The clash is brutal. A defiant president, a furious pope, and Republican leaders invoking God to defend war in Iran. Words like ājust warā and āterrorismā now carry the weight of life, death, and faith itself. As Navy ships choke the Strait of Hormuz and Truth Social erupts, one question rips through churches and capitols ali⦅
Republican leaders have rushed to frame Trumpās Iran campaign as not only strategically necessary, but morally righteous. McConnell casts Tehran as a blood-soaked enemy diminished at last, while Johnson leans on centuries-old Christian just war doctrine to argue that military force can be an instrument of mercy, sparing āmillions of innocent peopleā from terror. In their telling, this isnāt aggression; itās reluctant justice.
Pope Leo XIV, however, draws a hard line at the altar. By warning that Christ ādoes not listen to the prayers of those who wage war,ā he challenges the very theological scaffolding Johnson and Vance rely on. Trumpās furious counterattacks, and the Navyās blockade of Iranian ports, only sharpen the divide. What began as a geopolitical confrontation has become a spiritual referendum: whether faith should bless the missiles, or stand in their way.