Christians Worldwide Gather to Pray for Mike Huckabee’s Sanity
- Chadwick Dolgos
- 1 minute ago
- 2 min read
Christians from every corner of the globe have come together in unified prayer sessions, all focused on one man: U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee.
The former Arkansas governor and ordained Baptist minister, known for his staunch support of Israel, sparked the movement after his recent comments suggesting that Christians bear a moral obligation to the Jewish people.
Huckabee, who just days ago met privately with convicted spy Jonathan Pollard, made the blasphemous claim during a recent interview with an Israeli television host, explaining that the debt arises because Christianity began with Judaism and because Jesus himself was Jewish.
The statement has left many evangelicals staring at their Bibles in confusion, wondering if they accidentally purchased the extended Talmudic edition.
Pastor John MacArthur of St. Wick Community Church in California told reporters that the situation is serious.
“Mike has always been rock-solid on the essentials, so when he started talking about Christians owing anybody anything except the gospel, we knew something had gone terribly wrong.”
A mother of five from rural Georgia described watching the clip with her family.
“We all just froze. My husband whispered, ‘Did he just say we owe the Jews?’ and our oldest boy answered, ‘I think Governor Mike needs Jesus.’ That’s when we knew we had to pray.”
One missionary group based in New York released a brief statement saying that field workers will resume outreach only after Huckabee publicly reaffirms that salvation comes through faith in Christ alone, not through intergenerational moral debts.
Youth pastors report an unusual surge in altar calls. One teenager in Ohio explained that his group spent an entire lock-in praying that Huckabee would return to proclaiming that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life, no matter who his earthly mother was.
Huckabee himself appeared baffled by the uproar when approached outside a Chick-fil-A in Tennessee. “I love the Jewish people,” he insisted. “They gave us the prophets, the law, and the Messiah. What’s wrong with owing my entire life to them?”
A nearby seminary student gently reminded the former governor that gratitude is fine, but suggesting Christians are spiritually indebted to anyone other than Christ borders on a different religion entirely.
Prayer vigils continue outside Huckabee’s home, at Baptist conventions, and in small house churches from Arkansas to São Paulo. Participants say they will keep interceding until the man who once hosted a show on Christian television remembers that the debt every sinner owes was paid in full on a Roman cross, not collected in Jerusalem.
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