Pope Leo Tells the White House: God Does Not Bless Wars. The White House Has Concerns.

In a move that would have seemed unremarkable in most of recorded history but feels somehow radical in 2026, the Pope said that God doesn’t bless wars. Specifically, Pope Leo wrote: “Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.” He called for peace in the Middle East and insisted that “God does not bless any conflict.”

The White House, whose Secretary of Defense has been crediting divine providence with Iran war victories and quoting Psalms at press briefings, has not formally replied to the Pope’s theological position. This is not because they agree. CNN ran a piece on “the GOP’s double standard on the pope.” Analysis pieces appeared. Things were tense.

It is worth noting, for the record, that the leader of the Catholic Church — an institution with a complicated personal history on the subject of wars it has blessed — looked at the current situation and said, in so many words, “No. Stop. God is not doing this.” This constitutes, in the GCJ editorial view, an act of rational thought, however relative that designation has become.

The struggle between sacred and secular power is, as scholars note, roughly a thousand years old. It’s nice to see it’s still getting the attention it deserves in what used to be the news cycle.

We did not make this up. Middle East Eye has the receipts.