Here, For One Another

A great shift is happening in our time. A shift that history will record not by the actions of governments but by the movement of people—people who are no longer waiting for institutions to fix what is broken, who are stepping in where bureaucracy has faltered, who recognize that human dignity is too precious to be left in the hands of systems alone.

Where the government shrinks back—whether by choice, by dysfunction, or by collapse—we step in. Not because we must, but because we are called to. Because it is who we were made to be.

We can be here for each other.

Not because of allegiance to a politician. Not because of race, class, or ideology. Not because of any movement but the movement of the Spirit in those who have eyes to see and ears to hear.

People have spoken—not just at the ballot box, but in the streets, in their homes, in the quiet prayers whispered in the night. They have rejected corruption, the perversion of truth, and the unraveling of a society once built on honor, on accountability, on a vision of what could be.

A Call to Something Greater

We dream of unity, of a country where every person is truly free. And yet, we know the reality—not everyone will agree on everything. Some will hold fast to the status quo. Some will fight for their own gain. But that does not change our calling.

Jesus knew this tension well. He stood on a mountainside and spoke to the hearts of the people—not as rulers or subjects, not as the powerful and the weak, but as human beings created for something more. He called them to a kingdom not of this world—a kingdom built on mercy, on righteousness, on love that moves beyond words into action.

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy.”

— Matthew 5:3-7 (Read more at Bible.com)

Jesus didn’t tell people to wait for their rulers to fix their problems. He didn’t tell them to petition Rome for justice. He told them to become the kingdom in the midst of brokenness.

Where Do We Start?

We start here.

We take care of each other.

We check on our neighbors—not just in crisis, but as a way of life.

We ensure those around us have food, are not isolated, and have access to what they need.

We build networks of care, of support, of real community.

We don’t outsource love. We live it.

And we don’t stop at our doorstep. We support missional work—local, national, and international. We invest in organizations with credibility and integrity, those who are lifting the weary and feeding the hungry, those who are doing the work of Jesus in the darkest places.

The Great Reset: A Call to Action

Make no mistake—what is happening now is a reset unlike any we have seen in the last century, perhaps even in the last 200 years. The old systems are failing. The structures people relied on are being exposed for what they are.

We can lament that. Or we can build something better.

Not with political power. Not with anger or division. But with the same spirit that transformed the world 2,000 years ago—the spirit of selfless, relentless, sacrificial love.

What will we do?

We will rise.

We will serve.

We will be here for each other.