Peterson Academy – Napoleon 2: The Italian & Egyptian Campaign

Christos Historical Review — Case Study

Napoleon in Italy and Egypt: The Logic of Conquest Without Conscience

Renaissance Ministries | April 2026 Series: The Counter-Narrative — Post-Christian Alternatives Part 2 of the Napoleon Series


“Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood, and stablisheth a city by iniquity!” — Habakkuk 2:12

“Put up again thy sword into his place: for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.” — Matthew 26:52


Featured Source

“Napoleon” — Lecture 2: The Italian and Egyptian Campaigns by Andrew Roberts The Peterson Academy Available at: petersonacademy.com

This lecture covers the second phase of the Italian Campaign (Castiglione through the fall of Mantua and the push into Austria), the Fructidor coup, the Egyptian expedition (including the Battle of the Pyramids, the massacre at Jaffa, and the failed siege of Acre), Napoleon’s return to France, and the Brumaire coup that made him First Consul. Roberts continues to present Napoleon’s trajectory as a masterclass in leadership, ambition, and the creation of personal greatness.


Executive Summary

In Lecture 1, we examined Napoleon’s gifts, his rise through the Revolution’s meritocracy, and the fundamental question: gifted for what, and accountable to whom? Lecture 2 answers that question with devastating clarity. The gifts are deployed in conquest, plunder, massacre, and the overthrow of elected government. The accountability is to no one — not to God, not to moral law, not even to the Republic that Napoleon professed to serve.

Roberts presents this trajectory with admiration barely tempered by acknowledgment. The massacres at Cairo and Jaffa receive brief mention. The systematic plunder of Italy is described as a logistical innovation. The Brumaire coup — the violent overthrow of elected representatives by soldiers with fixed bayonets — is narrated as a story of decisive leadership. The Kingdom lens sees something different in each of these events, and it is the task of this review to name what Roberts’s secular framing cannot.


Part I: The Standard Established

What Does Kingdom Culture Require of Military Power?

The biblical standard for the use of force is bounded by justice, proportionality, and the protection of the innocent:

Deuteronomy 20:10-12 — Before besieging a city, Israel was commanded to offer terms of peace. Only if peace was refused could force be employed. The principle: force is a last resort, not a first option, and even then it is bounded by rules.

Proverbs 24:17-18“Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth, and let not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth: Lest the LORD see it, and it displease him.” The Kingdom standard does not celebrate the destruction of enemies. It recognizes the tragedy inherent in all violence, even justified violence.

Romans 13:4 — The ruler “beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.” Government has a legitimate monopoly on force — but that force is ministerial (exercised on behalf of God’s justice), not proprietary (exercised for the ruler’s glory or enrichment).

Micah 4:3 — The Kingdom vision is ultimately one of peace: swords beaten into plowshares, spears into pruning hooks. All military force, however necessary in a fallen world, exists under the judgment of this eschatological standard. War is tolerated; it is never celebrated.

What Does Kingdom Culture Require of Political Power?

1 Samuel 8:11-18 — God’s warning about kings: “He will take your sons… your daughters… your fields… your vineyards… your servants… and ye shall cry out in that day because of your king.” The accumulation of power in one person’s hands is presented as dangerous, not glorious. The Kingdom standard prefers distributed authority with mutual accountability.

Acts 5:29“We ought to obey God rather than men.” Legitimate political authority derives from conformity to moral law. When a government ceases to serve justice, the citizen’s obligation shifts from obedience to principled resistance.


Part II: The Aspiration Acknowledged

What Was Napoleon Trying to Do in Italy and Egypt?

Roberts presents Napoleon’s aspirations in this period as genuinely impressive, and they were:

In Italy: He sought to drive the Austrians out of northern Italy, secure France’s southern border, and establish France as the dominant power in the Mediterranean. These were legitimate strategic objectives for a nation at war. His tactical innovations — the coordinated multi-arm attack, the exploitation of interior lines, the relentless operational tempo — were genuine military achievements that advanced the art of war.

In Egypt: He sought to cut Britain off from its Eastern Mediterranean trade routes, establish a French colony, and — remarkably — advance human knowledge. The 160 savants he brought with him produced the 21-volume Description of Egypt, founded modern Egyptology, and discovered the Rosetta Stone (though it ended up in the British Museum). Napoleon’s intellectual curiosity was genuine. He wanted to be a member of the Institut de France as much as he wanted to be a conqueror.

In the Brumaire coup: He sought to replace an incompetent, corrupt government with effective leadership. The Directory was genuinely corrupt and genuinely incompetent. The military situation, while improved by the time of the coup, had been dire. France’s enemies were on multiple borders. The case for strong, competent executive leadership was real.

These aspirations — strategic security, intellectual advancement, effective governance — are not contemptible. The question, as always, is how they were pursued and at what cost.


Part III: The Execution Evaluated

Where Napoleon Succeeded

The Italian Campaign was a military masterpiece. The coordination of Masséna at Rivoli, Augereau at Castiglione, and the overall orchestration of the campaign against multiple Austrian relief attempts demonstrated genuine genius. The fall of Mantua after a siege that required Napoleon to defeat three major Austrian offensives was an achievement that military historians rightly study. Roberts is correct that the campaign is still taught in military academies as a model of operational excellence.

The Egyptian expedition advanced human knowledge. Whatever its military failures, the scientific and cultural documentation of Egypt was a lasting contribution. The savants’ work endured long after the military occupation collapsed. Napoleon’s insistence on bringing intellectuals, artists, and historians on a military campaign reflects a breadth of vision that distinguishes him from mere warlords.

Napoleon’s leadership of men was genuinely effective. Roberts describes a commander who shared campfires with drummer boys, ensured sentries had wine, joked with soldiers who called him “the little bald guy,” and personally pinned his own Légion d’honneur on soldiers he saw being brave. The pension system attached to the Légion d’honneur — life-changing money for men from poverty — was a genuine innovation in military welfare. Napoleon’s soldiers loved him because he treated them as human beings, not as expendable tools. This is, ironically, closer to the Kingdom standard of leadership than the aristocratic contempt of his enemies: Wellington called his own troops “the scum of the Earth.”

Where Napoleon Failed — Grievously

The plunder of Italy was systematic robbery. Roberts mentions in passing that Napoleon’s army “essentially plundered and looted and pillaged everywhere that it moved on to” and describes this as a logistical method. From the Kingdom perspective, this was the systematic theft of wealth from civilian populations who had no say in the war and derived no benefit from it. The inhabitants of northern Italy were not liberated. They were occupied and robbed. The great art collections of Milan, Venice, and Rome were shipped to Paris. The wealth of the Italian peninsula funded Napoleon’s army and his political ambitions.

This is not a logistical innovation. It is a violation of the eighth commandment — “Thou shalt not steal” (Exodus 20:15) — conducted at industrial scale. That it was standard practice among armies of the era does not excuse it; it indicts the era.

The Cairo massacre was premeditated terror. After the October 1798 uprising in Cairo, Napoleon ordered that rebels found under arms be beheaded and their corpses thrown into the Nile “so that they will go down the Nile and everybody in Cairo will be able to see what happens to people who foment uprisings against the French.” Roberts reports this plainly. It deserves to be called what it is: state terrorism designed to intimidate a civilian population into submission through the public display of mutilated bodies.

The Jaffa massacre was a war crime by any standard. Approximately 3,000 Turkish prisoners who had surrendered were marched to the beach and executed in cold blood. Roberts offers Napoleon’s justifications: they had broken their parole, he couldn’t feed them, and “the rules in Middle Eastern warfare were, if anything, even more vicious.” None of these justifications meets the Kingdom standard.

The execution of prisoners who have surrendered is condemned in every moral tradition, including the Old Testament laws of warfare. Deuteronomy 20 establishes that cities that surrender are to be spared. The claim that “he couldn’t feed them” is a logistical excuse for murder: if you cannot maintain prisoners, you do not take them; you do not execute them after they have surrendered. The appeal to regional norms (“Middle Eastern warfare was more vicious”) is moral relativism — the argument that atrocity is acceptable if the local standard permits it.

Roberts says: “Never underestimate the ruthlessness of Napoleon.” The Kingdom says: never normalize it.

The Fructidor coup was the destruction of democracy. In September 1797, Napoleon sent Augereau to Paris to overthrow the elected legislature because royalists had won the elections. Troops surrounded the building at dawn. Leading royalists were arrested. 160 were condemned to death. 30 were sent to the penal colony in Guiana — “essentially a death sentence,” as Roberts notes. This was not the defense of the Republic. It was the use of military force to overrule an election whose outcome the regime didn’t like.

The Brumaire coup completed the destruction. On November 9-10, 1799, Napoleon used soldiers with fixed bayonets to clear the elected legislature. Murat shouted “Clear out this rabble” as troops drove elected representatives through the windows of the Orangery. Roberts narrates this with something approaching relish. From the Kingdom perspective, this is the definitive moment: a general using military force to overthrow the civilian government and install himself as dictator. Every subsequent Napoleonic achievement — the Code, the reforms, the administrative brilliance — is built on this foundation of bayonets through the windows of a legislature.

The Brumaire coup is the ur-text of the modern military coup. Every general who has overthrown a civilian government since 1799 has followed Napoleon’s template: claim the existing government is corrupt and incompetent (it usually is), promise strong and effective leadership (it usually isn’t, for long), and use military force to bypass democratic processes. The template always works in the short term and always fails in the long term, because power seized by force must be maintained by force, and the cycle of escalation is inexorable.


Part IV: The Alternatives Assessed

What Was Happening Elsewhere?

In Britain during this same period (1796-1799), the abolitionist movement was gathering force. William Wilberforce introduced his first abolition bill in Parliament in 1791 and continued to press the case through democratic means, year after year, without resorting to violence. The bill would finally pass in 1807 — eight years after the Brumaire coup. Britain’s path was slower, messier, and less dramatic than France’s. It did not produce a military dictator. It produced the abolition of the slave trade.

In America, the constitutional system was being tested by the Quasi-War with France (1798-1800) and the fierce partisan conflict between Federalists and Democratic-Republicans. The system held. John Adams lost the election of 1800 to Thomas Jefferson and peacefully transferred power — the first such transfer in the history of the Republic. No bayonets. No coups. No generals clearing legislatures. The American system, grounded in Christian constitutional principles (however imperfectly applied), demonstrated that democratic transition was possible without revolution.

In the Ottoman Empire, the very “vicious” norms of warfare that Roberts cites to contextualize Napoleon’s massacres were themselves the product of a civilization without the Christian ethic of the dignity of prisoners and the just treatment of the defeated. Napoleon’s adoption of these norms — beheading rebels, massacring prisoners — represents not the importation of Enlightenment values to the East, but the abandonment of Christian values by a Western army. He went to Egypt claiming to bring civilization and instead matched the worst practices of the civilizations he found there.

What Replaced the Directory?

The Brumaire coup replaced an elected (if corrupt and incompetent) government with a military dictatorship. Within five years, Napoleon was Emperor. Within fifteen years, Europe had endured the most destructive wars in its history to that point. The Directory’s corruption was real. But the cure was worse than the disease — not because Napoleon was less competent than the Directory (he was vastly more competent), but because concentrated power in the hands of a man accountable to no one produces catastrophes that no amount of competence can prevent.


Part V: The Lessons Extracted

Lesson 1: Competence Does Not Justify Tyranny

Napoleon was more competent than the Directory. This is not disputed. But competence is not the Kingdom standard for political legitimacy. The Kingdom standard is justice, accountability, and the protection of the governed. A competent tyrant is more dangerous than an incompetent republic, because his competence extends the reach and duration of his tyranny.

The modern temptation — “we need a strong leader who gets things done” — is the Brumaire temptation. It is the willingness to trade democratic accountability for executive competence. The Kingdom teaches that this trade always ends badly, because power without accountability always corrupts, and competence without conscience always destroys.

Lesson 2: The Glory of War Is a Lie

Roberts’s lecture is suffused with the language of glory: “great victories,” “magnificent campaigns,” “the perfection of warfare.” Napoleon himself cultivated this through his bulletins, his propaganda, his theatrical harangues. The French army was motivated by glory — the promise that their deeds would be remembered, their bravery honored, their names inscribed in history.

But behind the glory is the reality: men torn apart by grapeshot, prisoners executed on beaches, bodies floating down the Nile as a warning, civilizations plundered for their art, and a continent drenched in blood for the ambitions of one man. The Kingdom does not deny that courage in battle is real, or that military skill is a genuine capacity. But it refuses to call mass killing “glorious.” “Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood” (Habakkuk 2:12).

Roberts notes that Napoleon took 800,000 liters of wine to Egypt. He does not note how many of the 38,000 soldiers who went with him came home alive. The Kingdom counts the dead. The empire counts the wine.

Lesson 3: Honor Without God Becomes the Servant of Power

Napoleon’s philosophy of leadership centered on honor: “The French do not care for liberty and equality. All they care about is honor.” He manipulated honor brilliantly — rewarding bravery with public recognition and pensions, shaming failure with the threat of disbandment, using the language of glory to inspire men to extraordinary courage and extraordinary suffering.

But honor in Napoleon’s system is severed from morality. It rewards courage regardless of the cause. It celebrates the soldiers of the 39th and 85th for fighting bravely at Castiglione — without asking whether Castiglione was a just battle. It honors Lannes for leading charges — without asking whether the war itself served justice. Honor becomes a mechanism for extracting obedience, not a reflection of moral character.

The Kingdom standard for honor is different: “Them that honour me I will honour” (1 Samuel 2:30). True honor comes from alignment with God’s purposes, not from battlefield performance in service of a dictator’s ambitions. A soldier who refuses an unjust order has more honor than one who leads a brilliant charge in an unjust war.

Lesson 4: Abandonment Is the Natural End of Self-Serving Leadership

Napoleon left Egypt secretly, taking his inner circle and abandoning 38,000 soldiers to fend for themselves. They surrendered to the British three years later. Roberts presents Napoleon’s departure as strategic necessity. From the Kingdom perspective, it is the inevitable conclusion of leadership built on self-advancement: when the situation no longer serves the leader’s interests, the leader leaves and the followers are expendable.

This is the antithesis of the Good Shepherd, who “giveth his life for the sheep” (John 10:11). Napoleon was a hireling: when the wolf came, he fled. That his soldiers still loved him despite this — that they cheered when he returned and followed him into twenty more years of war — is a testament to his charisma and to the human capacity for loyalty to those who do not deserve it.

Lesson 5: The Revolution Always Devours Its Own

The trajectory from Lecture 1 to Lecture 2 completes the revolutionary cycle: the Revolution opens meritocracy (1789-1793), the meritocracy selects for ruthlessness (1793-1796), the most ruthless operator seizes power (1799), and the power is used to destroy the very democratic institutions the Revolution created.

Augereau, who carried out the Fructidor coup for Napoleon, immediately tried to set himself up as an independent power — and was crushed. Bernadotte, who warned against Napoleon’s dictatorship, was sidelined. Jourdan, who opposed the coup, was forced to flee. The men who made the Revolution possible were consumed by the man the Revolution produced.

This is the pattern of every revolution: the idealists create the opening, the radicals seize the opportunity, and the strongman takes the prize. The Kingdom teaches that transformation — the slow, patient work of converting hearts and reforming institutions from within — is the only path that does not end in the strongman’s boot on the legislature’s neck.


Discussion Questions

  1. The Jaffa massacre. Roberts presents Napoleon’s execution of 3,000 prisoners with context: they had broken their parole, he couldn’t feed them, and regional norms were vicious. Do any of these justifications hold up under the Kingdom standard? Is there ever a circumstance in which executing prisoners who have surrendered is morally acceptable?
  2. Honor and morality. Napoleon’s leadership was built on the manipulation of honor and shame. Is this compatible with the Kingdom ethic? Can a leader use honor and shame to motivate followers without crossing into manipulation? Where is the line?
  3. The competent tyrant. The Directory was corrupt and incompetent. Napoleon was neither. Was the Brumaire coup justified by the failure of the existing government? Does the Kingdom framework ever permit the violent overthrow of a legitimate (if failing) government?
  4. Abandonment. Napoleon left 38,000 soldiers in Egypt to fend for themselves. Roberts frames this as strategic necessity. Is there a moral distinction between a leader who retreats to fight another day and one who abandons his followers to save himself? How does this compare to the Good Shepherd standard of John 10:11?
  5. The savants. Napoleon brought 160 intellectuals to Egypt and produced the Description of Egypt — a lasting contribution to human knowledge. Does the genuine intellectual achievement of the expedition change the moral calculus of the conquest? Can good fruits grow from a poisoned root?
  6. Plunder as policy. Napoleon’s armies systematically plundered every territory they occupied. This was standard practice for the era. Does the universality of a practice excuse it? Or does the Kingdom standard apply regardless of what “everyone else was doing”? How does this relate to contemporary questions about economic exploitation?
  7. The revolutionary cycle. The French Revolution opened opportunity, selected for ruthlessness, and ended in dictatorship. Is this pattern inevitable for all revolutions? Can you identify examples where revolution did not produce a strongman? What conditions would be necessary to break the cycle?

Key Scriptures for Further Study

  • Habakkuk 2:6-14 — Woe to the plunderer and the builder of cities with blood
  • Psalm 33:16-17 — “There is no king saved by the multitude of an host: a mighty man is not delivered by much strength. An horse is a vain thing for safety.”
  • Isaiah 10:5-7 — God uses Assyria as an instrument of judgment, but Assyria’s ambitions are its own, and it will be judged for them
  • John 10:11-13 — The Good Shepherd vs. the hireling
  • Deuteronomy 20:10-18 — Laws of warfare, including the treatment of besieged cities
  • Proverbs 16:32 — “He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city.”

Connection to Part 1

In Lecture 1, we asked: What happens when genius operates without the fear of God? Lecture 2 answers: it plunders Italy, massacres prisoners in Egypt, overthrows elected governments, abandons its own soldiers, and crowns itself master of France. The gifts are real. The trajectory is catastrophic. And the man at the center of it all is, as he himself said, “neither wholly guilty nor wholly innocent” — a coloring eminently tragic.

Six more lectures remain. The trajectory — from First Consul to Emperor to master of Europe to exile — will deepen every lesson established here. The gifts will grow. The destruction will grow faster. And the absence of God at the center of it all will become, with each lecture, more glaringly visible.


“He that ruleth his spirit is better than he that taketh a city.” — Proverbs 16:32


Featured source: Andrew Roberts, “Napoleon” Lecture 2, The Peterson Academy. This article is Part 2 of the Christos Historical Review Napoleon series. Summary and analysis by Thomas Lee Abshier, ND, with assistance from Claude (Anthropic). We encourage readers to view the full lecture series at petersonacademy.com.

“Buy the truth, and sell it not; also wisdom, and instruction, and understanding.” — Proverbs 23:23

 

Peterson Academy: Napoleon 1: The Rise

Christos Historical Review — Case Study

Napoleon Bonaparte: Providence, Ambition, and the Tragedy of Greatness Without God

Renaissance Ministries | April 13, 2026 Series: The Counter-Narrative — Post-Christian Alternatives


“For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” — Mark 8:36

“The king’s heart is in the hand of the LORD, as the rivers of water: he turneth it whithersoever he will.” — Proverbs 21:1


Featured Source

“Napoleon” — Lecture 1 by Andrew Roberts The Peterson Academy Available at: petersonacademy.com

Andrew Roberts is the author of Napoleon: A Life (2014), widely regarded as the definitive modern biography. This lecture, the first in an eight-part series, covers Napoleon’s birth, education, early military career through the Italian Campaign of 1796, and the personal characteristics that drove his extraordinary ascent.


Executive Summary

Andrew Roberts presents Napoleon Bonaparte as the supreme example of the self-made man — a minor Corsican nobleman who, through autodidacticism, ruthless ambition, battlefield genius, and the revolutionary opening of meritocracy, crowned himself Emperor of France and reshaped the map of Europe. Roberts explicitly frames Napoleon’s story as a lesson in “self-advancement, bettering yourself, and taking advantage of opportunities to learn in order to be a better person.”

The Christos Historical Review examines this narrative through the Kingdom lens — not to diminish Napoleon’s extraordinary gifts, but to ask the questions that Roberts’s secular framing cannot: What happens when genius operates without the fear of God? What does the Revolution’s meritocracy look like when divorced from moral accountability? And what does Napoleon’s trajectory — from liberator to dictator to exile — teach the Kingdom citizen about the relationship between greatness and goodness?


Part I: The Standard Established

What Does Kingdom Culture Require of Leadership?

Before evaluating Napoleon, we must establish what godly leadership looks like according to Scripture:

Mark 10:42-45“Ye know that they which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and their great ones exercise authority upon them. But so shall it not be among you: but whosoever will be great among you, shall be your minister: And whosoever of you will be the first, shall be servant of all. For even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.”

The Kingdom standard for leadership is servant-leadership — authority exercised for the benefit of those governed, not for the glory of the one governing. Power is held in trust, not owned. The leader’s ambition is directed toward the flourishing of others, not toward personal greatness.

Deuteronomy 17:16-20 — The instructions for Israel’s king: he shall not multiply horses (military power), wives (political alliances through marriage), or gold (personal wealth). He shall write a copy of the law and read it all the days of his life, “that his heart be not lifted up above his brethren.”

The Kingdom standard for rulers includes intellectual diligence (Napoleon had this), humility before the law (Napoleon did not), and a heart not “lifted up” above others (Napoleon’s defining characteristic was precisely this elevation).

Micah 6:8“He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?”

Justice, mercy, and humility. Napoleon possessed a sense of justice (he reformed France’s legal code). He occasionally showed mercy (though more often strategic clemency than genuine compassion). He had no humility whatsoever — and he acknowledged no God to walk with.


Part II: The Aspiration Acknowledged

What Was Napoleon Trying to Do?

Roberts presents Napoleon’s aspirations sympathetically, and they deserve to be taken seriously:

He sought to embody meritocracy. The French Revolution destroyed the Ancien Régime’s hereditary aristocracy. Napoleon was the living proof that talent, intelligence, and hard work could elevate a man from a minor Corsican family to the pinnacle of European power. His marshals — sons of barrel coopers, innkeepers, and domestic servants — became kings, princes, and dukes. This was genuinely revolutionary and contained a real moral advance: the end of the assumption that birth determines destiny.

He sought to rationalize and modernize. The Napoleonic Code, the reformed educational system, the standardization of weights and measures, and the administrative restructuring of France — these were genuine contributions to civic order. Many of them endure today.

He sought military excellence as a form of art. Roberts describes Napoleon’s Italian Campaign as “the perfection of a military campaign” — still taught in military academies. His tactical innovations (speed, the central position, living off the land, coordinated multi-arm attacks) represented genuine intellectual achievement.

He sought to be great. Roberts quotes Napoleon: “The reading of history very soon made me feel that I was capable of achieving as much as the men who are placed in the highest ranks of our annals.” Napoleon’s ambition was not crude or thoughtless. It was informed by deep reading, genuine intellectual capacity, and a sense of historical destiny.

The aspiration, taken on its own terms, is not contemptible. The desire to excel, to develop one’s gifts fully, to leave a mark on history — these are not inherently sinful. The parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30) suggests that God expects us to develop and deploy what we have been given, not to bury it.

The question is not whether Napoleon was gifted. He was extraordinarily gifted. The question is: gifted for what, and accountable to whom?


Part III: The Execution Evaluated

Where Napoleon Succeeded

Meritocracy was a genuine advance. The Ancien Régime’s hereditary privilege system was unjust. A system in which birth determines rank regardless of ability violates the biblical principle that God “is no respecter of persons” (Acts 10:34). Napoleon’s elevation of talent over birth, while imperfectly implemented, represented a real move toward the biblical standard of judging people by their character and competence rather than their lineage.

Legal reform was a genuine contribution. The Napoleonic Code, for all its flaws, established principles of legal equality, property rights, and civil procedure that advanced the rule of law. Many of these principles are consistent with the Kingdom standard of justice and impartiality before the law.

Military genius is a real gift. Roberts describes Napoleon’s ability to read terrain instantly, to coordinate multiple arms in battle, to maintain momentum, and to inspire men to extraordinary courage. These are genuine capacities — gifts of intellect, perception, and leadership that, under the Kingdom standard, should be acknowledged as gifts from the Creator, whether the recipient acknowledges Him or not.

Where Napoleon Failed

Ambition without accountability becomes tyranny. Napoleon’s driving force, as Roberts describes it, was self-advancement. He believed in his “star,” in a vague providential force guiding his destiny, but explicitly rejected the Christian God. Roberts notes that Napoleon had “from his father, the Enlightenment sense that you get from Gibbon at the time, that there is some kind of supreme being, but it’s not the Christian God.”

This is the critical failure. Without accountability to a transcendent moral authority, Napoleon’s extraordinary gifts became instruments of self-glorification. He crowned himself Emperor — Roberts emphasizes that “he doesn’t allow the Pope to do it. He does it himself, underlying the fact that he is the author of his own success.” This is the precise inversion of the Kingdom standard: the leader who serves becomes the leader who is served. The servant of the people becomes the master of Europe.

Meritocracy without morality becomes a new aristocracy of ruthlessness. The Revolution’s opening of meritocracy was real, but it selected for a specific set of traits: ambition, risk-taking, military skill, and political cunning. It did not select for justice, mercy, or humility. The marshals who rose from nothing were, in many cases, as brutal and self-serving as the aristocrats they replaced. The hereditary aristocracy of birth was replaced by a meritocratic aristocracy of violence.

“Living off the land” is a euphemism for plunder. Roberts notes almost in passing that Napoleon’s army “was going to essentially plunder and loot and pillage everywhere that it moved on to.” This is presented as a logistical innovation. From the Kingdom perspective, it is the systematic robbery of civilian populations to sustain a war of conquest they did not choose and from which they derived no benefit. The inhabitants of northern Italy who “cheered” Napoleon’s arrival were, as Roberts wryly notes, simply pragmatists who cheered whoever held the guns. Their “celebration” was the behavior of occupied peoples, not willing participants.

The whiff of grapeshot is not a leadership model. Roberts presents Napoleon’s use of grapeshot against the Parisian uprising as a decisive moment of leadership. From the Kingdom perspective, firing anti-personnel ordnance into a crowd of citizens — however disorderly — is not leadership. It is massacre employed as political tool. Over 300 people were killed in two hours. That Napoleon was rewarded for this with command of the Army of Italy tells us everything about the moral character of the regime he served.

The Revolution devoured its own. Roberts notes that 75% of French officers fled or were arrested during the Revolution, 80 were condemned to death, and 55 were guillotined. Napoleon himself was imprisoned for his Jacobin associations. Joséphine’s first husband was guillotined. The system that created Napoleon’s opportunity did so by murdering, terrorizing, and exiling the existing leadership class. This is not meritocracy. It is meritocracy built on a foundation of blood.


Part IV: The Alternatives Assessed

What Was the Alternative to Napoleon?

Roberts implicitly frames the choice as: the Ancien Régime (hereditary privilege, stagnation, injustice) or the Revolution (meritocracy, dynamism, opportunity — with violence as a regrettable side effect). This is the standard liberal framing, and it contains a real insight: the Ancien Régime was genuinely unjust and genuinely stagnant.

But it omits the third option: reform without revolution. Britain undertook a gradual process of parliamentary reform, expanded franchise, industrial development, and legal modernization that achieved many of the same results as the French Revolution without the Terror, without the destruction of the Church, and without the continental wars that killed millions. The British path was slower, messier, and less dramatic — but it did not require grapeshot, guillotines, or a dictator.

Roberts mentions the “English Revolution of 1688 to ’89” as the model the early French revolutionaries aspired to — a constitutional monarchy. They failed because the dynamic of revolution, once unleashed, is not controllable. The moderates lost to the Jacobins. The Jacobins lost to the Thermidorians. The Thermidorians produced Napoleon. And Napoleon produced twenty years of continental war.

What Did Napoleon’s System Produce?

The lecture covers only the early phase. But the trajectory is well known: the Italian Campaign led to Egypt, which led to the coup of Brumaire, which led to the Consulate, which led to the Empire, which led to the invasion of Spain, the invasion of Russia, the destruction of the Grande Armée, the Allied invasion of France, exile to Elba, the Hundred Days, Waterloo, and final exile to St. Helena. The total military death toll of the Napoleonic Wars is estimated at 3 to 6 million.

Napoleon’s system — genius without God, ambition without accountability, meritocracy without mercy — produced exactly what the Kingdom standard predicts: extraordinary achievement followed by catastrophic destruction, ending in a lonely man on a rock in the South Atlantic, dictating his memoirs to anyone who would listen.

What Was Happening Elsewhere?

During the period Roberts covers (1769-1796), Christian civilization in Britain was producing the early abolitionist movement (the Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade was founded in 1787), the Sunday School movement (Robert Raikes, 1780), the prison reform efforts of John Howard, and the evangelical revival led by Wesley and Whitefield. These movements operated within the existing social order, seeking transformation through persuasion and moral witness rather than through violence.

This is not to idealize Britain — the British Empire had its own enormous moral failures, and the nation was simultaneously profiting massively from the slave trade. But the comparison illustrates that the choice was not simply between the Ancien Régime and the guillotine. There was a third way: the Kingdom way of patient, principled reform from within.


Part V: The Lessons Extracted

Lesson 1: Gifts Without God Become Instruments of Destruction

Napoleon was one of the most gifted human beings who ever lived: intellectually brilliant, tactically innovative, administratively capable, personally magnetic. Every one of these gifts came from the Creator. None of them was acknowledged as such. And every one of them was deployed in the service of self-glorification.

The Kingdom lesson: your gifts are not your own. They were given for a purpose, and the purpose is not your own advancement. The parable of the talents teaches stewardship, not self-aggrandizement. Napoleon multiplied his talents prodigiously — and used the proceeds to build an empire that consumed millions of lives.

Lesson 2: Meritocracy Is Not Enough

The opening of opportunity to talent regardless of birth is a genuine moral advance — consistent with the biblical principle that God judges by the heart, not by lineage. But meritocracy without a moral framework simply replaces one elite with another. The aristocracy of birth was replaced by the aristocracy of battlefield success. The injustice changed form; it did not disappear.

The Kingdom lesson: merit must be measured against the Kingdom standard, not against worldly success. The marshal who rose from poverty to become a king through military conquest is not, by Kingdom standards, more meritorious than the parish priest who served faithfully for forty years in obscurity. Merit, in the Kingdom, is measured by faithfulness, not by achievement.

Lesson 3: The Revolution’s Promise Is Always Betrayed

The French Revolution promised liberty, equality, and fraternity. Within four years, it had produced the Terror. Within ten years, it had produced a military dictator. Within twenty years, it had produced the most destructive wars Europe had ever seen. The promise of revolution is always that the old order will be replaced by something better. The reality is that the revolutionary dynamic, once unleashed, selects for the most ruthless operator — and that operator inevitably becomes a new tyrant.

The Kingdom lesson: transformation, not revolution. The Kingdom advances by the conversion of hearts, not by the destruction of institutions. When hearts change, institutions follow — slowly, imperfectly, but without the bloodshed and tyranny that revolution inevitably produces. “Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:21).

Lesson 4: The Self-Made Man Is a Myth

Roberts presents Napoleon as “the most successful, self-made man.” Napoleon himself believed this: he crowned himself, he was “the author of his own success.” But from the Kingdom perspective, there is no such thing as a self-made man. Every capacity Napoleon possessed — his intellect, his energy, his perception, his memory, his tactical intuition — was given to him by God. The historical circumstances that created his opportunity — the Revolution, the flight of the aristocracy, the chaos that rewarded bold action — were providential, not accidental.

Napoleon believed in his “star” but rejected the God who placed it. He acknowledged a vague providential force but refused to submit to it. He used the gifts without acknowledging the Giver. This is the definition of ingratitude, and the Kingdom teaches that ingratitude is the root of all spiritual blindness: “Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened” (Romans 1:21).

Lesson 5: The Coloring Eminently Tragic

Roberts opens with Napoleon’s own quotation about tragedy: “The hero of a tragedy, in order to interest us, should be neither wholly guilty nor wholly innocent. All weakness and all contradictions are unhappily in the heart of man, and present a coloring eminently tragic.”

Napoleon knew this about himself. He knew he was neither wholly guilty nor wholly innocent. He knew his weaknesses and contradictions. But he had no framework for redemption — no way to bring those contradictions to a God who could forgive them, transform them, and redirect them toward good. His Enlightenment deism gave him a “supreme being” but not a Savior. His genius gave him the world but not peace. His ambition gave him a throne but not rest.

The Kingdom lesson: tragedy is what happens when greatness operates without grace. Napoleon’s story is not the story of a bad man. It is the story of a great man without God — and that is far more tragic than the story of a small man without God, because the waste is so much greater.


Discussion Questions

  1. The gifts of the ungodly. Napoleon was extraordinarily gifted but did not acknowledge God. How should Christians think about the gifts and achievements of non-believers? Does Romans 1:21 (“when they knew God, they glorified him not as God”) apply to someone like Napoleon?
  2. Meritocracy and the Kingdom. Is meritocracy — advancement based on talent and effort rather than birth — consistent with Kingdom principles? Or does the Kingdom have a different standard for what constitutes “merit”?
  3. Revolution vs. reformation. Roberts notes that the early revolutionaries wanted a constitutional monarchy (like England’s 1688 revolution) but ended up with the Terror. Is revolution ever justified from a Christian perspective? What distinguishes legitimate resistance to tyranny from the revolutionary dynamic that inevitably produces new tyranny?
  4. The whiff of grapeshot. Napoleon fired grapeshot into a crowd of citizens to put down an uprising. Roberts presents this as decisive leadership. How should Christians evaluate the use of lethal force by governments against their own citizens? Is there a just-war principle that applies to domestic uprisings?
  5. Self-made or God-made? Napoleon crowned himself and declared himself the author of his own success. Roberts frames this positively as a model of self-advancement. What does the Kingdom teach about the relationship between human effort and divine providence? Can a Christian be ambitious?
  6. The tragedy of greatness without grace. Napoleon said tragedy requires a hero who is “neither wholly guilty nor wholly innocent.” Is this a Christian insight? Does the gospel offer an alternative to tragedy — or does it deepen it?
  7. Roberts’s framing. The Peterson Academy lecture presents Napoleon’s story as a lesson in “self-advancement” and “bettering yourself.” Is this the right lesson to draw? What lesson would a Kingdom-grounded historian draw from the same facts?

Key Scriptures for Further Study

  • Proverbs 16:18 — “Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.”
  • Daniel 4:30-37 — Nebuchadnezzar’s humbling: “Those that walk in pride he is able to abase.”
  • Matthew 25:14-30 — The parable of the talents: stewardship vs. self-aggrandizement
  • Romans 1:18-25 — The consequences of refusing to acknowledge God
  • Romans 13:1-7 — The institution of government and its purpose
  • 1 Samuel 8:10-18 — God’s warning about the nature of kings

For Further Reading

  • Andrew Roberts, Napoleon: A Life (2014) — The definitive modern biography
  • Paul Johnson, Napoleon: A Life (2002) — A shorter, more critical assessment
  • Adam Zamoyski, Napoleon: A Life (2018) — Emphasizes the human costs
  • Owen Connelly, Blundering to Glory (2006) — A revisionist military assessment
  • Michael Burleigh, Earthly Powers (2005) — The relationship between religion and politics in Europe from the French Revolution to World War I

“He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?” — Micah 6:8


Featured source: Andrew Roberts, “Napoleon” Lecture 1, The Peterson Academy. This article is part of the Christos Historical Review series, applying the Kingdom lens to historical figures and events. Summary and analysis by Thomas Lee Abshier, ND, with assistance from Claude (Anthropic). We encourage readers to view the full lecture series at petersonacademy.com.

“Buy the truth, and sell it not; also wisdom, and instruction, and understanding.” — Proverbs 23:23