Because thou hast rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me: seeing thou hast forgotten the law of thy God, I will also forget thy children. Hosea 4:6 KJVThis verse of the Word is more relevant than ever. Today we can see how, even within political halls, the name of Jesus is invoked, and the slogan "One nation under God" is used. We also see how ordinary people, tired of the depravation and indolence of the world, claim to want a revival that awakens consciences and heals the nation. From a superficial point of view, this entire pursuit is noble and desirable; however, this whole "awakening" and the sudden desire to Christianize the nation hides something darker.
It is no coincidence that Christianity has been so marginalized for years and that, despite the gradual breakdown of moral values over the decades, the increase in crime, and immigration disorder have received little to no reaction from the powers that are supposed to maintain order.
Although to the untrained eye the phrase "conspiracy theory" might jump out as the correct idea, the truth is that all the moral corruption we have witnessed was carefully planned in order to establish, with civil support, a state apparently under God, but which in reality will be a state opposed to Him, whose main objective will be to persecute and eradicate those who truly desire to serve the God of the Bible.
Today, the wave of Christianity is stronger than in previous years. Furthermore, the separation of church and state, which is essential to maintaining liberty of conscience in the nation, is being questioned at a legal level—and all of this under the pretext that we have reached a moral breaking point (which is true, but only because it was designed that way). Under this pretext, there is a push to legislate religion, and if history has taught us anything, it is that when this occurs, there will be persecution, injustices disguised as holiness, and death.
The saddest part is that the majority of professed Christians are so disconnected from their history as Protestants that they cannot see that the entity causing all this turmoil is the very same one because of which the Protestant Reformation was born in the first place. It is enough to do a little research, and we will come to know that a large number of politicians, legislators, judges, members of the presidential cabinet, influencers, thinkers, journalists, and business owners are Catholic. All of these are placing a strong emphasis on the need to unite church and state, to tear down the "wall of separation" so that the nation may prosper and immorality may disappear—but the objective is, in reality, to reactivate the once absolute papal supremacy.
It is completely reasonable to reach this conclusion even through mere observation if we notice how prominent Protestant pastors and thinkers are so comfortably surrounded by Catholic priests and thinkers. How the former cast aside the doctrines that separated them from Rome for the sake of unity, and yet, the latter does not renounce any of its doctrines, no matter how blasphemous they may be.
A certain "Protestant" philosopher identified erecting a statue of Buddha as idolatry, but was unable to identify venerating, praying to, and kissing a statue of Mary or any other of the saints as idolatry. In a situation like this, one can only come to two possible conclusions: the vast majority of influential figures within Protestantism are totally ignorant of the Bible they claim to preach and of history, or they are Romanists in disguise with the sole intention of misdirecting as many souls as possible from the true Way.
Whichever it may be, one thing is certain: the separation between church and state will eventually fall. A theocracy will be the new form of government. Ancient religious laws that defy individual conscience and the commandments of God (the true ones) will be enforced. Those who today claim to be Christians and desire a holy and moral nation, tomorrow will accuse and persecute those they previously called brothers, thinking they are doing the work of God—and all of this will come to pass just as the Bible has predicted. But Jesus of Nazareth tells us: "be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world," and if He overcame, in Him we are more than conquerors.