MaddowBlog-'God deserves all the glory': Hegseth sparks controversy with faith-based message [View all]
When the rhetoric from Iranian theocrats and the Pentagon is effectively indistinguishable, the Defense Department is probably on the wrong track.
When wartime rhetoric from Iranâs theocratic officials and Pentagon officials is effectively indistinguishable, itâs a reminder:
The U.S. administration is on the wrong track.
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-04-09T13:06:50.282Z
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/hegseth-iran-war-religion-pentagon
On Monday, the day before the tenuous ceasefire was announced, Donald Trump not only insisted that God supports U.S. actions in Iran, but he said he was in a position to convey Gods wishes to the public. Around the same time, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth explicitly likened the rescue of a missing American airman shot down over Iran to the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The day after the ceasefire was announced, we heard more of the same. MS NOW reported as part of the networks liveblog coverage:
Hegseth invoked God throughout [his Pentagon press conference], again tying his Christian faith to U.S. military endeavors.
Referring to the war with Iran, Hegseth said, Our troops, our American warriors, deserve the credit for this day, but God deserves all the glory.
The beleaguered Pentagon chief went on to say U.S. service members have carried out their duties under the protection of divine providence, adding that combat operations have enjoyed miraculous protection.
Hegseth: "God deserves all the glory. Tens of thousands of sorties, refuelings, and strikes, carried out under the protection of divine providence. A massive effort with miraculous protection."
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2026-04-08T12:16:23.442Z
Its a free country, and the defense secretarys personal religious beliefs are no ones business but his own. That said, there is a broader political and governmental significance to this.
First, as world history has shown over the course of generations,
when leaders assume that they enjoy divine support for their military ambitions, it rarely goes well.
Second,
when the rhetoric from Irans theocratic officials and Pentagon officials is effectively indistinguishable, its a reminder that the Defense Department is probably on the wrong track.
And finally,
its striking to see the extent to which the Republican administrations religious posturing has faced unusual pushback from some of the most prominent figures in the global faith community....
Pope Leo XIV recently chastised those who invoke God as supportive of military might, saying in a homily on Palm Sunday, Brothers and sisters,
this is our God: Jesus, King of Peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war. He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.
This week, after Trump issued a genocidal public threat, saying he was prepared to kill
a whole civilization, the pope seemed to suggest that Americans should contact members of Congress as part of a political pushback campaign....
In other words, Team Trump, which has spent months clashing with the faith community, is adding a new front to the culture war, even as it fights a literal hot war against theocrats in the Middle East. Watch this space.