A Christian Response to America’s Historical Truth

Truth, Repentance, and the Gospel of the Kingdom: A Christian Response to the False History of Native Peoples and Manifest Destiny

There are times when a statement is so careless, so historically thin, and so spiritually dangerous that silence becomes agreement. Recently, I saw a post claiming that the idea of America taking land from Native Americans was “rubbish.” It argued that much of North America was uninhabited, that many Native peoples were simply violent aggressors, that most of the land was purchased fairly through treaties, that Native peoples moved too much to have any real claim to the land, and that God clearly gave this land to European settlers under the banner of Manifest Destiny.

As a Christian, an American, and a preacher of the Gospel of the Kingdom, I cannot accept that kind of statement as historical truth. I also cannot accept the opposite extreme that says all of American history is nothing but evil, oppression, theft, and bloodshed. Both extremes flatten history. Both extremes ignore complexity. Both extremes can become propaganda.

But Christians are not called to propaganda. We are called to truth.

Jesus said, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:32). Truth does not become dangerous because it exposes sin. Truth becomes dangerous only to those who have built their comfort on denial. The Kingdom of God is not threatened by honest history. The Gospel does not need myths to stand. Christ does not need us to cover the sins of men in order to defend the righteousness of God.

A historically honest Christian response must begin here: Native peoples were not nameless wanderers drifting across empty land with no claim, no culture, no stewardship, and no history. Before European settlement, North America was home to many Native nations and tribes, each with distinct languages, customs, religious traditions, political structures, homelands, and ways of life. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History states plainly that American Indians lived here before Europeans arrived, and that there were, and still are, many nations and tribes with different religions, customs, and languages. It also notes that European arrival brought disease, conflict, and the taking of Native land.

That alone destroys the careless claim that Native peoples had “no real claim” to the land.

Some Native nations were agricultural. Some were hunters. Some were traders. Some moved seasonally within recognized territories. Some lived in permanent towns and villages. Some formed confederacies, alliances, and councils. To say that movement cancels homeland is historically ignorant. Many peoples throughout world history have moved seasonally, followed herds, rotated land use, migrated under pressure, or held territory communally. That does not mean they had no connection, no stewardship, no rights, and no covenantal relationship to the land of their fathers.

The Bible itself understands land, inheritance, borders, fathers, tribes, and stewardship. “The earth is the Lord’s, and the fullness thereof” (Psalm 24:1). That means no people, whether European, Native, African, Asian, or any other, holds land as absolute owner before God. All land belongs to the Lord. Men are stewards. Nations are accountable. Kings are accountable. Settlers are accountable. Tribes are accountable. Governments are accountable. Churches are accountable.

The Scripture also says, “You shall not move your neighbor’s boundary marker, which the men of old have set” (Deuteronomy 19:14). That principle matters. God cares about boundaries. God cares about inheritance. God cares about unjust gain. God cares about covenant. God cares when powerful people use legal language to cover moral theft.

This is where the issue of treaties must be handled honestly.

Yes, there were treaties. Yes, there were land purchases. Yes, there were agreements. The historical record does not allow us to reduce the entire story to one word. It was not all one thing. The Library of Congress records 709 Indian land cessions from 1784 to 1894, including descriptions of the land ceded and the tribes affected. That fact proves there were formal cessions, negotiations, and treaties. But the existence of a treaty does not automatically prove justice. A treaty can be honorable, or it can be coerced. A treaty can represent mutual agreement, or it can be made under pressure. A treaty can be signed by rightful representatives, or by a minority faction that does not carry the consent of the people.

Historical records show this complexity clearly.

The 1790 Treaty with the Creeks stated that the United States would “solemnly guarantee” Creek lands within certain boundaries. It also warned that if a non-Native citizen attempted to settle on Creek lands, that person would forfeit U.S. protection. That language matters. It shows that the United States itself recognized Native land rights, boundaries, and political identity. If Native peoples had no real claim, why would the United States solemnly guarantee their lands?

The Treaty of New Echota in 1835 is another sobering example. The Digital Library of Georgia describes it as a treaty in which a Cherokee treaty party agreed to removal west of the Mississippi, but also notes that it was signed in opposition to the wishes of the majority of the Cherokee Nation, including the protests of Principal Chief John Ross. That is not a clean picture of righteous agreement. That is a picture of division, pressure, and a people being forced toward removal.

The U.S. Department of State’s Office of the Historian states that the U.S. government used treaties as one means to displace Native peoples from their tribal lands, and that this mechanism was strengthened by the Indian Removal Act of 1830. It also states that when treaties failed, the government sometimes violated both treaties and Supreme Court rulings to advance westward expansion. That is not anti-American propaganda. That is the U.S. government’s own historical office describing the record.

The National Archives explains that the Indian Removal Act authorized the President to negotiate removal treaties with tribes east of the Mississippi, with the goal of removing American Indians from existing states and territories and sending them west. We may debate political motives, economic pressures, and frontier conflicts, but the record is clear: removal was policy. Displacement was policy. Expansion was policy.

The Christian question is not whether America had a complicated frontier history. It did. The Christian question is whether we are willing to tell the truth when history exposes both blessing and bloodshed.

There were Native attacks on settlers. That is true. There were settlers who fought in self-defense. That is true. There were Native nations that warred against other Native nations before Europeans arrived. That is also true. There were brutal acts committed by Native warriors, by settlers, by militias, by armies, by governments, and by opportunists. History is not clean. Sin does not belong to one ethnicity. Violence is not owned by one people group. “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).

But the reality of violence on multiple sides does not justify false history. It does not justify saying Native peoples had no real claim. It does not justify broken treaties. It does not justify forced removal. It does not justify using the name of God to baptize greed, conquest, or racial contempt.

This is where Christians must recover discernment.

The Gospel of the Kingdom has power to transform any people and any culture. It can transform European settlers. It can transform Native nations. It can transform Africans brought here in chains. It can transform immigrants. It can transform kings, farmers, tribes, cities, governments, and generations. The Gospel is not weak. The Gospel does not belong to one race. The Gospel is not the property of Europe, America, or any political movement.

Jesus said, “This gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all the world as a witness to all the nations” (Matthew 24:14). The Greek word often translated “nations” carries the sense of peoples, ethnic groups, and nations. The Kingdom witness was always meant to reach every people. The Gospel belongs in every tribe, every tongue, every people, and every nation. Revelation 7:9 gives us the heavenly picture: “a great multitude which no one could number, of all nations, tribes, peoples, and tongues,” standing before the throne and before the Lamb.

That is the Kingdom vision.

But in the hands of unrepentant people, even holy language can be twisted. A man can quote Scripture and still walk in pride. A nation can speak of destiny and still break covenant. A preacher can speak of mission and still ignore injustice. A government can speak of civilization and still crush the people it has promised to protect.

The devil quoted Scripture to Jesus in the wilderness. Religious language is not proof of righteousness. Covenant language is not proof of obedience. Manifest Destiny may have been preached by some as divine purpose, but not everything called destiny is holy. Not every open door is from God. Not every expansion is Kingdom advancement. Not every victory is evidence of divine approval.

The prophet Isaiah warned, “Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil” (Isaiah 5:20). That warning belongs to every generation. It belongs to the political left when it rewrites history to destroy gratitude, faith, and national memory. It also belongs to the political right when it rewrites history to avoid repentance, deny injustice, and sanctify everything done under the American flag.

A remnant people must refuse both lies.

We do not need to hate America to tell the truth. We do not need to erase America’s blessings in order to grieve America’s sins. We do not need to deny the Christian faith of many early settlers in order to recognize that other men used Christian language for unchristian purposes. We do not need to despise our nation in order to call our nation back to righteousness.

The Bible says, “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people” (Proverbs 14:34). Notice the wording: any people. Not just one people. Not just one race. Not just one political party. Any people. Sin is a reproach to Native peoples. Sin is a reproach to European settlers. Sin is a reproach to America. Sin is a reproach to the Church when the Church refuses to discern the difference between the Kingdom of God and the kingdoms of men.

This is why the Church must stop confusing the Gospel with national myth.

The Gospel does not need us to pretend that all treaties were righteous. The Gospel does not need us to pretend that removal was mercy. The Gospel does not need us to pretend that disease was divine permission to take land. The Gospel does not need us to say that because many Native people died from disease, their surviving communities had no rights, no voice, and no future.

Disease was devastating. Historical sources recognize that European contact brought diseases that deeply affected Native populations. The Smithsonian notes that colonial settlers spread disease to American Indians. But disease does not erase moral responsibility. If a people are weakened by sickness, righteousness does not say, “Now we may take what remains.” Righteousness says, “How do we protect life, honor covenant, and fear God?”

The Gospel of the Kingdom is never permission to exploit the vulnerable.

When Israel entered the land in the Old Testament, that was a unique redemptive-historical event tied to covenant promise, prophetic timing, and divine judgment in a specific biblical context. America is not ancient Israel. European settlers were not Joshua. Manifest Destiny is not the book of Joshua. The United States does not have a blank prophetic check to declare itself the new Israel and then treat other peoples as Canaanites to be removed.

That kind of thinking is not biblical interpretation. It is spiritual presumption.

Jesus rebuked the spirit that wanted to call fire down on people in the name of zeal. When James and John wanted judgment to fall, Jesus said, “You do not know what manner of spirit you are of” (Luke 9:55). That verse should haunt every generation that tries to use God-language to justify destruction. It is possible to speak of God and carry the wrong spirit. It is possible to claim destiny and miss the heart of Christ.

The Kingdom of God comes through Christ, not conquest. Through truth, not denial. Through righteousness, not racial superiority. Through repentance, not historical whitewashing. Through the Cross, not the sword of political ambition.

At the same time, let us also be clear: rejecting false Manifest Destiny theology does not mean rejecting America’s redemptive purpose. God has used America. God has used missionaries sent from this land. God has used churches, revivals, prayer movements, Bible societies, abolitionists, reformers, intercessors, and Gospel preachers in this nation. God has used America to resist tyranny, send aid, preach Christ, defend freedoms, and become a refuge for many.

We can honor that.

But honor without repentance becomes idolatry. Repentance without gratitude becomes bitterness. The remnant must walk in both truth and honor.

We can thank God for the Pilgrims who sought religious liberty and still acknowledge that later expansion brought grievous injustice. We can honor the Huguenots and other believers who carried sincere Christian faith and still reject the idea that every act committed by European settlers was holy. We can love America and still tell the truth about broken treaties. We can preach the Gospel and still confess that the Gospel was sometimes mixed with greed, empire, racism, and violence.

The apostle Paul told the men of Athens that God “has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth” and that He appointed their times and boundaries so they might seek Him (Acts 17:26–27). That Scripture destroys racial pride. It destroys ethnic arrogance. It destroys the idea that one people has inherent divine superiority over another.

All nations are accountable to God. All peoples need Christ. All cultures need redemption. All bloodlines need the Cross.

The Native peoples needed the Gospel. The European settlers needed the Gospel. America still needs the Gospel.

But the true Gospel does not erase people. It does not mock their suffering. It does not deny their history. It does not make excuses for covenant-breaking. It does not celebrate the destruction of cultures as if every loss were automatically holy. The Gospel confronts idolatry in every culture, but it also honors the image of God in every people.

Genesis 1:27 says man was created in the image of God. That includes the Native mother grieving a child lost to disease. That includes the settler family murdered on the frontier. That includes the Cherokee family forced west. That includes the missionary who truly loved Christ. That includes the soldier who sinned against conscience. That includes every tribe, tongue, and nation standing in need of redemption.

This is why careless statements are dangerous. They train Christians to defend narratives instead of truth. They teach believers to treat history as a weapon rather than a witness. They make us think we must choose between loving America and telling the truth. But the prophets never believed that. Jeremiah loved Judah and told the truth. Daniel served in Babylon and refused compromise. Nehemiah rebuilt the walls and confessed the sins of his fathers.

Nehemiah prayed, “Both my father’s house and I have sinned” (Nehemiah 1:6). That is not self-hatred. That is covenant responsibility.

America does not need a Church that lies for her. America needs a Church that loves her enough to call her back to God. Native peoples do not need sentimental pity. They need honor, truth, justice, and the same Gospel of the Kingdom every people needs. The Church does not need to parrot secular guilt narratives, but neither should it parrot nationalist myths that cover sin.

The remnant must carry a higher sound.

We must be able to say: yes, America has been blessed by God, and yes, America has sinned before God.

We must be able to say: yes, the Gospel came to these shores, and yes, some men used Christian language while acting contrary to Christ.

We must be able to say: yes, there were real conflicts and violence on the frontier, and yes, Native peoples had real homelands, real rights, real histories, and real grievances.

We must be able to say: yes, some land was transferred by treaty, and yes, many treaties were pressured, broken, or ignored.

We must be able to say: yes, we love this nation, and yes, our love must be governed by truth.

The Kingdom of God is not advanced by denial. It is advanced by truth, repentance, righteousness, mercy, and the lordship of Jesus Christ.

So let the record be clear: I reject the idea that Native peoples had no real claim to the land. I reject the idea that disease somehow justified expansion. I reject the idea that every treaty was righteous simply because it was written on paper. I reject the idea that Manifest Destiny can be treated as unquestioned divine approval. I reject the idea that Christians must choose between loving America and telling the truth about America.

I also reject the spirit that hates America, curses our nation, erases the faith of sincere believers, and refuses to see the hand of God in our history.

The way forward is not denial. The way forward is not hatred. The way forward is repentance and reformation.

The Gospel of the Kingdom has power to transform any people or culture. But when handled by unrepentant men, even Gospel language can be twisted into a tool of destruction and death. That is why the Church must return to the fear of the Lord. That is why we must discern the difference between Christ and empire, between covenant and propaganda, between Kingdom mission and human ambition.

Jesus is not Lord over a false version of history. He is Lord over truth.

And if the Son makes us free, we shall be free indeed.

Sources and historical records referenced:

The Library of Congress, Indian Land Cessions in the United States, 1784–1894, records 709 land cession entries from 1784 to 1894.

The Smithsonian National Museum of American History states that American Indians lived in America before Europeans arrived, with many nations, tribes, languages, religions, and customs, and notes the effects of disease, conflict, and land loss after European arrival.

The National Archives explains that the Indian Removal Act authorized removal treaties with tribes east of the Mississippi and aimed to remove American Indians from existing states and territories.

The U.S. Department of State’s Office of the Historian states that treaties were used to displace Native peoples, and that the government sometimes violated treaties and Supreme Court rulings to facilitate westward expansion.

The 1790 Treaty with the Creeks, preserved through Yale’s Avalon Project, includes U.S. recognition and guarantee of Creek lands and warns against unauthorized settlement on Creek lands.

The Digital Library of Georgia’s description of the Treaty of New Echota notes that the 1835 treaty was signed by a Cherokee treaty party but opposed by the majority of the Cherokee Nation, including Principal Chief John Ross.

We must become the altar where the fire falls again.

Stay tuned, the journey continues…..

A voice of fire to the Remnant,

— Dr. Russell Welch

Dr. Russell Welch is a published author, prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, and founder of faith-driven publishing and media initiatives. He is known for crafting bold, Kingdom-centered messages that call the Ecclesia into maturity, doctrinal clarity, and governmental authority. With a passion for equipping the Remnant and honoring generational legacy, Dr. Welch writes and teaches at the intersection of Scripture, history, and spiritual governance, challenging believers to live as sons and daughters who legislate Heaven on earth through truth, holiness, and unwavering fidelity to Christ.

Be sure to check out his book, Spirit Wind People: Those Who are Moved by the Impulses of Holy Spirit, available exclusively on Amazon.

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