Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Shadow of 1953: How We Created the Enemy We Now Fight

 There are truths in history that are uncomfortable.

Truths that nations avoid.

Truths that leaders rarely admit.

But if we are ever going to understand why we stand on the edge of conflict with Iran today, we must go back—to Operation Ajax.

Because that is where this story truly begins.

1953: When We Took a Nation’s Future Into Our Own Hands

In 1953, the United States and Britain made a decision.

They removed a democratically elected leader—Mohammad Mosaddegh—and replaced him with a ruler who would serve Western interests.

Why?

  • Oil
  • Cold War fears
  • Control

The coup was funded and directed by the U.S. and Britain, restoring Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi to power (britannica.com)

At the time, it was called a success.

But history has a way of exposing what success really costs.

The Seed of Distrust

The Iranian people saw something clearly:

Their voice had been taken.

Their leader had been removed—not by their will, but by foreign powers.

And that memory never faded.

Historians and even U.S. officials now acknowledge that the coup caused lasting damage to America’s reputation and fueled deep anti-American feeling in Iran (Wikipedia)

A generation grew up knowing:

👉 The United States had helped install their ruler.

25 Years of Controland Growing Anger

For the next quarter century:

  • The Shah ruled with U.S. support
  • His government became increasingly authoritarian
  • Opposition was silenced

And all the while, the connection remained:

👉 The Shah = backed by America

This mattered more than anything else.

Because legitimacy cannot be imported.

And freedom cannot be imposed from the outside.

1979: The Explosion Was Inevitable

By 1979, the pressure broke.

The Iranian people—religious, secular, poor, wealthy—rose together.

The result was the

Iranian Revolution

The Shah fell.

And something new took his place.

Did We “Allow” It to Happen?

Yes—and no.

The United States did not install the new leadership.

But we must be honest:

👉 We had already shaped the outcome.

The revolution itself was driven by:

  • Opposition to dictatorship
  • Anger at Western interference
  • Rejection of the Shah’s rule (britannica.com)

And when the Shah collapsed:

  • The U.S. did not intervene to save him
  • The system we supported fell under its own weight

👉 The leadership that replaced him rose from the anger we helped create.

From Ally to Enemy

Before 1953:

  • Iran and the United States were not enemies

Before 1979:

  • Iran even had quiet cooperation with Israel

After 1979:

Everything changed.

  • America became the “Great Satan”
  • Israel became a central enemy
  • Iran’s identity was built in opposition to both

And why?

Because the revolution was not just political—it was a rejection of foreign control

Blowback: The Truth We Refuse to Face

Even American historians admit:

The 1953 coup helped shape the revolution of 1979 and the hostility that followed (Council on Foreign Relations)

This is what is often called blowback:

👉 When short-term victories create long-term enemies

The coup did not just remove a leader.

It planted something deeper:

Distrust.

Resentment.

Memory.

The Pattern Repeats

Iran is not an isolated case.

We have seen this before:

Iraq

Remove a regime—create instability.

Afghanistan

Intervene for decades—end where we began.

Syria

Attempt influence—leave behind chaos.

And Iran?

👉 We removed democracy…

👉 Installed power…

👉 And were shocked when it turned against us.

The Hard Question

If Britain and the United States had been:

  • Honest
  • Fair
  • Respectful of Iran’s sovereignty

Would we be here today?

History strongly suggests:

👉 No.

Because before 1953, the relationship was not defined by hatred.

That came later.

Final Thought: When Will We Learn?

We keep believing we can shape nations in our image.

We keep believing we can control outcomes.

We keep believing intervention will bring stability.

But history keeps answering:

No.

From 1953 to today, the lesson is clear:

👉 When you take control of another nation’s future,

you may win for a moment—

But you will pay for generations.

If we refuse to learn this lesson,

then Iran will not be the last time history turns against us.

Friday, April 3, 2026

When the Church Forgot The Mission

 There was a time when the Church turned the world upside down.

Not with armies.

Not with politics.

Not with wealth or influence.

But with a message.

A simple, powerful, life-altering message:

Jesus Christ saves.

You see it clearly in the book of Acts. They didn’t have platforms. They didn’t have political alliances. They didn’t have cultural approval.

What they had was the Gospel.

And it was enough.

The Power We Once Had

The early Church walked into hostile cities and preached Christ.

“And daily in the temple, and in every house, they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ.” (Acts 5:42, KJV)

They were beaten—but they kept preaching.

They were imprisoned—but they kept singing.

They were threatened—but they kept proclaiming salvation.

And somehow… Rome began to tremble.

Not because Christians were trying to take over the empire—but because they were changing hearts within it.

Where Did That Power Go?

Let me say this plainly:

The Church has not lost power because the world got darker.

The Church has lost power because it walked away from its mission.

We have traded:

  • Proclamation for opinion
  • Salvation for social positioning
  • The cross for comfort
  • The Gospel for politics

And then we wonder why there is no power.

A Church Full of Noise but Empty of Power

Today, many churches are louder than ever—but weaker than ever.

We speak on everything:

  • Elections
  • Nations
  • Culture wars
  • Social issues

But far too often… we are silent on the one message that actually saves:

“For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation…” (Romans 1:16, KJV)

Notice that the power of God is not in our opinions.

It is in the Gospel.

We Have Confused Influence with Impact

Some believe that if the Church gains political power, it will change the world.

But the early Church had no political power—and still changed the world.

Why?

Because transformation does not come from laws—it comes from new birth.

“Ye must be born again.” (John 3:7, KJV)

You can legislate behavior,

but only Christ can change a heart.

When the Church Chases Power, It Loses Authority

There is a dangerous pattern in history.

When the Church aligns itself too closely with worldly power—like after the Edict of Milan under Constantine the Great—it gains influence…

…but often loses its voice.

Why?

Because you cannot prophetically confront a system you depend on.

And so instead of calling people to repentance,

we begin defending systems.

Instead of preaching Christ,

We begin protecting positions.

The Mission Was Never Political

Jesus never told His followers:

“Go into all the world and fix Rome.”

He said:

“Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.” (Mark 16:15, KJV)

That is the mission.

Not to dominate culture.

Not to win arguments.

Not to secure influence.

But to proclaim salvation.

A Hard Question for Our Time

What if the reason the Church seems powerless today…

is not because God has withdrawn…

…but because we have?

What if heaven is still ready to move,

But the Church is no longer preaching the message heaven blesses?

The Way Back

The answer is not complicated—but it is costly.

We must return to:

  • Preaching repentance
  • Preaching the cross
  • Preaching the resurrection
  • Preaching salvation through Jesus Christ alone

We must be willing to:

  • Lose popularity
  • Lose approval
  • Lose comfort

To regain:

  • Power
  • Authority
  • The presence of God

Final Word

The early Church did not change the world by becoming more like it.

It changed the world by becoming more like Christ.

And until we return to that mission—

until we once again lift the Gospel above everything else—

We will continue to have churches full of activity…

but empty of power.

Because the truth remains:

The power of the Church has never been in politics.

It has always been in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.