The new realities
This may be the end of an era, as it was for Augustine when Rome fell; or for the wartime generation enduring the terror of German nationalism. But this is not yet the end.
10 MARCH 2025 · 10:04 CET

In twenty-four years of writing Weekly Word, this week’s column is for me the saddest. The events of the past days and weeks are forcing us to face new realities.
The America with which all post-war generations have grown up – symbolised by the Statue of Liberty welcoming the world’s ‘tired, poor, homeless, huddled masses yearning to breathe free’ – departed.
Friend and foe alike have been perplexed by the undisguised admiration of the new Oval Office incumbent for the Russian dictator
The America that recently voted with Russia, Belarus, North Korea and 15 other autocratic countries in the United Nations has turned her back on her historical identity.
How did this betrayal of Western allegiances and values happen?
Friend and foe alike have been perplexed by the undisguised admiration of the new Oval Office incumbent for the Russian dictator. Rumours of his recruitment by the KGB in 1987 would explain much, if true. However, American-Polish historian and author Anne Applebaum offered a credible explanation of the new administration’s direction last year in her latest book, Autocrats Inc. No one should be surprised, she wrote. This was both predictable and predicted.
‘Might is right’
Subtitled, The dictators who want to run the world, her book argues that despite different historical roots, goals and ideologies, modern autocrats are bound together by a ruthless, single-minded determination to preserve their personal wealth and power.
American-Polish historian Anne Applebaum offered a credible explanation of the new administration’s direction last year in her latest book, Autocrats Inc. No one should be surprised, she wrote.
American allies, she warned last year, especially in Europe, needed to face up to this new reality and make some dramatic changes.
Her analysis aligns with the ideas Russian influencer Alexander Dugin has been peddling for years: that the unipolar world of 'Pax Americana' has to give way to a multipolar world in which the imperial powers of Great America, Great Russia, Great China and Great India carve up the globe into various realms of hegemony.
The election of this administration was enabled by millions of well-meaning but misled evangelical voters who believed election promises about restoring Christian values in society
Putin has relentlessly pushed his theory of Russkiy Mir, the re-establishment of the Russian empire roughly corresponding to the former Soviet Union. For which Ukraine is an annoying obstacle.
The American president’s aim to ‘make America great again’ includes openly imperialist ambitions for expansion into Canada, Greenland, Panama, even Gaza.
So why should not Russia claim Ukraine, and China Taiwan? Washington is sending very clear and dangerous signals.
Heavy heart
My heart is heavy as I write this, for yet another reason. (How I wish I was wrong!)
The election of this administration was enabled by millions of well-meaning but, in my view, misled evangelical voters who believed election promises about restoring Christian values in society and re-establishing conservative standards concerning marriage, abortion and gender issues.
A further layer of this tragedy is that many of my fellow believers have been swept up in a movement distorting the teaching of Loren Cunningham, YWAM’s founder
Yet a further layer of this tragedy is that many of my fellow believers have been swept up in a movement distorting the teaching of Loren Cunningham, YWAM’s founder, whom I knew for 57 years.
The so-called Seven Mountains Movement distorts Loren’s teaching on lifespheres into a power-grabbing, take-back-control strategy, as I’ve written about elsewhere.
A word of hope
Yet whatever the future brings, in America, Europe, Ukraine or elsewhere, God is still sovereign. This may be the end of an era, as it was for Augustine when Rome fell; or for the wartime generation enduring the terror of German nationalism. But this is not yet the end.
But this is not yet the end
We all know the sequel, as depicted on the centuries-old Amsterdam gable stone shown above in the picture.
May the Ukrainian people who feel bewildered and betrayed by their strongest erstwhile ally experience the presence and protection of God in this Lenten season when we contemplate the betrayed Christ’s suffering… before God turned disaster into victory, death into resurrection.
Jeff Fountain, Director of the Schuman Centre for European Studies. This article was first published on the author's blog, Weekly Word.
Published in: Evangelical Focus - Window on Europe - The new realities