The world trembles

In a guest blog, Revd Charity Tozivepi-Nzegwu reflects on recent international events.

I have learnt that there are moments when the world trembles, not because violence has already erupted, but because the conditions for it are being normalised. When power begins to speak as though borders are optional, consent is irrelevant, and the lives of ordinary people are collateral.

Scripture teaches us to pay attention to such moments.

“Woe to those who devise wickedness and work evil on their beds. When the morning dawns, they perform it, because it is in their power.”
Micah 2:1

This is not merely about politics. It is about moral imagination. About whether the strong believe they are accountable. About whether might is mistaken for right. About whether law exists to restrain power or to be bent by it.

The wisdom tradition is clear. When authority forgets its limits, chaos follows. When force replaces dialogue, when domination disguises itself as order, when resources are valued more than lives, the earth itself becomes unsafe.

“Kings set themselves, and rulers take counsel together… but the one enthroned laughs.”
Psalm 2:2–4

Not because suffering is amusing, but because no empire is eternal.

There is a dangerous logic at work in the world, one that suggests that if power can act without consequence, then others will follow. Scripture rejects this utterly. Violence begets violence. Injustice multiplies itself. What is permitted for one soon becomes permission for many.

“Those who take the sword will perish by the sword.”
Matthew 26:52

The prophetic tradition does not call us to cheer, nor to inflame, nor to choose sides hastily. It calls us to discernment. To truth telling. To remembering that law, justice, and restraint are not weaknesses but gifts that protect the vulnerable.

God is never impressed by military strength. God listens for the cries of those who will pay the price long after speeches are finished, families who will grieve, children who will inherit rubble instead of hope.

“Seek justice, rescue the oppressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.”
Isaiah 1:17

This is a moment for vigilance, not vengeance.

For wisdom, not bravado.

For courage that refuses the seduction of domination.

And for prayer, not the kind that numbs conscience, but the kind that sharpens it.

May we remain awake.

May we refuse the lie that force is inevitable.

May we remember that peace is not passive, it is disciplined, costly, and holy.

© 2026 Reverend Charity Tozivepi-Nzegwu. All rights reserved.

Revd Charity Tozivepi-Nzegwu is a Methodist minister serving in the Cambridge Circuit, and Chair of the Connexional Justice, Dignity and Solidarity Committee. This article was originally posted on Facebook and is shared with her permission.

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