The End Time Chronicles

Man in suit with quote about Iran.

By James Moore

“Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities” (Voltaire).

America seems to have come into a peculiar kind of madness. Our soldiers are being told, in the sterile fluorescence of a combat readiness briefing, that the president has been “anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran.” This is the kind of idiocy that the Founders, those hardheaded men who had watched Europe bleed itself white over centuries of religious warfare, specifically designed a Constitution to prevent. But they didn’t have tattoos on their chests like the American Lord of War, Pete Hegseth.

Since U.S. and Israeli forces began coordinated strikes against Iran in early March, the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) has received hundreds of complaints from service members at more than fifty installations worldwide, alleging that military commanders are yoking the war to Christian eschatology, the theology of Last Things. Being frightened of combat and death has now been emotionally supplemented with the end of the world for American troops. Reports indicate at least one commander cited the Book of Revelation in a combat briefing, declaring that Armageddon was at hand and that the return of Jesus Christ was imminent. Another, according to an email shared by MRFF founder Mikey Weinstein, told troops not to worry, because “there’s a whole plan here” and Jesus is using Trump.

Weinstein is not an angry, anti-military curmudgeon. An Air Force Academy graduate and former JAG attorney, he is careful to note that the vast majority of his clients are themselves Christians, believers who feel, and this is his word, “brutalized” for failing to be sufficiently rapturous about the end of the world. When even the faithful find the theology alarming, it might be worth asking what exactly is going on.

The answer to that question, of course, is Christian Nationalism. The frightening religious movement has risen from the fever swamps of fringe internet theology into the Pentagon’s press briefings with surprising speed. Defense Secretary Hegseth, a man whose primary qualification for his position appears to be body art and facile tough talk, told his personally curated audience of reporters that “the providence of our almighty God” is protecting U.S. troops in Iran. At a dignified transfer ceremony for fallen soldiers, (until Trump showed up in a MAGA hat), Hegseth quoted Psalm 144 by declaring Jesus is “who trains my hands for war and my fingers for battle.”

The Pentagon and Hegseth, when asked to comment on the MRFF complaints, responded by linking reporters to a private X account called “Shadow of Ezra,” a QAnon conspiracy poster with zero credibility. The account shares a mix of pro-Trump political commentary, conspiracy theories, and sensationalized claims, including posts about figures like George Soros, Jay-Z, and others, often framed in conspiratorial terms. The Pentagon directing reporters to this anonymous account was widely seen as remarkable and controversial, given that Shadow of Ezra is an anonymous, unofficial account with roots in QAnon circles rather than any credible news or government source. Thirty Democratic members of Congress have written to the Pentagon’s inspector general demanding an investigation. No Republicans joined them.

To understand where this theology comes from, it helps to understand the concept of “the Rapture.” This is a mainstream Christian notion that true believers will be bodily whisked to heaven before a period of tribulation and Christ’s return. The delightful narrative of The End of Days was invented by a nineteenth-century Anglo-Irish preacher named John Nelson Darby. Before Darby, this was not mainstream Christian doctrine, and it remains, in the scope of Christian history, a theological novelty. As the late Christopher Hitchens observed with characteristic precision: “The Rapture is a belief held by millions of Americans, many of them armed, that they will be physically carried to heaven before an apocalyptic war cleanses the earth of the ungodly. The only difficulty is that this is demonstrably not what the relevant texts say, and demonstrably not what most Christians throughout history have believed.”

And now the Lord of War Hegseth has turned this fringe view into operational U.S. military doctrine.

The Book of Revelation, from which U.S. commanders drew their briefings, is one of the most contested documents in the biblical canon. Many early church fathers opposed its inclusion in scripture. You don’t have to dig far to discover even Martin Luther called it “neither apostolic nor prophetic.” Scholars have argued for centuries that it was almost certainly written during or just after the reign of the Roman Emperor Domitian, around 95 CE, as an elaborate coded protest against Roman imperial persecution of Christians. The “Beast” of Revelation, scholars like Elaine Pagels have suggested, almost certainly referred to Nero Caesar, whose very name excites the QAnon crowd because in Hebrew numerology it yields the infamous 666. The “Whore of Babylon” was Rome. The apocalyptic imagery was the language of resistance literature, the kind of coded dissent any occupied people uses when speaking plainly would get you killed.

To take this document as a literal roadmap for twenty-first century geopolitics is, plainly, nutso. Consider the absurdity of reading a first-century Jewish-Christian resistance pamphlet as a Pentagon planning document. Richard Dawkins, noted atheist, scholar, researcher, author and intellect, has pointed out that it is “a case study in motivated reasoning so pure that it would be fascinating if it weren’t so dangerous.” The Bible, Dawkins has argued, “was written by humans who didn’t know about germ theory, didn’t know that the earth went around the sun, and didn’t have access to the accumulated knowledge of two millennia of human inquiry. To take it literally is not faith, it is a failure of imagination.”

And yet, here is Texas, the state government is still mandating the display of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms. A number of districts have sued to block the rule and local courts have upheld their claims of constitutional violation but the governor insists that the school districts not involved in the lawsuits must continue to comply, or, you know, lose their funding. We have already banned hundreds of books our legislators found theologically or politically inconvenient.

Meanwhile, much of Christian culture in Texas is also embracing a growing movement of Christian Nationalists operating under the banner of “Seven Mountain Dominionism,” which is the noxious belief that Christians must “reclaim” seven spheres of social influence: family, religion, education, media, entertainment, business, and government. And no, that is not a metaphor. It is an explicit organizational strategy employed by influential figures close to the current administration that envisions a United States governed by biblical law.

Sam Harris, neuroscientist and author, has called this movement “Christian Sharia,” and the label is more than mere provocation, especially in a state where the governor expresses fears Texas is being overtaken by Islamists. “The desire to govern other people’s lives on the basis of ancient texts,” Harris has written, “is not limited to Islam. It is a feature of all religious conservatism, and the only thing preventing it from manifesting fully in the United States is the Constitution, which certain people are working very hard to erode.”

They are not working quietly, either. They are working through state legislatures, school boards, judicial appointments, and now, apparently, combat readiness briefings.

The Founders were not subtle about this. Thomas Jefferson called the doctrine of the Trinity “mere Abracadabra.” James Madison, the principal architect of the Constitution, wrote that “the number, the industry, and the morality of the priesthood, and the devotion of the people have been manifestly increased by the total separation of the church from the state.” John Adams was blunter still, signing the Treaty of Tripoli, which declared explicitly that “the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.”

These were men who had watched the Thirty Years War kill a fifth of Central Europe’s population. They had read their history and knew what happened when the sacred and the secular fused. They built a wall between church and state not out of hostility to religion, but out of hard-won, blood-soaked wisdom about what religion does to governments and governments do to religion when the two are allowed to merge. That wall is now being dismantled brick by brick, in school classrooms and military briefing rooms and Cabinet press conferences, by people who believe, with disturbing sincerity and terrifying confidence that they are doing God’s work.

There is one more inconvenient fact lurking beneath all of this, which is that the historical existence of Jesus of Nazareth as a divine figure is supported by essentially no contemporary evidence. The Roman historians Tacitus and Pliny the Younger mention Christians, not Christ. Josephus’s famous passage is widely regarded by scholars as a later interpolation. No Roman census record, no legal document, no contemporary account places a miraculous Jewish preacher at the center of first-century Judean life. This does not settle the question, obviously, because absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, but it does suggest a certain epistemological humility might be appropriate before one arranges a nuclear military’s war strategy around that figure’s imminent personal return.

And let me throw in a for fukk’s sake here, just for emphasis.

Mikey Weinstein, who is Jewish, has spent decades fighting for the religious freedom of U.S. service members, including and especially Christians who don’t want their faith weaponized. He describes several commanders using a specific phrase to tell troops that “Jesus is using Trump to light the signal lamp.” The soldiers who complained to him, he says, fear retribution for speaking out. They are fighting a war while also, apparently, fighting a theology.

Citizens doing their civic duty are, as someone with considerably more sense than most of Washington recently put it, the immune system of our body politic. This strain of American life, the fusion of military power, apocalyptic theology, and authoritarian politics, which threatens the wider world, has already been rejected at ballot boxes across the country, including in the congressional district of its principal champion.

The question is whether the immune system will respond quickly enough. The Book of Revelation, whatever its original intent, is a document about the end of things. If it were real and viable, most of us would not be around to appreciate the exquisite historical irony when the people most obsessed with its prophecies were the ones to make them come true.

This article was originally published on Texas to the world.

 

James Moore is the New York Times bestselling author of “Bush’s Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential,” three other books on Bush and former Texas Governor Rick Perry, as well as two novels, and a biography entitled, “Give Back the Light,” on a famed eye surgeon and inventor. Mr. Moore has been honored with an Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his documentary work and is a former TV news correspondent who has traveled extensively on every presidential campaign since 1976.

He has been a retained on-air political analyst for MSNBC and has appeared on Morning Edition on National Public Radio, NBC Nightly News, Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, CBS Evening News, CNN, Real Time with Bill Maher, and Hardball with Chris Matthews, among numerous other programs. Mr. Moore’s written political and media analyses have been published at CNN, Boston Globe, L.A. Times, Guardian of London, Sunday Independent of London, Salon, Financial Times of London, Huffington Post, and numerous other outlets. He also appeared as an expert on presidential politics in the highest-grossing documentary film of all time, Fahrenheit 911, (not related to the film’s producer Michael Moore).

His other honors include the Dartmouth College National Media Award for Economic Understanding, the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio Television News Directors’ Association, the Individual Broadcast Achievement Award from the Texas Headliners Foundation, and a Gold Medal for Script Writing from the Houston International Film Festival. He was frequently named best reporter in Texas by the AP, UPI, and the Houston Press Club. The film produced from his book “Bush’s Brain” premiered at The Cannes Film Festival prior to a successful 30-city theater run in the U.S.

Mr. Moore has reported on the major stories and historical events of our time, which have ranged from Iran-Contra to the Waco standoff, the Oklahoma City bombing, the border immigration crisis, and other headlining events. His journalism has put him in Cuba, Central America, Mexico, Australia, Canada, the UK, and most of Europe, interviewing figures as diverse as Fidel Castro and Willie Nelson. He has been writing about Texas politics, culture, and history since 1975, and continues with political opinion pieces for CNN and regularly at his Substack newsletter: “Texas to the World.”

 


Keep Independent Journalism Alive – Support The AIMN

Dear Reader,

Since 2013, The Australian Independent Media Network has been a fearless voice for truth, giving public interest journalists a platform to hold power to account. From expert analysis on national and global events to uncovering issues that matter to you, we’re here because of your support.

Running an independent site isn’t cheap, and rising costs mean we need you now more than ever. Your donation – big or small – keeps our servers humming, our writers digging, and our stories free for all.

Join our community of truth-seekers. Please consider donating now via:

PayPal or credit card – just click on the Donate button below

Direct bank transfer: BSB: 062500; A/c no: 10495969

Donate Button

We’ve also set up a GoFundMe as a dedicated reserve fund to help secure the future of our site.
Your support will go directly toward covering essential costs like web hosting renewals and helping us bring new features to life. Every contribution, no matter the size, helps us keep improving and growing.

Thank you for standing with us – we truly couldn’t do this without you.

With gratitude, The AIMN Team

5 Comments

  1. There is a USA group, their S S of Superstitious Shitheads, permeating, infiltrating, cancering that silly nation. Adults believing ridiculous lying rubbish is not news, it is a chronic maggoting curse on society. Thus, a Trump and his foul retards a’following do severe damage, being clumsily thoughtless, morally evil, ethically arid, mentally defective. Extreme superstition kills, it motivates the inner filth of the feeble fools and it must end soon. for our sake, all of us hoping for some civilised awareness and behaviour.., not Trump’s deep dirty devious dickheaded delusional degradations causing damage. All Abrahamic religion is a pox.

  2. I suspect the “rapture” has already happened and we are now abandoned here with the leftovers running the place. That is, “God was here but He left early”.

  3. One of the things that puzzles me is what the followers of the Jewish faith think about the return of Jesus Christ.
    I am under the impression that the Jewish faith does not believe Jesus was the messiah, or Christ. The Christian faith includes the old testament, and the Islamic faith considers Jesus as a major prophet, but the Jewish faith does not recognise Jesus and apparently they are still waiting for the messiah. All three faiths are monoethic and come from the same beginnings.
    Then there was the unfortunate issue with Pontius Pilate and the events leading to Jesus death (this Friday commemorates the death as Good Friday, and Easter Sunday as Jesus rising from the dead). Now with Easter being one of the central events to Christian faiths, where does Judaism fit?
    If the Israel USA alliance against Iran is based on religion, there might be some tricky differences of opinion, especially with an expected return of Jesus.

  4. “…“anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran.” ….”
    Someone should tell these mal-aligned Jesus freaks that Jesus died 2000 years ago and no longer exists. If there is/was a Christian god then that mysterious entity would not be interested in appointing Trump as his messiah because Trump constantly disrespects every principle of Christian teachings. But then, apparently god (or God if you prefer) knows what he/she/it is doing so we can forget all about it.

  5. American journalist and author William J. Kole an ex-evangelical preacher (first attracted whilst at Uni), has written a book In Guns We Trust -The Unholy Trinity of White Evangelicals, Politics, and Firearms

    Says there’s about 60 million white Christian evangelicals in the US, and that 55-60% are armed, many with multiple arms caches and are prepared to use them against ‘others’.

    Kole not only stopped preaching but exited the entire Christian evangelical scene, when he realized many attending sermons were carrying guns.

    Seems, the whole of America will blow itself to smithereens from within (if not the world).

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*