Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Faith and the Free Market Expelled from Iraq’s Garden of Eden
Faith and the Free Market Expelled from Iraq’s Garden of Eden
Mar 15, 2026 6:37 PM

As reported by the Wall Street Journal, Iraq’s largest oil refinery for domestic use has been overtaken by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the radical jihadi terrorist group aiming to establish an Islamic caliphate in these two nations. As Iraq’s most lucrative resource is now siphoned off by a radical organization, the global oil market risks destabilization while financially empowering ISIS. Economic stability facilitates greater religious freedom – establishing an ISIS controlled government as detrimental to Iraq’s advances toward a stable and secular democratic state. The Christian population has been a primary target of this fundamentalist movement, with ISIS demanding they must convert to Islam, pay a fine, or face “death by the sword.” It was in here, in ancient Babylon, where political and economic institutions took stead; today these have been condemned while the Biblical story of Exodus is being retold with 50,000 Christians fleeing their homes.

Congressman Frank Wolf of Virginia delivered an impassioned speech on the House floor stating “ISIS is systematically targeting Christians and other religious minorities in Iraq for extinction.” The fear of a Christian genocide is all too real, as the zeal of fundamentalism bleeds through the country. Wolf also echoed the words he and his colleagues wrote in a letter to President Obama in June: “Absent immediate action, we will most certainly witness the annihilation of an ancient munity from the lands they’ve inhabited for centuries.”

Central to the free market, is the assurance of property rights. If the land rights of national corporations or private firms are targeted by rogue international actors, international investment will cease – disrupting global economic security. ISIS has also begun to sell this illegally obtained crude oil on the market. Herein lies the other major concern, a radical organization opposed to Western economic ideology has been financially empowered to continue their plight to disrupt the political machinery of a country. The BBC has reported that as ISIS advances further south toward Baghdad, they have also collected valuable American military supplies, which can either be used as physical weaponry or sold to be utilized as a financial weapon. ISIS is alleged to be the world’s wealthiest jihadist organization with assets exceeding $2 billion.

Licensing ISIS access to Iraq’s natural resources will only condemn the Republic of Iraq to be held hostage by a violent independent terrorist-run state in the north and west. America cannot continue to appease terrorists if it desires to sustain the ideals of liberty and the free market system globally. Iraq serves as a conduit toward expanding Western economic practices through more stable governance in the Middle East.

The more money ISIS collects, the more appealing it is as a viable and lucrative employment prospect for Iraqi citizens. As detailed by Richard Wright in The Looming Tower, the parent organization of Islamic fundamentalism, al-Qaeda, rose to power with its ability to provide a living wage, health care, and paid vacations to recruits. Winning the hearts and minds of a people is significantly more dangerous than the acquisition of weaponry and other raw materials. An offshoot of al-Qaeda, ISIS leadership understands effective recruitment practices.

Liberty and the global financial markets are at risk with Senator Lindsay Graham declaring that “[t]he seeds of 9/11 are being planted all over Iraq and Syria.” The longer ISIS’s conquest for an Islamic utopian state is appeased by the United States, the closer es to destroying the Republic of Iraq as it stands.

World leadership will establish that the munity recognizes the current Iraqi government as the legitimate sovereign and will protect its authority. When world powers does not assert responsible influence, volatile organizations will take advantage of the lack of security and assert dominance, establishing themselves as the new legitimate governing entity. Fueled by the powerful appeal of religious fervor, ISIS has the strength to dismantle capitalist ideas and forcibly implement socialist economic policies.

As I discussed in a recent piece, notable Islamic theologians, including the late Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran, have asserted that Islam and capitalism are inherently patible, prompting the adoption of an Islamic social economic policy that invalidates the ideas of private property and free enterprise. ISIS follows this belief and would only further this policy and destroy religious freedom in the process.

It is easy to understand why many are apprehensive toward possible intervention in Iraq, the nation has been embroiled in sectarian conflict and the wounds of Operation Iraqi Freedom remain fresh. It will no doubt be a difficult task for Iraq to construct a more cohesive government, but it is hard for political unification if a radical organization distracts the process through warfare.

For the Christian who chooses to stay in behind in ISIS controlled Mosul, a devastating future awaits. In recent days, a statue of the Virgin Mary was destroyed outside of one of the churches, and replaced with a black flag, with a remaining Christian remarking “we are in the quiet before the storm”. Mosul will not be the only major conquest of ISIS. If the world stands by, not only will the light of Christianity be darkened, but the black flag of ISIS will cloak any hope of political and economic freedom in the birthplace of humanity – Iraq – once home to the Garden of Eden.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Game of Theories: Real business cycle
Note: This is post #115 in a weekly video series on basic economics. The “real” part of the real business cycle (RBC) refers to real shocks to an economy, specifically to supply shocks. As Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution University says, RBC is useful for plex supply shock, such as a sudden rise in oil prices. But it can also explain many of the economic downturns throughout human history. For instance, in ancient times when economies relied primarily on agriculture,...
The EU’s self-defeating digital tax
In today’s global economy, pany that provides a successful product or service can earn billions of dollars a year. Governments steal a greedy glance and ask how they can get their “fair share” of this money. The latest example is the EU attempting to create “tax harmonization” among its members as it imposes a digital tax on “Big Tech” firms. The proposal is currently stalled, as more fiscally responsible nations like Ireland object to the EU’s plan to tax tech...
Nihilism and mass murder: Christianity in reverse
Brazil was rocked last week by a deadly shootout in a high school in Suzano, a suburb of Sao Paolo. Two former students armed with a gun, crossbows and axes killed nine people and mitted suicide. Immediately, the media began another campaign against Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, leading people to believe that the massacre had something to do with his pro-gun policies. There is, of course, an elementary problem of logic in this argument: Bolsonaro assumed the presidency 63 days...
National healthcare can’t fail if there are no goals
As the Brexit debacle monopolizes UK news, the government quietly released a consequential announcement: The National Health Service (NHS) is considering repealing requirements that emergency rooms in England treat or release patients within four hours. The new guidelines vindicate critics of single-payer health care, who say the government inevitably rations care, downgrades its own standards, and then declares victory. The UK’s goal of a four-hour wait in accident and emergency rooms (A&Es) is roughly twice as long as patients wait...
Finding common grace in a Ugandan refugee camp
Every day we receive innumerable blessings from God. We receive these blessings apart from our individual standing before God or our membership in any munity. These blessings are rooted in God’s creation itself. They are a form of what the Reformed theologian Abraham Kuyper called ‘Common Grace’: The divine covenant in the Mediator in turn has its background in the work of original creation, in the existence of the world, and in the life of our human race. As individuals...
Captain Marvel’s grit
The latest Marvel film has done well at the box office, and for good reason. It is a solid entry in the MCU, and an introduction to a new character that promises to be central to the ongoing narrative arc following Avengers: Infinity War (some spoilers follow). There are quite a few notable themes in Captain Marvel, and I’ll highlight a couple here. First, we learn a fair amount more about the Kree, the civilization introduced in Guardians of the...
Scandal and school, education and freedom
It’s not news that a college education costs a boatload today. But as we’ve all learned over the past week, the cost of a college education is much more – about $500,000 more over tuition, room, and board if you’re a TV celebrity like Lori Loughlin. Add $1 million bail and the possibility of prison time to boot. Some people will do anything for their kids, up to and including bribing school officials to admit their less than stellar students...
Why do pastors receive a tax exemption for housing?
A federal court of appeals recently upheld the constitutionality of the ministerial housing allowance. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago ruled unanimously that the sixty-five year old tax provision does not violate the First Amendment clause that prohibits government establishment of religion. The decision reversed a federal judge’s 2017 opinion that invalidated the allowance as a violation of the establishment clause. The court ruled the housing allowance is constitutional under two of the U.S. Supreme Court’s church-state precedents....
Acton Line: Neighborly help for the poor; Americans flunk political science
On this week’s Acton Line podcast we hear about a church-based ministry that engages with the homeless and poor “relationally, responsibly, passionately.” James Whitford, executive director of Watered Gardens Gospel Rescue Mission in Joplin, Missouri, joins Acton’s Andrew Vanderput in a thought provoking conversation on private charity and the intensely personal nature of the organization’s outreach. In the second segment, Aquinas College economist David Hebert and Acton’s Tyler Groenendal dig into the public’s deep dissatisfaction with America’s political institutions –...
Interview: Margarita Mooney on communism, freedom, and the ‘irreducible person’
The Acton Institute alumni network is now over 8,000 people strong. This group spans many disciplines and contains many of the most influential leaders from those disciplines. Margarita Mooney is one of those influential people. pleted her undergraduate studies at Yale University and her doctorate at Princeton University. She is currently an Associate Professor of Practical Theological at Princeton Theological Seminary, and is an education entrepreneur. As the founder of Scala Foundation, she has built programming designed to strengthen classical...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved