Empires of Men

When societies stop loving their neighbor as themselves, daily life begins to fracture in ways that go far beyond money. Trust thins out. Families and communities grow estranged. “Us vs. them” becomes normal, and fear becomes easy to manipulate. The consequences show up everywhere: delayed justice and mass incarceration, discrimination and exploitation, homelessness and anxiety, wars and displacement, abuse of human and animal life, and even a wounded earth of disasters, droughts, and hostile climes. What does this breakdown of neighbor-love do to the everyday lives of ordinary people?

Empires of Men
Empires of Men

Theme Text: “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment?” Jesus replied: “‘Love the LORD your God with all your heart and soul and mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ Matthew 22:36-39

When human societies are organized around fear, ranking, and rivalry, something basic begins to collapse. People stop expecting care from one another. Communities lose the habits of trust. Neighbors become competitors, threats, or strangers. In that kind of world, “love your neighbor as yourself” sounds like a beautiful slogan, but it does not feel realistic.

Yet the Bible treats neighbor-love as more than private kindness. It is the social foundation that makes human life livable. And when neighbor-love grows cold, the damage spreads outward, not only through households and streets, but through institutions, economies, and even the land itself.1

Empires of Men do not usually forbid love of neighbor with a law. They make it feel impractical by rewarding the opposite. They reward suspicion as “wisdom,” competition as “strength,” and scapegoating as “unity.” They teach people to secure themselves by ranking others, to protect their group by distrusting outsiders, and to treat relationships as transactions rather than covenantal care. In that climate, trust becomes risky, mercy looks like weakness, and neighbor-love gets pushed into private life instead of shaping public life.

What happens when neighbor-love breaks down

The list below is not saying that every tragedy has one simple cause. It is naming what becomes normal, what becomes tolerated, and what becomes harder to repair when societies are trained to divide, distrust, and rule through fear rather than shared care.2, 3

Earth
  • Disasters, droughts, hostile climes: hazards become catastrophes when people and land are treated as expendable, and when protection is reserved for the already-secure.4, 5, 6
  • Conflicts, terrorism, wars: fear hardens into cycles of retaliation, and “security” becomes a reason to sacrifice other people’s lives and futures.7
  • Fractured life with animals, plants, and habitats: creation is reduced to raw material, and living communities are drained faster than they can heal or regenerate.14, 15, 16
Society
  • Injustice, delayed justice, mass incarceration: systems can start protecting status more than restoring neighbors, and punishment grows faster than repair.8, 9
  • Racism, misogyny, discrimination, high inequality, exploitation: “us vs. them” lines harden, and whole groups learn they must prove their worth before they can be treated as human.
  • Anxiety, poverty, lack of healthcare, homelessness, manmade disasters: when shared care is weak, ordinary life becomes precarious, and stress becomes a permanent atmosphere rather than a temporary season.10, 11, 12
  • Estranged families and lost loved ones: isolation increases, trust thins out, and people carry grief without the supportive bonds that make grief bearable.2, 3
Humans
  • Chronic diseases, disabilities, pandemics: bodies bear the cost of social stress, disrupted care, and environmental harm, and outbreaks expose how tightly bound our health is to one another and to the living world.13, 14, 16
  • Ill-treatment, animal and human rights abuses: once people learn that some lives matter less, exploitation becomes easier to justify and harder to stop.9, 10
  • Death: not only as an end, but as a daily shadow through violence, neglect, preventable suffering, and the slow wearing down of hope.7, 14

That is why the Bible’s call to neighbor-love is not sentimental. It is a serious invitation to rebuild trust, practice justice as repair, and treat the earth as a shared home rather than a storehouse for the strong. This is also why “empire” is not only about rulers and armies. It is a way of training ordinary people to accept division as normal.

Economic gaps can be one visible symptom, but the deeper problem is relational. When a society loses neighbor-love, it loses the instinct to see another person’s pain as “my concern.” It loses the will to protect the vulnerable. It loses the patience to share, to listen, to forgive, and to repair.

Is this a new phenomenon? Not really. History shows that human empires repeatedly produce cultures of fear and division. That is why the Bible’s older stories still feel surprisingly current. One of them is the story of Joseph in Egypt, where a crisis becomes the occasion for hoarding, consolidation, and eventually the loss of freedom for an entire population.

Read Next: Joseph in the Egyptian Empire

Footnotes
  1. Pew Research Center (Pew Charitable Trusts), “Americans’ Deepening Mistrust of Institutions,” October 17, 2024. Source. ↩︎
  2. U.S. Surgeon General, Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation: The U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on the Healing Effects of Social Connection and Community (2023). PDF. ↩︎
  3. World Health Organization, “WHO Director-General’s opening remarks at the launch of the report of the WHO Commission on Social Connection, ‘From Loneliness to Social Connection’” (June 30, 2025). Source. ↩︎
  4. United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), “Global Assessment Report (GAR) 2025.” Source. ↩︎
  5. World Meteorological Organization (WMO), State of the Global Climate 2024 (report landing page). Source. ↩︎
  6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Climate Change 2023: Synthesis Report (AR6 SYR), Longer Report (PDF). PDF. ↩︎
  7. Uppsala University / Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), “Sharp increase in conflicts and wars” (press release, June 11, 2025). Source. ↩︎
  8. U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), Prisoners in 2023 – Statistical Tables (PDF). PDF. ↩︎
  9. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), The 2024 Annual Homelessness Assessment Report (AHAR) to Congress, Part 1: Point-in-Time Estimates of Homelessness (PDF, December 2024). PDF. ↩︎
  10. International Labour Organization (ILO), “Global Estimates of Modern Slavery: Forced Labour and Forced Marriage” (publication page; estimates for 2021, released 2022). Source. ↩︎
  11. World Bank, “Poverty, Prosperity, and Planet Report 2024” (report page). Source. ↩︎
  12. World Health Organization, “Anxiety disorders” (fact sheet, September 8, 2025). Source. ↩︎
  13. World Health Organization, “Noncommunicable diseases” (fact sheet, September 25, 2025). Source. ↩︎
  14. World Health Organization, “One Health” (fact sheet, October 23, 2023). Source. ↩︎
  15. Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), “Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services” (2019). Source. ↩︎
  16. World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), Living Planet Report 2024 (report page). Source. ↩︎

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