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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHegseth injects combative Christianity into America's military
During his briefing on the Iran war last week, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested that Americans take a knee and pray to Jesus for the success of U.S. forces in the Middle East. A few days later, he read out a sermon praying that wicked souls be delivered to the eternal damnation in the fight against Iran.
The Defense secretary has increasingly used his bully pulpit to promote his combative, controversial brand of Christianity. While the Pentagon says Hegseth is embracing Americas proud history as a Christian nation, some experts and veterans worry that Hegseths move to inject the military with more explicitly religious sentiments threatens to divide Americas forces.
I think its extremely concerning the way that he is operating. Its concerning to me as a Christian, and its concerning to me as an American, said Matthew Taylor, a visiting scholar at Georgetown Universitys Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs.
-snip-
Hegseth, who was deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan before becoming a Fox News host, has presided over prayer services in the building led by controversial Christian pastors and revamped the militarys Chaplain Corps, and official Defense Department social media posts often amplify ultraconservative Christian views.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/hegseth-injects-combative-christianity-into-america-s-military/ar-AA1ZE1zO
Hegseth is one of those who believes he'll hurry up the rapture by invading Iraq. Thing of it is the rapture was not part of Christian theology till John Nelson Darby invented it in the 19th century.
Also, many believe Revelations AKA the Apocalypse was not a predication of the future but an encouragement to Christians to hang in there in spite of Rome's mistreatment.
MineralMan
(151,232 posts)put forward by a very tiny minority of people who claim to be Christians. Why? Because Jesus is never quoted as sayin we should fight with others and make war on them. Such never were his supposed teachings, regardless of what version of scriptures you study.
Of course, that has never stopped some people who claim Christianity from promoting violence.
Pete Hegseth is one of those few who want to make Christ a violent warrior.
A pox on him.
Note: I am not a Christian. I am an atheist, after having met so very many so-called Christians.
LearnedHand
(5,483 posts)Evangelicals comprise the largest group of xtians, and a huge percentage of them believe in or sympanoze with this xtian nationalist shit.
MineralMan
(151,232 posts)Evangelical generally means having the desire to spread Christianity and convert people into Christians. Fundamentalists take a very narrow view of the religion, focusing on power and control over human beings.
So, we have the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the United State, which is quite a liberal Christian denomination. At the same time we have the Missouri and Wisconsin Synods for the Lutheran Church, which are fundamentalist versions and not so nice to be around.
LetMyPeopleVote
(179,716 posts)Hegseth does not believe in the First Amendment. Hegseth believes that his version of radical christianity is the only acceptable religion. Jews, Muslims, Hindus and any other religions do not belong in Hegseth's military.
Hegseth has 'threatened' military chaplains who refuse to back his Iran war plans: report
— Raw Story (@rawstory.com) 2026-03-29T14:00:23Z
https://www.rawstory.com/hegseth-iran-2676634943/
According to Washington Post analyst Michelle Boorstein, Hegseth's inflammatory rhetoric at a recent Pentagon prayer service has triggered serious alarm among military chaplains and senior officials who view his approach as a dangerous departure from Pentagon norms.
At the prayer service, Hegseth invoked religious language to justify military violence, saying: "Let every round find its mark against the enemies of righteousness and our great nation. Give them wisdom in every decision and overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.".....
Pentagon insiders describe the atmosphere as chilling. An anonymous Department of Defense source characterized the environment as "terrifying," noting that personnel working under Hegseth fear being punished or fired for failing to embrace his Christian nationalist worldview.
An unnamed member of a recent Joint Chiefs chairman's leadership team articulated the constitutional threat directly: "I don't approve of cramming your religious faith down people's throats, and when the top of the chain couches these operations in this hyper-Christian tone, it flies in the face of the freedom of religion that the Constitution enshrines and that our men and women in uniform sign up to defend."
Norrrm
(5,016 posts)We have plenty of folks who want to be the Christian Ayatollah of America today.
HeartsCanHope
(1,673 posts)They had other scriptures wrong, (like not allowing a place for women among church leadership and
and their weird worship of fetuses,) but they did get this right. Revelation was an allegory, and had already happened.
This is really interesting, and reinforces what I was taught. I'm more of an agnostic than atheist, I suppose, today.
My parents' church's other beliefs, (like the husband being the head of the house--women being under their husband's
authority,) drove me away from religion. Thanks for a very informative video, Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin!
Will keep it for future ammunition!