Inkari Files 015 – Be Ready. Not Alarmed.

“You will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you are not alarmed; for these things must take place, but the end is not yet.” — Matthew 24:6

The headlines always promise peace.
This week it came wrapped in another treaty — the newest attempt to still the fire between Israel and Hamas. Political architects call it historic, the dawn of stability. The cameras love the handshakes, the pens signing, the flags aligned for half a second.

And yet, behind the applause, the same pattern repeats. Humanity drafts documents to manage chaos while ignoring the Author of peace Himself. We legislate redemption and call it diplomacy.

Since the prophets first wrote of kingdoms rising and falling, the world has tried to write its own version of Revelation — one where human reason out-negotiates divine justice. Each generation finds its “great peacemaker,” a leader promising that if we just redraw the lines, everyone will finally rest.

But Scripture warns us:

“While they are saying, ‘Peace and safety!’ then sudden destruction will come upon them…” — 1 Thessalonians 5:3

This doesn’t mean every cease-fire signals the end of days. It means every attempt at peace apart from repentance follows the same trajectory: temporary calm built on spiritual vacancy. Nations can pause the gunfire, but they cannot manufacture righteousness.

Look closely at how the modern world defines peace.
It is no longer reconciliation with God; it is the absence of discomfort. A cease-fire without confession. A truce that leaves the heart unchanged.

When power consolidates under promises of “global stability,” the machinery looks efficient — technocrats, oversight committees, humanitarian coalitions. But systems without surrender become scaffolding for pride. Babel had blueprints too.

Human unity is not evil; it’s incomplete. Without the Creator at the center, it bends back into idolatry — worship of process, progress, or personality. The treaty may hold for a season, but the soil beneath it still trembles.

We keep trying to buy peace without bowing to the Prince of it.
Every signature on parchment is another attempt to codify what only blood could purchase.

The Bible never condemns peacemaking; it condemns pretending we can achieve it without God. Jesus said, “Blessed are the peacemakers,” not the peace-dealers. The first reconcile men to God; the second reconcile men to convenience.

Political peace is fragile because it is transactional. Divine peace is eternal because it is covenantal.

Christ never told His followers to panic when nations tremble. He told them to prepare.
Readiness is not fear; it is focus.

1 Peter 3:15 says,

“Sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence.”

So, when headlines shake the world, believers should respond with three things:

  1. Clarity. Know what Scripture actually says — not what rumor or algorithm claims.

  2. Charity. Speak truth without cruelty. Light doesn’t panic when darkness moves; it shines.

  3. Consistency. Let your peace outlast the news cycle. The world’s treaties expire. The cross doesn’t.

The Church’s role is not to predict the hour but to live like every hour matters.
Prophecy isn’t a guessing game; it’s a guardrail. It keeps us steady when history loops through familiar chaos.

The true peace agreement was already signed — not in ink, but in blood.
At Calvary, the King didn’t negotiate; He surrendered Himself.

Every modern treaty is just a shadow play of that reality: mankind still trying to secure on paper what was already sealed in eternity.

So yes — watch the world. Analyze the politics. Pray for Israel, for Gaza, for every soul caught between ideology and survival. But do it with eyes fixed higher.

Because the next time the world declares “peace and safety,” the Church should not flinch.
We should whisper back the words of our Commander:

“Be ready. Not alarmed.”

— Inkari 🧵⚡
Sector Δ7
Data Recovered – Matthew 24:6 / 1 Thessalonians 5:3 / 1 Peter 3:15
Transmission Archived