clearly:

“Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom there is no help.” —Psalm 146:3 (KJV)

We are living in a time when many have forgotten this.

The Rise of Political Faith

There is a growing spirit in the Church that looks to political power as the answer to spiritual problems.

Some believe:

  • This leader will fix the world
  • This war will bring peace
  • This nation must win at any cost

And if you question it, you are seen as weak—or worse, as siding with evil.

But history—and even recent events—tell us something different.

  • Many Americans themselves are divided about the war and its purpose
  • Efforts to force outcomes through pressure and conflict have not produced a clear resolution
  • Even allies question whether these strategies are working
  • And some Christian voices are warning that faith is being misused to justify conflict

This is not a simple “good vs. evil” story. It is complicated, painful, and costly.

War cannot change the Heart.

Let me speak as a pastor, not a politician.

You cannot bomb a nation into righteousness.

You cannot legislate holiness.

You cannot force peace through fear.

The Bible never teaches that the Kingdom of God comes through political dominance.

Jesus said:

“My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight…” —John 18:36 (KJV)

And again:

“For all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.” —Matthew 26:52 (KJV)

War may stop an enemy for a season—but it does not change the human Heart.

Only Christ does that.

Are We Losing Our Witness?

This is what burdens me most.

When Christians speak with anger instead of compassion…

When we celebrate destruction rather than pray for peace…

When we begin to see entire nations of people as enemies…

We are no longer reflecting Christ—we are reflecting the world.

The Apostle Paul reminds us:

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood…” —Ephesians 6:12 (KJV)

Iran is not the enemy.

Immigrants are not the enemy.

People are not the enemy.

Sin is the enemy. Darkness is the enemy. And the answer to that has always been the Gospel—not the sword.

Why This Matters Now

There are even those today framing this war in spiritual terms—as though it is part of God’s plan or prophetic fulfillment (Wikipedia).

That should give us pause.

Because when we begin to attach the name of God to human conflict, we step into dangerous ground.

God is not the author of confusion—or blind nationalism.

He is the God of truth, righteousness, and peace.

What I Believe Should Be Done

I have been asked, “What do you think we should do?”

Here is my answer:

We should pray more than we argue.

We should seek truth more than victory.

We should guard our hearts more than defend a political position.

And above all, we should remember where our hope truly lies.

“Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the Lord our God.” —Psalm 20:7 (KJV)

A Final Word to My Friends

If you support these policies, I do not see you as my enemy.

If you disagree with me, I do not question your faith.

But I must stand where Scripture stands.

My hope is not in Washington.

My hope is not in military strength.

My hope is not in any man.

My hope is in Jesus Christ.

And if we lose that—if we trade that for political power—then even if we win the world, we will have lost something far greater.

“For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” —Mark 8:36 (KJV)

When War Is Far Away… and Yet So Close to the Heart

There is a strange distance in the American soul when it comes to war.

We hear of bombs falling, of cities trembling, of families fleeing in the night—but we hear it through screens, through headlines, through voices that never quite carry the weight of what is truly happening. For most Americans, war is something that happens over there. It is measured in oil prices, in the rise at the gas pump, in the cost of groceries, in the uneasy tone of the evening news.

But it is not felt.

College students still make their Spring Break journeys. Families gather for ball games and cookouts. The great landmarks of our nation stand untouched—the Statue of Liberty still lifts her torch, the Golden Gate still spans the water, airports bustle, schools open their doors, and hospitals carry on their healing work without interruption.

There are no sirens in the night.

No shattered homes.

No children pulled from rubble.

And because of this, we have grown distant—not only from the reality of war, but from the people who are living in it.

There is a perception, whether spoken or unspoken, that the people of places like Iran, Gaza, Lebanon, or other war-torn lands are somehow different from us. Different in thought. Different in feeling. Different in worth.

But this is a grave error.

Mankind is the same.

We are no different—emotionally, spiritually, or physically—from any other human being on this earth. The mother in Tehran who clutches her child as the sky thunders with aircraft feels the same fear as a mother in Indiana would feel. The father who wonders if his home will still be standing by morning carries the same burden of love and responsibility as any father here. The child who trembles in the darkness longs for safety in the same way our children do.

The Scripture reminds us of this shared humanity:

“And hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth…” — Acts 17:26 (KJV)

One blood.

Not many kinds of humanity—just one.

And yet we live so far removed from the suffering of that one human family that we struggle to understand their pain. We analyze war as strategy. We debate it as policy. We defend it as necessity.

But for those who are living beneath its shadow, war is not theory—it is terror.

It is loss.

It is grief.

It is the sound of weeping that does not stop when the cameras turn away.

And what troubles my heart even more deeply is this: among those suffering are our brothers and sisters in Christ.

Believers who gather quietly, sometimes in secret. Saints who lift their voices in prayer while the world around them shakes. Families who have lost homes, churches, and even loved ones, yet remain faithful to the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

The Apostle Paul wrote:

“Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?” — Romans 8:35 (KJV)

For many of our brethren across the world, this is not a verse to be quoted—it is a reality to be endured.

They are living in peril.

They are facing the sword.

And yet they remain steadfast.

Meanwhile, we who live in comfort must ask ourselves: have we grown so accustomed to peace that we no longer feel the suffering of the Body of Christ?

The Word of God commands us:

“Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them; and them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.” — Hebrews 13:3 (KJV)

As being yourselves also in the body.

That means their pain is not distant—it is ours.

Their tears are not foreign—they are family.

Their suffering is not separate—it is shared.

If one part of the body suffers, all suffer.

“And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it…” — 1 Corinthians 12:26 (KJV)

We must not allow the comfort of our surroundings to dull the compassion of our hearts.

We must not allow distance to create indifference.

We must not allow political lines to divide what Christ has made one.

Instead, we are called to weep with those who weep.

To pray without ceasing.

To carry a burden that we may never fully understand—but must never ignore.

“Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep.” — Romans 12:15 (KJV)

There is also a sobering truth we must face: many Americans have never truly experienced the fear that war brings. And because we have not felt it, we often fail to grasp the cries of those who live under its weight.

We see images—but they do not shake us.

We hear reports—but they do not break us.

And so we must ask the Lord to restore in us a heart of compassion.

A heart that sees beyond borders.

A heart that recognizes the image of God in every man, woman, and child.

A heart that remembers that Christ died not for one nation—but for the world.

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son…” — John 3:16 (KJV)

Not just our world.

The world.

As I write this, my heart is heavy—not with politics, not with opinions—but with concern for the household of faith scattered across lands torn by war. I think of believers praying in the night. I think of pastors preaching under threat. I think of families holding on to hope when everything around them has been shaken.

And I am reminded that while we may be distant from the battlefield, we are not distant from the responsibility.

We are called to pray.

We are called to love.

We are called to remember.

May God forgive us where we have grown cold.

May He awaken in us a burden for our brothers and sisters.

And may we never forget that beyond every headline, beyond every conflict, beyond every nation—

there are souls.

There are families.

There is the Body of Christ.

And they are suffering.

“The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart; and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.” — Psalm 34:18 (KJV)

Even in war, God is near.

And so must we be—in prayer, in compassion, and in truth.

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