3 Stories Breaking Right Now: And the Biblical Truth That Steadies Them All
- Layne McDonald
- Feb 19
- 5 min read
Some mornings the news feels like a fire hose. Multiple fronts, multiple crises, all demanding our attention at once. Today is one of those mornings.
As of Thursday, February 19, 2026, three major stories are unfolding simultaneously: each with serious implications for global stability, each involving military positioning, and each touching the same volatile region. Before we react, before we spiral, let's do what we always do here: look at the facts, anchor ourselves in truth, and respond with clarity instead of chaos.
The Facts: Three Developing Stories

Story #1: U.S. Weighing Strike on Iran
According to multiple reports, President Trump has been briefed by top national security advisers on a potential U.S. military strike against Iran, possibly as early as Saturday. The consideration follows failed nuclear talks and increased military activity in the region. Iran's Revolutionary Guard has been conducting drills in the Strait of Hormuz, and Iranian authorities announced a temporary partial closure of the strait "for security reasons." The Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint through which roughly 21% of the world's petroleum passes.
Story #2: First Board of Peace Meeting in Washington
President Trump is hosting the inaugural meeting of what's being called the "Board of Peace" in Washington, specifically focused on Gaza reconstruction and Hamas disarmament. Reports also indicate the Trump administration is planning construction of a 5,000-person U.S. military base inside the Gaza Strip. The stated goal is establishing long-term stability in the region following years of conflict.
Story #3: Ukraine-Russia Talks Continue; Regional Trade Tensions Rise
Ukraine and Russia completed the second day of U.S.-brokered negotiations in Geneva. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed talks are proceeding on both military and political tracks, though no breakthroughs have been announced. Meanwhile, Hungary and Slovakia announced they are suspending diesel exports to Ukraine, citing growing tensions over oil deliveries. The trade disruptions add economic pressure to an already fragile diplomatic situation.
The Lens: What Steadies Us When the World Shakes

Three regions. Three crises. Three potential powder kegs.
If you're feeling overwhelmed, you're not alone. But here's what I've learned covering news through a biblical framework: the chaos we see today isn't new. The human condition: power struggles, territorial disputes, the fear of scarcity: has been playing out since Genesis.
What is new is our instant access to it all. We can watch three international crises unfold in real-time on our phones before we've finished our morning coffee. That kind of awareness is both a gift and a burden.
So let's anchor ourselves in something older and steadier than breaking news.
Psalm 46:1-3 says: "God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging."
Did you catch that? Though the earth give way. Though mountains fall. Though waters roar.
The psalm doesn't promise the absence of chaos. It promises the presence of God in the chaos.
This isn't naive optimism or spiritual bypassing. It's the recognition that geopolitical instability has always existed, and God has always been sovereign over it. Our job isn't to pretend these stories don't matter. Our job is to engage them from a posture of peace instead of panic.
Here's the biblical truth that steadies all three stories: God's purposes aren't threatened by human power plays. Nations rise and fall. Leaders posture and negotiate. Borders shift and trade routes close. And through it all, God remains on His throne, working all things: even the chaotic, scary things: toward His purposes.
That doesn't mean we're passive. It means we're grounded.
The Response: What This Means for Us

So what do we do with this information?
First, we pray strategically. Not vague, "God bless everyone" prayers, but specific intercession. Pray for President Trump and his advisers as they weigh military action: that wisdom would prevail over impulse, that lives would be valued over optics. Pray for Iranian citizens who have no say in their government's provocations. Pray for diplomats in Geneva working toward peace between Ukraine and Russia. Pray for the civilians in Gaza who've endured years of instability and just want safety for their families.
Second, we resist the urge to pick a tribal side. The McReport doesn't do left-versus-right posturing because Scripture doesn't. We're called to love mercy, seek justice, and walk humbly (Micah 6:8): and sometimes that means critiquing policies from both sides when they fail to prioritize human dignity. Military strikes have consequences. So do nuclear programs. So does abandoning diplomatic efforts too quickly. Wisdom holds tension well.
Third, we stay informed without staying anxious. There's a difference between being aware and being consumed. You don't need to refresh the news every ten minutes. You don't need to spiral into worst-case scenarios. Follow trusted sources (like this one), check in once or twice a day, and spend the rest of your time living your actual life: the one God gave you, with people right in front of you who need your presence and peace.
Fourth, we remember our sphere of influence. You probably can't personally broker peace between Ukraine and Russia. But you can be kind to the neighbor who's terrified about global instability. You can choose not to amplify inflammatory takes on social media. You can model calm, thoughtful engagement when everyone around you is losing their minds. That's not small. That's kingdom work.
Finally, we hold hope without naivety. The Bible is clear: this world is broken, and it will remain broken until Jesus returns to make all things new (Revelation 21:5). We don't expect utopia. But we also don't give in to despair. We work for peace, pray for leaders, advocate for the vulnerable, and trust that God sees what we don't.
When Mountains Quake

The Strait of Hormuz. The Gaza Strip. Geneva conference rooms.
Three places most of us will never visit, but that shape the world we live in. It's okay to feel small in the face of all this. It's okay to feel out of control. You are.
But God isn't.
And the same God who holds nations in the palm of His hand holds you too. Your anxiety doesn't change the outcome of these crises, but your trust changes you: it makes you steadier, wiser, more useful to the people around you.
So take a breath. Say a prayer. Stay informed but not obsessed. And remember: the mountains may quake, but our foundation doesn't.
Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.
Follow at LayneMcDonald.com for calm updates as this story develops.
Sources: Reports compiled from breaking news coverage, February 19, 2026

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