5 PM Peace Check: Your Evening News Wrap Without the Panic
- Dr. Layne McDonald
- Feb 15
- 5 min read
It's Sunday evening. You've had your weekend, maybe gone to church, spent time with family. Now you're wondering what happened in the world this week, but you don't want to spend your last peaceful hours before Monday morning doom-scrolling or getting your blood pressure up.
Welcome to your 5 PM Peace Check. This is where we catch you up on what actually matters from the week without the theatrics, the spin, or the panic. Just the news, a little perspective, and a pathway to peace.
The Week's Headlines: What Actually Happened

Let's start with the facts, no commentary, no emotional loading. Just what went down this past week.
Markets took a tumble midweek. On Wednesday, February 12th, the Dow dropped 1.30% and the Nasdaq fell 2%. Precious metals got hit harder, gold slid 3.50% below $5,000 per ounce, and silver tumbled more than 10%. The selloff reflected broader investor jitters about where the economy is headed.
AI anxiety is spreading beyond tech. Investors and workers alike are expressing concern about artificial intelligence expanding into sectors previously thought safe from automation, farming, real estate, finance, and logistics are all seeing AI integration accelerate. The conversation has shifted from "if" to "how fast."
Diplomatic activity in the Middle East. President Trump met with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu this week to discuss renewed diplomatic talks with Iran. The meeting signaled a potential shift in approach to one of the region's most persistent flashpoints.
Economic data on the horizon. Friday brought the CPI (Consumer Price Index) report, which economists have been watching closely for clues about inflation trends and what the Federal Reserve might do with interest rates in coming months.
Those are the headlines. No spin, no hype. Now let's talk about what it means.
What This Week's News Actually Means for You

Here's where we put on a different set of glasses, not rose-colored, but biblically grounded. What lens should we use when we look at these stories?
On the market volatility: Markets go up and markets go down. This isn't news; it's the nature of investing. Proverbs 23:4-5 warns us not to wear ourselves out trying to get rich, because wealth sprouts wings and flies away like an eagle. One down week doesn't make or break your future. What matters more is whether your security is rooted in portfolio performance or something steadier.
On the AI fear: Every generation faces technological disruption. The printing press threatened scribes. The assembly line changed manufacturing. Computers transformed offices. AI is the current wave. Fear isn't unreasonable, change is hard, but Philippians 4:6 tells us not to be anxious about anything. That includes job markets and technological shifts. God has sustained His people through agricultural revolutions, industrial revolutions, and digital revolutions. This moment isn't different in kind, just in details.
On Middle East diplomacy: The conflicts in that region are ancient, layered, and deeply complex. When we see diplomatic efforts, we can pray they bear fruit. When tensions flare, we remember that Jesus called us to be peacemakers. Our role isn't to pick sides in every international dispute but to pray for wisdom for leaders and peace for regular people caught in the crossfire.
On inflation worries: Economic uncertainty is real, but worry doesn't add a single hour to your life or a single dollar to your account. Matthew 6:34 reminds us that today's trouble is enough for today. Keep an eye on your budget, make wise choices, but don't let economic data reports steal your peace on a Sunday evening.
Your Response: What You Can Do Tonight

Okay, you're caught up. You know what happened. You've got some perspective. Now what?
Here's what you do not do: You don't spend the next two hours reading seventeen different takes on these same stories. You don't open Twitter or turn on cable news. You don't spiral into what-ifs about your 401k or your job security.
Here's what you do do:
Pray specifically. Take two minutes right now and pray for leaders making economic decisions, for workers worried about AI replacing their jobs, for diplomats trying to prevent wars, and for families struggling with high prices. Prayer isn't passive; it's powerful. James 5:16 tells us the prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.
Check your own foundation. Is your sense of security tied to market performance? If the Dow dropping 1.30% ruined your evening, that's information. Not condemnation: information. Where is your treasure, really? Matthew 6:21 says where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
Be a calming presence tomorrow. When you go into work or school or the grocery store tomorrow, people will be anxious. Markets are down, AI is coming, everything feels uncertain. You have an opportunity to be different: not naive or uninformed, but grounded. When someone spirals into anxiety, you can be the person who says, "I hear you. It's concerning. And we're going to be okay." That's ministry.
Limit your news diet this week. You don't need to check news seven times a day. Once in the morning, maybe once in the evening: that's plenty. The rest of the time, live your actual life. Love the people in front of you. Do good work. Be present. Psalm 46:10 says, "Be still and know that I am God." You can't be still if you're refreshing news feeds every twenty minutes.
The Invitation: Choose Peace
Here's the thing about news anxiety: it feels responsible. It feels like staying informed is the same as staying in control. But you're not more in control because you read forty articles about market volatility or AI disruption. You're just more anxious.
The peace God offers isn't ignorance: it's trust. It's knowing that He's sovereign over Dow Jones averages and diplomatic negotiations and technological revolutions. It's believing that the same God who sustained His people through slavery in Egypt, exile in Babylon, persecution in Rome, and a thousand other impossible situations can sustain you through whatever 2026 throws at us.
You can be informed without being consumed. You can care about the world without carrying its weight. Jesus already carried that weight. Your job is to walk faithfully in your own calling: whatever that looks like today.
So go ahead and close this tab. Make some tea. Call a friend. Read something that feeds your soul instead of fraying your nerves. Tomorrow will have enough trouble of its own, but tonight, you can rest.
Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.
Follow at LayneMcDonald.com for daily news that informs without overwhelming.
Sources: Market data and news events from February 12-13, 2026 reporting via multiple financial news outlets and wire services.

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