The Unease You’re Feeling Is Not an Accident
Something has shifted. You may not be able to name it precisely, but you feel it — in the cost of your groceries, in the tone of the news, in the conversations at church that drift toward things nobody used to say out loud. A quiet, persistent sense that the world your parents handed you is becoming unrecognizable, and that the pace of that change is accelerating. You’re not being paranoid. You’re paying attention. And the difference between those two things matters more right now than perhaps at any moment in living memory.
This is not a piece about stocking your bunker or predicting the exact date of the apocalypse. What this is, instead, is a serious look at four converging pressures that demand a serious response — not from politicians, not from pundits, but from you, personally, spiritually, and practically.
The ancient word for that response is readiness. Jesus used it often. “Watch therefore,” He said in Matthew 24:42, “for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.” That command was not given to frighten us. It was given because preparation, properly understood, is an act of faith.
The international architecture the United States spent seventy years building after World War II is visibly straining. Trade wars, sanctions, tariff escalations, and the fracturing of longtime alliances have not just rattled markets — they have begun to rewire the fundamental relationships between nations. BlackRock’s own geopolitical risk analysts noted recently that 2025 and 2026 may mark the beginning of a new geopolitical era altogether, one shaped by a more transactional American foreign policy that is exposing deep fractures within the Western alliance.
Yes, BlackRock is a globalist corporation that uses guidance as a manipulation tool, but that doesn’t mean they’re wrong.
The economic consequences are not abstract. When global supply chains are disrupted, your grocery shelf is disrupted. When trading partners retaliate against American tariffs or get mad over mean words by President Trump, American manufacturers absorb the blow. When the dollar’s reserve currency status comes under pressure — as it increasingly does when rival powers strike bilateral energy deals that bypass the dollar entirely — the purchasing power of every American paycheck is quietly eroded.
Futurists and market analysts have long predicted that the period from roughly 2015 to 2030 would be one of pronounced systemic upheaval in America, driven by the simultaneous conclusion of an 80-year institutional cycle and a 50-year economic cycle. We are now living in the middle of that overlap. The turbulence is not random. It is structural. And it is not finished.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs have estimated that generative AI could displace as many as 300 million full-time jobs globally by 2030. A broader range of expert projections suggests that somewhere between 15 and 25 percent of existing jobs will face significant disruption within just the next two years, with entry-level white-collar positions carrying the highest immediate risk. If you have children approaching the workforce, or if your own career depends on tasks that can be systematized and automated, this is not a distant threat. It is an arriving one.
The employment disruption is serious. The cybersecurity dimension may be worse. AI is rapidly lowering the barrier to sophisticated cyberattacks, enabling bad actors — whether rogue states, criminal organizations, or lone ideologues — to strike at critical infrastructure with tools that previously required nation-state resources.
The employment disruption is serious. The cybersecurity dimension may be worse. AI is rapidly lowering the barrier to sophisticated cyberattacks, enabling bad actors — whether rogue states, criminal organizations, or lone ideologues — to strike at critical infrastructure with tools that previously required nation-state resources.
The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report ranks cyber insecurity among the top threats facing the world over the next two years, and the Council on Foreign Relations has flagged a highly disruptive AI-enabled cyberattack on American critical infrastructure as a plausible near-term contingency. Your power grid, your water system, your banking infrastructure — none of these are immune, and all of them are being probed.
And before anyone thumbs their nose because I invoked the WEF and CFR, know this: They may be evil but they telegraph their moves. Just as they had a pandemic “simulation” surrounding Wuhan a year before the “real” thing hit, so too should we take it seriously when they make similar claims about cyberattacks. They aren’t just telling us their predictions. Oftentimes, they’re telling us their plans.
Then there is the subtler threat, perhaps the most insidious of all. AI-generated disinformation — deepfakes, synthetic voices, fabricated video — is already eroding the public’s ability to trust what it sees and hears. When nobody can agree on what is real, truth itself becomes a casualty. And a society that cannot agree on reality cannot sustain the kind of civil order that liberty requires. As Daniel 12:4 foretold, knowledge shall increase in the latter days. The prophecy did not say that increased knowledge would bring increased wisdom. That gap — between what we can build and what we are wise enough to govern — is the crisis hiding inside the AI revolution.