
Are You Okay With This?
In Dearborn, Michigan—America’s largest Muslim-majority city—a pastor just got excommunicated from his own community. His crime? Daring to question why the city was naming two intersections after Osama Siblani, a man who publicly praised Hezbollah and Hamas as “freedom fighters.”
When Pastor Ted Barham raised that moral objection before the city council, Dearborn’s Muslim mayor, Abdullah Hammoud, lost his composure. He branded the pastor an Islamophobe, told him he’s “not welcome here,” and promised to throw a parade when he leaves town. That’s not governance—it’s Islamic mob rule with elected authority right here in the USA.
As Mark Levin revealed on LevinTV and reported by The Blaze, this wasn’t just a city-hall tantrum. It’s the same spiritual corrosion that turned Bethlehem from 80 percent Christian to barely 15 percent today—the same pattern that left a few Jewish families in Hebron needing armed escorts just to reach the tombs of their patriarchs. When the righteous go silent, darkness fills the microphone.
Dearborn didn’t celebrate “diversity.” It sanctified extremism.
City leaders publicly elevated a man who praised blood-stained movements that murder civilians and call it justice. And when a Christian pastor dared to object, they called him the problem.
The Bible says, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness.” (Isaiah 5:20)
Evil isn’t lurking in the shadows anymore—it’s getting street signs and photo ops. And the politicians cheer while churches cower.
A Muslim mayor just told a Christian preacher he’s unwelcome for speaking truth in a public meeting. That’s sort of arrogance is open rebellion against God Himself. What happened in Dearborn is a preview of what’s coming for every pastor who refuses to bend.
The Church has spent too long begging for a seat at tables where our faith is mocked. It’s time to flip the tables, not polish the silverware. Christians across America should be lighting up every microphone, camera, and comment thread with support for Pastor Barham. The world can exile truth-tellers, but it cannot erase truth.
This battle isn’t about party politics—it’s about whether the Church still believes in her own divine authority. When governments mock righteousness and reward hate, silence becomes complicity.
If we won’t stand with one pastor facing civic persecution, we’ll have no moral footing left when the next one is dragged into court—or worse.
So rise up. Write. Speak. Stand. Pray. And never forget God’s warning: “If the watchman sees the sword coming and does not blow the trumpet… I will require his blood at the watchman’s hand.” (Ezekiel 33:6)