ANZAC Day: A Sacred Stand Against Globalism and Moral Decay, By Paul Walker

April 25th is more than a date marked on the calendar—it is a sacred day, etched into the soul of our nation. ANZAC Day calls us to remember the gallant men of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who charged into the jaws of death at Gallipoli in 1915. But it is also a rallying cry to defend everything they fought for: God, country, and the enduring values of Western Christian civilisation.

The ANZAC spirit—bravery, brotherhood, sacrifice—was not forged in a vacuum. It was shaped by a culture steeped in Christian morality, loyalty to one's homeland, and a willingness to fight evil when it rises. Our forefathers believed in right and wrong, in good and evil. They bowed their heads before God, and they stood tall before tyrants.

Today, we face a different kind of invasion. Not by bayonet or battleship, but by ideologies and institutions that aim to erase our sovereignty, dismantle our culture, and silence our faith. Globalism is not just a political threat—it is a spiritual and moral cancer, spreading rootless consumerism, moral relativism, and identity confusion wherever it goes.

It promises "progress" but delivers spiritual poverty. It preaches "unity" but demands the surrender of all that makes us distinct: our borders, our beliefs, our history.

The ANZACs were the opposite of this globalist ideal. They were men rooted in place, anchored in duty, and defined by love—love for their God, their families, and their homeland. They did not die so we could become another indistinguishable province in a godless global order. They died so we could be free peoples under God, governing ourselves, raising families in peace, and preserving the inheritance passed down through generations.

And yet, what are we doing with that inheritance?

We are governed by men and women who openly sneer at the values the ANZACs held dear. Our laws mock the sanctity of life, marriage, and family. Our churches grow silent while politicians bow to Beijing. Our schools rewrite history to breed shame instead of gratitude. And worst of all, we allow foreign entities—like the Chinese Communist Party—to lease our ports and dictate our markets, while we're told to stay quiet in the name of economic convenience.

This is not what the ANZACs died for.

They faced bullets and artillery for the sake of the soil beneath their feet. We, in contrast, are often unwilling to face ridicule or inconvenience to preserve the nation they gave their lives for. It is time to reverse that trend.

If ANZAC Day is to mean anything in 2025, it must be more than a moment of mourning. It must be a call to action. It must stir in us the resolve to reclaim Australia as a Christian nation, under sovereign rule, committed to truth, to justice, and to the preservation of our unique way of life.

Let us teach our children that the ANZACs were not just warriors—they were men of faith, men who knelt in prayer before storming the beaches. Let us build an economy that serves the family, not faceless conglomerates. Let us demand leaders who put God before globalism, who fear the judgment of heaven more than the opinion of the UN.

The answer to globalism is not merely politics—it is repentance. We must turn our hearts back to the values that gave the ANZACs their strength: faith in God, love of country, and the courage to stand when standing costs something.

Lest We Forget—Or Worse, Betray

ANZAC Day must not become a hollow ritual or a vague appeal to "mateship." It must remain a solemn vow—a promise that we will not allow their sacrifice to be mocked by global bureaucrats, cultural radicals, or spineless politicians.

The ANZACs stood against an empire. So must we.

On this day, as we bow our heads in prayer and gratitude, let us raise our eyes with resolve. Let us reject globalism and recommit ourselves to building an Australia that is Christian, free, and fiercely independent.

May their sacrifice never be forgotten.

May their courage live on in us.

Lest we forget. 

 

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Sunday, 04 May 2025

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