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Monday 8 January 2024

Unjust War

 



Countries like Britain, the USA and Australia may have been the victors in World War 2, but it is clear that God is not happy with how we won those wars, because all of those societies have been handed over to an increasingly degrading and declining society since many of the soldiers who fought in those wars came home, broken. Every generation after the one they raised has become more degraded and more decadent. The end of those wars signaled the beginning of the end for Anglo-Saxon prestige and dominance in the world. And Russia to, which dealt more violence than any western nation, suffered in its own way too. 

When you read history you can spot the general periods where decline set in. For France it was during the reign of the Sun King, Louis the 14th. Louis was both the pinnacle of the monarchy in France and also the one who sowed the seeds for its destruction in the French revolutions with both his excess and his wanton, unnecessary, and often prideful violence, two things he said on his death bed that he regretted:

"On September 1, 1715, the Sun King, no longer dazzling Europe as of old, departed forever. In his last moments he seems to have realized many of his errors, and his dying words were not without grandeur. "Why weep?" he said to his domestics in tears; "do you think me immortal?" And then he commanded that his little great-grandson, the boy about to become Louis XV, should be brought to the bedside. "You are soon to be King of a great realm," spoke the dying monarch. "What I commend most earnestly to you is never to forget the obligations you owe to God. Remember that to Him you owe all that you are. Try to keep peace with your neighbors. I have been too fond of war: do not imitate me in that, or in my too great expenditure."[1]

When future historians write about when the West began to decline they will likely pinpoint the world wars where the excesses of colonialism (imperialism) and war broke our western nations thoroughly. Both those wars were a direct result of the imperial pretensions of the major European powers and their belief they should each be the dominant power in Europe and the World. We have advanced somewhat technologically since then, but the West has declined in many other ways consistently since the end of the second world war.

Historically speaking, no civilization unleashes that level of violence on the world, without God in turn punishing it within a few generations with serious consequences. The same will be true of future civilisations as well. The same will be true for Israel if they continue with their leveling of Gaza. And America if keeps up its wars. And Russia if it goes too far in it wars. America might have beat Germany in the war, but America and her allies have lost the battle for civilisation and are in a fast retreat and decline, because God does not smile on violent nations, even ones who begin with the intent to respond to attacks. He demands restraint from the powerful. 

Nations which sow violence will always end up facing the judgment of God.

Habakkuk 2:8, "Because you have plundered many nations, all the remnant of the peoples shall plunder you, for the blood of man and violence to the earth, to cities and all who dwell in them."

Whenever a nation rises to prominence over other nations the same test is always before it: how will it steward its power? Most societies fail the test. And the nations dealing violence today always have it returned eventually. This is one of the reasons why I always advocate against any war that is not for defending one's own borders, and even in that case the war should be limited and just.

We'd be wise to heed those final words of the Sun King to his heir:

"What I commend most earnestly to you is never to forget the obligations you owe to God. Remember that to Him you owe all that you are. Try to keep peace with your neighbors. I have been too fond of war: do not imitate me in that, or in my too great expenditure." 

The Sun King came to this reflection too late for himself and his nation, he set in on a trajectory of destruction, but his example is there for us to learn from.

List of References


[1] Davis, William Stearns. A History of France from the Earliest Times to the Treaty of Versailles (pp. 169-170). Lecturable. Kindle Edition.


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