Reading the recent threats issued on Truth Social by President Trump on Easter Sunday, and his public statements on Easter Monday, threats to completely destroy Iran by Easter Tuesday, to blow up bridges, to dismantle power plants, if the Strait of Hormuz is not opened by Iran, were not only disturbing; they were heartbreaking. It forces one to ask, with a heavy conscience: how did America and the rest of the world arrive at such a perilous moral moment, where the language of annihilation is normalized and even baptized using Christian categories and language as a strategy? President Trump’s threats are not a sign of strength. Rather, it shows some sign of desperation, impatience, incohesion that has characterized his justification of this war from the beginning of this unfortunate war, and a lack of any prudence or sound judgment. This is a dangerous abandonment of the ethical restraints that govern the conduct of war and preserve our common humanity and could constitute a war crime and a violation of the U.S military’s rules of engagement.
“When the language of power abandons justice, it becomes recklessness dressed as authority”
We may call it negotiation. We may call it deterrence. But when the language of power abandons the discipline of justice, it becomes recklessness dressed in the garments of authority. It becomes, in truth, a grave moral failure. What we are witnessing today is deeply troubling. The current war started by the United States and Israel against Iran does not, in my judgment, meet the conditions of a just war and is thus an unjust war. It lacks moral clarity, proportionality, and credible evidence of imminent threat. Preventive war, dressed up as necessity, remains ethically indefensible in international law. It is even more ethically flawed when it is driven by fear, speculation, or geopolitical ambition and economic interest rather than demonstrable and imminent danger.
The unnecessary loss of innocent lives cannot be reduced to a strategy or collateral damage, particularly since this is an unjust war. The life of an American soldier is as sacred as the life of an Iranian child. The tears of a Palestinian mother, the grief of an Israeli father, the anguish of a Lebanese family, these are not inevitable collateral realities. They are the very measure by which history will judge us. And what shall we say about the systematic destruction of civilian infrastructure? Of universities, hospitals, power systems, and bridges reduced to rubble? What shall we say of targeted assassinations that erode every moral boundary? These are not signs of justice or strength but acts of cowardice driven by fear. These are wounds inflicted upon the fragile body of our shared humanity.
“The Cross reveals sacrificial love, not domination; the Resurrection proclaims life, not destruction.”
One day, a future generation, perhaps wiser, perhaps more humane, will look back upon this moment in 2026 and ask: how did reasonable people remain silent while an architecture of violence was constructed before their very eyes? How did nations, endowed with reason and conscience, allow themselves to be carried by the winds of fear, power, and vengeance? They will ask how leaders, intoxicated by power, mistook domination for security, and destruction for peace.
As a Christian leader, I must speak with prophetic clarity and humility. The Gospel does not bless war. It does not sanctify vengeance. It does not anoint the language of annihilation. As Pope Leo XIV reminded the Church on Palm Sunday, “God does not walk with those who sow death, but with those who build peace with patient hands.” And again, he teaches us: “The Church has no enemies to destroy, only brothers and sisters to embrace.” This message has landed on deaf ears and hardened hearts because the dramatis personae in this ongoing conflagration have a different agenda, which sadly they have not articulated, particularly Trump. I guess for President Netanyahu, it will serve his political interest and desire for a Greater Israel if Iran becomes a failed state and is reduced to rubble by the U.S., repeating what Israel did in Gaza, and then setting up a Board of Peace after the destruction. Let’s pray that this does not happen.
This is the scandal of our time that the name of God is invoked in the service of violence, that the Cross of Christ is misappropriated to justify the machinery of war. To compare acts of military power to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as the U.S. Defense secretary does repeatedly is not only theologically misguided but a form of idolatry; it is a profound distortion of the Christian mystery. The Cross reveals sacrificial love, not domination. The Resurrection proclaims life, not destruction.
As Christians, we must reclaim the robe of righteousness from those who would stain it with the language of war. We must remind the world that Christianity stands on the side of life, dignity, justice, dialogue, and peace. The God of life and the God of Jesus Christ, who came to give us life in abundance, is not the patron of war and vengeful people or nations, but the source of reconciliation.
Therefore, the world must not remain silent. Conscience must awaken. Religious leaders, especially those who claim proximity to power, must speak truth, not flattery, as was the case last week when the Religious Freedom Committee met with President Trump at the White House. They must preach restraint, not aggression; humility, not hubris; dialogue, not destruction. They must call leaders to conversion, not reinforce their illusions of invincibility and the superpower syndrome, which largely drives the President. May we be reminded that peace is not weakness. Peace is the highest expression of moral courage and the greatest longing of human beings. Dialogue is not futile; it is the best expression of our human capacity to reason together and walk towards the promotion of our common good.
“Peace is not weakness; it is the highest expression of moral courage.”
And so we pray.
We pray that the fever of war will break.
We pray that the language of threats will give way to the discipline of dialogue.
We pray that vengeance will surrender to conversion, and that enemies will rediscover one another as members of a single human family.
May the grace of the Resurrection heal our wounded world.
May it restore to us the wisdom to choose life over death.
May it remind us that every act of violence is a defeat of humanity and a wound in the heart of God.
And as we marvel at the wonders of human ingenuity seen even in the current mission of Artemis II, may we remember that the human mind, created in the image of God, is not destined for destruction, but for creation, for healing, and for the flourishing of all. We can use our innovative minds to advance human good and a civilization of love.
Let us choose that path.