He thanked God for the Iran bombings; fanatic advisors believe Jesus is coming
Photo: unsplash.com/@trommelkopf.
Last night, after the United States launched offensive strikes on Iran, President Donald Trump stood before the nation and thanked God.
That was blasphemy. Pure and simple.
God is not in your missiles, Mr. President.
God is not in your bombs, your destruction, or your war speeches.
God is not sitting in the war room giving you a thumbs-up while people die under fire.
You don’t get to drag the name of God into your prideful, blood-soaked mess.
But he did it anyway—like a man playing God, then bowing to himself in prayer.
And worst of all, he wasn’t alone.
Standing behind him, in spirit if not on stage, were his warped “faith advisers”—Evangelical extremists who treat the Book of Revelation like a war manual.
They aren’t mourning the lives lost in Iran.
They aren’t praying for the civilians who will now live in terror.
No.
They’re salivating.
Because in their twisted fantasy, this war is the beginning of the end—the spark that will force Jesus to return faster.
Let’s call this what it is! Madness disguised as faith.
These End Times fanatics don’t care about Christians in Iran.
They don’t care about Muslims.
They don’t care about Jews, atheists, children, elders, or anyone who doesn’t fit into their narrow, dangerous little world.
They see the Middle East as a chessboard for their Armageddon cosplay.
They believe that burning it all down will bring them salvation.
And Trump, the king of showmen, plays into it because it feeds his ego and rallies a bloodthirsty voting base.
But Jesus never called us to rush toward war.
He said, “Blessed are the peacemakers”—not the war planners.
He said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you”—not “thank God after you bomb them.”
What Trump did wasn’t just poor taste.
It was spiritual violence.
It was using God’s name to justify death, destruction, and global chaos.
That is not Christianity.
That is not patriotism.
That is not leadership.
That is blasphemy.
And furthermore, anyone who cheers on war in God’s name is not doing the Lord’s work.
They are spitting in the face of Christ, who was nailed to a Roman cross by an empire not so different from ours.
An empire that believed in war, conquest, and brutal displays of power.
So when Trump thanks God for war, he’s not following Jesus.
He’s following Caesar.
And it’s high time Christians stop confusing the two.