The Tucker Carlson Show - Breaking News: Israel Shuts Down Christ’s Resurrection Site. Bishop Strickland & Tucker Respond.
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Bishop Joseph Strickland on Israel closing the holiest church in Christendom and the “holocaust of our time” in Gaza. (00:00) Israel's Forced Closure of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher (15:25...) What Is a Justified War (41:49) Why Bishop Strickland Defended Carrie Prejean Boller (50:28) The Response to Bishop Strickland's Statement Most Reverend Joseph E. Strickland is a Catholic bishop known for his unwavering fidelity to Jesus Christ, his defense of the Deposit of Faith, and his courageous witness to the truth in an age of confusion. Ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Dallas in 1985, he was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI in 2012 as the fourth Bishop of the Diocese of Tyler, Texas, a role he served until 2023. A lifelong shepherd devoted to the Holy Eucharist and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Bishop Strickland has consistently proclaimed the Church’s teachings on the sanctity of life, moral truth, and Eucharistic reverence. In 2025, he founded Pillars of Faith, an apostolate dedicated to strengthening Catholics in fidelity to Christ and His Church. Today, Bishop Strickland continues his apostolic mission nationally and internationally through preaching, teaching, writing, and media outreach. Paid partnerships with: Hallow prayer app: Get 3 months free at https://Hallow.com/Tucker Dose: Daily supplements for the systems that support you. Use code TUCKER for 35% at https://dosedaily.co/tucker Brooklyn Bedding: Get 30% off sitewide with promo code TUCKER at https://brooklynbedding.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bishop Strickland, thank you so much for doing this.
What do you make of the closure of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher by Israeli authorities on Palm Sunday?
Well, really, Tucker, probably some things have developed even since the last thing I saw,
but it looked like they were deciding to open it after all or whatever.
To me, really, Tucker, this comes down to a consequence of the evil.
that we see that we're witnessing.
And I think we need to pay attention to it in that context.
As we already discussed,
the large-scale destruction of civilian life is never morally justifiable by any nation,
by any entity, by, for any reason.
It's just not.
And to me, the closure of the Holy Sipoker, the holy site for us,
There's so many in the Holy Land, but the closure of that and the not allowing the procession
of Palm Sunday is a tragic consequence of just how far off the mark.
Really, the world is at this point in so many ways.
And what's going on there, we must speak calmly, lovingly, clearly that, no, we can't allow this.
And the closure to me is just one of many tragic consequences where this has to be addressed.
And we've got to keep going back to that principle that the large-scale destruction of civilian life can never be morally justified.
Amen.
And I'm glad to hear at least one religious leader in the United States say that so clearly.
I think that any believing Christian would agree with that as a foundational part of the faith.
But you're hearing just the opposite.
And I want to ask you for that in just a minute.
But you don't seem like you believe that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre was closed for, quote, safety reasons.
Well, I really don't know, Tucker.
And maybe for some making those decisions, that's the reason.
But why would it be judged to be a place that is unsafe because of this chaos that surrounds it?
So like I said, I think it's a consequence of everything we're seeing, which is immoral and is destructive to humanity.
I mean, in very significant ways, you're a man of history, and we all need to be people of history.
And if we look at history, these days will be marked in history as a very devastating time,
similar to things that we can look back in the last 100 years, 200, 2,000 years,
that when these kind of moral aberrations begin to just take over, we need to speak up.
And I really don't know the motivation for the closure of the Holy Sepulchre.
I mean, I can surmise a lot of things.
The possible reopening or partial that I've heard about.
I don't know if even that's accurate.
That's part of I know what you're fighting and what we're all finding is so much misinformation,
so many false messages, it's really hard to know what is true.
Yes.
And that's why I think it's so important.
and I will be a broken record repeating we can never justify the large scale destruction and
devastation of civilian life as morally justifiable. We can't do that. And I think we have to
keep going back to that home base with all the chaos that we're all dealing with. I think one of
the things that we can say is that Christianity targeted or not, the court tends of
Christianity, whether on purpose or not, is often in the crosshairs. We know that, I believe,
talking to people in Jerusalem this morning, that there were no synagogues completely closed.
And we know that the Church the Holy Sepulchre was not closed during the last two world wars.
We know that the idea was to have a Catholic leader and three others in there for a live stream
service. And that was banned. So it's hard to understand how this was done for
safety reasons. And moreover, I wasn't aware that the government, the secular government of Israel,
owned the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, or by the way, the Dome of the Rock, or were any other
religious building owned by someone else in East Jerusalem? I mean, where does this authority come
from that you can just close someone else's church? Well, I don't think it is true authority,
and it is, it's, you know, basically totalitarian saying, we've got the power, we've got the bombs, we can do what we want.
And that is, again, as we look at history and we look at this moment, that is about as scary as it gets to have that attitude.
And sadly, we're seeing that attitude.
We are the ones with the power, so we are the ones calling the shots.
Forget what is moral, forget what is true, forget what has historic precedent.
I mean, I'm sure both of us, for several years now, I get tired of the word unprecedented
because we hear it all the time, but we're living in unprecedented times.
for all the more reason we need to go back to foundational pillars of life and faith.
Of course, as a Catholic bishop, Jesus Christ is that pillar that we keep returning to,
listening to him, looking at the model of his life, which flies in the face of anything violent.
And that doesn't mean that he was not addressing the terrible issues of his stuff.
I mean, you mentioned, you used the phrase in the cross hairs.
Cross is where Jesus Christ died.
And ironically, Tucker, and I'm sure it isn't lost on you,
that in my experience, as a bishop and a priest,
Holy Week is always a time where things are in the crosshairs.
And it's different issues and different situations historically.
but there's something about Holy Week that calls us back to who is Jesus Christ.
Do we believe him or not?
And if we do, we must morally be guided by his life.
We must.
It suggests that there's something else going on here, perhaps influenced by the spiritual war ongoing around us,
that Christians would be the target, since it is at its core a religious,
in that opposes violence against innocence and the destruction of innocence.
And so here, I mean, a totalitarian regime, at least as you think of it in your mind, or I do,
targets violence against its enemies.
It's, you know, the threats.
There's nothing less threatening than for Christian clergymen standing in an empty church,
live streaming the sacraments.
But they went after those guys.
So what does that, what does that tell you?
of all the enemies? Why are they in the threat? Really, really, Tucker, what it tells me is that
truth is threatening. And if you think about the drama of Holy Week, which we in the Catholic
faith are in the midst of, when Jesus Christ is before Pilate, and that is historic reality
for whatever your faith perspective, this Jesus of Nazareth stood before Pilot, the least,
leader of the Roman Empire that was stationed there in Jerusalem. And Pilate says, what is truth?
And the mob that was there, Pilate himself, everyone was threatened by this Jesus, who we know,
we believe, is truth incarnate. He is the truth. And as he's standing there,
really Tucker, I think that is what's threatening. To those who are,
are not living by the truth and humbly seeking the truth, which we all have to do. I don't claim
to have it all figured out, but I look to Christ because he is the truth. For those who are
promoting all of these things, closure of holy sites, and attack of innocent people, they are
definitely threatened by the truth, not by some propaganda, but by the real truth. They find it
threatening. And to me, that really what Cardinal Pizza Bala and the others were going to try to do
just a live stream, very small scale, really, that was threatening because it's about
proclaiming truth that really begins to cause people of good hearts, whether they have faith or not.
It causes the human instinct to say, wait a minute, what's going on? When they hear,
truth. That is disruptive, not in a violent way, but just because truth cuts through it all. That's what
they're afraid of. I truly believe that. So we're still in the middle of Lent, inching closer and
closer to Holy Week, the days leading up to Easter, when we are called to walk alongside Jesus
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One of the truths that seems the most threatening is that violence is not the answer.
And so that...
I'm sorry?
Well, the power of the world isn't the answer.
That is what threatens them.
And that's what they don't want to get into the hearts and minds of
just everyday people.
They don't want that word to get out there that war isn't the answer.
Sometimes it, I mean, the church, the Catholic Church has a doctrine of justifiable war,
which is pretty strict and pretty clear and probably very few wars have qualified.
And there's serious questions about this war.
I think it's pretty much unqualified.
But that's what we have to do.
keep looking at. Look at the principles. And it really, Tucker, what I would encourage your viewers
and all of us. I mean, I'm just one of the viewers in many situations. I'm a bishop who doesn't
even have a diocese anymore, but I do have an apostolic call that I take very seriously.
And I say to myself, to you, Tucker, as a good man seeking truth, and all of us who are in this,
we need to take a breath. We need to calm our hearts. And we need to send us.
simply seek the truth. I believe, and I feel compelled to proclaim to the world, we know the truth. The truth sets us free. It's Jesus Christ. And certainly, that was the threat that the Romans and the Jewish leaders wanted to get rid of. That's historic reality. They plotted to rid themselves of this truth problem. And in many ways, we see the same.
thing repeated. I mean, it gets masked in a lot of ways, but all, and I pray daily for the leaders
of the world, for every nation, for leaders who have the power and the responsibility in this
moment to go back to those basic principles. They need to take a deep breath and ask themselves,
is this true what I'm promoting, what I am doing? Is it about the truth that says,
us free. And when we ignore the truth, that is when we are the most bound by violence and evil.
And we're seeing it. It played out in our lifetime right in these moments on the TV screen,
on our phone screens, on the airwaves. We're seeing ignoring truth has consequences. And it comes
down to each of us individually. When we ignored the truth that I am a sinful man who needs to
repent and I need to seek the life that is Jesus Christ. When we try to to hide that, to ignore it,
to eliminate it, it doesn't go away. It will not be eliminated any more than killing Jesus Christ
on a cross in the first century eliminated the truth that he is. Truth will not be eliminated,
but a lot of innocence can be harmed when we think we can avoid the truth and do it our way and do it with our power.
When we go down that path, it's destructive in so many ways, even to those individuals that are doing it.
But the tragedy is to so many innocents that get lost in it that we must speak against innocent lives being just, you know,
the term is collateral damage, but that in itself says we have to be very careful about
allowing our hearts to hearten that we just use terminology for innocence dying.
Oh, they're just collateral damage.
May I ask you to go back for a second as a Protestant myself who's often heard the term
just war theory, which I think derives from Augustine, but I could be wrong.
Can you summarize that for people who aren't familiar with what it is, just in broad terms?
What's a justified war?
Well, there are four basic points that I can't claim that I can get all of them as, you know, it's pretty simple.
Most of the time, the truth is pretty simple.
But it has to be, the just war theory is based on if war, which should be avoided if at all possible, if it is to be justified.
It has to be proportionate.
It has to be, it can't be preemptive.
It really, Tucker goes back in a lot of ways to the right to self-defense.
The right to self-defense of one person, the right to self-defense of a nation.
That is really the core of the just war theory.
It has to be a real threat, not a perceived threat, not a future threat, but a real threat.
It has to be in proportion.
I mean, you know, putting it on the just person-to-person context.
I mean, somebody slaps you.
You don't shoot them.
That is not proportional.
Yes.
It has to avoid harming innocence that really have nothing to do with whatever the conflict is in any direct way.
And so those basic points are what you have to look at.
It has to have a reasonable expectation of success that this will accomplish the protection of innocence that it should be about.
Those points are what we have to keep looking at.
And like I said, there probably aren't many wars in human history that would qualify as meaning all the criteria.
some meet more than others.
But I don't know that this present conflict,
they're not even calling it a war,
and I think that tells us something.
But this present conflict,
I don't know that it qualifies on any of those points
because, yes, there were some threat there,
but was it justifiable to immediately address that threat,
which seemed to be a future threat that may have been very real.
claim to know all of that but i think the leaders are challenged to really look more deeply at that
and certainly the the idea that of protecting innocence honestly i mean and again i haven't been in
any war rooms or heard the real discussion but it it it seems and what we're seeing it's like
we can expect and we can plan for the collateral damage which
should be always stated as we can plan for innocence to die because of this action,
because that's what collateral damage really is talking about.
So that I think is a reasonable, probably not the most scholarly exposition of the just war theory,
but those are the basic points.
And again, if people say, oh, it gets so complicated, just think about defending
yourself, defending your home, defending your family. You can't go out and, you know, you have a
neighbor that's talking crazy and go and put a bomb in their front yard. I mean, that's not
proportionate. That is not reasonable. And it has to be something that is a reasonable. And I think
one of the greatest points of the just war theory is it going, is it likely to be successful?
is it likely to have an outcome that brings more peace, more protection, not just to the individuals
that you're specifically responsible for, but brings it to the world. And so I think that we've got to
honestly assess what is happening and acknowledge that no nation seems to be really, and I love the
United States. I was raised as a patriotic kid. I still believe.
in a lot of the principles, but when we lose sight of the basic principles of our founding as a
nation, or as of our faith of Christianity, or whatever our faith is, those basic principles
have to guide us, and we can't allow popular opinion or political agendas to override those basic
moral values that should be the pillars that found us, that state, that state,
stabilize everything that is shaking in the world today.
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So this morning, the president of the United States, whom I campaigned for and defended
daily for 11 years, not attacking him, but he issued a statement threatening to destroy
the civilian infrastructure of Iran, including the desalienization plants and energy grid
of Iran.
and that seems to be a threat against innocence.
I don't know any other way to read it.
How would you assess that?
Is that consistent with a just war?
No.
And as you said, Tucker, we have to acknowledge that it is, to directly do that is wrong.
Is immoral?
Going back to that basic principle I started with,
Anytime civilian life is devastated, it's not done morally.
It's not done morally.
It's not something we can just turn a blind eye and say, well, we got to do this.
The large-scale destruction of civilian lives is never morally justified.
Like I said, if I'm a broken record making that point, I believe I need to be because
the more I think about that, the more I pray about that, the more I look at what's happening,
it says, let's put a stop to this, let's pull back from this.
And I understand from what I see in the news that there are efforts of talking about some
sort of solutions, but the talk seems to always have much less focus and much less power behind it
than the bombs and the destructive forces.
I guess that is, you know, by human nature,
maybe that's somewhat natural,
that when you've got the power,
it's hard to restrain yourself from using it.
We see that played out in so many ways.
But that is where the moral values have to kick in
for the individual man or the individual nation
and the leader that is a man or a group of men and women that are leading a nation,
they need to constantly go back to those principles and asking themselves,
is this justifiable? Is this something that is moral to do?
And if it's not moral, then we should just put up a big bright red stop sign and say,
we're not going to do this because it is morally questionable, much less,
clearly immoral. And when we go down the path of saying, well, we've got to do some immoral things,
I mean, it's like the end justifies the means. I mean, some basic principles of philosophical,
logical thought that have guided nations and individuals through history. You know, if we get on a
path where we say the end justifies the means, then the means can become so,
immoral that it's just devastating for not just the individuals or the nations involved,
but for all of humanity. We've got to be very cautious about going down that path. And I'm afraid
that many of the things that we've seen have crossed that line of just saying, we believe,
yeah, this is evil. Okay, it's evil, but we've got to do it for the good end. That is very,
dangerous territory.
Also common, I think.
I mean, people, as you said, who have power tend to misuse it, an often noted phenomenon
because it's true.
What's different, at least in my lifetime, is seeing self-described Christian leaders
not only defend violence, but attack anyone who questions its use, and then use the Bible
to justify it.
So I guess what I'm saying is one of the battle.
here is over what Christianity is as a faith. And that seems to me a very important battle,
certainly a conversation. So what you're seeing some Christian leaders do is say, well,
there's violence throughout the Bible. And God justifies it, in some cases,
defends it through what the Christians call the Old Testament from beginning to end.
There's violence against innocence. So it's therefore okay. What is your response to that?
Well, Tucker, quite simply, probably not surprising, my response is Jesus Christ.
If we claim, which I do, and I do my best, I mean, I'm a sinner, I mess up all the time.
We do individually, if we're smart enough to be humble enough to acknowledge that.
We as nations and we as individuals, we get off the mark, we mess up.
But we can always repent of that and seek again to follow the truth that is Christ.
And that's the distinction that I would make.
If people are calling themselves Christians, we are of the body of Christ that is his church.
And we have to look to him.
Yes, in the Old Testament, there are many examples of destructive power.
But that is not the world that we live in.
We believe that Jesus Christ has redeemed everything.
And one of the key points of Jesus Christ, St. Paul says it very well.
We are neither Greek nor Roman.
We are not individual nations.
We are Christian.
And to use Christianity as a weapon against one part of his body to another part of his body is that's a misuse of the message.
of Jesus Christ, if we look to him, I mean, he died of a cross because he embraced that freely
as a man and as the son of God. But he was willing to do that. He was willing to personally
receive the greatest violence of destroying his body and his human life for the sake of
the peace that he brings. And if we look to Jesus Christ, we can't justify the violence that we're seeing.
You can harken back to the Old Testament. But if you believe Jesus Christ is the new covenant,
that he, I mean, he came out of that world of the Old Testament. He is of Hebrew origin. And we should embrace that.
Absolutely. That is historical reality, but he came to bring a new covenant and to bring a redemption of all of that.
And just one example of what Christ, if we look to Christ, he's often saying, yes, we used to do this.
But this is the new way that through the Father's sending me to you is being revealed.
It used to be an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
That cannot be that way with us.
He says to his disciples, and we have to really listen to that.
We may not like listening to Christ himself, but that is what we're called to, especially
if we call ourselves Christian.
That is probably, as you point out, Tucker, one of the greatest issues that we have
to face now because there are many non-Christians in the world. And for Christianity to be really
co-opted and hijacked in the way that we're seeing is destructive to the message of truth that is
Jesus Christ, because I can imagine people are saying, well, if this is what Christianity is
really all about, I've had considered it, but I'm not going to even look at Christianity. If that's
what it's about. It's not what it's about. But when voices are saying, we can, again, going back to
that basic idea of we can destroy civilians violently and in drastic ways and say that it's moral
because we're claiming to be Christian, that's nonsensical. And it's offensive to Christ himself as
anything could be. He is a man of peace. And that, it doesn't mean just let yourself be run over,
but real peace is about respecting our lives and the lives of others in always seeking without
violence to embrace the truth that sets us free. So I guess what I would say to Christians that are
claiming sort of Old Testament justification, show me that in Christ, and they're not going to find it.
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It does seem like this is an effort to co-opt Christianity
and change the world's understanding of Jesus.
And it seems like Holy Week maybe is particularly
hard for people who want to do that because the whole message of Holy Week is the opposite.
I mean, you're the theologian, but I think Jesus is coming into Jerusalem at a time when it's
occupied by foreign pagan authorities that are oppressing the people of Jerusalem.
And a lot of people watching assume Jesus was going to liberate the city in some using force.
He was the king, but he doesn't come in on a warhorse.
He comes in on a donkey and then submits to being tortured to death because the victory is
larger than a military victory. It's a final victory. It's a spiritual victory. And that seems like
the message as a non-theologian Protestant, that seems like a very clear message. But you tell me,
is that the message? Tucker, you are spot on. And that's why I mentioned earlier in our conversation.
Holy Week is a week of drama. And it's a week of waking up and realizing the real message of Jesus
Christ. I mean, the whole passion story of Christ is the elements there. I mean, we have Judas
Ascariat who, why did he betray Christ? I mean, I don't claim to be able to read his mind or
his heart, but the indications are he betrayed Christ because he wanted the kind of military leader
that many wanted.
Christ's triumphant entry into Jerusalem is, it's a very interesting scene that we need to constantly go back to and look at in terms of what's really going on.
Just before Christ, as recorded in scripture, just before Christ enters triumphally into Jerusalem,
the verses are talking about the authorities seeking and clotting to assassinate Lazarus,
the one he had raised from the dead.
And so one of the, which is really one of the most, it's described in John,
and it's one of the most amazing passages in the entire Bible.
Jesus has just raised this man from the dead four days after his death.
One of the amazing things he did, the guy's alive, and the religious authorities,
want to murder him?
Sorry, excuse me.
It's amazing.
It really is.
And the drama is right there.
We have to see it and recognize the way it continues to unfold in our lives.
I mean, I don't want to label anyone, Judas Ascaria, but we need to ask ourselves,
every one of us, and I include myself, we have to be very careful and ask, are we beginning
to move in a direction that?
Judas Ascariot would have approved when we are saying we want, hail Jesus, hail to the son of David,
but we want to shape the son of David according to our agenda. That is where it gets very dangerous.
And it culminates in destruction for Judas Asperiod and apparent, I mean, real destruction for Christ,
because he is truth, because he is God's divine son, what the world can throw at him can't destroy him
because he's beyond creation. He is the Lord of Creation. But he allows it to happen out of love for
all of us. And, you know, in the, I mean, it's just so rich with images that can be beneficial to
all of us. But for us to hear Christ in this time,
in this moment in our history, for the world, for this nation, for the Catholic Church for Christians,
to hear Christ say to those who are literally in the moment, nailing him to a cross,
killing him, Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.
To have that kind of mercy and compassion in your heart is, and we've seen some saints
that have echoed it. St. Stephen, the first martyr, echoed his Lord.
in saying that. But that is, again, going back to where's the threat? That is a very
threatening sentiment when you think, when we think, when the world thinks that the powers of the
world can ultimately prevail to hear the man being destroyed by the world saying,
Father, forgive them. They know not what they do. It reminds us that we've got to retune
our hearts and our minds to the message of Jesus Christ and to face everything we're facing.
It's like Holy Week being played out again at writ large in our time.
The hidden messages and the plottings and the confusing.
I mean, here we have things being hailed as wonderful and then underneath it.
The underbelly is a darkness of plotting the destruction of innocence and the destruction of lives that really have nothing to do with this.
So once again, I go back to that idea of we have to, I mean, the gauge has to be the large-scale destruction of civilian life can never be morally justified.
And, you know, with Christ, I mean, it was one man.
But in terms of reality, in terms of the universe, trying to kill Jesus Christ, son of God, Jesus of Nazareth, killing him.
And they were successful in killing him.
He died on the cross.
But that is large scale destruction of innocent life, of civilian life.
And that is the principle we just have to keep going back to to keep really looking through.
looking at everything through that lens and urging the leaders of Israel, the leaders of the United
States, the leaders of Europe, the leaders of the world to come together and to listen to the words
of Jesus Christ, even those who don't believe him, because they are true words, they resonate in hearts
if people will just listen and really open their hearts to what he's saying.
I mean, certainly, I believe the world will embrace Jesus Christ before it ends.
That is prophecy and that is logic.
When the world will embrace truth, not everyone, we're all left with our free will.
And that is, I mean, the free will of the individual and writ large the free will of nations.
And we see that in Old Testament.
God doesn't necessarily stop the free will of nations or individuals from doing something that God knows is contrary to truth.
And the consequence of ignoring the truth, really, I mean, we can see it as God's punishment, but really it goes deeper than that.
It's simply in conflict with reality.
And when we oppose the truth, we're opposing reality, and the consequences will follow.
Maybe not immediately, but the consequences will catch up with us when we ignore truth.
And Tucker, I know that the people that you interview as your life, your career, your good work of doing your best to share truth, you're constantly talking to people who have themselves lived through the
consequences and hopefully awaken to the reality, I've got to follow truth. When we ignore
truth, and it, I mean, it's in countless ways in our society today. But when we ignore the
truth, we get on a path that brings us harm. And sadly, the more influence we have, the more
that path involves other innocent people, the more we can bring, we can bring destruction down on the
heads of the most innocent. When we decide, I'm going to consciously deviate from the truth
because I've decided I know better. That should be a huge caution, ultimately stoplight for all of us.
be very careful about going down that path because we've seen it in history and we see it in our time.
When the individual says, I'm somehow above or outside the truth, then they may prevail for a moment,
but it will always come to destruction.
There was a controversy six weeks or so ago around a woman called Kerry Prejean Boller,
who was a member of the president's religious liberty task force.
She was expelled from it.
Really, from my reading for two reasons.
One, she called attention to the deaths of innocence in Gaza
and made the point that their lives were as valuable as anyone else's.
And two, she refused the basic tenets of Zionism, political Zionism,
and said that she didn't have to sign up for that as a Christian.
and she was expelled for that.
And there were a number of religious leaders,
Christian leaders, who approved of her expulsion,
and in fact, who made it possible.
You weighed in on this.
Can you tell us why you did that and what you said?
Yeah, thank you, Tucker.
Well, really, again, you know, I'm a simple guy,
and it comes down to basic simple truth ultimately.
And truth is simple.
Yes, it's deep.
It's rich. It's hard to fathom. But it's not complicated in the way that our world is so often complicated.
As you said, I think Kerry was removed because they didn't like the truth she was speaking.
The truth about Gaza, which is verboten by many. The innocence that have devastatingly died there is just horrible.
It truly is a holocaust of our time. But she was, they didn't like it.
that truth? And they didn't like the truth of her pushing back against the agenda that is saying
this political Zionism is something that Christians need to embrace. No, it's not. And the Catholic
Church is very clear. From everything that I've seen, I had a conversation with Carrie before I put out
my statement. And I had the conversation because I was hearing things. And I just wanted to, really,
my intention with reaching out to Kerry was just to be a pastor and to offer her some support
and some consolation. In the midst of that conversation, she basically challenged me and asked me,
Bishop, if what you're saying you really believe your message, my message to her, if I really
believed it, was I willing to publicly speak it? And I told her, I would pray about it and I would
consider it. But even as I told her that I would pray about it, I knew in my heart that, you know,
I was, as we say, sometimes Christians say, I was convicted. I knew that if I was going to be
the man I want to be, if I was going to be the Christian that I want to be, I had to speak up.
And to not attack anyone, but simply say, you know, and what I had to. And what I had to,
tried to do in a rather several more words than this, but basically was say,
Kerry was removed from that committee because she was speaking truth that the powers that
be didn't want to be spoken. And because of that, we, I felt the need to speak out for her.
I don't think Carrie claims to be a sinless, some sort of perfect woman, but she was right in what she was speaking.
You know, people can say, I mean, very often, and I know you hear this all the time, you know, people will, when they don't like the truth that's being said, they'll very often go after the tone.
And it's human to, for the tone to get a little elevated when we're speaking truth that, especially when it's being opposed, I know I can personally confess that sometimes that happens.
We can, when we're facing pushback against something we know deeply in our hearts to be the truth, we can hopefully not get violent, but we can get very animated.
in how we're doing that.
But, and I think that that's what people really pretty cleverly will say,
oh, well, it was the tone.
Well, yeah, sometimes the tone, but sometimes it may be appropriate.
When truth is being ignored, we need to get attention sometimes.
And again, looking to Christ as the model.
I mean, he said, love your enemy,
but he also was willing to call his fate a side,
spade. And when the leaders that he was speaking with were clearly not in the line of truth,
he was willing to get pretty animated in the way he spoke to them and said things like,
you brood of vipers. I mean, I think that was actually John the Baptist. But Christ said those
kinds of things to the leaders because that's what truths demand sometimes. It, we
We should not return to violence in order to stand for the truth, but we should do it with vigor, with strength.
And to me, that's where Kerry was rejected primarily because they didn't want her to speak that truth.
And you've seen it.
Well, I think you're an example, Tucker.
I mean, you were a man speaking truth, and they tried to silence you.
Terry was speaking truth.
They tried to silence her and ultimately it backfires.
When it is truth, when someone or a group is speaking truth,
trying to oppose that, it does backfire.
I think of Gamaliel in the Acts of the Apostles,
a Jewish leader who said, you all need to be careful.
If this is of God, you'll find yourself finding God.
If it's not of God, then it'll go away on its own.
What Gamaliel is saying, truth lasts.
Truth prevails.
Truth continues because of the essence of what it is.
It is truth.
And we see that over and over again.
When truth is being proclaimed and whatever powers of the world try to squelch that truth,
try to silence it so often.
I mean, Jesus Christ, what is the whole drama of Jesus Christ?
The world, the powers that were in the first century, tried to eliminate him.
And where are we now in the 21st century?
He is still that voice of truth that can and sure guide us.
So Kerry was removed as one voice echoing the truth that is Jesus Christ.
removed because of that, and look what's happened. Her voice has grown. I had no idea who
Perry preaching Boler was before she got removed. And then I end up making a statement about her.
That is a beautiful example of what we all need to remember for ourselves in our personal
journey against sin and death. And in the global journey, we need to remember if it's the truth,
it will come out and it will prevail.
So we better do our best to stay with the truth.
I love the image of the plum line of truth that comes from Old Testament prophets to stay with the truth.
I waver.
I weaken.
I'm a sinner, but I do my best to return to that plum line of truth.
And that's what we need to do as individuals and as nations.
we need to constantly be willing to challenge ourselves.
Am I in whatever way avoiding or trying to obfuscate the truth?
And to the degree that I'm doing that, I'm sinning, I repent, I ask forgiveness, and I get back to the truth.
What kind of response did you get to the statement that you wrote about Kerry?
I'd have to say, overwhelming.
I mean, I've been on X, even when it was back when it was Twitter.
And I've had some things that I've said that have gotten significant response.
You know, I don't even know what you call the numbers that you see, but whatever, the biggest number there is close to a million at this point of people.
And sometimes those numbers don't all necessarily mean that people are in agreement.
but the vast majority of people have said, thank you for being a bishop, a successor of the apostles that was willing to speak to this.
And, you know, Tucker over and over again, and I can imagine, I mean, you're in a large, you have a big voice in today's world.
And I know you know that. And I know you do your best to take that responsibly, which we have to.
I'm the first to be surprised to have a million acknowledgments of what I've said,
for the most part, very positive.
So the response has been tremendous.
And it's, I mean, the words I believe, the words that I've posted, I believe that came from prayer,
that came from real consideration of the truth that I believe in.
But it wasn't my words that people are really responding to.
it's truth. People are hungry. They are starving. There is a worldwide famine for the truth.
Thankfully, we can find it, but we have to fight for it sometimes. And that's what I saw in the
response is people are grateful when a voice and, you know, when Carrie and I spoke, you know,
God has blessed me in tremendous ways.
And really, Tucker, I mean, we've never met, but I see you, our story is very similar.
They tried to cancel you.
I mean, back in the culture when people speaking truth were getting canceled.
And what has happened?
Your voice has grown, and I think it should.
Thankfully, I mean, I don't know.
You're not the perfect man, but you are a man seeking truth.
That's how I understand Tucker Carlson.
And because of that, they tried to, they fired you and they tried to eliminate your voice,
and that voice is only grown.
The same thing for me.
I'm a bishop removed from his diocese, and my voice has grown.
I mean, I still am in the kids from East Texas, but my voice of doing my best to be faithful to the truth and to be willing.
And that's, I think, where both of us can stand together.
We've been willing to speak the truth when it wasn't popular,
when it was sometimes threatening to be further consequences if we stay with that voice of speaking the truth.
But I think both of us in different ways, I can't speak for you, but I can speak for myself,
I have to. I have to do what I'm done. I can't knuckle under and say, okay, just quit speaking the truth.
I was told to quit it. Stop it. Quit speaking the truth. You are told as well, and I'm sure behind
the scenes, you could share lots of stories of people saying, oh, Tucker, don't, you know, calm down,
don't do this, back off. But we can't. When it's the truth and you know it, deep in your heart,
that is what Christ was able to do in a beautifully peaceful way.
He endured everything the world could throw it in.
And, you know, in many ways, I haven't had anything thrown at me.
But I've been willing to speak the truth when it wasn't popular and when it basically got me kicked out of the club.
But I'm still a bishop.
I'm still a successor of the apostles.
And so it's essential that I continue to speak.
Not my truth.
I mean, you know, that's where some, it gets crazy.
People speak of, oh, well, that's your truth and that's my truth.
There's truth, and we all have the obligation to seek it to be willing.
And I've said this many times, and I say it again.
Anytime I speak something that I'm claiming to be the truth,
if people can show me that this is not the truth,
want to hear that. I don't want to ever be in a position where people are saying, oh, well,
he's got a big voice, so I won't tell him he's wrong on that. I want to hear if I'm wrong.
But, and I happen. I can be for sure. I'm a, you know, a man weak and sinful and easily
confused and easily diverted from the truth, but I keep going back to trying to do my best
to grow climate. That's what we're all called to do. And I see Carrie right there with us as a woman,
a mother, and a wife, and a woman with a voice. And once you have a voice, you have an obligation to speak the
truth with it. You said you're on acts. You're clearly paying attention to what's happening
around the world. It's very easy to become discouraged. Jesus is
under fire, the church broadly is under fire. Truth is obviously a target, maybe the main target.
So it's discouraging. Do you see God moving as a counterbalance to that? Do you see God moving more
as evil becomes more obvious? Tucker, thank you for asking that question because I think
absolutely. I see goodness and beauty and truth, changing hearts and moving people in all kinds of ways.
That's been one of my blessings. I'm basically, I'm an attenerent bishop now who travels all over the place and speaks in different settings and meets people across this nation and really around the world.
and I have seen that goodness and those hearts seeking the truth.
And of course, I believe that God is, it's still his world.
It's still his church.
And he isn't absent from any of this.
Free will allows us to destroy ourselves.
If we make that foolish choice, but God is always offering the opportunity.
to each of us individually and to each of us in whatever group,
whatever definition of a group of humanity.
For us, we're all brothers and sisters.
We're all the children of God.
But I believe absolutely answering your question that God is working in hearts.
God is working through all of this.
I mean, look at all the evil that's been exposed.
We hate it.
We're horrified.
But it needs, it's like a wound that needs to be cleansed.
A wound that needs to be opened up and the putrefied flesh needs to be cleansed.
That's, we're in a time of cleansing, of purification.
God is allowing the truth that has been hidden for so long.
So much corruption, it just, it does get overwhelming.
And I've put out messages to encourage people.
don't despair. It's so easy to despair, and we see it. I know both of us see it too often,
especially young people, lives ending, sometimes intentionally, because they're just despair of this
dark world, but we can never despair. We should be people of hope and acknowledge the evil
that's there, but believe that God is with us. Jesus Christ,
prevails as truth prevails. And I guess that's because I know many of the people that probably
listen to you are not people of faith. But again, I would go back to simply truth prevails.
When is the truth? And we know, I believe that Jesus Christ is truth incarnate. Truth,
walk this earth. And we believe in the Catholic faith, he remains here, through the saccharence,
through the life of baptized people and goodness living in the world.
But truth prevails.
And when we are willing to challenge ourselves to always go back to the truth, that will
lead us nowhere but to God.
And so God is working through all of this.
And there's so much goodness out there, the things that have been hidden literally for centuries
that are coming to light.
What comes to mind for me is an apparition of Our Lady,
called Our Lady of Good Success,
that is in Ecuador, Keto, Ecuador.
It happened shortly after Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared in 1531 there in Pepeiac,
outside Mexico City.
The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe,
still is revered there by Catholics and others there of that miraculous appearance.
This apparition happened in the 1570s, I believe, shortly after Our Lady of Guadalupe.
And what's interesting is the apparition, it's to a nun.
Our lady speaks to a nun, and this has been approved as private revelation, but it is accepted as authentic.
by the church.
But basically the apparition, Mary says to this nun, Mother Mariana,
that for the 20th and 21st century, this will come to light
and will help people navigate a world and a church,
deeply affected by the chaos of not following the truth.
I mean, that's what it comes down to.
We believe the church will prevail.
The gates of hell will not prevail against the Catholic Church.
That is our faith.
We believe what Christ says in the gospel, and we believe it applies to this church.
But that doesn't mean that we human beings, and the church has gone through every kind of storm that humanity can come up with.
But we believe the church will not be destroyed, so we can't despair.
But what's interesting to me is that this apparition, it's a sign of the goodness, a sign of the hope, a sign of God still with us.
One of the things that as a bishop, as a lifelong Catholic, one of the great realities that I think is always helpful to me is to remember, God is timeless.
That's hard for us to grasp. We can't really grasp it. How can't really grasp it? How can God be?
outside time, but he is. God is eternal. And so the things unfolding, we said, well, this was
400 years ago, and now it's happening now, and how's this work? For God, there is no time. It's
simply truth, goodness, and beauty, always flowing from the heart of the Trinity, God, Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit. So keeping that perspective always reminds us, reminds me to be careful about
presuming things about history because God's outside all of that. I mean, history is a reality of
the creation that God has given us, which is precious and is good, as God says in Genesis. He saw
that it was good. But the evil and the bad can come when we who are created in God's image and
likeness begin to ignore truth. That is constantly what it comes down to. When I,
sin, I'm ignoring truth. I mean, we may not say, oh, I'm going to go ignore some truth today.
But if we trace it back logically, what I'm doing when I sin in significant or the just small ways,
sometimes it's literally telling a lot, ignoring the truth, pretending that this is the way things are,
or this is what I've done. But when we ignore truth on the personal level, on the national level, on the national level,
in the midst of history, when we ignore truth, we are on a destructive path. So we're always
challenged to go back to the truth. And in this conversation, once again, I repeat,
the destruction, the wanton destruction of innocence, of civilians is never morally justified.
That's the anchor of truth. That's the pillar of truth that we have to keep returning to.
when we get caught up in the confusing and chaotic realities that we're all facing.
We have to go back to the truth and humbly acknowledge, Lord, I'm wondered in significant
or maybe just in basic ways, but the more we allow ourselves to put blindfolds on and ignore the
truth.
And I think that's a lot of what's happening right now.
It's like, you know, the political entity that is called Israel is getting a
free pass for facing the truth for whatever reasons for political agendas or some kind of
co-opted religious idea. But when we ignore the truth that atrocities have been committed
against civilians, against innocence, then when we won't speak of that, like Gaza, then we're
on a dark path. And it becomes something. It's sort of like the club of complete.
where we say, well, we'll all ignore that truth, won't we? And we move forward. And too much of that
happens in today's world. You wonder why. I mean, there are, you know, a lot is written about this.
There's a lot of speculation about it. Why would people intentionally lie in the United States about
what everyone can see about the atrocities you just mentioned? Why would our political leaders do that?
Why would so many of our religious leaders do the same? And there are all these theories,
while they're being paid off or
those are not adequate
explanations from my perspective. It does
feel like, and there are instances of this,
Paul alludes to this in Galatians,
that it's almost like there's a spell,
there's a supernatural quality
where people can't see things.
They sincerely can't see things.
Their vision is clouded.
Do you think that that phenomenon exists now?
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Evil is real.
the Catholic Church sees evil personified in Satan and his demons.
Christ has, I mean, Satan has no power, really.
But we, individual human beings and any group of human beings,
when we give into ignoring the truth,
we really are giving into the power of evil.
And like you're alluding to, Tucker, I mean, that's why, thankfully,
God clearly tells us through his son and in other passages, even in the Old Testament,
we are not to judge each other.
We are not the judges.
We are to make judgments about what is true, but we're not to judge the individual person.
And I think that that's where we have to always remember because, you know, the atrocities that happen.
And that doesn't mean what we just say, well, you know,
out of respect for this person, I need to allow this to happen or allow myself to be attacked.
That is not what we're talking about, but we do have to always acknowledge when it comes down to
judging the person, we should simply not do it and acknowledge that maybe there is evil.
And I truly believe that the delusion of evil has many by the graham.
in its grasp in the world today, we all have the obligation to set ourselves free from that,
to see the light and to make the choice to turn from it.
But I know that it can become very difficult, seemingly impossible.
And I think that really as we talk about all of this, Tucker, I believe, again, it comes down to basic human choice.
choices, the world leader that is deciding this is justified because I have decided this,
this and this, it comes down to. And again, I think of us as individual sinners. When we sin,
we've simply decided, I know better. In this, you know, we, we explain it away. We make
rationalizations, but at the heart of it is, yes, this is what the world says is true,
but I know better. I've figured it out. I know better. And I think that that's where,
you know, the atrocities in Gaza, they are actively working to hide those and to squelch any voice
that there's to speak up about innocent lives being destroyed because it threatens their,
I know better attitude. It threatens that truth that they're trying to create. We can all try to
create our own truth, but it doesn't exist, really. And that is what we have to always be humble
enough to acknowledge. And we have to pray that world leaders will be people whose hearts are open
because that got the power to do drastically, devastatingly destructive things like we've witnessed
in Gaza, what we're witnessing in Lebanon. I mean, very little is spoken about some of these things
because the powers that be don't want that truth spoken because it threatens their false scenario.
And so it really is as basic as that.
But I think there are forces worldly and supernatural of evil that.
I mean, just like when, you know, when evil tries to cancel a voice of truth and our culture,
certainly in the supernatural realm, Satan and his minions are trying to do the same thing.
I mean, the St. Michael Prayer that we offer as Catholics is rooted in acknowledging that basic reality.
And not seeing a demon around every corner, but acknowledging that evil is real.
Evil has its power when we give it power.
And that's why we have to prayerfully turn to the truth.
I urge everyone to do that.
And if you aren't a believer to at least, I mean, hopefully somewhat being sane is to embrace the truth.
I mean, a definition of insanity is to say, well, I'm going to ignore what's true and just go into my fantasy world.
times that happens. But if we are people who are rational, then rationality means based in the
truth. And we all have an obligation to find the truth, to speak the truth, and to live the truth.
My final question is about persecution, which you've alluded to, and you've said,
oh, Jesus was murdered for telling the truth. That was the main threat he posed, the fact that he was the
embodiment of truth and that that principle stands and that people who it's not the liars who
are punished just people who tell the truth. So if we accept that we're clearly in a new kind of
world where trends are accelerating, you would have to think that persecution will intensify
specifically of Christians. And I think it is. I think it's what we're watching. Do you believe that?
And if you do, how should Christians respond to persecution?
Well, Tucker, I do believe that, I mean, it's very clear, I believe that faith,
really, any stance for truth, the real truth, is being persecuted because the powers of chaos,
the powers of that false message are growing and gaining influence.
What is our response as Christians?
Well, I guess it sounds pretty simplistic, but we stay with the truth.
We don't compromise.
We don't become violent in the face of violence.
We don't embrace hatred.
I mean, I think that, you know, it probably is one of the most powerful things we can do
is seek to truly love our neighbor.
And certainly, I mean, Christ tells us, love God with all your heart, mind, and soul,
and your neighbor as yourself, the great commandment.
But I think that we need to put that into practice by not giving
into the hate, no matter how much we are persecuted, no matter how much hatred is thrown at us.
We have great examples in our Catholic faith in the saints of the ages. So many of the saints.
And Christ themselves says, if they hate you, remember, they hated me first. What is persecution about?
We're persecuted when they hate what we're doing. They hate who we are. They hate what we're
saying. And so we're in good company with Christ himself. How did Christ respond? He didn't waver from
the truth, but he didn't violently fight back either. That is, I think, the basic reaction we should
have. We should trust in the power of the truth. Yes, we can be eliminated. We can be assassinated in
this world, and it happens. But the truth continues to prevail. And if as Christ died in service
to the truth, he was the truth, and he died for the truth, if it comes to that, we shouldn't
seek that. Our lives are valuable. But if it comes to that, then we who believe in the truth
should be the martyrs, be willing.
If that's what it takes to stand for the truth that I sacrifice my life in this world,
it begins to remind us that life is not limited to this world.
We believe in everlasting life.
The salvation of souls is what the Catholic Church exists for.
It may not always look like that through history and in our time,
because too many voices seem to be too worried about this world.
But ultimately, to be alive is to have eternal life with God.
And so sacrificing this earthly life, if it comes to that,
and we should, I've always loved the example of St. Thomas Moore.
He was a great lawyer.
He was a great mind.
And he did everything he could to keep from losing his life.
life in this world. But ultimately, he knew that if he had to sacrifice his life in this world,
he could look to eternal life with God and heaven. And he says that to his own daughter,
we shall merrily meet in heaven. That has to be our attitude as well. Not wantonly and easily
allowing our lives to be destroyed. That is not respectful of the treasure of our life
that God has given us. We should desire to be here as long as God gives us breath. But when that ends,
and if we lose that life because we've stood for the truth, then we're in good company.
So the Christian's response to persecution should ultimately to be willing and to be strengthened
and to strengthen each other to stand with the truth come what may.
Amen.
Bishop Strickland, thank you very much for taking this time.
That was great.
Thank you, Tucker.
God bless you.
God bless you.
