The Wolves In America
While reflecting on America’s current condition, I couldn’t help but think of The Grey (2011), a survival thriller directed by Joe Carnahan. In the movie, oil workers crash in the frozen wilderness of Alaska and face relentless attacks from a pack of grey wolves. John Ottway (Liam Neeson) struggles to survive, facing loss, fear, and impossible odds. Through faith, strategy, and perseverance, he manages to endure.
America today faces similar threats. Like John and his team, the Americans are surrounded by “the wolves”— extremists ideologies (Pedophilia, homosexuality, Islamization) and forces that attack American Christian society, American youth, and its Christian values. Millions of persecutors, terrorists, and Jihadists have entered America, echoing attacks on Christians in Islamic countries. These threats have harmed many, especially the youth. Yet, too often, we criticize leadership in passion without understanding risks or having a strategy. Complaints alone do not protect lives or reputation. Action, unity, and wisdom are essential.
Now, let’s talk about the movie.
Part 1 – Facing the Grey Wolves
After their final day on the job, John and the other oil drillers board a plane. During the flight, he dreams of lying in bed with his wife but is abruptly awakened by a loud bang. Fear grips him, and he quickly buckles up.
Shortly afterward, the back of the plane tears open, and luggage flies out. The plane crashes violently. Eight people, including John, survive, but a young worker, Lewenden, dies from his injuries. John watches helplessly as his companion’s life fades.
Taking charge, John organizes the survivors and tasks them with building a fire. While tending it, he discovers a corpse. A grey wolf feeding on the body attacks him, but he narrowly escapes. The group realizes they have crashed in wolf territory and decides to keep watch in shifts.
Later, Hernandez (Ben Bray) is killed by two wolves. John urges the group to leave, but Diaz (Frank Grillo) questions his leadership. While walking, Flannery (Joe Anderson) falls behind and is killed. When a pack approaches, the survivors run for trees, lighting a fire to ward them off.
A stressed Diaz loses his temper and threatens John with a knife. John quickly disarms him, and Diaz begins to regret his actions. Just as he prepares to apologize, a wolf pounces from behind. John later identifies it as an omega wolf sent by the alpha to test them. They manage to kill the wolf and roast it for food.
Bloodied and elated at surviving, Diaz beheads the corpse and defiantly throws the severed head back at the pack. The group notes the act as unwise, remembering that “wolves are known to take revenge.”
America’s Vulnerabilities
America faces similar dangers due to flaws in its political and social systems, which allow millions of Islamists—those who persecute Christians in their Islamic countries—to enter. The nation has fallen from its heights, and citizens are surrounded by threats. Many have suffered from attacks, yet many often criticize government, social, and spiritual leadership without strategy.
Too often, they speak against dangerous ideologies without understanding their nature or risks. Momentary satisfaction in insulting the enemy leads to greater losses—lives, reputation in foreign affairs, and global influence.
The old saying holds true: “Remove the problem before it harms you” or “The snake should die, but the rod shouldn’t break.” To survive, we must understand our enemy and act wisely rather than react blindly.
How the West Lost Its Vision
The enemy destroyed their generations. Instead of reaching the lands where the Gospel was most needed, many in the West allowed foreign ideologies and cultural influences to enter and shape their own societies. They brought Islamists, Islamists who secretly follow pedophilia and homosexuality started their movements in the west, later known as LGBT to destroy the Christian youth and their identity. Over time, movements that challenged traditional Christian morality gained influence and began reshaping the identity of Western youth. For decades—perhaps even centuries—this transformation was happening quietly, yet many failed to recognize its long-term consequences.
Today, a large number of people in Western societies no longer understand the foundations of biblical truth. Many are unfamiliar with the Christian values that once shaped their culture. As a result, they often struggle to defend their faith or explain Christianity within an increasingly secular and ideologically contested world.
Meanwhile, Islamic and LGBT ideological movements have been highly organized and intentional. They invest enormous resources, build networks, raise young leaders, and actively engage with young people and the wider public. Their ideas are promoted daily through education, media, and cultural platforms, allowing their influence to grow steadily.
In contrast, the mission that Jesus gave to Christians was to proclaim the truth of the Gospel and to transform nations through the glory of God.
Unfortunately, the Church has sometimes thought too narrowly. Many believers focus only on their local communities—perhaps their city or region—and even thinking nationally can seem like a major step. The vision of bringing the transformative message of the Gospel to the entire world often feels beyond imagination.
And even when some Christians do recognize this global calling, they often lack clear strategies for engaging and responding thoughtfully to powerful secular ideologies and other organized belief systems.
Part 2 – The Vulnerable and the Handicap
While sitting around the fire, Diaz admits he is an atheist. Talget (Dermot Mulroney) shares his belief in God and speaks lovingly of his daughter. John expresses a desire for faith. Later, he recites a simple poem written by his father, and the group sleeps through the night.
The next morning, Burke (Nonso Anozie), weakened by hypoxia, is found dead. The survivors leave camp and approach a steep canyon. Hendrick (Dallas Roberts) secures a line across to a tall tree. Diaz and John traverse carefully.
Talget, afraid of heights and with a bleeding hand, gets his foot caught on a hook. The rope breaks, and he falls violently, thrashing against branches. He hallucinates a vision of his daughter before four wolves attack and drag him away.
Diaz, John, and Hendrick continue to a river. Diaz, humbled and exhausted, accepts that he may die in the wilderness. Tearfully, he gazes at the mountains and parts ways with John and Hendrick, who continue together.
Further along, wolves attack again. Hendrick falls into the river, trapping his foot beneath boulders. John tries to save him but fails, and Hendrick drowns. Alone and frustrated, John appeals to God, but he quickly realizes he must rely on strategy and courage to survive.
Supporting the Like-Minded
People around us vary in beliefs, strengths, and vulnerabilities. Talget represents those with faith but held back by fear or lack of resources. Diaz shows strength but struggles with recklessness.
In society, like-minded people of faith and vision can be vulnerable if left unsupported. Empowering them at the right time allows them to protect communities and guide youth. It’s the time when Western Christians, organizations, and governments, especially America must raise leaders in America and globally and empower them. If we let these individuals fall, predators exploit their weaknesses, and we lose valuable allies.
Part 3 – The Survivor

John continues alone, cold and wet. He stops and examines the collected wallets of others, suddenly realizing he has entered the wolves’ den. The team had walked toward danger, not away from it.
The alpha wolf stands in front of him, growling. John glances at his wife’s photo and recalls her terminal illness and his failed attempt at suicide.
As the wolf approaches, John arms himself with a knife and attaches shards of glass from small liquor bottles to his other hand. He looks to heaven and recites:
“Once more into the fray. Into the last good fight I’ll ever know. Live and die on this day. Live and die on this day.”
In a brief post-credits scene, the alpha wolf lies injured on the ground, with John’s head resting on it. He has survived.
The Survivor’s Strategy
John survives through faith, courage, and careful strategy. We can apply the same principles:
- Stand united – Scattered efforts fail against a coordinated enemy. Christians cannot remain isolated from politics; they must engage strategically to protect Christian values and influence society, both nationally and internationally.
- Empower the youth – The next generation is the most targeted. Raise leaders socially and politically in America and around the world, and empower Christian leaders in Islamic countries, empower christian social platforms and organizations.
- Act strategically – Understand the enemy’s goals before taking action. The enemy’s goal is global. When they live in Islamic countries, their plans are designed and executed to expand, reach new regions, and build their hubs in America and Europe. Meanwhile, Western Christians often focus only on saving their own country, which results in losing influence both in their own nation and in international institutions such as the UN and the EU. They must address oppression and persecution in Islamic countries by empowering Christian organizations there. This is one of the most effective ways to weaken Islamist influence socially and politically at the international level and in foreign affairs.
- Support allies – Do not leave capable people to struggle alone. Empower them to grow globally, be their voice, and help them become influential and recognized leaders.
Evil is organized
Figures like Ilhan Omar, Rashida Talib, and certain leaders in London rise quickly to power, not in Islamic countries but in Christian nations. They are like omega wolves, sent and empowered by the Islamic world to influence America and Western countries, just as they have changed the Middle East and destroyed its Peace.
They empower one another and raise leaders globally. In just a few days or months, they establish hubs in America, the UK, and Europe. They build mosques in the heart of the cities. They have people in every social and political forum, and they are present throughout the media industry. Most importantly, they empower others to become a “recognized voice” known worldwide.
Meanwhile, many Christian politicians, social leaders, businessmen, entrepreneurs, and celebrities hide their faith. How can they hope to raise or empower new leaders? How can they think of building churches in Islamic countries, while they ignore the fact that 3,000 churches in the UK have been turned into mosques?
The Challenge for Christians
There was no Christian leader in the entire UN, from any Christian country, who confronted Muslim leaders when they spoke about Islamophobia and the protection of Muslim minorities. No Christian leader exposed the atrocities of those who persecute Christians, burn their homes and churches, or even burn Christians alive in Islamic countries.
If we want to protect America and the world from Islamic domination, we must be equally strategic. As Jesus said, “Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves.”
Standing Against Global Islamization
There is no political leader who exposes Muslims who, wherever they go, divide countries, cause corruption, build lobbies, and then weaken states to turn them into Islamic countries. The same happened in the Indian subcontinent: Pakistan was created in 1947, but internal divisions followed because different groups sought power. This eventually led to the partition of Pakistan, creating Bangladesh and Pakistan in 1971.
Contemporary Divisions and Separatism
Now, Muslims in India seek to divide the country and claim Kashmir as a separate state. Muslims in Azad Jammu & Kashmir in Pakistan also claim a separate identity. In Balochistan, Pakistan, certain Muslim groups demand independence. Among them, the most powerful seek to rule, claiming to speak for Islam and perpetuate oppression.
Double Standards in Global Reactions
When the Pakistani army conducts operations against militants in Balochistan, the muslims labels it a crime against a state. Yet, when Israel acts against Hamas in its territory, it is labeled oppression—largely because global Islamic lobbies support Palestinian militants. Is it normal that every Muslim country speaks in favor of Palestine, even when there is no direct personal benefit, but only political gain to increase Islamic influence in the UN?
The Power of Organized Lobbies
It is not normal that the same voice is echoed in Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, America, Norway, France, and even Hollywood. The reason is that Muslims have organized lobbies in every city, state, and country and on every social and political forum. They empower and elevate more Muslim leaders, while the West does not prioritize empowering persecuted Christians in Islamic countries. Even Western Christians are often not involved in national politics, so how can they influence global politics?
Raising Our Voice Against the Wolves
Since 2016, I have been saying that Christians worldwide need to unite against political Islamization—against the process by which countries are divided and turned into Islamic states. We must raise and empower leaders. The wolves are united; we must be too. America has over 323 million people, yet millions of challenges threaten society. Leadership alone—POTUS or organizations—is not enough. Every citizen has a role. Together, with faith and wisdom, we can protect our Christian values and rebuild strength.
Good people often work individually or in small groups, while enemies unite globally. The wolves’ target is clear: “You.” It is our responsibility to raise our voice in unity. We are exposing the enemy, and also trying to raise Christian leaders in Islamic countries, preaching the gospel to Muslims for the massive gospel revolution in Islamic world. The Bible foretells that nations will bow before God. This will come to pass when humanity unites to fulfill the prophecies written in Isaiah 41:6–7. We need God’s people to stand with us, organizations, churches, individuals to stand with us and empower us.
God’s Promise for all Nations:
America can rise again, and with wisdom, we can protect the world—following the principles in Daniel 12:3. Just as John survived through faith, courage, and strategy, we too can succeed. If we have faith and courage, let us unite, develop strategic platforms, and think on a global scale.
“All nations whom You have made shall come and worship before You, O Lord, and shall glorify Your name.” Psalms 86:9
“For the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the LORD as the waters cover the sea.” Habakkuk 2:14
I have also written another article, Check out: The Heritage of Pakistan: Uncovering Its Pre-Islamic Civilizations
Excellent analysis, very insightful and well structured