Evil From Within

Remembering the Center in a Disordered Time

There are seasons in a nation’s life when the greatest danger is not an external threat but a quiet corrosion from within. It begins subtly, almost invisibly when ego, ignorance, and hatred start shaping the atmosphere of public life. Over time, these forces do more than distort institutions; they disfigure our shared sense of what it means to be a decent and caring society.

Ego is often the first fracture. When public life becomes a stage for performance rather than stewardship, when leaders cling to image instead of responsibility, the common good slips out of view. A nation guided by ego forgets how to look at itself with honesty. It loses the capacity for self‑reflection, the humility that keeps a people tethered to reality. This is the first sign of a country drifting from its center.

Ignorance follows—not the simple absence of knowledge, but the refusal to learn, to listen, to be changed. It is a turning away from complexity, a shrinking of curiosity, a suspicion of nuance. When ignorance becomes a civic posture, a nation forfeits its ability to imagine new possibilities. It becomes brittle, reactive, easily manipulated. This is the quiet rise of willful unknowing.

And in the space created by ego and ignorance, hatred takes root. Hatred offers shortcuts: easy enemies, simple explanations, a counterfeit belonging built on exclusion. It narrows the moral imagination until neighbors become abstractions and strangers become threats. Hatred does not merely divide a people; it hollows them out. It is the most seductive form of moral amnesia.

But the deeper tragedy is this: these forces diminish everyone. A nation ruled by ego cannot grow. A nation ruled by ignorance cannot adapt. A nation ruled by hatred cannot endure. The erosion is spiritual long before it is political.

And yet, even in such seasons another story is possible.

Renewal begins in the smallest of human gestures: choosing presence over performance, curiosity over certainty, compassion over fear. It begins when ordinary people refuse to participate in the dehumanization of others, when they insist on seeing the world and one another clearly. This is the slow, steady work of re‑anchoring a community.

I have come to believe that the antidote to evil from within is not outrage but presence. Not louder arguments, but deeper attention. Not purity, but humility. The work is relational, embodied, and often quiet. It happens in conversations where someone feels seen for the first time in years. It happens in circles where grief is allowed to breathe. It happens when a person discovers that their story still has weight, still has dignity, still has a place in the world.

A nation remembers its center when its people remember theirs.

The path forward is not grand or dramatic. It is the daily practice of refusing to shrink the circle of belonging. It is the discipline of tending to the human spirit, our own and one another’s, with steadiness and care. It is the courage to imagine a future not built on fear but on the simple conviction that we belong to one another.

Evil from within is real. But so is the quiet, persistent work of those who choose to live differently. And in the end, it is this work, patient, relational, grounded in presence, that keeps a nation from losing itself.