The Joy Of A People Freed From Oppression Reveals Why Liberty, Morality, And Limited Government Still Matter
As Venezuelans poured into the streets and gathered across the diaspora in tears, prayer, and celebration following the capture of Nicolás Maduro, the world witnessed something true and unmistakable: the sound of people tasting freedom after years of tyranny.
Flags waved. Cries of “Libertad!” echoed. Families who fled hunger, censorship, and political imprisonment dared to hope again.
And yet, in a bitter twist of irony, some voices in the United States on the far Left rushed to defend Maduro, minimize his crimes, and demand his release. And of course, condemn every action by President Trump. It’s almost as if the far left has no actual values of their own
History has seen this before.
When the Oppressed Rejoice — and the Elites Object
It is one of the recurring paradoxes of modern politics: those who suffer under tyranny recognize it immediately, while those insulated from its consequences often explain it away.
For years, Maduro presided over the systematic dismantling of Venezuela’s democracy, including rigged elections, imprisoned dissidents, silenced churches, crushed free enterprise, and an economy reduced to rubble. Millions fled. Children starved. Faith communities prayed quietly under threat.
Yet now, as the people most affected rejoice at his removal, some American political activists and lawmakers have chosen to stand on the opposite side, portraying Maduro not as a tyrant, and actually opposing his arrest (to no avail)? A narco-terrorist dictator, who refused to step down after being voted out of office. but as a misunderstood leader or victim of “imperialism.”
It is a striking contrast: the oppressed celebrating liberation while privileged ideologues mourn the loss of power for a strongman.
Freedom Exposes False Narratives
The reaction reveals something deeper than partisan disagreement. It exposes a worldview divide.
Biblically grounded democracy rests on the belief that human beings are moral agents, capable of self-government under God, requiring limited government and accountable leadership. That framework produced free markets, civil society, and unprecedented prosperity.
Authoritarian socialism, by contrast, concentrates power in the hands of the few, demands submission, and promises equality while delivering misery. Venezuela is a case study in the fallacies of socialism.
When Venezuelans celebrate, they are not celebrating a geopolitical maneuver. They are celebrating the possibility of truth, accountability, work, worship, and hope. Their joy dismantles the narrative that tyranny can ever be justified by intentions, slogans, or academic theories.
Calling Wrong “Right” Never Ages Well
Time has a way of clarifying moral confusion.
Those who once defended Soviet communism, Castro’s Cuba, or Mao’s China now find themselves on the wrong side of history. And once again, we are watching the same mistake unfold, calling evil good and good evil, confusing oppression with “equity,” and mistaking control for compassion.
The Bible warns that this inversion is not merely a political error, but moral blindness.
The United States was designed for a moral people precisely because freedom cannot survive without virtue. When citizens abandon truth, excuse tyranny, or mock the cries of the oppressed, liberty erodes.
Freedom Is a Gift and a Responsibility
The biblical call to “let the nations be glad” (Psalm 67:4) is not merely an expression of relief when tyranny falls — it is a call to uphold justice, righteousness, and human dignity wherever they are threatened. It is a reminder that freedom without virtue collapses into chaos, and that self-government depends on moral citizens willing to steward their liberties wisely.
As journalists, pastors, policymakers, and everyday citizens, our task is not simply to cheer when tyrants fall but to champion the deeper principles that make freedom sustainable: moral responsibility, personal virtue, rule of law, limited government, and economic freedom. These are the pillars that allow nations not only to be free, but to be glad.
And when nations rise, and people rejoice in the restoration of dignity and hope, “let the nations be glad” rings with profound relevance.
Let the Nations Be Glad and Let America Remember
The rejoicing of Venezuelans is a reminder that freedom is precious. It is fragile. And it depends on a people willing to discern right from wrong and good from evil
Let the nations be glad when dictators fall.
But let America also remember which side of history — and Scripture — it stands on.
Because when the oppressed rejoice and elites protest, the contrast tells us everything we need to know.





