A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
Ecclesiastes 3:8 (KJV)
The Teacher’s ancient observation sits uncomfortably with our longing for permanent peace, yet it names something true: not all seasons are the same, and the present moment—with its colliding crises, its trade routes weaponized, its ordinary people displaced or endangered—may be one we do not choose. What Ecclesiastes invites is not resignation but a kind of sober humility: recognition that we live in time, that our plans and threats intersect with forces beyond our control, and that wisdom sometimes means accepting what we cannot remake rather than exhausting ourselves in the attempt. In such seasons, patience becomes its own form of courage, and the simple act of bearing witness—seeing clearly without despair—is itself a spiritual discipline.
What prompted this
Today's news bears witness to multiple escalating conflicts—military standoffs threatening vital trade routes, ongoing warfare in several regions, disease outbreaks, and cycles of violence—alongside a broader sense of systems under strain and vulnerable people caught in the turbulence.
- Iran threatens to block more trade routes as US launches fresh strikes BBC World
- Trump retreat over Hormuz tolls suggests he is struggling to end Iran war BBC World
- Strait of Hormuz 'faultline' exposes weakness of the US-Iran deal BBC World
- Three killed as Russian bombing of Odesa continues BBC World
- Acting AG Todd Blanche faces a key test. And, ICE pauses most traffic stops NPR News
- How to keep cool in this year's extreme summer heat even without air conditioning NPR News
- U.S. and Iran standoff over the Strait of Hormuz intensifies NPR News
- Todd Blanche faces high-stakes confirmation hearing for attorney general NPR News
- New US Ebola patient arrives in Germany for treatment The Guardian
- Killings continue on Del Monte farm in Kenya, families say, after G4S hired for security The Guardian