“Peace” With Iran May Have Opened Door to Ezekiel 38
Trump is outside of reality if he believes that Iran is going to scream, “death to America!”, for 47 years and suddenly forgive Trump for killing all their leaders and forcing them to sign a “peace deal”.
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President Donald Trump has long been regarded as one of the strongest supporters of Israel ever to occupy the White House.
His recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital, the relocation of the U.S. embassy, recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, and support during some of Israel's most challenging moments earned him widespread admiration among Israelis and evangelical Christians alike.
That is why many Christian supporters of Israel were surprised by a series of recent comments regarding Israel's war against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Speaking about the conflict, Trump criticized Israel's military operations, saying that "Israel is fighting Hezbollah too long, and too many people are being killed."
He went on to suggest that Israel's approach was excessive, stating, "You don't have to knock down an apartment house every time you're looking for somebody. There are a lot of people in those apartment houses and they're not all Hezbollah."
Trump also revealed that he had privately expressed dissatisfaction with Israeli strikes in Beirut.
"I did not like that, I let them know that," he said, referring to one attack that he described as "too much."
Perhaps most surprising was his suggestion that Syria could potentially deal with Hezbollah more effectively.
"I suggested to Israel to let Syria take care of Hezbollah," Trump said. "If Israel can't do the job without killing everyone else, he'll do the job, Syria will do the job."
He further stated that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "has to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon" and added, "I'm not happy with the way Israel has handled themselves with Lebanon, and with Hezbollah."
Yet it was another remark that generated perhaps the most concern among many evangelical supporters of Israel.
"Israel would have been blown up a long time ago, had I not gotten involved," Trump declared. Elsewhere he stated, "Without me, there would be no Israel."
To be fair, there is a practical truth behind some of these comments.
The United States has been Israel's most important ally for decades. American military aid, intelligence cooperation, diplomatic support, and strategic deterrence have undoubtedly strengthened Israel's ability to defend itself.
President Trump's own policies also contributed significantly to Israel's security position in the region.
But there is a vast difference between acknowledging America's importance and suggesting that Israel's existence depends upon any single political leader.
For Christians who understand God's covenant relationship with Israel, that distinction matters.
Israel's survival did not begin with Donald Trump.
Nor did it begin with America.
Israel survived Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome, the Islamic caliphates, the Crusades, centuries of exile, the Holocaust, and repeated attempts by neighboring nations to destroy it.
Why?
Because Scripture presents Israel's preservation as an act of divine faithfulness rather than geopolitical luck.
God has often used nations and leaders as instruments of protection. America may very well be one of those instruments.
But instruments are not the source.
God is.
That is why statements suggesting that Israel would not exist without a particular leader make many Christians uncomfortable. They unintentionally place human accomplishment in a position Scripture reserves for God alone.
Beyond the theological concerns lies a practical one.
Trump's comments regarding Lebanon reflect a growing frustration within portions of the American political establishment regarding Israel's military campaign against Hezbollah.
Yet critics often ignore a reality that Israeli military planners have dealt with for decades.
Hezbollah intentionally embeds itself among civilians.
Its weapons are hidden in neighborhoods.
Its fighters operate near schools.
Its command infrastructure is woven into apartment complexes, mosques, hospitals, and civilian districts.
This is not an accident. It is a deliberate military strategy.
When Israel strikes these targets, international headlines frequently focus on the destruction while paying less attention to why those military assets were located there in the first place.
The uncomfortable reality is that Hezbollah benefits from civilian casualties because they increase diplomatic pressure on Israel.
Israel did not place rockets in apartment buildings.
Israel did not establish missile depots beside schools.
Israel did not choose to use civilians as shields.
Hezbollah did.
And history has repeatedly demonstrated what happens when these networks are left intact.
They rebuild.
They rearm.
And eventually they attack again.
The suggestion that Syria could somehow replace Israel as the force responsible for containing Hezbollah raises additional questions.
The current Syrian leadership may present a different face than the Assad regime, but many of its leaders emerged from Islamist backgrounds deeply hostile toward Israel. Reports continue regarding pressure against Druze communities and other minorities.
Why should Israel assume Syria's interests align with its own?
More importantly, why should anyone believe Syria would be more committed to dismantling Hezbollah than Israel itself?
What may be emerging is a reality that Bible students have anticipated for decades.
America still supports Israel.
But America's interests are not always identical to Israel's interests.
Washington increasingly seeks stability, ceasefires, and conflict reduction.
Israel seeks survival.
Sometimes those goals overlap. Sometimes they do not.
For Christians, this moment serves as an important reminder.
Political leaders come and go. Alliances shift. Governments change.
But God's covenant promises do not.
The Bible predicts a future in which Israel becomes increasingly isolated from the nations around her. It describes a world that eventually turns against Jerusalem rather than defending it.
Whether today's developments represent part of that trend remains to be seen.
But one lesson is already clear.
Christians can appreciate political leaders who support Israel.
They can be grateful for allies.
They can celebrate wise policies.
But they should never confuse God's instrument with God's sovereignty.
Because according to Scripture, when Israel ultimately stands alone, it will not be Washington that saves her.
It will be God.

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