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Edward Randolph-Koranteng (Rev), who is a Banking and Organizational Development Consultant, is the founder of Idea Champions Center.

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Idea Champions Center > Blog > Books > Alexander, Rome, And The Mongols All Fell In Iran — So Why Does Israel Win? The Answer Changes Everything
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Alexander, Rome, And The Mongols All Fell In Iran — So Why Does Israel Win? The Answer Changes Everything

E.A. Randolph-Koranteng (Rev)
Last updated: April 8, 2026 9:48 pm
E.A. Randolph-Koranteng (Rev)
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Looking at history and theology, we see two distinct patterns that usually define the survival of Iran and Israel.

There is the Iranian pattern, which is mostly structural. Every empire that has tried to swallow Persia eventually ends up retreating or completely falling apart. It’s a certain kind of long-term biological or civilizational endurance. They use absorption and strategic depth to just outlast basically anyone who tries to occupy their land. And then there is the Israel pattern, which is biblical. This comes from the idea in Genesis that those who bless Israel are blessed and those who curse them are cursed. It suggests that any nation specifically targeting Israel for destruction just won’t win in the long run.

Do these ideas contradict? I don’t think so. They just operate on different timelines.

The Iranian pattern is looking at centuries. It’s about superpowers—take the Mongols or the Greeks under Alexander—who attempted to rule the Iranian plateau and ultimately faded into history. Iran might lose a battle or face an occupation, but the civilization remains distinct long after the occupiers are gone. Israel’s pattern is usually sharper. It’s about military confrontations where things don’t go well for the aggressor in specific turning points of history, or like the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians who hit Israel and eventually faced a slow-motion or sudden collapse from a higher judgment.

Also, it isn’t always an “either / or” situation. The same empire could, and often has, run into both countries. Consider Rome. The Romans fought Persia for centuries and it drained their coffers and energy. Rome also destroyed the Temple in Jerusalem and scattered the Israelites. But Rome eventually decayed internally and fell and ended up in the history books while both nations involved in their old wars still exist today.

And something worth noting: the biblical promise for Israel was often tied to obedience in the text. There were times, like during the exile to Babylon, when Israel suffered total military defeat as a form of divine correction. So the promise isn’t about winning every firefight, it’s about the fact that the covenant itself can’t be wiped out. Similarly, Iran’s history isn’t a string of endless victories—they’ve definitely been conquered—but they basically culturaly “digest” their conquerors and emerge on the other side.

Theologically, God is the one who sets up kings and takes them down. That’s the core of the Book of Daniel. We even see Persia (as Cyrus the Great) being used as the literal “anointed” hand of God to rebuild Israel. Iran, in this sense, has actually been an instrument for the survival of Israel before, and not many people think about that side of it today.

If these two collided directly, maybe we would see the limit of these patterns, but historically Iran hasn’t gone into full-scale war directly against Israel. It’s usually through other groups and loud rhetoric. And Iran’s pattern isn’t about winning one specific war but surviving for ten generations. Israel’s pattern is about not being destroyed as a chosen people.

Iran’s pattern = Empires that try to permanently conquer Persia eventually collapse.
· Israel’s pattern = Nations that attack Israel for its destruction will face divine judgment, often through historical reversal.

These can coexist because an empire could attack both nations and lose to both in different ways. For example, Alexander the Great attacked neither Israel nor Iran as an empire (he died young). Rome attacked both: Rome destroyed Jerusalem (70 AD) but later fell; Rome fought Persia for centuries and fell. God’s purposes for Israel and for Iran are not in competition—both nations have unique prophetic roles in Scripture (Iran as Persia appears in Daniel, Esther, and Ezekiel 38-39 as part of end-times alliances).

Scripture that holds both truths:
“I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come” (Isaiah 46:9-10). God weaves both patterns into His sovereign plan—neither nation is invincible apart from Him, but both have been preserved for His purposes.

At the end of the day, Iran’s pattern is more about observed history while Israel’s is about a theological covenant. They don’t have to conflict. They’re like two different layers of truth. One is about how empires fail under the scale of geology and distance / culture and land, and the other is about how God protects a specific light or purpose He placed on a specific group. An empire trying to fight against both traditions would basically be choosing the hard way to stop existing. One offers patient attrition and the other offers divine judgment. One way or another, the aggressor is going to lose.

Thanks for reading. May The Good Lord sustain us all. Shalom and life to you.

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By E.A. Randolph-Koranteng (Rev)
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Rev. Edward Randolph-Koranteng (A Servant of Christ), who is a Banking and Organizational Development Consultant, is the founder of Idea Champions Center. A Consultant that helped to set up Fidelity Bank in Ghana, he is also the founder / C.E.O. of the former B-One Savings and Loans Limited. ...Read More
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Edward Randolph-Koranteng (Rev), who is a Banking and Organizational Development Consultant, is the founder of Idea Champions Center.

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