By John & Nisha Whitehead
The Rutherford Institute
October 23, 2025
" Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God."-Thomas Jefferson
For a man supposedly intent on winning a Nobel Peace Prize, Donald Trump spends an extraordinary amount of time waging war, threatening to wage war, and fantasizing about waging war.
Notwithstanding his dubious claims about having ended " seven un-endable wars," Trump has continued to squander the American people's resources and moral standing by feeding the military-industrial complex's insatiable appetite for war-preemptively bombing nuclear facilities in Iran, blowing up fishing boats in the Caribbean, and flexing military muscle at every opportunity.
Even the Trump administration's version of " peace through strength" is filtered through a prism of violence, intimidation and strongman tactics.
It is the gospel of power, not peace-a perversion of both Jesus' Sermon on the Mount and the U.S. Constitution.
Thus we find ourselves at this peculiar crossroads: a president hailed by his followers as an "imperfect vessel" chosen by God to save the church and restore Christianity-while they turn a blind eye to his record of adultery, deceit, greed, cruelty, and an almost religious devotion to vengeance and violence.
If anything captures Trump's worldview, it is the AI-generated video he shared on social media: a grotesque fantasy of himself wearing a golden crown, flying a military fighter jet, and bombing a crowd of protesters with brown liquid feces.
This is the man who claims to be "saving God"?
Dismissed by his devoted base as harmless humor-a cheeky response to the millions nationwide who took part in the "No Kings" protests on Oct. 18-Trump's crude fantasy of assaulting critics with fecal bombs nevertheless begs the question: Who would Jesus bomb?
That question, of course, is meant less literally than morally.
To answer it, we must first understand who Jesus Christ was-the revered preacher, teacher, radical, prophet and son of God-born into a police state not unlike the growing menace of America's own police state.
When he came of age, Jesus had powerful, profound things to say, about justice, power and how we are to relate to one another. " Blessed are the merciful," " Blessed are the peacemakers," " Love your enemies."
A revolutionary in both spirit and action, Jesus not only died challenging the police state of his day-the Roman Empire-but left behind a blueprint for resisting tyranny that has guided countless reformers and freedom fighters ever since.
Far from the sanitized, domesticated figure presented in modern churches, Jesus was a radical nonconformist who challenged authority at every turn. He spoke truth to power, defied political and religious hierarchies, and exposed the hypocrisy of empire.
Jesus rejected politics as a means to salvation. For Him, faith was not about seizing power but serving others-helping the poor, showing mercy even to enemies, and embodying peace, not war. He did not seek political favor or influence; He actively undermined it.
That is not to say He was passive. Jesus knew righteous anger. He turned over the tables of the money changers in the Temple because they had turned faith into profit and worship into spectacle.
Yet even in anger, He refused to wield violence as a tool of redemption. When His own arrest approached, He rebuked His followers: " Put your sword in its place, for all who take the sword will perish by the sword."
The Beatitudes summarize His message: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God." And when asked to name the greatest commandment, He answered simply: to love God with all one's being and to love one's neighbor as oneself.
In other words, we love God by loving our fellow human beings.
Jesus-the "Prince of Peace"-came not to destroy life but to restore it.
Which brings us to Donald Trump, the latest political "savior" anointed by Christian nationalists for whom the pursuit of a Christian theocracy now appears to outweigh allegiance to our constitutional democracy.
Seduced by political power to such an extent that the true message of Jesus has been taken hostage by partisan agendas, much of today's evangelical movement has become indistinguishable from right-wing politics-defined by anti-immigrant and anti-homosexual rhetoric, material excess, sprawling megachurches, and a spirit of judgment rather than mercy.
Meanwhile, the wall of separation-between church and state, between moral authority and political coercion-is being torn down from both sides.
The result is a marriage of convenience that corrupts them both.
This is what happens when you wrap your faith in the national flag.
What is worse-far worse-than the Christian right selling its spiritual birthright for a political seat at Trump's table is the blasphemy that has followed: the Gospel of Jesus replaced by the Gospel of the Military-Industrial Complex.
Within the White House, faith leaders gather to lay hands on Trump as he sits at the Resolute Desk, praising him for defending "religious freedom" for Christians-seemingly unconcerned that from that same desk he has signed death warrants for nearly every other freedom.
In the Pentagon, Trump's Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, presides over prayer services where the name of Christ is invoked almost in the same breath as he boasts of preemptive strikes, righteous killings, and " peace through strength."
Kristi Noem, the head of the Department of Homeland Security, prays in front of the cameras all the while boosting spending on military weapons for ICE by 700%, with significant purchases of chemical weapons and " guided missile warheads and explosive components."
This is not Jesus' Christianity-it is Christian nationalism: Christianity draped in the flag and wielding the weapons of war.
When leaders presume to act in God's name, every drone strike becomes a crusade, every critic a heretic, every raid a holy war.
This is how war becomes a form of worship in the American empire.
What was once the Gospel of Peace has been replaced by a national creed that equates killing with courage, dominance with divine favor, and obedience with faith.
It is a blasphemous marriage of church and state-one that desecrates both Christ's command to love one's enemies and the Constitution's mandate to keep religion free from the corruption of power.
Under Trump's rule, this weaponized faith has found expression not only in rhetoric but in action.
It is there in the bombing of Venezuelan fishing boats- no declaration of war, no congressional authorization, no due process-men in small vessels labeled "enemy combatants" by fiat. It is there in the militarized ICE raids that tear families apart under cover of darkness. It is there in the persecution of journalists and dissidents accused of being anti-American. It is there in every detail of how, as one state senator warned, " the President is building an army to attack his own country."
Each act is justified as righteous violence, sanctioned by a president who sees himself as both protector of the faithful and punisher of the wicked.
Yet beneath the veneer of divine mission lies the same old tyranny the Framers warned against: a ruler who mistakes executive power for divine right and turns the machinery of government into an instrument of holy war.
Both Jesus and the framers of the Constitution understood the same truth: faith and freedom cannot be imposed by force.
That is why the First Amendment forbids the government from establishing religion. The moment religion aligns itself with political power, it ceases to be faith and becomes ideology. The moment a president claims divine sanction for war, the republic ceases to be a democracy and becomes a theocracy of fear.
Driven by those concerns, the framers built a system designed to restrain ambition, limit vengeance, and guard against tyranny.
That constitutional system is being bulldozed before our eyes-just as surely as Trump is bulldozing his way through the White House, leaving wreckage in his wake.
And so we return to the question that started it all: Who would Jesus bomb?
The answer, of course, is no one.
Jesus would not rain destruction from the skies or bless the machinery of death. He would not mistake vengeance for virtue or domination for deliverance.
Jesus would heal the sick, welcome the stranger, and lift up the poor. He would drive the money changers from the temple, not sanctify the merchants of war.
Yet here we are.
Under Trump's broadened definitions of "rebellion" and "domestic terrorism," Jesus would be labeled a subversive, his name placed on a watchlist, his followers rounded up for "reeducation." He preached compassion for enemies, defied authority, and stirred the crowds without a permit.
Were Jesus--a Palestinian refugee, a radical, and a revolutionary-to show his face in Trump's American police state, he would fare no better than any of the undocumented immigrants being snatched up in the dead of night, stripped of any real due process, made to disappear into inhumane detention centers, and left to be tortured or die.
This is what happens when nations lose their moral compass: due process becomes a slogan, justice a privilege, and compassion a crime.
When even mercy is outlawed and truth branded subversion, the darkness is no longer metaphorical-it is moral.
It is midnight in America, a phrase evocative of Martin Luther King Jr.'s warning of a " midnight in the moral order."
This is the time, King cautioned, when absolute standards pass away, replaced by a "dangerous ethical relativism." Morality becomes a mere "Gallup poll of the majority opinion." Right and wrong are reduced to the philosophy of "getting by," and the highest law becomes the "eleventh commandment: thou shall not get caught."
In this deep darkness, King said, there is a " knock of the world on the door of the church."
That knock is a reminder, he warned, that the church "is not the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state. It must be the guide and the critic of the state, and never its tool. If the church does not recapture its prophetic zeal, it will become an irrelevant social club without moral or spiritual authority."
That knock still sounds today-steady, insistent, and largely unanswered.
It reverberates through religious institutions that mistake nationalism for faith and pulpits that confuse politics with piety. It calls us to rediscover the moral courage that resists tyranny rather than blesses it-to be, once more, the conscience of the state before the darkness becomes complete.
Whether we heed that call will determine what kind of nation we remain.
The time for silence has passed; the hour demands conscience.
As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People and in its fictional counterpart The Erik Blair Diaries, "we the people" must step up, speak up and speak out.
The tragedy of our age is not merely that presidents claim godlike power or that the citizenry themselves go along with it-it is that people of faith who should know better consent to it.
When Christians cheer the strongman who wraps himself in Scripture while shredding the Constitution-when they bow to the idol of safety, mistaking fear for faith-and when religious institutions fail to speak truth to power-we lose more than our freedoms.
We lose our moral and spiritual birthright.
This article was originally published on The Rutherford Institute.