WATCH: Netanyahu Says “Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan”
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WATCH: Netanyahu Says “Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan”

Wow, this is a bit troubling! I do think there’s some context here that I will break down for you, but first watch this clip: Are Christian’s ok with this? Netanyahu: "Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan. Because if you are strong enough, ruthless enough, powerful enough, evil will overcome good." He basically said Jesus Christ is no match for weapons of war…https://t.co/VTzxcSpyxl https://t.co/YtyVOwkEoH pic.twitter.com/ppZDGFcBU7 — MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) March 19, 2026 So that does not sound good at all on it’s face…. Anyone who has that world view would seem to raise red flags as a leader. But, I also said there is context here, so let me give that to you. Here is some detail on the book he referenced, it’s authors, and the specific quote: The Lessons of History Authors: Will and Ariel Durant Publication Year: 1968 Overview It is a short book (typically listed at 119–128 pages total, with the main text around 100–102 pages) that condenses insights from their 11-volume The Story of Civilization series. Key Content and Context Yes, the book contains a passage very close to what you described (often paraphrased online as “Jesus Christ is no match for Genghis Khan” or “Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan”). The exact wording is: “Nature and history do not agree with our conceptions of good and bad; they define good as that which survives, and bad as that which goes under; and the universe has no prejudice in favor of Christ as against Genghis Khan.” This appears in the context of discussing how history and nature operate on survival and power rather than moral ideals—i.e., conquerors and force often “win” in raw historical terms over figures embodying gentleness or ethics. The book uses this to illustrate one of its broader “lessons”: morality and survival are not the same thing in the long arc of history. The paraphrase you mentioned is a common (and fair) summary of that idea, and it has been referenced that way in recent discussions. So that’s the book and the context. And the lesson from the quote, at least in the interpretation Netanyahu seems to have of it, is that the world does not reward peace.  The world only rewards and recognizes brutal force.  Overwhelming brutal force.  That’s it.  Survival of the fittest.   King of the Hill.  Zero sum game. And I have to say partially he’s right.  At least this side of Heaven.  There is that very tough reality to our world. I will also say that if the United States were attacked at the levels and volumes that Israel has been attacked over the years and decades, I think the United States would respond with far-greater force than Israel has used recently. So there’s nuance to the whole situation, but on it’s face that’s not a great quote and time & place is also not good at all.