When the World Is Burning, Stay
A Meditation by Rev. Cameron Trimble
“Stability is not about standing still. It is about remaining faithful when everything else is in motion.” — adapted from the Rule of St. Benedict
The world does not feel steady right now. Institutions we were taught to trust are unraveling. Power is being abused without accountability. Fear is being used as a governing strategy. Many of us wake each day bracing ourselves for what new harm will be revealed.
We need to be honest about this. Naming the danger is not despair; it is sanity.
History tells us that moments like this are not new. Empires have fallen before. Moral orders have collapsed before. People have lived through seasons when cruelty was normalized and minorities were treated as a threat. In those moments, not everyone fled or fought. Some chose something less dramatic and more enduring.
In the sixth century, as the Roman Empire disintegrated, St. Benedict of Nursia did not try to save the empire. He also did not abandon the world. Instead, he gathered people into a way of life rooted in stability, shared labor, prayer, and care for the vulnerable. The monasteries that followed did not prevent collapse. But they preserved humanity within it.1
They became places where learning survived, where the poor were fed, where dignity was practiced when power had lost its moral compass. They did not do this by being loud or dominant. They did it by staying.
This is a different kind of courage than the kind we usually celebrate. It is the courage of remaining present when it would be easier to harden or disappear. It is the courage of tending life when destruction has momentum.
Benedict called this stability: committing to a place, a people, and a way of living that resists chaos without mirroring it. Stability is not passivity. It is disciplined faithfulness. It is the refusal to let fear decide who we become.
This matters for us now.
We are living through a time when many are tempted to withdraw, to numb themselves, or to believe that nothing they do will matter. But the Benedictine wisdom insists otherwise. It teaches that how we live in the midst of breakdown shapes what becomes possible afterward.
When we choose to stay human—when we keep telling the truth, caring for one another, protecting the vulnerable, practicing restraint instead of revenge—we become carriers of a different future, even if we never see its fullness.
This does not mean we ignore injustice or accept harm. Benedictine communities were not neutral. They were ordered around values that quietly but firmly contradicted domination: humility over power, shared resources over hoarding, hospitality over exclusion, care over control.
In times like these, courage does not always look like confrontation. Sometimes it looks like preserving what makes life worth saving.
If the world feels like it is burning, the invitation is not to match the fire with more fire. The invitation is to become places of shelter, memory, and moral clarity—to keep the human story alive until it can be told again more truthfully.
You are not weak for feeling afraid. You are not naïve for choosing tenderness. You are not irrelevant because you cannot fix everything.
The work now is to stay.
We are in this together,
Cameron
Reflection Questions
Where do you feel most tempted to withdraw or harden right now?
What does “staying” look like in your life, in your relationships, your work, your community?
What values are you quietly preserving, even when they are not rewarded?
Who are the people you need to stay connected to so you do not carry this season alone?
A Prayer for the Day
A Blessing for Steadfast Hearts
God of endurance and mercy, When the ground feels unsteady beneath us, Anchor us in what is faithful and true. Give us the courage to remain human When fear urges us toward indifference. Give us patience to tend life When destruction feels louder than care. Help us stay—with one another, With our values, With the work of repair that unfolds slowly. When we cannot see what will come next, Teach us to trust that staying matters. Amen.
Spiritual Practice
The Practice of Stability
Today, choose one small act of staying:
Stay present in a difficult conversation instead of avoiding it.
Stay attentive to your body’s needs rather than pushing through exhaustion.
Stay connected to one person who reminds you of who you are.
Stay committed to a practice—prayer, journaling, walking, reading—that roots you.
At the end of the day, reflect briefly: Where did staying make life feel more real, even if it was hard?
You are not asked to save the world. You are asked to help preserve what matters.
Important Notice: I’ve been made aware that unauthorized copies of one of my books, The Beginner’s Bible Study, are currently being advertised and sold through Facebook and other online ads, often by overseas sellers. These versions are not produced or approved by me, contain numerous typos and inaccuracies, and sometimes require a one-time or recurring subscription fee. Please do not click on or purchase from these ads. The only authentic versions of my work are those sold directly through my official website and trusted publishing partners.
Upcoming Events That Might Be of Interest…
February 5, 2026 - Margaret Wheatley and and I are launching a new online course called “Leading with Spirit,” a six-session journey into soul-grounded leadership designed to deepen your trust in guidance, nurture perseverance, and rekindle imaginal wisdom for our fractured world. Take a look at the course outline. We are really excited and hope you can join! Scholarship are available if needed. Learn more here!
February 11th and 25, 2026 - Join Our “Building a Culture of Leadership Within Congregations” Cohort facilitated by Rabbi Benjamin Ross and me! A two-session course for ministers and faith leaders ready to strengthen how their congregations and ministries identify, develop, and support leaders. Learn more here.
July 19-24, 2026 - Join me and amazing co-facilitator, Victoria, on retreat in the back-country of beautiful Wyoming. The Art of Wilding is a 5-Day Expedition for Women Leaders. We will spend the week reconnecting to nature, exploring our inner landscapes for change, and engage the wisdom of spiritual teachings. Click here to learn more.
I drafted a Strategic Framework for Congregations as we move into the coming years of increased authoritarianism around the world. If interested, you can download it here.
Fun Things My Friends Are Up To…
I get to work with such amazing, creative people. This section is my way of celebrating them—no paid promotions, just joy in what they’re creating.
Have you heard about the Franciscan Federation? I absolutely LOVE these folks and am excited about the future they are envisioning. If you want to learn more about Franciscan theology, check out their extensive website of resources. This world needs more Franciscan-hearted people. Count me in!
Bryan Sirchio is the lead designer of the Convergence Music Project and has just launched a new podcast on Just and Generous Worship Music. Check out the podcast and new website here: https://convergencemp.com/
I am working on a big AI project in partnership with a company called Change.ai. I have been SO impressed with their commitment to justice organizations and safe, ethical AI space. Change Agent grew out of a 55-year-old civil rights nonprofit, and those values guide their approach.
If you are a leader or member of a congregation looking for consulting support in visioning, planning, hiring or staffing, please consider Convergence.



I’m a newbie to your contemplative writing in the last couple months, and I look forward to your postings all through the week. Your reflections are consistently some of the wisest and most insightful material I find anywhere. I particularly found today’s spiritual practice of stability to be helpful. Thanks for all that you do, springing so clearly from who you are.
To remain present,
stay disciplined and faithful.
Human and humane.
...
Commit to truth, care,
goodness, not neutrality.
Restraint, not revenge.