1. United States
  2. Pa.
  3. Letter

Military Zealotry: Stand on Separation of Church and State

To: Rep. Houlahan, Sen. McCormick, Sen. Fetterman

From: A constituent in Reading, PA

March 5

U.S. military personnel are being told the current conflict with Iran is part of “God’s divine plan,” and that the President has been “anointed by Jesus” to carry it out. Multiple reports and complaints from service members show commanders have invoked biblical prophecy and Armageddon to frame military operations, representing a profound ongoing violation of the constitutional principle separating church and state. Our military exists to defend the Constitution, not to wage wars justified by any particular religious doctrine. The United States is home to people of many faiths and no faith at all. Our armed forces reflect that diversity — a diversity and freedom our Founding Fathers enshrined into the constitution. When leaders present military actions as part of a Christian prophecy, they undermine the religious freedom of service members and erode the legitimacy of the chain of command. This is not simply inappropriate rhetoric. It’s wildly dangerous. The core issue here isn’t religion. The U.S. has always had religious politicians. The real danger is apocalyptic belief mixed with command authority. Think about the chain of command: - one officer - giving orders - to soldiers who feel they cannot refuse If that officer believes a war literally fulfills prophecy, rational restraint disappears. Compromise disappears. Nuclear escalation becomes “God’s will.” That’s not politics anymore. That’s a crusade. The founders knew this. That’s why the First Amendment built a firewall between church and state. Not because they hated religion, but because they understood something brutal about human nature: give someone divine justification and a sword, and they will use both. I implore you to investigate these reports and reaffirm that U.S. military policy and decision-making must remain firmly grounded in constitutional law and democratic oversight — not some religious zealot prophecy. The founders understood the risks of mixing religious authority with state power. That principle is not optional. It is fundamental to the survival of our democracy.

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