Weren't We Supposed to Fear the Warrior King for This — Not Lord Business?
“Would you also destroy the righteous with the wicked?
“Would you also destroy the righteous with the wicked? … Far be it from You to do such a thing as this, to slay the righteous with the wicked… Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?” — Genesis 18:23–25
For two thousand years, Christian political imagination has carried a particular warning about power. The warning was not subtle. It appeared in sermons, in medieval chronicles, in Protestant pamphlets, in Puritan jeremiads, in American revival preaching. The danger was the warrior king — the ruler who loved glory more than justice, conquest more than mercy, whose armies burned cities and called it victory.
The fear had a theological shape. Kings, Christians were told, would answer to God for the innocent blood they shed. Augustine warned that empires could become “great robberies.” The prophets spoke of rulers who built their houses with injustice and their chambers with wrong. The Book of Revelation pictured kings drunk on the blood of the saints.
















