GUEST BLOG from New Thought Media Substack
America has bombed Iran, and in the wake of destruction, the air is thick with confusion, fear, and judgment. Political commentators clamor to justify or denounce, social media ignites with opinions, and many feel the heavy drag of helplessness. The cycle is familiar: violence erupts, outrage rises, fear deepens, and the possibility of peace recedes. But for those walking a spiritual path rooted in the New Thought tradition, this moment presents not only a crisis but an invitation. It asks us: what do we really believe about consciousness, about cause and effect, about the power of thought, prayer, and love in shaping reality?
New Thought is not an ideology of retreat. It does not ask us to look away from the pain of the world or to spiritualize suffering with platitudes. It asks us to see clearly, to feel deeply, and to respond with the full power of an awakened mind. At its core, New Thought teaches that reality is shaped by consciousness, and that each thought, word, and intention ripples outward into the world. This means that our response to war, even from the quiet of our homes, matters. Not just morally, but metaphysically. If consciousness creates experience, then what we hold in consciousness in moments like this contributes directly to what happens next in the collective field.
When we witness bombs dropping on foreign soil, our first instinct may be to recoil or rage. But New Thought invites us to pause. To breathe. To notice what arises. Do we move into fear? Into judgment? Do we dehumanize those involved? Do we begin to imagine retaliation? Or can we hold a higher vision—a vision that does not deny the pain and complexity, but that sees beyond it to a deeper truth? That all beings are expressions of the Divine, that separation is an illusion, and that peace is not only possible, but natural when we return to our spiritual center.
Deeply We Are ONE.
To live this teaching is to resist the gravitational pull of fear. The media feeds on it. Governments leverage it. But fear contracts, divides, and distorts. It pulls us into binaries of good versus evil, us versus them, safety versus threat. New Thought insists we see with spiritual eyes: that there is no them. That what we do to another, we do to ourselves. That the real battleground is consciousness, and that the war outside reflects wars unresolved within. When we feed fear, even subtly, we feed the very conditions that make violence inevitable. But when we feed love—not sentimentally, but as a focused energetic practice—we shift the field.
In this light, the bombing of Iran is not just a geopolitical act—it is a spiritual flashpoint. It reveals the depth of our collective wounding, our addiction to control, our habit of domination. But it also reveals the places where healing is possible. Where we can choose again. New Thought does not look at the world through rose-colored glasses. It sees clearly that humanity is in a deep process of reckoning. That we are confronting centuries of fear, trauma, and disconnection. But it holds that we have the power, through intention and alignment, to move in a different direction.
Because Deeply We Are ONE.
That movement begins within. Not as a retreat from action, but as a foundation for right action. Before we post, protest, or persuade, we tune inward. What frequency are we carrying? What energy are we transmitting? Are we amplifying division, or holding space for reconciliation? Are we rehearsing fear stories, or invoking possibilities of peace? In this way, every individual becomes a node in the web of transformation. Every prayer, every meditation, every conscious choice becomes a seed. And when enough seeds are planted, the field changes.
But this is not a passive process. It is not about waiting for the world to change. It is about becoming agents of that change, grounded in spiritual principle. We must be willing to grieve—to feel the sorrow of lives lost, families shattered, futures burned. We must be willing to reckon with our own complicity, to see how our comfort is often built on others’ suffering. And we must be willing to forgive: not as an act of forgetting, but as a radical assertion that love is stronger than hate, that healing is more powerful than harm.
New Thought does not offer a quick fix. It offers a path. A path that demands we take responsibility for our inner landscape, knowing that it shapes our outer world. In this moment, that means refusing to make enemies. Refusing to collapse into cynicism. Refusing to believe that violence is the only language that power understands. It means affirming, again and again, that peace is possible, because peace is who we are at our core.
Because Deeply We Are ONE.
We practice this not just in meditation halls or Sunday services, but in the mess of life. When we read the news, when we talk with friends, when we confront our own reactions. We practice by speaking truth without hatred, by setting boundaries without violence, by loving fiercely in the face of despair. We practice by remembering that the Divine is present even in rubble, that light exists even in the darkest moments, and that every person is capable of transformation.
Let us not underestimate the power of this path. History tells us that consciousness movements change the world. The abolition of slavery, the civil rights movement, the fall of apartheid—all were fueled not just by politics, but by a shift in human awareness. By a deep, collective knowing that something higher was possible. New Thought is part of that lineage. It is a continuation of the human longing for wholeness, for justice, for love made visible.
So we must speak. We must act. But first, we must see. We must see that this bombing is not isolated. It is part of a pattern. A pattern of disconnection, fear, and domination. And we must choose to break that pattern. Not with more violence, but with vision. With the steady, courageous choice to be different. To hold peace in our hearts when others call for war. To hold compassion in our thoughts when others fuel hate. To hold love in our words when the world shouts in anger. We do this because
Deeply We Are ONE.
This is not idealism. It is realism at the deepest level. Because every war begins in the mind. And every peace does too. If we want a peaceful world, we must cultivate peaceful minds. Not complacent, but clear. Not passive, but powerful. We must train ourselves to see beyond appearances, to trust in the unseen currents of grace that move through even the most chaotic times. We must build communities that practice this together, that remind each other of the truth when fear threatens to erase it.
There will be those who say this is not enough. That spiritual work is secondary, that real change comes only through force. But we know better. We know that the outer world mirrors the inner. That every system we seek to dismantle—racism, militarism, patriarchy—is rooted in a consciousness of separation. And that the most radical act is to refuse that separation. To live as if we are already one. Because we are.
Deeply We Are ONE.
In the days ahead, the noise will rise. The justifications will multiply. The fear will spike. Let us be still. Let us listen for the deeper current. Let us anchor in truth. That every life is sacred. That every act of violence wounds us all. That every moment is an opportunity to choose again.
Let us not waste this moment. Let it break us open. Let it awaken us to what we are here to do. Not to condemn, but to create. Not to mirror hate, but to magnify love. Not to explain away suffering, but to meet it with presence. This is our work. This is our call.
And we are ready. Because Deeply We Are ONE.