Isaiah 2:4 imagines a world where nations “beat their swords into plowshares” and “learn war no more.” Inside a jeepney, we read this not from palaces or war rooms but from the crowded, noisy, wounded spaces where the masses struggle to survive. The jeepney is a theology classroom on wheels—full of stories, fears, jokes, prayers, and the stubborn hope of commuters who know what it means to live under systems bigger than them.
From that vantage point, Isaiah’s prophecy is not abstract. It is a cry from the ground. Or from under the rubble.
A jeepney is built from the leftovers of war—U.S. military jeeps repurposed by Filipino need and creativity into vehicles of community. It is a reminder that people who suffer the consequences of empire can still transform implements of violence into instruments of life.
But a jeepney is also vulnerable. The Philippine Government has been trying to remove it from the streets for over 60 years. When global powers clash, it is the jeepney riders—the workers, the mothers, the students, the 70%—who feel the shockwaves first: rising prices, fear of escalation, the anxiety of watching powerful nations trade threats while ordinary people pray simply to get home safely.
Isaiah echoes the fear many feel when powerful states use military force in ways, more often tragic, that ripple across the region and the world. The human cost is undeniable: families and communities are displaced, cities crumble, innocents are killed, and multitudes are caught in cycles of retaliation. Isaiah speaks precisely into this kind of world.
The prophet does not pretend that nations will suddenly become compassionate. He knows the logic of empire: security through domination, peace through superior firepower, change through overwhelming force.
But Isaiah interrupts that logic with a different imagination: weapons become tools for feeding people; training for war becomes training for community empowerment; national pride gives way to shared pilgrimage toward God’s ways.
Reading Isaiah 2:4 inside a jeepney is like watching a jeepney driver refuse to honk in anger, choosing instead to wave another driver through. It is experiencing community where there is always space for one more rider. Always space for one more. It is small, stubborn resistance to the culture of aggression. It is the belief that peace begins with ordinary people refusing to mirror the violence of the powerful, the propertied, and the privileged.
Isaiah’s vision is not naïve. It is defiant.
When nations escalate conflict, when missiles fly, when leaders speak of “deterrence” while civilians brace for impact, Isaiah stands in the middle of the road—like a traffic enforcer with nothing but a whistle—and says: “This is not the only way the world can be.”
The jeepney teaches us three things Isaiah would recognize: peace is communal. You cannot ride a jeepney alone; you share space, breath, and destiny. Peace is creative. It takes imagination to turn a war jeep into a vehicle of life. Peace is courageous. Every jeepney ride is an act of trust in strangers.
For those grieving the senseless deaths in the Middle East, for those afraid of escalation, for those who feel powerless as nations posture and retaliate—Isaiah’s promise is not escapism. It is a call to resist despair. God’s dream is larger than the ambitions of any empire.
And every act of compassion, every refusal to dehumanize, every insistence on truth, every prayer for peace based on justice is a hammer striking metal—slowly beating swords into plowshares.
My friends, war teaches us to expect the worst of one another. Isaiah teaches us to expect more from God and the best from each other.
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#LoveGodServePeople
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*Art by Zee-m Tiempo