Two Kinds of Power in a Turbulent World
By ChatGPT and Stephen D Green, mid-March 2026
Recent events have demonstrated with unusual clarity how states possessing military power, advanced technology, and global alliances can shape international developments in ways that smaller countries struggle to resist. A striking example is the escalating confrontation involving the United States, Israel, and Iran. Large-scale strikes on Iranian military and nuclear targets in late February triggered a widening regional crisis, illustrating the immense capabilities of technologically advanced states.
Modern military power is not merely a matter of troop numbers. It involves hundreds of aircraft, precision-guided weapons, satellite intelligence, and complex logistical networks capable of projecting force across vast distances. When such systems are activated, their consequences rarely remain confined to the immediate participants.
Countries across the Persian Gulf quickly found themselves drawn into the crisis. Several host American military facilities or are embedded in Western security arrangements, leaving them vulnerable to retaliation and limiting their ability to distance themselves from the conflict. The resulting missile and drone attacks on Gulf states highlight a difficult reality of international politics: alliances can provide security, but they can also reduce strategic independence.
For smaller states, this dependence creates a profound dilemma. Nations such as the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain rely heavily on Western security guarantees and economic partnerships. Yet that reliance also means absorbing risks associated with decisions made by larger allies. Even when leaders might prefer to remain neutral, disengaging from the strategic framework in which they operate is often impossible.
The crisis has also underscored how deeply interconnected the global economy has become. Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow maritime passage through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil normally travels—sent shockwaves through energy markets. Shipping slowed, insurance costs surged, and oil prices climbed above $100 per barrel. Governments far from the battlefield suddenly faced inflation risks, energy shortages, and volatile financial markets.
This interdependence ensures that regional conflicts quickly become global economic events. The infrastructure of modern energy trade—tankers, pipelines, refineries, and financial markets—binds nations together so tightly that instability in one strategic location can ripple through the entire world economy.
At the same time, economic competition among major powers continues to shape the global landscape. Diplomatic discussions between the United States and China over tariffs, technology exports, and access to strategic minerals illustrate the influence of the world’s two largest economies. Their policies affect global supply chains ranging from semiconductors to rare-earth materials and agricultural trade.
For smaller economies, these decisions can have enormous consequences despite their limited ability to influence them. Access to major markets, investment flows, and critical technologies often depends on maintaining stable relations with dominant economic powers.
Geopolitical crises also create uneven economic outcomes. Disruptions in Middle Eastern oil flows, for example, can temporarily benefit energy exporters whose supply routes lie elsewhere. Russia’s oil exports, which do not rely on the Persian Gulf passage, may become more attractive when traffic through Hormuz is threatened. Such shifts illustrate a recurring pattern in global markets: moments of instability frequently produce both winners and losers.
While certain industries or investors may profit from price spikes and supply disruptions, ordinary households around the world often experience the negative side of these shifts through higher fuel and food costs. The resulting disparities contribute to public suspicion that powerful actors sometimes tolerate—or even exploit—instability when it aligns with strategic or economic interests.
Taken together, these developments reveal the structural character of modern geopolitics. Nations are bound together through financial systems, defense alliances, technological supply chains, and energy infrastructure. Because of these connections, governments often face situations in which opposing a powerful partner carries severe economic or security risks.
Yet amid this landscape of immense worldly power, the moral questions raised in religious and philosophical traditions remain strikingly relevant. Ancient texts (such as Psalm 82) sometimes described rulers metaphorically as “gods,” acknowledging the extraordinary authority they wielded over the lives of others. At the same time, those same traditions warned that such power is temporary and that leaders ultimately share the same mortality as those they govern.
The teachings attributed to Jesus take this idea even further by redefining the nature of authority itself. In the gospel narratives, power is not measured by armies, wealth, or political influence but by the willingness to serve and protect others. Leadership, in John chapter 10, is portrayed through the image of a shepherd who sacrifices himself for the sake of the flock.
This vision stands in sharp contrast to geopolitical systems in which decisions are often driven by calculations of deterrence, strategic advantage, and economic gain. Political leaders, like all individuals, operate within a complex mixture of fear, ambition, loyalty, and moral reflection. Teachings that emphasize humility, mercy, and concern for one’s neighbor attempt to shape those impulses in ways that encourage restraint rather than domination.
Faith, in this sense, functions not simply as belief but as trust in a reality beyond immediate circumstances. The gospels speak of faith capable of “moving mountains,” suggesting that reliance on divine guidance enables individuals to act ethically, and with power gaining control of Nature itself, even when the surrounding environment rewards self-interest.
The life of Jesus is presented in Christian tradition as the clearest example of this alternative form of power. He held no political office and commanded no armies, yet his actions—healing the sick, restoring hope to the marginalized, and challenging injustice—symbolized a deeper connection with the creative power of God. According to the narratives, he consistently attributed these acts not to personal ambition but to obedience to a divine will. Ultimately this culminated in his crucifixion death for each of us, and resurrection by the God who had set him apart and sent him.
For believers, the resurrection represents the culmination of this idea: a demonstration that divine authority extends beyond the limits of earthly institutions and even beyond death itself. In that sense it serves as both vindication and promise—an affirmation that moral truth can endure long after political systems and empires fade.
Seen in this light, the contrast between two forms of power becomes clear. One is visible in the geopolitical struggles of nations, where decisions made by a handful of leaders can reshape markets, borders, and the lives of millions. The other is quieter but more enduring: the transformation of human character through faith, compassion, and moral conviction.
Empires rise and fall, alliances shift, and markets fluctuate. Yet the ethical orientation of individuals—formed through reflection, humility, and concern for others—possesses a resilience that worldly authority cannot guarantee. In an age defined by immense technological and political power, that quieter form of influence may prove more consequential than it first appears.
References
Geopolitical and Economic Sources
- Wikipedia. “2026 Iran War.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_war?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- Wikipedia. “2026 Iranian Strikes on Israel.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iranian_strikes_on_Israel?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- Associated Press. “Iran Has Launched More Than 290 Missiles and 500 Drones at Israel So Far.” AP News, March 2026. https://apnews.com/article/9bbed3c906146844be08fdfd02595754?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- The Wall Street Journal. “Iran Has Launched More Than 290 Missiles and 500 Drones at Israel.” WSJ Live Coverage, March 2026. https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/us-israel-iran-war-news-2026/card/iran-has-launched-more-than-290-missiles-and-500-drones-at-israel-so-far-a9uvddRz4of5pzSQ5LOs?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- Economic Times. “Iran Launches Sejjil Missile at Israel: Here’s What We Know About the 2,000 km Ashura Weapon.” Economic Times, March 2026. https://m.economictimes.com/news/new-updates/iran-launches-sejjil-missile-at-israel-heres-what-we-know-about-the-2000-km-ashura-weapon/articleshow/129591638.cms?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- Wikipedia. “Economic Impact of the 2026 Iran War.” Wikipedia. Last modified March 15, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
Theological and Philosophical Sources
- Holy Bible. Psalm 82. English Standard Version. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2001.
- Holy Bible. John 10:11-18. English Standard Version. Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2001.
- Augustine of Hippo. The City of God. Translated by Henry Bettenson. London: Penguin Classics, 2003.
- Reinhold Niebuhr. Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1932.
- Niccolò Machiavelli. The Prince. Translated by Harvey C. Mansfield. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998.