More than 100 US service members have reportedly filed complaints claiming that some military commanders are framing the escalating conflict with Iran as part of a biblical prophecy — specifically, a divine setup for Armageddon.
According to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation — a nonprofit that advocates for the constitutional rights of service members — the calls started pouring in shortly after US and Israeli forces began bombing Iran days ago. That was first according to the reporting of independent journalist Jon Larsen, and later backed up by a further jaw-dropping investigation this week from the Huffington Post.
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Mikey Weinstein, the MRFF’s founder and president, said reaction to the Iran invasion from certain commanders was not solemn or measured — but celebratory. He explained:
“We started getting calls in the wee hours of Saturday morning from people saying their commanders were just jubilant about this and trying to tell people, ‘Don’t worry, it’s all part of God’s plan.’”
Let that sink in.
Weinstein said the language being invoked goes far beyond personal faith. He pointed to graphic imagery from the Book of Revelation to explain:
“They are promised a 200-mile-long river that is four-and-a-half feet deep filled with nothing but the blood that their weaponized version of Jesus will spill at the Battle of Armageddon. That’s a lot of blood.”
Apocalyptic. Violent. And for troops trained to follow orders without hesitation, it creates a chilling dynamic. Because when faith crosses into command authority, pushing back is not simple. Weinstein said:
“This is all about time, place and manner. If you’re being proselytized to by your superior, you can’t say, ‘Get out of my face.’ Under the military’s criminal code of justice, insubordination is considered a felony.”
One complaint obtained first by Larsen reportedly came from a non-commissioned officer awaiting deployment. He filed on behalf of himself and 15 others from different religious backgrounds. In it, the soldier claims a commander instructed him to reassure fellow troops that the war in Iran was:
“…All part of God’s divine plan.”
WTF.
The commander allegedly cited Revelation and spoke of Armageddon and the imminent return of Jesus Christ. And it didn’t stop there. According to Larsen’s read of the complaint, the commander said this about President Donald Trump:
“[Trump] has been anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth.”
The officer described the delivery in terms that are hard to ignore:
“[The commander] had a big grin on his face when he said all of this which made his message seem even more crazy.”
For the troops involved, this is not a theological debate. It is about morale, cohesion, and the Constitution they swore to defend. The solider wrote in his filing:
“I and my fellow troops know that it is completely wrong to have to suffer through what our commander said today. It’s not just the separation of church and state … It’s the fact that our commander feels as though he is fully supported and justified by the entire [combat unit’s name withheld] chain of command to inflict his Armageddon views of our attack on Iran on those of us beneath him in the chain of command.”
As for Weinstein, he also said some troops were invited to Bible studies at commanders’ homes to “discuss how this was all part of the plan and it’s all being lived out in the Book of Revelation and Christian eschatology.”
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Weinstein also warned that filing formal complaints can come at a steep personal cost:
“Then you completely out yourself. And when you do that in the military, you become what we call a ‘tarantula on a wedding cake.’ How long do you think that cake lasts at that wedding?”
Weinstein acknowledged that many military chaplains are Christian, and that alone is not the issue. Instead, he explained that it’s the Christian Nationalism part of things that is particularly damning:
“By itself, that’s fine. But if you are a Christian Nationalist, you don’t pay any attention to the time, place or manner … with any sort of religious extremism, we end up not with little streams, or creeks or brooks, but with oceans and oceans of blood.”
This isn’t about mocking belief. It’s about the razor-thin line between personal faith and official military doctrine. When war is framed not as policy or strategy but as prophecy, the implications are enormous — and horrifying.
And for the young men and women in uniform (of every religion and no religion!) the fear is not just about what lies ahead overseas. It’s about what is happening within their own chain of command.
Just awful…
[Image via MEGA/WENN]














