Pete Hegseth recited a customized prayer that a lead planner had delivered to the team ahead of a mission, and a Pentagon spokesman later said he made clear the prayer was a reflection of the Bible verse Ezekiel 25:17. The prayer was identified as CSAR 25:17.
The sequence matters because it places the prayer in a Pentagon service, then ties it to a verse that the spokesman said Hegseth linked to Ezekiel 25:17. The recitation came after the lead planner had already delivered the prayer to the team before the mission, making Hegseth's role a public repetition of a text that had been prepared in advance.
That detail is the anchor here: the prayer was not described as a spontaneous remark, but as a customized prayer with a specific designation. The source also links it to the Bible verse Ezekiel 25:17, which is the same verse the spokesman said Hegseth had in mind when he recited it.
The tension is in the naming. CSAR 25:17 is how the prayer was identified, while the Pentagon spokesman framed it as a reflection of Ezekiel 25:17. Those two descriptions point to the same moment from different angles, and together they show that the prayer was both personalized for the mission and explicitly tied back to scripture.
What comes next is straightforward: the record now hinges on that identification. Hegseth's recitation at the Pentagon service, the lead planner's earlier delivery to the team, and the spokesman's later explanation all point to the same conclusion — this was a customized prayer, and the Pentagon said it was meant as a reflection of Ezekiel 25:17.