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The American Bible Society's 2025 State of the Bible report has revealed something extraordinary: younger Americans who consistently engage with Scripture are measurably flourishing--a word not often associated with Gen Z.
This past weekend, the village of Yelewata in Nigeria was transformed into a furnace of unspeakable horror. Over 200 Christians, including women and children, were burned alive or butchered in their beds. Entire families erased from the earth in the span of hours. There were no UN press briefings. No hashtags. No somber journalists anchoring primetime slots with "breaking news."
As war rages between Israel and Iran, many believers are asking a serious question: Is this the war prophesied in Ezekiel 38--the apocalyptic conflict known as the War of Gog and Magog?
The specter of Tehran closing or severely disrupting traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has thrown oil markets and global economies into a state of anxious uncertainty. The potential ramifications could be nothing short of catastrophic, sending oil prices soaring beyond current records and triggering shocks felt worldwide.
Like many, if not most, wars, the conflict between Israel and Iran didn't have to happen, and certainly, not in this way. That won't be the way the international media, as well as liberal legacy news outlets in the United States, report it. The same sources that have been demonizing Jerusalem's efforts to eradicate the Hamas terrorists who launched the Gaza war with unspeakable atrocities on Oct. 7, 2023, will put all the blame on Netanyahu and the Israelis.
For many around the world, the Iran-Israel relationship is defined by decades of hostility, threats, and war. Yet, it wasn't always this way. Before the Islamic Revolution of 1979, Iran was a modern, thriving nation with complex but cooperative ties to Israel.
In the span of just a few days, the Islamic Republic of Iran has seen its military prowess shattered, its defenses overwhelmed, and its strategic options narrowed to a thin, dangerous edge. So what does Iran have left? Very little--and none of it good.
In an extraordinary demonstration of intelligence prowess and military precision, Israel launched a stunning, covert attack deep inside Iran's territory that has stunned the world and reshaped the strategic calculus in the Middle East. This operation, executed with a level of sophistication rarely seen in modern warfare, has been hailed by defense experts as a watershed moment -- a brilliant convergence of espionage, technology, and battlefield strategy.
As Israel wages a fierce and targeted campaign against Iran, waves of airstrikes shaking the region, an unexpected front has opened--not in the Middle East, but within the American conservative movement. For those who support Israel both biblically and strategically, the moment is clarifying-and troubling.
When Iran launched its barrage of missiles and drones in retaliation toward Israel, it was expecting that its regional network--the so‑called "Axis of Resistance"--would erupt in synchronized retaliation. But Israel remains largely unchallenged from these allies, save for a lone Houthi missile. Where are Hezbollah, Hamas, and Iran‑aligned militias in Iraq and Syria?
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