Peacemakers, Patriots, and the Sword: How Christians Lost Their Theology of War

Podcast Episode

Peacemakers, Patriots, and the Sword: How Christians Lost Their Theology of War

November 24, 2025 · 7:21

0:00 7:21

Episode Description

Christians once refused to kill. The early Church, including the Council of Nicaea, demanded that soldiers lay down their swords after baptism. Augustine allowed war only as a tragic act of love. Luther insisted that Christians may fight only in truly just wars—and only according to conscience, not blind obedience to the state.


So how did we get from “Blessed are the peacemakers” to treating military service as a Christian duty for every citizen?


In this episode, we explore:


Why early Christians forbade military service


How Luther’s two kingdoms prohibit blind obedience to government


How modern patriotism rewrote Romans 13


Why the Bible celebrates peacemakers, not national warriors



This isn’t a call to pacifism—it’s a call to repentance. Before we salute soldiers, we must bow to Christ, the Prince of Peace, who conquered not by killing enemies but by dying for them.