The Trump administration convened nearly two dozen evangelical leaders for private counsel in the wake of its strikes on Iran, according to an investigation by The Intercept. The reporting, based on internal communications and interviews with participants, details how a network of religious advisers — led by Paula White-Cain — interprets the conflict not as a geopolitical confrontation but as a fulfilment of biblical prophecy leading to Armageddon. The question is not whether these advisers hold sincere theological convictions. It is whether the institutional architecture they occupy — spanning the White House, the Pentagon, and the military chaplain corps — has begun to shape the boundaries of what counts as acceptable policy.

The theological framework inside the advisory structure
The advisers operate within what theologians call the dispensationalist tradition — a strain of evangelical theology that reads global events as markers on a prophetic timeline. According to The Intercept’s reporting, White-Cain discussed prophetic interpretations of Middle Eastern events directly with Israeli leaders, framing the Iran strikes within a biblical narrative of divine inevitability.
The Intercept further reports that White-Cain has framed support for Trump in spiritual terms, suggesting that opposing him equates to opposing divine will — a formulation that collapses the distance between political loyalty and religious obedience.
Other figures in Trump’s spiritual circle have adopted similar framing. The Intercept identifies California megachurch pastor Greg Laurie as telling his audience that current events align with end-times theology. Alabama pastor Travis Johnson, who moves in the same advisory circles according to the investigation, has characterized Islam in military conquest terms. What binds this network is not just shared belief but shared access: these are not fringe voices shouting from the margins but advisers with direct lines into the executive branch.
The Pentagon’s Christian turn
The theological current extends beyond the White House — and this is where institutional power becomes concrete. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has drawn sustained scrutiny for embedding evangelical symbolism into military culture. According to PBS reporting, he hosts monthly Christian worship services at the Pentagon and has displayed Bible verses in department promotional materials. He bears tattoos of the Jerusalem Cross and the phrase “Deus Vult” — “God wills it” — a Crusader rallying cry.
More consequentially, Hegseth has used militaristic religious language in Pentagon settings, framing military action in spiritual terms, according to PBS and Guardian reporting. His 2020 book framed America’s cultural conflicts in explicitly civilizational and religious terms, and his department has moved to reshape the military chaplain corps along more overtly Christian lines — a structural change that affects how service members across every branch receive spiritual counsel and, by extension, how they understand the moral dimensions of the wars they fight.
The policy footprint is becoming visible. The chaplain corps restructuring has redirected institutional resources toward evangelical programming. Hegseth’s Pentagon has expanded faith-based briefing sessions that, according to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, blur the line between morale support and theological endorsement of military operations. And the administration’s rhetorical framing of the Iran conflict — consistently cast in civilizational rather than strategic terms — has narrowed the political space for diplomatic off-ramps. When war is framed as prophecy, de-escalation becomes not just strategically difficult but spiritually suspect.
Institutional concern and contested claims
The Associated Press reports that 30 Democratic members of Congress have asked the Pentagon inspector general to investigate claims — which the AP has not independently verified — that U.S. military commanders told troops the Iran war fulfilled biblical prophecy. The allegations stem from the Military Religious Freedom Foundation. Three major religion watchdog groups told the AP they had not received similar complaints.
The contested nature of these specific allegations matters. But so does the structural context that makes them plausible. What is verifiable is the alignment of institutional power: a defence secretary who frames conflict in religious terms, a spiritual advisory network that interprets war as prophetic necessity, and a president who has used religious appeals when urging lawmakers to support military action.
Why the institutional structure matters
The significance lies less in any individual adviser’s beliefs than in the institutional incentives at work. Religious certainty, when fused with military authority, transforms conflicts from negotiable disputes into existential ones. As Georgetown visiting scholar Matthew D. Taylor told The Intercept, a scenario in which the U.S. goes to war against a Muslim country while military leadership frames conflict in explicitly religious terms represents exactly the convergence that scholars of Christian nationalism have long warned about.
The danger is not that Pentagon officials privately pray — it is that theological frameworks are being institutionalized in ways that constrain policy options. When the chaplain corps is reshaped to favor a single tradition, when military briefings incorporate prophetic language, when the president’s closest spiritual advisers describe de-escalation as defiance of God’s plan, the architecture of decision-making shifts. Diplomatic alternatives do not get formally rejected — they simply stop being generated. For allies and adversaries tracking American decision-making, the operative question is no longer whether theology is decorating policy or directing it. It is whether anyone inside the system retains the institutional standing to propose alternatives that fall outside the prophetic frame — and whether those proposals, if they exist, can survive the political costs of appearing to oppose divine will.

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